The Clansman (1905)/Advertisements

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4472345The Clansman — AdvertisementsThomas Frederick Dixon

2nd Hundred Thousand
The Leopard's Spots
A Romance of the White Man's Burden
By Thomas Dixon Jr.

THIS NOVEL is as remarkable in its way as "Uncle Tom's Cabin" was when it first appeared. Mr. Dixon's story gives the Southern point of view of the same question, and as a picture it is as graphic and as striking as Mrs. Stowe's book.

"Able and eloquent."—Bookman.

"A novel of absorbing interest."—Baltimore Sun.

"An exceptionally dramatic story."—St. Louis Republic.

"The love story is one of the finest in recent fiction."—George Hamlin Fitch in San Francisco Chronicle.

"The strong work of a strong man."—New York World.

"A revelation of the intensity of Southern thought."—Boston Journal.

"An epoch-making book, packed with truth stranger than fiction."—Atlanta Journal.

"The most notable book from the press since 'Uncle Tom's Cabin' precipitated the greatest revolution of modern times."—Rev. H. W. Battle in Springfield Republican.

"It is a splendid human document. The picture stands out like a tracing of fire in a dark night."—Chicago Evening Post.

"A conflict of terrific forces."—Louisville Courier-Journal.

"Tears and laughter mingle on every page."—Davenport Democrat.

"A living, burning book."—New York Mail and Express.

"Stern, historical reality."—Pittsburg Chronicle-Telegraph.

"The most powerful novel I have read in years."—Max Nordau.

"Strong in emotional power—the most human novel we have fallen upon in many weeks."—Critic.

"No other book on the subject has ever approached it in power or fearlessness of expression."—New York Journal.

"Of undeniable force, beauty and vitality."—Chicago Record-Herald.

"A sweeping epic, the only offset to 'Uncle Tom's Cabin' ever written."—The Sunny South.





Illustrated by C. D. Williams. Price, $1.50

Doubleday, Page & Company, New York

THE author showed in "The Leopard's Spots" his mastery of the expression of powerful human emotions. This new story appeals to a wider audience, on the greatest of all subjects for a novel, the power of Love, as affected by the movement toward Socialism which marks the new century. It is essentially a love story and character study of three strong men and two fascinating women. In swift, unified and dramatic action, we see Socialism a deadly force, in the hour of the eclipse of Faith destroying the home life and weakening the fiber of Anglo-Saxon manhood. This dream of "fellowship and solidarity" is shown to be a lapse to the herd, out of which, under Love, the sacredness of marriage was evolved as the basis of civilization. The crash and roar of New York's colossal life are heard throughout the novel. The book grips the reader and holds him. The five figures of the drama are very vivid.

Illustrated by Clinedinst
$1.50
Doubleday, Page & Company
Publishers
133-137 East 16th St., New York