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OF

SPORTS AND

PASTIMES.

ESTABLISHED MARCH 1860.]

Price 1s. 6d.

EMBELLISHED EVERY MONTH WITH A STEEL PLATE ENGRAVING
OF A PATRON OF SPORT, AND EVERY SEVENTH MONTH
WITH AN ADDITIONAL STEEL PLATE OF A

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Among the Contributors to BAILY'S MAGAZINE are to be numbered the leading Sporting writers of the day, whose excellence of literary style has enabled the Magazine to attain its present popularity.

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THE GENTLEMAN'S MAGAZINE ADVERTISER.

SECOND EDITION. Crown 8vo, cloth extra, 6s.

AMERICAN HUMORISTS.

Including WASHINGTON IRVING, OLIVER WENDELL HOLMES, JAMES RUSSELL LOWELL, ARTEMUS WARD, MARK TWAIN, and BRET HARTE.

By the Rev. H. R. HAWEIS, M.A.

'Mr. Hawcis's book is written in a form which exactly suits the subject. . . Six leading humorists are treated of, in as many chapters, and Mr. Haweis has distilled the essence of their wit, and encased it in delightfully rambling, illustrative, anecdotal remarks of his own, which make a good foil for the numerous sparks of wit quoted from the American writers. A series of essays to light and so enjoyable has not appeared for a long time.'-DUNDEE ADVERTISER.

'Last year the Rev. H. R. Haweis delivered a series of lectures at the Royal Institution, London, on "American Humorists." The lectures were very much relished, and Mr. Haweis thought that they would be welcome to many readers. We are inclined to think that he is right. There will be general satisfaction that he has published criticisms on men like Washington Irving, Oliver Wendell Holmes, James Russell Lowell, Artemus Ward, Mark Twain, and Bret Harte. There can be no doubt that his criticisms are all suggestive, and that he brings out, for the benefit of those who have not read much of American literature, a good deal of that humour which runs through the productions of some of the American humorists, and thus adds to the general stock of human knowledge. Mr. Haweis has unquestionably taken the greatest of the American humorists. The volume is well got up, and is sure to be widely read.'-SCOTSMAN.

'A good deal may be learned from these lectures. He quotes well and effectively, and it is not impossible that not a few may date their first acquaintance with a suggestive and amusing field of literature from the perusal of these lectures.'-NONCONFORMIST.

'These six lectures comprise a keen but very appreciative analysis of the writings of the half-dozen Americans who have in great part revolutionised our ideas of humour.............. The extracts furnished by Mr. Haweis are thoroughly typical, and his criticisms are unusually clear and sometimes exhaustive.'-WORLD.

3 vols. crown 8vo. At every Library.

THE GOLDEN SHAFT.

By CHARLES GIBBON, Author of 'Robin Gray,' &c.

'There are few more charming living writers of fiction than Mr. Gibbon. However short or long his stories may be, however slight in texture or plot, we are at least sure to meet with some simple touches of nature which somehow get at the heart of the reader. And this is one of the highest achievements of the novelist; for one touch of nature is worth a hundred volumes of mere sensationalism. The novel before us is no exception to the author's rule. It is a Scotch story, and several of the characters are drawn with a delicate yet powerful hand. We have much confidence in recommending this novel; it is pure and healthful in tone, robust in sentiment, and it is withal excellently written.'-BRITISH QUARTERLY REVIEW.

The Golden Shaft" is a story of true love, and is told with subdued pathos and much quiet power....The Fiscal is a powerfully drawn character, and his daughter Ellie a thoroughly sweet girl. On the whole, we have seen nothing before of Mr. Gibbon's writing so good as this novel.'-DAILY NEWS.

In preparation, to be published in May,

ACADEMY NOTES,

Illustrated. Edited by HENRY BLACKBURN. 1s.

1883.

GROSVENOR NOTES, 1883.

Illustrated. Edited by HENRY BLACKBURN. 1s.

SALON NOTES,

1883.

With over 300 full-page Illustrations. Edited by A. DUMAS. (English Edition.) 8s.

Crown 8vo. cloth extra, 3s. 6d.

LOVE ME FOR EVER.

By ROBERT BUCHANAN,

With a Frontispiece by P. MACNAB.

"The tale is one of the best that Mr. Buchanan has ever written.'-DERBY MERCURY.

'Mr. Buchanan's story is simple, well told, and interesting.'-ACADEMY.

'A very delightful story. It contains a charming mixture of realism and idealism. Nothing sweeter or more delicate than the character of Mabel has ever been presented to the reader, and no author that we know of has mingled dreamland with everyday life so well as Mr. Buchanan has done. It is a story to be read with pleasure; and it assuredly should be successful.'-ECOTSMAN.

CHATTO & WINDUS, Piccadilly, W.

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AN ILLUSTRATED MAGAZINE OF SCIENCE. PLAINLY WORDED-EXACTLY DESCRIBED.

Edited by RICHARD A. PROCTOR.

TO OUR READERS.

THE first number of Volume III. commenced with the present issue, No. 62, January 5, 1883. In this volume several series of articles will be continued, among them the following:

'A NATURALIST'S YEAR.' By Mr. GRANT ALLEN.

'OUR BODIES.' By Dr. ANDREW WILSON.

'ORIGIN AND GROWTH OF MYTH.' By EDWARD CLOdd.

PLEASANT HOURS WITH THE MICROSCOPE,' By Mr. H. J. SLACK.
'NIGHTS WITH A THREE-INCH TELESCOPE.' By F.R.A.S.
THE CHEMISTRY OF COOKERY.' By Mr. W. MATTIEU WILLIAMS.
'SOCIOLOGY.' By Mr. THOMAS FOSTER.

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'SUN-VIEWS OF THE EARTH, OR THE SEASONS ILLUSTRATED;'

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and THE SOUTHERN SKIES. BY THE EDITOR.

Besides these, there will be articles on Electricity,' 'Chemistry,' Entomology,' 'Geology,' and 'Health Resorts,' Spectrum Analysis,' and Mapping, the series on How to Get Strong will be continued, and the columns of Mathematics, Whist,' and Chess' will be continued weekly. For the present, the Easy Lessons in the Differential Calculus' will be replaced by simpler mathematical subjects; but they will ere long be resumed, until so much of the subject as can conveniently be dealt with in these pages has been completed. 'KNOWLEDGE.' Volume II. (June 2 to December 29, 1882) now ready, price 8s. 6d. 'Knowledge' Library Series. Crown 8vo. cloth, price 6s. each, post free, 68. 6d. Cheap re-issue of Mr. PROCTOR'S Works:-1. THE BORDERLAND OF SCIENCE. 2. SCIENCE BYWAYS. 3. THE POETRY OF ASTRONOMY. Just published (reprinted from KNOWLEDGE).

4. NATURE STUDIES. By GRANT ALLEN, ANDREW WILSON, THOMAS FOSTER, EDWARD CLODD, and RICHARD A. PROCTOR, 5. LEISURE READINGS. By EDWARD CLODD, A. C. RANYARD, THOMAS FOSTER, and RICHARD A. PROCTOR. Imperial 8vo. cloth, price 5s., post free, 58, 6d.

6. THE STARS IN THEIR SEASONS. An Easy Guide to a Knowledge of the Stars, in Twelve Maps, showing the Stars at all hours, all the year round. By RICHARD A. PROCTOR.

'KNOWLEDGE,' every Friday, price 2d.; Yearly, post free 10s. 10d.; also in Monthly Parts.

London: WYMAN & SONS, 74-76 Great Queen Street, W.C.

TO ALL INTERESTED IN THE PREVENTION OF DISEASE AND THE PRESERVATION OF HEALTH.

Every Friday, price 2d.; Post Free, 2d. Yearly, Post Free, 10s. 10d. To be had of all Booksellers and Newsagents.

ON FRIDAY, APRIL 13th, 1883, WILL BE PUBLISHED No. I. OF

HEALTH:

A WEEKLY JOURNAL OF SANITARY SCIENCE.

'Reason's whole pleasure-all the joys of sense

Lie in three words, HEALTH, peace, and competence.'-POPE.

HEALTH will be devoted to the popular exposition of all details connected with the preservation of health and the diffusion of health knowledge amongst the people. Its contents will include Notes on Health, Original Essays on Health, Papers on Personal Health, Articles on Health in the Home and Family Circle, Correspondence on Health topics, and Advice on all matters relating to Sanitary Science.

HEALTH will be written in a thoroughly popular style, free from all technicality, and adapted to interest as well as instruct; whilst the low price of the periodical-2d. weeklywill, it is hoped, bring it within reach of all classes of the community.

OFFICE: 74-6 GREAT QUEEN STREET, LONDON, W.C.

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'Mr. Besant's power as a writer of nouvelles, as well as of longer works of fiction, has not often been better illustrated than in the volumes which take their title from the first story in them-"The Captains' Room.". It is not the least of Mr. Besant's attractions and merits that his stories will thoroughly bear reading or dipping into again and again.'-SATURDAY REVIEW.

Mr. Walter Besant is one of the most delightful of modern writers. All his good qualities are abundantly illustrated in the volumes of collected tales he has entitled "The Captains' Room." The first is the best, but all are readable and good, full of spirit and go, and abounding in playful and genial fun.'-DAILY NEWS.

'No one need have the least hesitation in taking up any book written by Mr. Walter Besant if he desires to have good bright writing, well-defined and interesting plot, and general ease and grace. The stories in this volume have all these qualities. They are full of the spirit of the times to which they specially relate, and are redolent of the scenes which are described. Nothing is more wonderful, indeed, than the manner in which Mr. Besant contrives to give local colouring to all his stories. They are delightful reading.'-SCOTSMAN.

"The Captains' Room" will confirm the impression of those who maintain that Mr. Besant is one of the most able and eriginal writers of fiction. The story is improbable enough, and yet the improbability in no way detracts from its charm-perhaps it rather heightens it. The closing chapter reads like a fairy tale.'-FIGAR).

New and cheaper Edition. Crown 8vo. cloth extra, 3s. 6d.

ALL SORTS AND CONDITIONS OF MEN.

BY

AN IMPOSSIBLE STORY.

WALTER

BESANT.

With Twelve Illustrations by FREDERICK BARNARD.

"All Sorts and Conditions of Men," like its numerous predecessors, is eminently bright, readable, original, and charming-a book to be read with unalloyed pleasure and to be closed with regret-the regret being, however, pleasantly tempered by that sense of satisfaction which is always given by work which is in every respect well done, which, from beginning to end, one would not have other than what it is. Whether it be a possible or an impossible story, there cannot be any doubt that it is altogether refreshing and delightful.'-ACADEMY,

'A work of striking originality of design; Mr. Besant's vivacity and humour, which often rise to pathos and never sink to caricature, tinge the whole story, and make even his most serious passages delightful........It is, perhaps, the greatest point in Mr. Besant's marked success that he has written a novel with a purpose, and contrived to make it as lively and sparkling as any reasonable reader could wish.'-ATHENÆUM.

• The book, to one tired of the strained analysis of limited mental conditions, which is the too frequent subject of modern fiction, has a breath of complete refreshment about it, like a plunge in the open sea to a weary town-dweller. There are in it copiousness of human interest, wide sympathy with human suffering, and cheerful, hopeful, and humble views of human progress enough to fill the mind and brace the energies. It is beyond all things an interesting and amusing book.'--DAILY NEWS.

It is one of the author's great merits, that he has struck an entirely new and very fascinating vein of modern romance....The motive of the book is worked out with an evident seriousness, with unfailing vivacity, and with a lightness and brightness of touch and style which never degenerate into facetiousness. One charm of the work is that the seriousness, though present, is never self-assertive, being ever relieved by a delicate sense of the humorous side of life; another is, that the pages show an equally delicate poetical instinct, which finds its fullest expression in the character of Angela, whose figure stands out clearly amongst the most charming personages of modern fiction; and a third attraction is, that the interest never flags....The book is full of interest, humour, and charm.'-SATURDAY REVIEW.

"The public, in view of his latest story. "All Sorts and Conditions of Men,' will hope that Mr. Besant may long remain to write novels for them..... His novel is one that is eminently readable. It is full of touches of delightful humour. It has strong human interest, and it may be read even by those who are least inclined to think seriously of the questions with which it deals, but only of the pleasure that comes of reading a good and interesting story.'-SCOTSMAN.

"All Sorts and Conditions" is a pleasanter book than any of its predecessors, savǝ perhaps "The Chaplain of the Fleet," and a book of more uniform excellence as well as of greater elevation of thought..... The spirit of sursum corda which animates it is interesting and contagious, and sustains the reader all through in a manner not common with modern novels.'-PALL MALL GAZETTE.

CHATTO & WINDUS, Piccadilly, W,

THE GENTLEMAN'S MAGAZINE ADVERTISER.

MONTHLY, PRICE NINEPENCE.

SPECIMEN NUMBER SENT POST-FREE BY THE PUBLISHERS FOR NINE PENNY STAMPS.
OPINIONS OF THE PRESS.

"The lithographic illustrations are admirable.'

CIVIL SERVICE GAZETTE.

'The magazine which, by its intrinsic merits, has gained such a deservedly high reputation.'

SHEFFIELD POST. 'The illustrations are in good taste and well executed.' OXFORD UNIVERSITY HERALD.

'A better aid to the artistic student could not have been devised.'-SHREWSBURY CHRONICLE.

• Conceived in the refined spirit of Greek art.'

SCOTSMAN.

'A very fascinating periodical.'-JOHN BULL. The designs are of a high class and in excellent taste....in accord with the best æsthetic tone of our times.'-COURT JOURNAL.

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'The illustrations are remarkably good.'-ROCK. Novel and attractive.' TREWMAN'S FLYING POST. Of the many art journals, for direct usefulness this is the cheapest and the best.'-HASTINGS NEWS. It is beautifully got up.'-BRISTOL MERCURY. "The publication is altogether a very beautiful ore.' HALIFAX COURIER. 'Unsurpassable in general beauty and elegance.' BRIGHTON EXAMINER.

'Very effective and tasteful.'

HAMPSHIRE ADVERTISER.

'Beautifully produced.'-WESTERN MORNING NEWS.
'Is rich in designs.'-CHRISTIAN WORLD.
'Presents splendid specimens of high class art.'
SHEFFIELD EVENING POST.

Prizes are offered for Sketch Designs for Wall and Ceiling Decoration. Now ready, Vol. IV., with Etched extra Frontispiece, and full Tinted and other Illustrations bound in cloth, price 7s. 6d. London: SAMPSON LOW, MARSTON, SEARLE, & RIVINGTON, 188 Fleet Street, E.C.

Now in the press, new and cheaper edition, with 84 Illustrations, crown 8vo. cloth extra, 7s. 6d.

SOCIAL LIFE IN THE REIGN OF QUEEN ANNE.

BY JOHN ASHTON,

Author of Chap-books of the Eighteenth Century' &c.

'Mr. Ashton has selected an interesting subject, and has done justice to his choice. There can be no doubt either of Mr. Ashton's diligence in collecting his materials or of his good sense in refraining from intruding himself unnecessarily upon the reader. We are grateful to him both for his industry and his reserve. Even a man who is well versed in the diaries and correspondence of Queen Anne's time will find something that is new to him in every chapter....On these subjects, and on every curiosity of Queen Anne's reign, Mr. Ashton has much to say, and he tells his story with good taste and without unnecessary amplification. His volumes will serve a double purpose. They will amuse the ordinary reader of the day, and instruct the student of English manners in the habits of a time which has never failed to attract.'-ACADEMY.

Two handsome and portly volumes, which should excite a double interest and command a double sale, owing, not only to the literary merits of the work, which appear to me to be considerable, but also on account of the volumes, presenting an admirably expansive field for the activity of the Grangerites.-G. A. S., in ILLUST. LONDON NEWS. The successful writing of such books as Mr. Ashton's requires peculiar faculties: capacity for research in a supreme degree, with quick instinct for what is typical and expressive, and tact of representation; the power of effective grouping, and, above all, lightness of touch and solidity and sobriety of judgment. Mr. Ashton, who showed most of these qualities in his "Chap-books of the Eighteenth Century," has not failed in his bolder and more difficult enterprise. All out-of-the-way corners he has looked into and ransacked, not only the newspaper, but novels, journals, diaries, and such State papers as are accessible; and he has arranged his vast miscellany of facts so well, and written in a style so crisp, clear, and attractive, that we can safely prophesy for the volumes a very wide acceptance....In such a lively, appetising manner does Mr. Ashton conduct us through the whole circle of social life in the stirring period he deals with.'-NONCONFORMIST.

Mr. Ashton is not a violent disciple of so-called Queen Anne Furniture, nor yet a reviler of the present day, but simply a collector and searcher out of curious details and insignificant facts, which become significant when brought together and systematically arranged. Mr. Ashton has had the reign of Queen Anne for his period, and has sought, found, and ordered a host of little facts mentioned in contemporary literature, which illustrate the domestic and social life of the period. The compilation is very able and interesting, and the illustrations, taken from contemporary prints, are a very valuable addition.'-MANCHESTER EXAMINER.

'Mr. Ashton has produced, beyond a doubt, the most accurate and readable picture of social life under Queen Anne that has yet been published............. The book can be opened anywhere and read with pleasure and profit.' -MORNING POST.

With commendable diligence Mr. Ashton has assembled a vast number of "documents," advertisements, and what not, which he has skilfully grouped in chapters illustrating the education, food, dress, amusements, science, art, and manners of the time. His book is, in fact, a valuable and trustworthy collection of mémoires pour servir. In these pages the reader may wander at will in that lesser London of which Covent Garden and Leicester Square were the centres. With Mr. Ashton's book all things are feasible, provided the reader carry with him a decent And as Mr. Ashton, with commendable and indeed unusual amount of curiosity and a fairly good memory. honesty, gives chapter and verse for his statements, our pilgrim may be moderately sure that his imaginings will possess a certain verisimilitude.'-ATHENEUM.

We can promise the public a good deal of real entertainment from these two volumes. Mr. Ashton has made a careful study, and gives us what we may fairly call an exhaustive history. It has often been done before, but never to our knowledge so completely; and the book, moreover, has this special recommendation: that it is enriched with a variety of illustrations, copied faithfully from the original prints "in all their uncouthness and reality."-ST. JAMES'S GAZETTE.

TWO BOOKS BY GEORGE MACDONALD.

The PRINCESS and CURDIE,

With 11 Illustrations by JAMES ALLEN.
Small crown 8vo. cloth extra, 5s.

GUTTA-PERCHA WILLIE.

With 9 Illustrations by ARTHUR HOPKINS.
Small 8vo. cloth extra, 3s. 6d.

CHATTO & WINDUS, Piccadilly, W.

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