Taylor, Miss Mary, 15, 35, 58,
91, 92, 94, 98.
— Mr. Joe, 72.
— Mr. James, 72, 73, 74, 145.
Temperament, Charlotte Bronte’s,
73, 81.
_Tenant of Wildfell Hall, The_, 39, 40, 54, 55.
— — audacity of, 54.
— — realism of, 54.
— — and Farrar’s _Eternal
Hope_, 55.
Thackeray, 15, 47, 61, 123.
Theories, 16, 17, 57-90, 100, 106,
231-332, 237, 238-247.
Thornton, 20.
_Villette_, 46, 89, 100, 105, 140-161. — Lucy Snowe in, 71, 79, 89.
— M. Paul in. _See_ Emanuel
Paul.
— dialogue in, 149.
— germ of the real in, 145,
158.
— reality of, 144, 145, 146,
147, 148, 158, 159, 163.
— realism of, 163, 164.
— style in, 160, 161.
— and _The Professor_ compared,
98, 99, 111, 112.
— and _Jane Eyre_ compared,
105, 144, 159.
— and _Shirley_ compared, 111,
141, 148, 159.
— quoted, 149-153, 154, 155,
157.
Ward, Mrs. Humphry, 14, 196.
Williams, Mr. W.S., 40.
— — Charlotte Bronte’s
letter to, 78.
Wilson, Rev. Carus, 24, 25.
_Wisdom and Destiny_ quoted, 170,
213.
Woman, 69, 70, 117, 118, 132,
133, 140, 142, 143.
Woman, mid-Victorian, 71, 118,
132.
— modern, 133.
Woman’s place in the world, 78,
142.
Women, Charlotte Bronte’s, 69,
70, 132, 133.
Wooler, Miss, 26, 27, 35, 98.
Wordsworth, letters to, 99.
_Wuthering Heights_, 16, 17, 21, 39, 40, 46, 105, 127, 128, 130, 131,
139, 172, 173, 208-234.
— — criticism of, 209-233.
— — dialogue in, 218, 219,
220-221, 223, 224.
— — mysticism in, 173.
— — paganism in, 209,
211, 214, 222.
— — passion in, 210, 211,
212, 213, 218, 221, 222, 224,
228, 231.
— — realism in, 221, 224,
228.
— — style in, 228, 230.
— — the supernatural in,
17, 196-209, 216.
— — sources of, 232, 233,
234.
Zamorna.
— _See_ Heathcliff.
— _See_ “Gondal Poems”.
2/- Hutchinson’s 2/-
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BOOKLOVER’S LIBRARY
The Booklover’s Library is now accepted as one of the most successful ventures of recent years. Beautifully produced and covering a wide range of subjects, the books have been eagerly sought by a discriminating public.
Published in the first instance at a price from 30/- and below, each title selected for this library is generally admitted to be a little masterpiece in its own particular sphere.
Here are the eighteen titles which are now available:
First titles in the
BOOKLOVER’S LIBRARY
No. 1.
HAWORTH PARSONAGE
by Isabel C. Clarke
_Sphere._–“This biography of that tragical family whose private lives far transcended the gloom of the magnificent work they produced, is a matter of interest to all who have read and loved _Jane Eyre_ and _Wuthering Heights_.”
No. 2.
ROMANCE OF EMPIRE by Sir Philip Gibbs
Sir Philip Gibbs unfolds in his graphic, picturesque way the amazing record of vision, courage and sacrifice on the part of the pioneers in the great adventure of Empire.
No. 3.
THE COURTSHIP OF ANIMALS
by W.P. Pycraft
The aim of this book is to bring together a most astounding collection of facts in regard to the Courtship of Animals of all kinds, from Apes to Ants.
No. 4.
THE GHOST BOOK by Cynthia Asquith
Weird, uncanny stories of the supernatural by May Sinclair; Algernon Blackwood; Mrs. Belloc Lowndes; L.P. Hartley; Denis Mackail; Clemence Dane; C. Ray; Hugh Walpole; Desmond MacCarthy; Walter de la Mare; Arthur Machen; D.H. Lawrence; Oliver Onions; Mary Webb; Charles Whibley; Enid Bagnold.
No. 5.
PASSION MURDER & MYSTERY
by Bruce Graeme
_Sunday Times._–“Mr. Graeme has the true knack of the story-teller, and lovers of the gruesome will find all they want in this collection of tales, as they are tragic.”
No. 6.
TAHITI–ISLE OF DREAMS
by Robert Keable
_Illustrated London News._–“This is a book of charm and personal philosophy which will not be forgotten by those who read it.”
No. 7.
THE THREE BRONTES by May Sinclair
Mr. Clement K. Shorter in the _Sphere._–“Assuredly she has produced a book in which there is not a dull line, upon what is acknowledged to be one of the most fascinating subjects in the whole range of literature.”
No. 8.
LESS THAN THE DUST: The Autobiography of a Tramp by Joseph Stamper
Compton McKenzie in the _Daily Mail._–“… there are pages with the quality of Maxim Gorki … absorbed me sufficiently to make me read every page, starting at three o’clock in the morning after having read several other books–and I cannot say more for a book than that.”
No. 9.
THE JUTLAND SCANDAL
by Admiral Sir Reginald Bacon
_Daily News._–“… a concise exposition of the tactics at Jutland and a stinging rebuke to those who accuse of having missed a glorious opportunity through over-caution and lack of fighting spirit.”
No. 10.
HENRY VIII & HIS WIVES
by Walter Jerrold
In this volume Mr. Jerrold has set out to relate the personal history, so far as it is ascertainable, of the much-married Henry and the six women whom he successfully wedded.
_Observer._–“… a rich mine of controversy….”
No. 11
BEYOND KHYBER PASS
by Lowell Thomas
_Spectator._–“Unchanged in the last thousand years, the people of Central Asia stroll through Mr. Thomas’s pages, shrouded girls, swashbuckling youths, peasants, princes … it is an amazing pageant that he presents to us.”
No. 12.
LIFE AND LAUGHTER ‘MIDST THE CANNIBALS by Clifford Collinson
_Yorkshire Herald._–“This is a fascinating narrative of life in the South Seas, and emphasizes that fact proves more interesting than fiction….”
No. 13.
LIKE SHADOWS ON THE WALL
by W.B. Maxwell
_Spectator._–“Mr. Maxwell sketches in a character, a scene, or an incident with remarkable rapidity and vividness … his book is salted with a humour all his own.”
No. 14.
SPOOK STORIES by E.F. Benson
_Times._–“Mr. Benson is well-versed in the gentle art of sending cold shivers racing down other people’s spines.”
_Spectator._”These spook stories could not be beaten; every chapter makes one’s flesh creep.”
No. 15.
ROAMIN’ IN THE GLOAMIN’
by Sir Harry Lauder
_Daily Chronicle._–“It is so vivid that it gives the impression of not being written at all, but spoken in that vivid, pawky, homely way which makes him ‘get over’ the footlights as no other artist can do.”
No. 16.
WITH LAWRENCE IN ARABIA
by Lowell Thomas
_Daily Mail._–“Recounts the extraordinary and almost legendary career of Colonel Lawrence. His experiences indeed read like an ‘Arabian Night’ of the twentieth century. He played his part marvellously.”
No. 17.
THE KASIDAH of Haji Abdu El Yezdi
by Sir Richard F. Burton, K.C.M.G.
A Lay of the Higher Law
The Kasidah has been described by some of Sir Richard Burton’s admirers as his masterpiece, and this edition brings it within the reach of a much greater public than has been possible before.
No. 18.
THE SOUL OF THE WAR
by Philip Gibbs
_The Author._–“If there is any purpose in what I have written beyond mere record it is to reveal the soul of war so nakedly that it cannot be glossed over by the glamour of false sentiment and false heroics.”