_LIBRARY EDITION._

  _Including important passages and chapters hitherto omitted._

  WITH 28 PORTRAITS AND PLATES.

  * * * * *

  =LIST OF STORIES.=

  Les Miserables. 5 vols. Notre Dame. 2 vols. Ninety-Three, 1 vol. The Man who Laughs. 2 vols. Toilers of the Sea. 2 vols. Hans of Iceland, 1 vol. Bug-Jargal; Claude Gueux; The Last Day of a Condemned, 1 vol.

  14 vols. 12mo. Decorated cloth, gilt top, $1.50 per volume; plain cloth,$1.25 per volume; half calf or half morocco, gilt top, $3.00 per volume.

  _Any story supplied separately in cloth._

  Large handsome type, clear white paper, and choicely decorated coverscombine to make this the most beautiful and desirable library edition ofthese great works.

  * * * * *

  To what other man can we attribute such sweeping innovations, such a newand significant presentment of the life of man, such an amount, if wemerely think of the amount, of equally consummate performance.--ROBERTLOUIS STEVENSON.

  _A model edition for use and convenience._--_Cincinnati CommercialGazette._

  A permanent, delightful book to all good judges of publishing.--_TheBeacon._

  _A most beautiful and desirable library edition._--_Baltimore American._

  A delight to the eye and the touch.--_Boston Journal._

  * * * * *

  LITTLE, BROWN, AND COMPANY, PUBLISHERS,

  254 WASHINGTON STREET, BOSTON.

  =BRICHANTEAU, ACTOR=.

  Translated from the French of

  =JULES CLARETIE, Manager of the Comedie Francaise=

  With Preface by FRANCISQUE SARCEY.

  12mo. Cloth, extra, gilt top. $1.50.

  * * * * *

  M. Jules Claretie has had a wide acquaintance with actors. He has had anopportunity of studying them still more closely since he has been themanager of the Comedie Francaise. Brichanteau is charming because he isalways treading the boards, because he believes in good faith that hislife is a drama, in which he plays the principal part. The work iswritten with a sprightly and witty pen.--FRANCISQUE SARCEY.

  The translation has preserved the sprightly wit and grace of theoriginal, in which all the shades of character, frequently delicate andelusive, are brought out by refined turns of expression.--_PhiladelphiaPress._

  As a whole, the book is a delightful and beautiful work of art. The manof whom Claretie writes becomes a living character to us, and we lovehim as we would such a man in real life.--_Cincinnati Tribune._

  He is more than a sketch; he is a Meissonier portrait, painted with allthat accuracy of detail for which Meissonier was famous.--_BostonLiterary World._

  One of the most pathetically humorous books ever written, and it shouldbecome a classic.--_St. Louis Mirror._

  That there is a lovable, generous, elevated, human and humanepicturesqueness to the caricatured strolling player is shown with suchadmirable truth by Claretie, that his "Brichanteau" deserves permanencyamong desirable books.--_Washington Times._

  You love Brichanteau and take him to your heart, for he is an honestfellow, who fights gallantly and merrily with his bad luck.--_New YorkTimes._

  A lively, amusing, intensely Gallic series of studies of stagelife.--_The Outlook._

  A delicious character, this Brichanteau.--_Detroit Free Press._

  The author is so witty and the ridiculous side of his hero is so welldescribed that the book is a treat--restful and refreshing.

  The delicious absurdity of this "optimist failure," "Brichanteau Actor,"reminds one of Don Quixote, while his consummate good nature is almostequal to Sir Roger de Coverley's. The clever French author has made hisactor tell for the most part his own story, and in a natural, easymanner--the perfection of polished French style.--_Chicago Farm, Field,and Fireside._

  * * * * *

  LITTLE, BROWN, AND COMPANY, PUBLISHERS,

  254 WASHINGTON STREET, BOSTON.

  =Alphonse Daudet in English=.

  =New Uniform Edition of the Novels, Romances, and Memoirs of AlphonseDaudet, the greatest French Writer since Victor Hugo=. Newly Translatedby Katharine Prescott Wormeley, Translator of Balzac's Novels; JaneMinot Sedgwick, Translator of George Sand; Charles de Kay, and others.

  =Printed from large clear type, with Frontispieces. Twenty volumes. 12mo.Cloth, gilt top. $1.50 per volume=.

  * * * * *

  _Arrangement of the volumes._

  ALPHONSE DAUDET. By Leon Daudet. To which is added"My Brother and Myself," by Ernest Daudet 1 vol.

  FROMONT AND RISLER 1 vol.

  THE NABOB 2 vols.

  KINGS IN EXILE 1 vol.

  NUMA ROUMESTAN 1 vol.

  THE LITTLE PARISH and ROBERT HELMONT 1 vol.

  LITTLE WHAT'S HIS NAME 1 vol.

  TARTARIN OF TARASCON and TARTARIN ON THE ALPS 1 vol.

  PORT TARASCON and LA BELLE NIVERNAISE 1 vol.

  THIRTY YEARS IN PARIS, etc. 1 vol.

  THE IMMORTAL, etc 1 vol.

  SOUVENIRS OF A MAN OF LETTERS and ARTISTS' WIVES 1 vol.

  THE EVANGELIST and ROSE AND NINETTE 1 vol.

  JACK 2 vols.

  MONDAY TALES 1 vol.

  LETTERS FROM MY MILL, etc 1 vol.

  SAPPHO 1 vol.

  THE HEAD OF THE FAMILY 1 vol.

  * * * * *

  Of the brilliant group of men who have made contemporaneous Frenchliterature, of that coterie toward which the eyes of all the readingworld have been turned with admiration and interest during the last halfa century, Daudet was the greatest. He was the most universal, the mostoriginal, the most human.--_From an Article in The Book Buyer, by L. VanVorst._

  Has, perhaps, transferred bodily into his writings more actual events,related in the newspapers, in the court-house, or in society, than anyother writer of the present age. Of some of his novels one hardly daresay that they are works of fiction; their characters are men and womenof our time; they do in the book almost exactly what they had done inreal life.--_Prof. Adolph Cohn, in The Bookman._

  He is a novelist to his finger-tips. No one has such grace, suchlightness and brilliancy of execution.--_Henry James, in The Century._

  The slightest pages from his pen will preserve the vibration of his soulso long as our tongue exists imperishable. He is the author of twentymasterpieces.--EMILE ZOLA.

  * * * * *

  LITTLE, BROWN, AND COMPANY, PUBLISHERS,

  254 WASHINGTON STREET, BOSTON.

 
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