have in each its subject preserved for us in miniature perfection, and in the permanent amber of an unapproachable style. The charm of this little book cannot be written down; to do it justice would be to write another such book, and who to-day is to write it? How illuminating it would be to have such a writer turning his lantern on the literary productions of our day, for example, on The Sacred Fount! These two "discoveries" are, I admit, balancing the egg considerably after Columbus; but I will do worse and affirm that during this same beneficent cold I have discovered also two excellent plays, Hamlet and Much Ado About Nothing, besides The Gentle Reader and the Essays of Douglas Jerrold. I will not claim for all an equal efficacy, but the fact that the fair Beatrice is "stuffed and cannot smell" proves that one touch of influenza makes the whole world kin. I take the thanks of my fellow sufferers for granted. I congratulate them on their opportunity. "The writer of these lines," says Henry James in the essay on Madame de Sabran, “has read the book with extreme pleasure, and he cannot resist the temptation to prolong his pleasure and share it with such readers as have a taste for delicate things." or my I have shared my pleasure, medicine, and I hope I shall be rewarded by hearing of the discoveries of others in this same direction, or, at least, an explanation as to why some books are a sovereign remedy, while others, like The Making of an American, Robert Browning's poems, the books of Elinor Glyn, the magazines with their interesting articles on radium (it is needless to say that I cite at random) are, however valuable they may be at other times, distinctly not to be recommended as books for a cold. ERNEST THOMPSON SETON HIS NEW BOOK Monarch, the Big Bear of Tallac AN EXQUISITE HOLIDAY BOOK Illustrated with 8 full page drawings by the author and many line drawings on the page margins. Printed in two colors $1.25 net Postage 12 cents HARLES SCRIBNERS SONS NY By HENRY SETON MERRIMAN The Athenaeum, (London) says: "Looking back on his work one would say that THE LAST HOPE is one of his very best novels. It is not often given to a novelist to lay down his pen while at his best." "ITS INTEREST IS UNFLAGGING AND ITS BRILLIANCY UNDENIABLE." RHYMES and JINGLES UNIFORM CHILDREN'S CLASSICS "The Book of Joyous Children," by JAMES WHITCOMB RILEY. "A Child's Garden of Verses," by ROBERT LOUIS STEVENSON. "Lullaby Land,"by EUGENE FIELD. $1.25 net. (Postage 10 cents) THE LAST HENRY SETON -London Daily Telegraph. 12mo. $1.50 THE BEST POSSIBLE CHRISTMAS GIFT FOR WATHORNADAY A BOY "A Great Natural History."-N.Y. Sun. "The crowning achievement of a man who has spent his life in the study of animals. It will remain, we anticipate, for scores of years as the abiding authority on the natural history of this country."-Outdoor Life. 343 Illustrations. $3.50 net. (Expressage 48 cts. extra). NORIBNERS SONS NY |