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PERCIVAL, JAMES G., May, i. 272; | SCHOOLCRAFT,

The Coral Grove, iii. 129; To Seneca
Lake, iii. 313.

PERRY, NORA, After the Ball, iii. 253.
PETERSON, HENRY, Ode for Decoration-
Day, iv. 484.

PHELPS, ELIZABETH STUART, Deacon
Quirk's Opinions, ii. 503.
PIATT, JOHN J., Higher Tenants, iv.

58.

PIERPONT, JOHN, My Child, i. 152.
PIKE, ALBERT, To the Mocking-Bird,
iii. 125.

PINKNEY, EDWARD COATE, A Health,
i. 117.

POE, EDGAR ALLAN, The Purloined
Letter, i. 85; Annabel Lee, i. 119;
The Haunted Palace, ii. 435.
PORTER, NOAH, Books and Reading, i.
394.

PRENTICE, GEORGE D., The Closing
Year, i. 282.

PRESCOTT, WILLIAM HICKLING, The
Monarch of Tezcuco, i. 164; The
Palaces and Temples of the Incas,
iv. 478.

PRESTON, HARRIET W., The Songs of
the Troubadours, iv. 224.
PRESTON, MARGARET JUNKIN, The
Lady Riberta's Harvest, iii. 273.

R.

RAMSAY, DAVID, Washington Resigns
his Commission, iii. 137.
RANDOLPH, JOHN, The Revision of the
Constitution, iv. 103.

READ, THOMAS BUCHANAN, Drifting,
iii. 92; Sheridan's Ride, iv. 128.
RIDEING, WILLIAM H., Boating down
the Grand Cañon, iii. 422.
ROBERTS, SARAH, The Voice of the
Grass, iii. 128.

ROLLINS, ELLEN H., Winter Pleasures,
ii. 420.

RUSH, BENJAMIN, The Influence of
Educated Women, iii. 95; On the
Use of Tobacco, iii. 98.

S.

HENRY ROWE, The

White Stone Canoe, i. 458.
SEDGWICK, CATHERINE MARIA, The
Sabbath in New England, iv. 100.
SEWARD, WILLIAM HENRY, The Con-
dition of China, iv. 393.
SIGOURNEY, LYDIA HUNTLEY, The Con-
necticut River, iii. 435.
SIMMS, WILLIAM GILMORE, The Maiden
and the Rattlesnake, ii. 163.
SMITH, SAMUEL F., America, iv. 125.
SPARKS, JARED, The American Revo-
lution, ii. 302.

SPOFFORD, HARRIET PRESCOTT, Inside
Plum Island, iii. 440.

SPRAGUE, CHARLES, Shakespeare Ode,
iii. 167; The Family Meeting, iv.
417.

STANLEY, HENRY M., Life and Scenery
on the Congo, ii. 244.
STEDMAN, EDMUND CLARENCE, Be-
trothed Anew, ii. 219; Restricted
Development of Poetry in America,
iii. 183.

STILLÉ, CHARLES J., Labor in the Mid-
dle Ages, iv. 329.

STODDARD, CHARLES WARREN, A South-
Sea Idyl, iii. 459.
STODDARD, RICHARD HENRY, Autumn,
i. 278; The Flight of Youth, ii. 431;
Birds and Thoughts, iii. 127; The
Sky, iii. 313.
STORY, JOSEPH, The Indians, i. 376;
The Importance of Classical Learn-
ing, i. 379; Free Schools, i. 380.
STORY, WILLIAM W., The Violet, i.
434.

STOWE, HARRIET BEECHER, Sam Law-

son, the Village Do-Nothing, ii. 74.
STRAHAN, EDWARD, The Crest of the
Alleghanies, iv. 70.

STREET, ALFRED B., A Forest Nook,
iii. 308.

SUMNER, CHARLES, Oration on La
Fayette, iii. 43; The Horrors of
War, iv. 398.

T.

SANDERSON, JOHN, The Parisian " Pen- TAYLOR, BAYARD, Love-Song of the
sion," iv. 19.

SAVAGE, MINOT J., The Debt of Re-

ligion to Science, iv. 361.

Bedouins, i. 115; How I came to
Buy a Farm, i. 228; Pedestrianism
in Europe, iii. 69.

SAXE, JOHN GODFREY, The Proud Miss TERHUNE, MRS. MARY VIRGINIA, Care

MacBride, iv. 388.

of the Body, ii. 467.

i. 210.

WEEKS, ROBERT KELLY, A Day, iii.

TERRY [COOKE], ROSE, Summer, i. 277; | WEBSTER, DANIEL, Reply to Hayne,
The Trailing Arbutus, i. 433; Squire
Paine's Conversion, iii. 7.
THOMPSON. DANIEL PIERCE, A New
England Country Court, iv. 401.
THOREAU, HENRY DAVID, Ascending
Ktaadn, ii. 39.

TICKNOR, GEORGE, Don Quixote, ii. 339.

TINCKER, MARY AGNES, The Terror of the Earthquake, iii. 489. TOURGÉE, ALBION W., A Terrible Ride, iii. 100.

TREAT, MARY, Our Familiar Birds, iii. 339.

TROWBRIDGE, JOHN TOWNSEND, Nancy Blynn's Lovers, ii. 18; The Vagabonds, iii. 480. TUCKERMAN, HENRY T., Author-Worship, ii. 142.

V.

VARIOUS, Love's Young Dream, i. 115; The Revolving Seasons, i. 271; A Garland of Flower-Poems, i. 429; Sunshine and Hope, ii. 217; Shadow and Grief, ii. 431; Sonnets, iii. 32; Life in Nature, iii. 123; Aspects of Nature, iii. 308; The Rivulet, the River, and the Ocean, iii. 433; Poems of Thought and Sympathy, iv. 49; Patriotic Songs, iv. 119; Poems of Humor, iv. 314; Home Life and Sentiment, iv. 413. VERPLANCK, GULIAN C., The Lessons of American History, iv. 384.

W. WALKER, MRS. E. A., The Total Depravity of Inanimate Things, iv. 254.

WALLACE, LEWIS, An Ancient ChariotRace, i. 405.

WALLACE, SUSAN E., The Light of the Harem, ii. 361.

WARE, WILLIAM, The Journey to Palinyra, i. 67.

WARNER, CHARLES DUDLEY, The
Pleasures of Gardening, i. 198.
WARNER, SUSAN, In the Autumn
Woodlands, iv. 88.
WASHINGTON, GEORGE, Farewell Ad-
dress, ii. 416.

310.

WEEMS, MASON L., Keimer's Attempt to found a New Religion, iii. 237. WHIPPLE, EDWIN PERCY, The Energy of Youth, i. 174. WHITCHER, MRS. FRANCES M., Hezekiah Bedott, i. 57.

WHITE, RICHARD GRANT, Conditions of Language-Variation, i. 493. WHITMAN, WALT, Song of the Redwood-Tree, ii. 489.

WHITNEY, MRS. ADELINE D. T., Boston Transcendentalism, i. 203; A Violet, i. 435; Released, iv. 52. WHITNEY, WILLIAM D., The Origin of Language, ii. 272.

WHITTIER, JOHN GREENLEAF, A Warning, i. 120; Prelude to "Among the Hills," ii. 181; The Eternal Goodness, iii. 500.

WILCOX, ELLA WHEELER, The Disappointed, iv. 61.

WILLIAMS, ROGER, Dialogue between Truth and Peace, i. 341. WILLIS, NATHANIEL PARKER, Absalom, iv. 96; Unwritten Music, iv. 284.

WILSON, ALEXANDER, The Bluebird,

ii. 201. WILSON, JAMES GRANT, A Visit to Sunnyside, iii. 283. WINCHELL, ALEXANDER, Obliterated Continents, iii. 55.

WINTHROP, THEODORE, The Ride of the Avengers, i. 143. WIRT, WILLIAM, The Blind Preacher, i. 102.

WISE, JOHN, Twelve Hundred Miles through the Air, iv. 202. WOODWORTH, SAMUEL, The Old Oaken Bucket, iv. 414.

WOOLSEY, THEODORE D., Our Debt to our Ancestors, ii. 331. WOOLSON, ABBA G., A Sojourn in Arcady, ii. 207. WOOLSON, CONSTANCE Kentucky Belle, i. 73.

FENIMORE,

WRIGHT, WILLIAM B., The Brook, iii. 317.

Y.

WAYLAND, FRANCIS, The Bible and YOUNG, CHARLES A., The Heat and

the Iliad, iii. 484.

Light of the Sun, ii. 375.

Robert Burns.

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THE COLONEL'S DAUGHTER;

OR,

WINNING HIS SPURS.

BY CAPTAIN CHARLES KING.
12mo. Extra Cloth. $1.25.

"The sketches of life in a cavalry command on the frontier are exceedingly vivid and interesting; and the element of adventure is furnished in the graphic and spirited accounts of affairs with the hostile Apaches. Captain King is to be thanked for an entertaining contribution to the slender stock of American military novels-a contribution so good that we hope that he will give us another." -N. Y. Tribune.

"The fertility of this field of garrison and reservation life has already at. tracted the attention of several writers. We took up the work of Captain King with the impression that it might be like some of these, an ephemeral production; we found it instead a charming work, worthy of achieving a permanent place in titerature. We cordially congratulate Captain King on his accomplished success, for such unquestionably it is."-Army and Navy Journal, N. Y.

"There have been few American novels published of late years so thoroughly readable as 'The Colonel's Daughter,' which, if it be Captain King's first essay in fiction, is assuredly a most encouraging production."-Literary World.

"The volume is a remarkable work of fiction, and will be found entertaining and well worthy a careful reading."-Chicago Tribune.

"Not for many a season has there appeared before the public a novel so thoroughly captivating as The Colonel's Daughter' Its fresh flavor cannot fail to please the veriest ennuyê, while its charming style would disarm the most fastidious critic. With that delicacy of touch peculiar to his workmanship, he draws now upon pathos, now upon humor, but never strains either quality to its utmost capacity, which distinctly proves that Captain King is a writer of signal ability, whose novel of The Colonel's Daughter' we hope is but the prelude to many others."-Milwaukee Sentinel.

"A departure into a new field in novel writing ought always to be welcomed. The Colonel's Daughter' is, strictly speaking, the first American military novel. It is a good one, and Captain King ought to follow up the complete success he has made with other stories of army life on the American frontier. The style of the author is unaffected, pure in tone, and elevating in moral effect."-Wisconsin State Journal.

Captain King has in this novel prepared for us a clear and interesting story of army incidents in the West. He is au fait in the art which made Sir Walter Scott a companion for old and young-the art which brings to the mind of the reader that sentient power which places us directly into communion with the imaginary characters filling their parts in a book. The military incidents are interwoven into the inspiring love episode that to the pages of this work add animation."-Times-Democrat, New Orleans.

"The Colonel's Daughter; or, Winning His Spurs,' a story of military life at an Arizona post, written by Captain Charles King, U.S.A., and published by J. B. Lippincott & Co., Philadelphia, may rightfully claim to be a good novel. Its characters are strong and clear-cut; its plot original and well sustained, and the pictures of military life on the frontier, of Apache character, and of the physical features of Arizona Territory are realistic and fascinating."-San Francisco Bulletin.

"The outcome of the novel is just what every reader would wish. It is a splendid story, full of life and enjoyment, and will doubtless prove a great favorite."-lowa State Register, Des Moines.

For Sale by all Booksellers.

Published by J. B. LIPPINCOTT COMPANY, Philadelphia, Pa

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