The Tenants of Beldornie. By Rose Mackenzie Kettle. (Weir.)
Novels emanating from the hands of this talented lady are always a pleasure to read. The plot, though not of a very marked nature, is fairly consistent. The descriptive portions are in many instances even brilliantly written, and the characters are full of life and energy. The heroine is not the stereotyped lackadaisical miss which is repeated in tale after tale till it is positively nauseating, but a woman with strongly marked passions, and the scenes in which she figures are forcible and interosting. The male characters are not brought very prominently forward and the hero is sadly disappointing. But, take the story all through, it is brightly written, and the effects are carried out artistically. If not full of romance, few will lay down the book till the end is reached.
The Tenants of Beldornie. By Rose Mackenzie Kettle.
Etiquette: What to Do, and How to Do It, By Ludy Constance Howard.
An Astronomical Dream
Table of Contents
Miracles of healing - Christian Miracles or Healing
History of Russia: Christian Versus Barbarian
History of Japan: Early Christian Martyrs
The Jesus of History
The Assyrian Origin of Devil Worshippers
The Christ Of Dogma
The early history of Constantinople