Page:The Granite Monthly Volume 9.djvu/144

128 Octavio married a young and charming English girl, who adores him. He is perfection, his wife thinks; but Ellen, with that instinct which nothing can escape, feels that there is something wrong with her husband. But what? Her most careful watching reveals nothing, Octavio does not visit any actress; in society he takes hardly any notice of women; he even replied very coolly to the marked advances of a Russian princess, celebrated for beauty and coquetry. His secret drawer, opened during his absence, revealed no proof of infidelity to the suspicious Ellen. But how could she be jealous of Arria Marcella, daughter of Arrius Diomedes?

Edited by Rev. Samuel Longfellow. 2 vols., 12mo. With five new steel-engraved Portraits, and many Wood - Engravings and fac-similes. In cloth, $6.00. In half-calf, with marbled edges, $11.00. In half-morocco, with gilt top and rough edges, $11.00.

"It has not been generally known that Mr. Longfellow added to his poetic gifts those of an artist. In this biography will be found letters and diaries written by the poet while abroad, and charmingly illustrated by him with dainty pen-and-ink drawings." — Chicago Tribune.

"A vast amount of Mr. Longfellow's correspondence, which is of far more interest than is usual, even among men of letters, on account of its fine and sympathetic literary quality. The poet's beautiful spirit shines through every private letter that he wrote. There will be no Carlyle revelations." — Boston Traveller.

"Remarkably rich in material relating to the daily life of the poet. Of course, a wealth of resource has been at the command of the biographer; and the volume will include, in addition to the correspondence, several portraits, taken at different periods of Longfellow's life, from early youth to advanced age." — New York Evening Post.

The biography of the foremost American poet, written by his brother, is probably the most important work of the kind brought out in the United States for many years. It is rich in domestic, personal, and family interest, anecdotes, reminiscences, and other thoroughly charming memorabilia.

The first volumes of "," or "Gleanings from the Old Newspapers, chiefly of Boston and Salem," with brief Comments by Henry M. Brooks of Salem, Mass. 16mo. Cloth. Price 50 cents per vol.

Vol. I. "Curiosities of the Old Lottery."

Vol. II. "Days of the Spinning-Wheel in New England."

Vol. III. "New-England Sunday."

Should there be sufficient encouragement, the Series will be continued by these: —

"Quaint and Curious Advertisements;" "Literary Curiosities;" "Some Strange and Curious Punishments;" "New-England Music in the latter part of the 18th, and in the beginning of the 19th Century;" "Travel in Old Times, with Some Account of Stages, Taverns, etc.;" "Curiosities of Politics among the Old Federalists and Republicans," etc.