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AUSTRALIAN STORIES


WHILE THE BILLY BOILS.

By Henry Lawson. With eight illustrations by F. P. Mahony. Thirty-first thousand. Crown 8vo., cloth gilt, 3s. 6d. (postage 2d.)

For cheaper edition see Commonwealth Series, page 12.

The Academy: "A book of honest, direct, sympathetic, humorous writing about Australia from within is worth a library of travellers' tales…The result is a real book―a book in a hundred. His language is terse, supple, and richly idiomatic. He can tell a yarn with the best."


ON THE TRACK AND OVER THE SLIPRAILS.

By Henry Lawson. Nineteenth thousand. Crown 8vo., cloth gilt, 3s. 6d. (postage 2d.)

For cheaper edition see Commonwealth Series, page 12.

Daily Chronicle: "Will well sustain the reputation its author has already won as the best writer of Australian short stories and sketches the literary world knows."

Pall Mall Gazette: "The volume now received will do much to enhance the author's reputation. There is all the quiet irresistible humour of Dickens in the description of 'The Darling River,' and the creator of 'Truthful James' never did anything better in the way of character sketches than Steelman and Mitchell."


CHILDREN OF THE BUSH.

By Henry Lawson. Ninth thousand. Crown 8vo., cloth gilt, 3s. 6d. (postage 2d.)

Also in two parts, entitled "Send Round the Hat" and "The Romance of the Swag." See page 12.

Daily Telegraph: "These stories are for the most part episodes which appear to have been taken direct from life.…and Mr. Lawson contrives to make them wonderfully vivid…Mr. Lawson's new stories are as good as his old ones, and higher praise they could not get."

The Bulletin: "These stories are the real Australia, written by the foremost living Australian author…Lawson's genius remains as vivid and human as when he first boiled his literary billy."

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