WYMPS, AND OTHER FAIRY TALES. Illustratedby Mrs. Percy Dearmer.
Miss Sharp has wit, wisdom, and imagination for her initialequipment, but she possesses also what is rarer far—the accent andthe point of view. For instance, she would never introduce a bicycleinto this old-fashioned country. She knows perfectly well that ifthere should be any occasion for hurry—which is rarely the casein Fairyland—naturally you take a rocking-horse.—The Academy.
ALL THE WAY TO FAIRYLAND. Illustrated byMrs. Percy Dearmer.
Far and away the best fairy tales are the old traditional stories ofCinderella; Jack and the Beanstalk, and others. To these we addthe stories of Hans Andersen and Grimm; and now room must bemade in that select company for the tales of Evelyn Sharp.—TheSt. James' Gazette.
ALSO
AT THE RELTON ARMS. A novel. THE MAKING OF A PRIG. A novel. THE MAKING OF A SCHOOL GIRL.
JOHN LANE, London and New York.
TheOther Side of the Sun
Fairy Stories By EVELYN SHARP
Illustrated By NELLIE SYRETT
JOHN LANE THE BODLEY HEAD London and New York 1900
Copyright, 1899, by JOHN LANE
University Press
John Wilson and Son, Cambridge, U. S. A.
TO ALL THE CHILDREN I KNOW ON THIS SIDE OF THE SUN