University of Virginia Library

THE
MISER'S HEIR;
OR, THE
THE YOUNG MILLIONAIRE.

BY

P. HAMILTON MYERS

, AUTHOR OF “BELL BRANDON,” “ELLEN WELLES; OR, THE SIEGE OF FORT STANWIX,” “THE EMIGRANT SQUIRE,” ETC. “The scene of the present story is laid in the city of New York, ere that metropolis had encircled within her broad arms the extent of territory which now marks her limits. Fortunes were made for men in those days while they were sleeping, in the rapid increase of the value of real estate; and the author makes one of those vast accumulations the groundwork of a plot of no common order. The time runs through some fifteen or sixteen years; embracing the boyhood and early manhood of the hero. He has vividly portrayed the baneful effects of avarice—the deep-dyed villany, the bartering of soul necessary to gratify that passion by dishonest means—the one engrossing idea leading the miser, ignus-fatuus like, step by step, till at last he sees that for which he has toiled and sinned, at the very moment of fancied possession, fade like a vision from his grasp. He has depieted unrewarded toil struggling for an honest subsistence; but while he has drawn a contrast between worthy poverty, and the unblessed wealth of him who accumulates it for itself alone; he has not drawn from the purlieus of over-grown cities those degrading pictures so frequently found in modern literature, which shock the sensibilities, while they may not fail to interest us. He has shown, what should be the prime object of all story-writers, whose works reach directly the million, the complete triumph of virtue over duplicity and crime—the utter fallacy of lasting success as the result of dishonest practices. The hero is a creation—in which the author has shown himself no mere painter, but an artist. In all our reading of fiction, or in every-day life, we do not remember to have seen his like before; the meek, enduring youth; the forbearing, long-suffering, generous man—in short, the practical Christian. The style of the author is graceful and highly polished, with no marked attempts at fine writing, but equal throughout; and the incidents stirring and interesting—that of the death of the hero intensely thrilling.” —Phila. Dollar Newspaper.
Philadelphia:
T. B. PETERSON, No. 102 CHESTNUT STREET,