20 BELLES LETTRES.
Palgrave. — ^Works by Francis Tuknsr Faxgrayb, M.A., late Fellow of Exeter College, Oxford \—
THE FIVE DAYS' ENTERTAINMENTS AT WENTWORTH GRANGE. A Book for Children. With lUnstrations by Arthur HuGHXS, and EngniYed Title-page by Jeens. Small 4to. cloth extra. 6f.
" If ytm wemi a really good hook Jor both sexes and all ages^ huy this, as handsome a volume of tales as you* II find in all the market, " — ^ATHRNiEUM. * ^Exquisite both inform and substanee. — Guardian.
LYRICAL POEMS. Extra fcap. 8vo. 6j.
- ^A volume of pure quiet verse^ sparkling wilh tender mdodies^ and
alive with thoughts of genuine poetry, . . . Turn where we will throughout the volume^ we find traces of beauty, tenderness^ and truth ; true poets work, touched '"and refined by the master-hand of a real artist, who shams his genius even in tr^les" — Standard.
ORIGINAL HYMNS. Third Edition, enlarged, i8mo. is. 6d,
- ^ So choice, so perfect, and so refined, so tetuier in feeling, and so
scholarly in expression, thai we look with special interest to every^ thing that he gives us/* — ^Ltterary Churchman.
GOLDEN TREASURY OF THE BEST SONGS AND LYRICS. Edited by F. T. Palgrats. i8mo. 4;. 6d,
SHAKESPEARE'S SONNETS AND SONGS. Edited by F. T.
Palgrats. Gem Edition. With Vignette Title by Jeens. y.6d,
f* For minute eiigunce no volume could possibly excel the 'Gem
Editiam: "—SCOTSMAN.
THE CHILDREN'S TREASURY OF LYRICAL POETRY.
Selected and arranged with Notes by F. T. Palgrave. i8mo.
2J. dd, and in Two Parts, ix. each.
HERRICK : SELECTIONS FROM THE LYRICAL POEMS. With Notes. i8mo. 41. 6^.
Pater. — the renaissance. Studies in Art and Poetry. By Walter Pater, Fellow of Brasenose Collie, Oxford. Second Edition, Revised, with Vignette, engraved by C. H. Jeens. Crown 8vo. lOf. 6</.
- Mr, Pater^s Studies in the history of the Renaissance, constitute
the most remarkable example of this younger movement towards a &esh and inner criticism, and they are in themsdves a singular . and tttiereOmg addition to literature. The subjects are of the very kind in which we need instruction and guidance, and there is a moral in the very choice of them. From the point of view of fifrm and literary comlfosition they are striking in the highest d^ree. They introduce to English readers a new and distinguished master in the great ana difficult art of writing prose Their style is marked by a flavour at once full and exqtasiie, by a quality that mixes richness with deUccuy and a firm coherency with infmite subtlety" — ^FORTNIGHTLY REVIEW.