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36 aLOBE LIBRARY.


MAGMILLAN'S GLOBE LIBRARY.

BtoHiifully printed on toned p€^er and hound in cloth extra, gilt edgeSy price 4f . 6</. each ; in cloth plain, 3J. dd. Also kept in a variety oj ca^and morocco bindings at moderate prices.

BboKS, Wordsworth says, are

"the spirit breathed By dead men to their kind ; "

and the aim of the publishers of the Globe Library has been to make it possible for the universal kin of English- speaking men to hold commimion with the loftiest " spirits of the mighty dead j " to put within the reach of all classes complete and accurate editions, carefully and clearly printed upon the best paper, in a convenient form, at a moderate price, of the works of the master-minds of English Literature, and occasionally of foreign literature in an attractive English dress.

The Editors, by their scholarship and special study of their authors, are competent to afford every assistance to readers of all kinds : this assistance is rendered by original biographies, glossaries of unusual or obsolete words, and critical and explanatory notes.

The publishers hope, therefore, that these Globe Editions may prove worthy of acceptance by all classes wherever the English Language is spoken, and by their universal circula- tion justify their distinctive epithet ; while at the same time they spread and nourish a common sympathy with nature's most "finely touched" spirits, and thus help a little to

    • make the whole world kin."

The Saturday Review says : " The Globe Editions are admirable for their scholarly editings tJieir typographical excellence, their com- pendious form, and their cheapness." The British QUARTERLY Review says: *^ In compendiousness, elegance, and scholarliness, the Globe Editions of Messrs. Macmillan surpass any popular series of our classics hitherto given to the public. As near an approach to miniature perfection as has ever been madej**

Shakespeare's Complete Works. Edited by W. G.

Clark, M. A., and W. Aldis Wright, M. A., of Trinity College,