Page:Tennysoniana (1879).djvu/229

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11

MACGILL (HAMILTON M., D.D.] Songs of the Christian Creed and Life, selected from Eighten Centuries. Crown 8vo, 7s

The representative hymns included in this volume range from the Second Century to the Nineteenth. In each case the original and a translation are given, and where the hymn was originally in English, a Latin rendering is given. A few are Greek and English; all the others have the Latin and English side by side. Among the authors may be enumerated Clement of Alexandria, Hilary, Ambrose, Augustine, Gregory of Nazianzus, Anselm, Thomas A. Kempis, Xavier, Watts. Toplady, Cowper, Heber, Keble, Newman, Bonar, and many others.

MACKENZIE (J.) An Appeal for a New Nation. 8vo,

——— Mainoc Evline, and other Poems. 12mo, 5s

MANNING (CARDINAL) and History: An Answer to the Cardinal's Appeal to the History of the Venerable Bede, by Two PRIESTS. Sewed, 1s 6d

MANUEL (PRINCE DON JUAN, the Spanish Boccaccio) Count Lucanor, or the Fifty Pleasant Stories of Patronio, written by the Prince Don Juan Manuel, A.D. 1335—1347, and now first translated from the Spanish into English, by James York, M.D. 12mo (pp. xvi. 246), 6s

"This curious collection of 'Pleasant Stories,' composed a century before the invention of printing, has already been translated into French and German, and was well worth putting into an English dress. . . . In his brief account of Don Juan Manuel, Dr. James York has told the readers of 'Fifty Pleasant Stories' as much, perhaps, as they will require to know of them. . . . The notes explanatory or illustrative of the stories are, as notes should be, brief, instructive, and to the point."—The Saturday Review.

MARTYN (REV. THOMAS, M.A.) Greek Testament Studies; or, a Revision of the Translation for Private Use. 8vo, 2s 6d

MARY (QUEEN) Two Plays by Dekker, Webster, and by Thos. Heywood, newly edited, with Essay on the Relation of the Old and Modern Dramas in this Chapter of History, by W. J. BLEW. I2mo, 43 6d

MILTON'S PARADISE LOST, in Ten Books, the text exactly reproduced from the First Edition of 1667, with Appendix, containing the additions made in later Issues, and a Monograph on the original publication of the Poem. Crown 4to, 18s

——— LARGE PAPER, £1 4s

The reproduction of Milton's "Paradise Lost" has an interest superior to that of most reprints, as no edition subsequent to the first has preserved the system of emphasis adopted by Milton.