ADVERTISEMENTS, from the Walter Scott Publishing Company, Limited, London and Felling-on-Tyne.

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ADVERTISEMENTS, from the Walter Scott Publishing Company, Limited, London and Felling-on-Tyne.

THE WORLD’S LITERARY MASTERPIECES.
The Scott Library.
Maroon Cloth, Gilt. Price 1s. net per Volume.
VOLUMES ALREADY ISSUED—

1 Malory’s Romance of King Arthur and the Quest of the Holy Grail. Edited by Ernest Rhys.

2 Thoreau’s Walden. With Introductory Note by Will H. Dircks.

3 Thoreau’s “Week.” With Prefatory Note by Will H. Dircks.

4 Thoreau’s Essays. Edited, With an Introduction, by Will H. Dircks.

5 Confessions of an English Opium-eater, Etc. By Thomas De Quincey. With Introductory Note by William Sharp.

6 Landor’s Imaginary Conversations. Selected, with Introduction, by Havelock Ellis.

7 Plutarch’s Lives (Langhorne). With Introductory Note by B. J. Snell, M.A.

8 Browne’s Religio Medici, etc. With Introduction by J. Addington Symonds.

9 Shelley’s Essays and Letters. Edited, with Introductory Note, by Ernest Rhys.

10 Swift’s Prose Writings. Chosen and Arranged, with Introduction, by Walter Lewin.

11 My Study Windows. By James Russell Lowell. With Introduction by R. Garnett, LL.D.

12 Lowell’s Essays on the English Poets. With a new Introduction by Mr. Lowell.

13 The Biglow Papers. By James Russell Lowell. With a Prefatory Note by Ernest Rhys.

14 Great English Painters. Selected from Cunningham’s Lives. Edited by William Sharp.

15 Byron’s Letters and Journals. Selected, with Introduction, by Mathilde Blind.

16 Leigh Hunt’s Essays. With Introduction and Notes by Arthur Symons.

17 Longfellow’s “Hyperion,” “Kavanagh,” and “The Trouveres.” With Introduction by W. Tirebuck.

18 Great Musical Composers. by G. F. Ferris. Edited, with Introduction, by Mrs. William Sharp.

19 The Meditations of Marcus Aurelius. Edited by Alice Zimmern.

20 The Teaching of Epictetus. Translated from the Greek, with Introduction and Notes, by T. W. Rolleston.

21 Selections from Seneca. With Introduction by Walter Clode.

22 Specimen Days in America. By Walt Whitman. Revised by the Author, with fresh Preface.

23 Democratic Vistas, and Other Papers. By Walt Whitman. (Published by arrangement with the Author.)

24 White’s Natural History of Selborne, with a Preface by Richard Jefferies.

25 Defoe’s Captain Singleton. Edited, with Introduction, by H. Halliday Sparling.

26 Mazzini’s Essays: Literary, Political, and Religious. With Introduction by William Clarke.

27 Prose Writings of Heine. With Introduction by Havelock Ellis.

28 Reynolds’s Discourses. With Introduction by Helen Zimmern.

29 Papers of Steele and Addison. Edited by Walter Lewin.

30 Burns’s Letters. Selected and Arranged, with Introduction, by J. Logie Robertson, M.A.

31 Volsunga Saga. William Morris. With Introduction by H. H. Sparling.

32 Sartor Resartus. By Thomas Carlyle. With Introduction by Ernest Rhys.

33 Select Writings of Emerson with Introduction by Percival Chubb.

34 Autobiography of Lord Herbert. Edited, with an Introduction, by Will H. Dircks.

35 English Prose, From Maundeville to Thackeray. Chosen and Edited by Arthur Galton.

36 The Pillars of Society, and Other Plays. By Henrik Ibsen. Edited, with an Introduction, by Havelock Ellis.

37 Irish Fairy and Folk Tales. Edited and Selected by W. B. Yeats.

38 Essays of Dr. Johnson, with Biographical Introduction and Notes by Stuart J. Reid.

39 Essays of William Hazlitt. Selected and Edited, with Introduction and Notes, by Frank Carr.

40 Landor’s Pentameron, and Other Imaginary Conversations. Edited, with a Preface, by H. Ellis.

41 Poe’s Tales and Essays. Edited, with Introduction, by Ernest Rhys.

42 Vicar of Wakefield. By Oliver Goldsmith. Edited, with Preface, by Ernest Rhys.

43 Political Orations, from Wentworth to Macaulay. Edited, with Introduction, by William Clarke.

44 The Autocrat of the Breakfast-table. By Oliver Wendell Holmes.

45 The Poet at the Breakfast-table. By Oliver Wendell Holmes.

46 The Professor at the Breakfast-table. By Oliver Wendell Holmes.

47 Lord Chesterfield’s Letters to his Son. Selected, with Introduction, by Charles Sayle.

48 Stories from Carleton. Selected, with Introduction, by W. Yeats.

49 Jane Eyre. By Charlotte BrontË. Edited by Clement K. Shorter.

50 Elizabethan England. Edited by Lothrop Withington, with a Preface by Dr. Furnivall.

51 The Prose Writings of Thomas Davis. Edited by T. W. Rolleston.

52 Spence’s Anecdotes. A Selection. Edited, with an Introduction and Notes, by John Underhill.

53 More’s Utopia, and Life of Edward V. Edited, with an Introduction, by Maurice Adams.

54 Sadi’s Gulistan, or Flower Garden. Translated, with an Essay, by James Ross.

55 English Fairy and Folk Tales. Edited by E. Sidney Hartland.

56 Northern Studies. By Edmund Gosse. With a Note by Ernest Rhys.

57 Early Reviews of Great Writers. Edited by E. Stevenson.

58 Aristotle’s Ethics. With George Henry Lewes’s Essay on Aristotle prefixed.

59 Landor’s Pericles and Aspasia. Edited, with an Introduction, by Havelock Ellis.

60 Annals of Tacitus. Thomas Gordon’s Translation. Edited, with an Introduction, by Arthur Galton.

61 Essays of Elia. By Charles Lamb. Edited, with an Introduction, by Ernest Rhys.

62 Balzac’s Shorter Stories. Translated by William Wilson and the Count Stenbock.

63 Comedies of de Musset. Edited, with an Introductory Note, by S. L. Gwynn.

64 Coral Reefs. By Charles Darwin. Edited, with an Introduction, by Dr. J. W. Williams.

65 Sheridan’s Plays. Edited, with an Introduction, by Rudolf Dircks.

66 Our Village. By Miss Mitford. Edited, with an Introduction, by Ernest Rhys.

67 Master Humphrey’s Clock, and other Stories. By Charles Dickens. With Introduction by Frank T. Marzials.

68 Oxford Movement, The. Being a Selection from “Tracts for the Times.” Edited, with an Introduction, by William G. Hutchison.

69 Essays and Papers by Douglas Jerrold. Edited by Walter Jerrold.

70 Vindication of the Rights of Woman. By Mary Wollstonecraft. Introduction by Mrs. E. Robins Pennell.

71 “The Athenian Oracle.” A Selection. Edited by John Underhill, with Prefatory Note by Walter Besant.

72 Essays of Sainte-beuve. Translated and Edited, with an Introduction, by Elizabeth Lee.

73 Selections from Plato. From the translation of Sydenham and Taylor. Edited by T. W. Rolleston.

74 Heine’s Italian Travel Sketches, etc. Translated by Elizabeth A. Sharp. With an Introduction from the French of Theophile Gautier.

75 Schiller’s Maid of Orleans. Translated, with an Introduction, by Major-General Patrick Maxwell.

76 Selections from Sydney Smith. Edited, with an Introduction, by Ernest Rhys.

77 The New Spirit. By Havelock Ellis.

78 The Book of Marvellous Adventures. From the “Morte d’Arthur.” Edited by Ernest Rhys. [This, together with No. 1, forms the complete “Morte d’Arthur.”]

79 Essays and Aphorisms. By Sir Arthur Helps. With an Introduction by E. A. Helps.

80 Essays of Montaigne. Selected, with a Prefatory Note, by Percival Chubb.

81 The Luck of Barry Lyndon. By W. M. Thackeray. Edited by F. T. Marzials.

82 Schiller’s William Tell. Translated, with an Introduction, by Major-General Patrick Maxwell.

83 Carlyle’s Essays on German Literature. With an Introduction by Ernest Rhys.

84 Plays and Dramatic Essays of Charles Lamb. Edited, with an Introduction, by Rudolf Dircks.

85 The Prose of Wordsworth. Selected and Edited, with an Introduction, by Professor William Knight.

86 Essays, Dialogues, and Thoughts of Count Giacomo Leopardi. Translated, with an Introduction and Notes, by Major-General Patrick Maxwell.

87 The Inspector-general. A Russian Comedy. By Nikolai V. Gogol. Translated from the original, with an Introduction and Notes, by Arthur A. Sykes.

88 Essays and Apothegms of Francis, Lord Bacon. Edited, with an Introduction, by John Buchan.

89 Prose of Milton. Selected and Edited, with an Introduction, by Richard Garnett, LL.D.

90 The Republic of Plato. Translated by Thomas Taylor, with an Introduction by Theodore Wratislaw.

91 Passages from Froissart. With an Introduction by Frank T. Marzials.

92 The Prose and Table Talk of Coleridge. Edited by Will H. Dircks.

93 Heine in Art and Letters. Translated by Elizabeth A. Sharp.

94 Selected Essays of de Quincey. With an Introduction by Sir George Douglas, Bart.

95 Vasari’s Lives of Italian Painters. Selected and Prefaced by Havelock Ellis.

96 Laocoon, and other Prose Writings of Lessing. A new Translation by W. B. RÖnnfeldt.

97 Pelleas and Melisanda, and the Sightless. Two Plays by Maurice Maeterlinck. Translated from the French by Laurence Alma Tadema.

98 The Complete Angler of Walton and Cotton. Edited, with an Introduction, by Charles Hill Dick.

99 Lessing’s Nathan the Wise. Translated by Major-General Patrick Maxwell.

100 The Poetry of the Celtic Races, and other Essays of Ernest Renan. Translated by W. G. Hutchison.

101 Criticisms, Reflections, and Maxims of Goethe. Translated, with an Introduction, by W. B. RÖnnfeldt.

102 Essays of Schopenhauer. Translated by Mrs. Rudolf Dircks. With an Introduction.

103 Renan’s Life of Jesus. Translated, with an Introduction, by William G. Hutchison.

104 The Confessions of Saint Augustine. Edited, with an Introduction, by Arthur Symons.

105 The Principles of Success in Literature. By George Henry Lewes. Edited by T. Sharper Knowlson.

106 The Lives of Dr. John Donne, Sir Henry Wotton, Mr. Richard Hooker, Mr. George Herbert, and Dr. Robert Sanderson. By Izaac Walton. Edited, with an Introduction, by Charles Hill Dick.

108 Renan’s Antichrist. Translated, with an Introduction, by W. G. Hutchison.

109 Orations of Cicero. Selected and Edited, with an Introduction, by Fred. W. Norris.

110 Reflections on the Revolution in France. By Edmund Burke. With an Introduction by George Sampson.

111 The Letters of the Younger Pliny. Series I. Translated, with an Introductory Essay, by John B. Firth, B.A., Late Scholar of Queen’s College, Oxford.

112 The Letters of the Younger Pliny. Series II. Translated by John B. Firth, B.A.

113 Selected Thoughts of Blaise Pascal. Translated, with an Introduction and Notes, by Gertrude Burford Rawlings.

114 Scots Essayists: from Stirling to Stevenson, Edited, with an Introduction, by Oliphant Smeaton.

115 On Liberty. By John Stuart Mill. With an Introduction by W. L. Courtney.

116 The Discourse on Method and Metaphysical Meditations of RenÉ Descartes. Translated, with Introduction, by Gertrude B. Rawlings.

117 KÂlidÂsa’s SakuntalÂ, Etc. Edited, With An Introduction, by T. Holme.

118 Newman’s University Sketches. Edited, with Introduction, by George Sampson.

119 Newman’s Select Essays. Edited, with an Introduction, by George Sampson.

120 Renan’s Marcus Aurelius. Translated, with an Introduction, by William G. Hutchison.

121 Froude’s Nemesis of Faith. With an Introduction by William G. Hutchison.

122 What is Art? By Leo Tolstoy. Translated from the Original Russian MS., with Introduction, by Alymer Maude.

123 Hume’s Political Essays. Edited, with an Introduction, by W. B. Robertson.

OTHER VOLUMES IN PREPARATION.

“It is one of those delightful medleys of anecdote of all times, seasons, and persons, in every page of which there is a new specimen of humour, strange adventure, and quaint saying.”—T. P. O’Connor in T. P.’s Weekly.

“A remarkable collection of good stories which must have taken years of perseverance to get together.”—Morning Leader.

“A book which should prove acceptable to two large sections of the public—those who are interested in musicians and those who have an adequate sense of the comic.”—Globe.

Landseer, Sir Edwin. By the Editor.

“This little volume may rank as the most complete account of Landseer that the world is likely to possess.”—Times.

Reynolds, Sir Joshua. By Elsa d’Esterre-Keeling.

“To the series entitled ‘The Makers of British Art’ Miss Elsa d’Esterre-Keeling contributes an admirable little volume on Sir Joshua Reynolds. Miss Keeling’s style is sprightly and epigrammatic, and her judgments are well considered.”—Daily Telegraph.

Turner, J. M. W. By Robert Chignell, Author of “The Life and Paintings of Vicat Cole, R.A.”

Romney, George. By Sir Herbert Maxwell, Bart., F.R.S., M.P.

“Likely to remain the best account of the painter’s life.”—AthenÆum.

Wilkie, Sir David. By Professor Bayne.

Constable, John. By the Right Hon. Lord Windsor.

Raeburn, Sir Henry. By Edward Pinnington.

Gainsborough, Thomas. By A. E. Fletcher.

Hogarth, William. By Prof. G. Baldwin Brown.

Moore, Henry. By Frank J. Maclean.

IN PREPARATION.
MILLAIS—LEIGHTON—MORLAND.

Volume I. contains—

  • Where Love is, There God is Also.
  • The Godson.

Volume II. contains—

  • What Men Live by.
  • What Shall it Profit a Man?

Volume III. contains—

  • The Two Pilgrims.
  • If You Neglect the Fire, You Don’t Put it Out.

Volume IV. contains—

  • Master and Man.

Volume V. contains—

  • Tolstoy’s Parables.


TRANSCRIBER’S NOTE

Original spelling and grammar have been generally retained, with some exceptions noted below.

Original printed page numbers are shown like {p-xiv} or {p14}.

Footnotes have been relabeled 1–117, converted to endnotes, and moved to the ends of the relevant chapters.

I produced the cover image and hereby assign it to the public domain.

  • Page xi. The phrase Weath of Nations was changed to Wealth of Nations.
  • Page xiii. The phrase ‘I am much pleased with was changed to “I am much pleased with.
  • Page xxiii. The phrase int his room while was changed to into his room while.
  • Page 144. The phrases Xerxes’s army and Xerxes’ army are both retained.
  • Page 157n. The phrase much rom their business was changed to much from their business.
  • Pages 162–163. The phrases “that in the year (p. 162) and north exposition.” (p. 163) contain unbalanced quotation marks in the original. Two new double quotation marks have been inserted to balance these, at “‘Hybernum fracta and “He speaks of that river’s.
  • Page 254. The phrase SAMILLUS, MARCUS FURIUS was changed to CAMILLUS, MARCUS FURIUS.
  • Page 258. This (originally unnumbered) page begins sixteen pages of ad­ver­tise­ments from The Walter Scott Pub­lish­ing Co. A new head­ing AD­VER­TISE­MENTS was in­serted. This new head­ing con­tains also the footer text that was originally printed on each page of the ads section. The ads were printed in several different styles with considerable variation. The styling has been herein greatly simplified. Several large curly brackets } that graphically indicate combination of information on two or more lines of text have been eliminated, by restructuring the text. Ditto marks Do. were also removed.


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