“The newe increase of sea wages to Maisters, Botswaynes, Gunners, Pursers, and Cookes, as also shall serue her matie.at the seas in any of thes her highnes shipps hereafter, as also what rates have bene & yet are payde, wcat this Present are servinge in any of these her Maties.shipes now in the narrow seas or ells wheare abroad, as followeth:The Elizabet Jonas, Triumphe, Whit Beare, Merhonour, Arke Raughley, Victory; Mathewe and Andrewe, 2 Spanish shipps. In these viij shippes, yf any of her mgties vj mrsshalbe appointed to serue, then to haue—New ratesper mensem.Olde ratesper mensem.The Boteson400326The Gonner11260150The purser168100The Cooke1000176Repulse, Warspight, Garland, Defiance, Mary Roase, Lyon, Bonauentur, Hope, Vauntgard, Raynebowe, Nonperelia. Yf any of these xj shipps, then to have, etc.····Dreadnought, Swifsuer, Antelope, Swallowe, Foresight, Aduentur. Yf any, etc.····Ayde, Answere, Quittance, Crane, Aduauntage, Teiger. Yf any, etc.····Tremontaine, Scoute, Achates, The Gally Mercury. Yf any, etc.····Charles, Aduice, Moone, Frigett, Spye, Signet, Sonne, George hoye, Primrose.····Memorand: that these aduanced Rates doe onlie concerne the Queens matiesvj maisters, and the Botesons, Gunners, Pursers, & Cooks, that daylie serue her Matiein the shipps in ordinarie in Harborow, and noe others: wchis so increased to them especiallie to containe them in true seruice and due obedience to her matie.”
“The newe increase of sea wages to Maisters, Botswaynes, Gunners, Pursers, and Cookes, as also shall serue her matie.at the seas in any of thes her highnes shipps hereafter, as also what rates have bene & yet are payde, wcat this Present are servinge in any of these her Maties.shipes now in the narrow seas or ells wheare abroad, as followeth:
The Elizabet Jonas, Triumphe, Whit Beare, Merhonour, Arke Raughley, Victory; Mathewe and Andrewe, 2 Spanish shipps. In these viij shippes, yf any of her mgties vj mrsshalbe appointed to serue, then to haue—
Repulse, Warspight, Garland, Defiance, Mary Roase, Lyon, Bonauentur, Hope, Vauntgard, Raynebowe, Nonperelia. Yf any of these xj shipps, then to have, etc.
····
Dreadnought, Swifsuer, Antelope, Swallowe, Foresight, Aduentur. Yf any, etc.
····
Ayde, Answere, Quittance, Crane, Aduauntage, Teiger. Yf any, etc.
····
Tremontaine, Scoute, Achates, The Gally Mercury. Yf any, etc.
····
Charles, Aduice, Moone, Frigett, Spye, Signet, Sonne, George hoye, Primrose.
····
Memorand: that these aduanced Rates doe onlie concerne the Queens matiesvj maisters, and the Botesons, Gunners, Pursers, & Cooks, that daylie serue her Matiein the shipps in ordinarie in Harborow, and noe others: wchis so increased to them especiallie to containe them in true seruice and due obedience to her matie.”
This will be seen to differ somewhat from Harrison’s list of the previous year.—W.
[219]See Hakluyt’s record of the daring and endurance of our Elizabethan seamen.—F.
[220]“Confession by torment is esteemed for nothing, for if hee confesse at the iudgement, the tryall of the 12 goeth not vpon him; if hee deny the fact: that which he said before, hindreth him not. The nature of English-men is to neglect death, to abide no torment: and therefore hee will confesse rather to haue done anything, yea to haue killed his owne father, than to suffer torment: for death, our nation doth not so much esteeme as a meere torment. In no place shall you see malefactors goe more constantly, more assuredly, and with lesse lamentation to their death than in England.... The nature of our nation is free, stout, haulty, prodigall of life and blood; but contumely, beating, servitude, and seruile torment, and punishment; it will not abide. So in this nature & fashion, our ancient Princes and legislatoors haue nourished them, as to make them stout-hearted, couragious, and souldiers, not villaines and slaues; and that is the scope almost of all our Policie.”—Sir Thomas Smith’sCommonwealth of England, ed. 1621, p. 97, Book II., chap. 27 (not 25).—F.
[221]But see how felons who won’t confess are pressed to death by heavy weights.—F.
[222]A.D.1586.Hol.iii. 1434, col. 2. “On the one and twentith daie of Ianuarie, two Seminarie preests (before arreigned and condemned) were drawne to Tiburne, and therehanged, bowelled, and quartered. Also on the same daie a wench wasburntin Smithfield, forpoisoningof hir aunt and mistresse, and also attempting to haue doon the like to hir vncle.”——A.D.1577. “The thirtith daie of Nouember, Cutbert Maine wasdrawne, hanged, and quarteredat Lanceston in Cornewall for preferring Romane power ... 1577-8. The third daie of Februarie, John Nelson, for denieng the queenes supremasie, and such other traitorous words against hir maiestie, was drawne from Newgate to Tiburne, and therehanged, bowelled, and quartered. And on the seuenth of the same moneth of Februarie, Thomas Sherewin was likewise drawne from the tower of London to Tiburne, and therehanged, bowelled, and quarteredfor the like offense.”—Holinshediii. 1271, col. 1, l. 15, l. 47—F.
[223]A.D.1540. “The eight and twentith of Julie (as you have heard before), the Lord Cromwell was beheaded, and likewise with him the Lord Hungerford of Heitesburie, who at the houre of his death seemed vnquiet, as manie iudged him rather in a frensie than otherwise: he suffered for buggerie.”—Holinshed, iii. 952, col. 2, l. 21. See the rest of the column for other executions for heresy, for affirming Henry VIII.’s marriage with his first queen, Katherine, to be good, for treason, and for robbing a lady.—F.
[224]A.D.1580, ann. Elizabeth 23. “The eight and twentith daie of Nouember, were arreigned in the King’s [Queen’s] Bench, William Randoll forconiuring to know where treasure was hid in the earth, and goods felloniouslie taken, were become: Thomas Elks, Thomas Lupton, Rafe Spacie, and Christopher Waddington, for being present, aiding, and procuring the said Randoll to the coniuration aforesaid: Randoll, Elks, Spacie, and Waddington, were found guiltie, and had iudgement to be hanged: Randoll was executed, the other were repriued.”—Holinshed, iii. 1314, col. 2, l. 68.——A.D.1587. “The thirteenth of Januarie, a man was draune to Saint Thomas of Waterings, and there hanged, headed and quartered, for begging by a licence whereunto the queenes hand was counterfeited.”—Holinshed, iii. 1315, col. 1, l. 46.—F.
[225]Cap. 8, Record Commission Statutes.—F.
[226]Sir John Falstaff.—F.
[227]Mr. William Shakspere.—F.
[228]A.D.1569-70. “The seven and twentith of Januarie, Philip Mestrell, a Frenchman, and two Englishmen, were draune from Newgate to Tiburne, and there hanged, the Frenchman quartered, who had coined gold counterfeit; the Englishmen, the one had dipped silver, the other, cast testons of tin.”—Hol., iii. 1211, col. 1, l. 65.——A.D.1577-8. “The fiue and twentith of Februarie, John de Loy, a Frenchman, and fiue English gentlemen, was conueied from the tower of London towards Norwich, there to be arreigned and executed for coining of monie counterfeit.”—Hol., iii. 1271, col. 1, l. 55.—F.
[229]See note [p.227],A.D.1575. “The ninteenth of Julie, a woman was burnt at Tunbridge in Kent for poisoning of hir husband: and two daies before, a man named Orleie was hanged at Maidstone, for being accessarie to the same fact.”—Holinshed, iii. 1262, col. 1, l. 70.—F.
A.D.1571. “On the sixteenth of Julie, Rebecca Chamber, late wife to Thomas Chamber of Heriettesham, was found culpable [= guilty] of poisoning the said Thomas Chamber hir husband, at the assises holden at Maidstone in the countie of Kent. For the which fact, she (hauing well deserued) was there burnt on the next morrow.”—Hol., iii. 1226, col. 2, l. 30. See like instances in Stowe’sAnnales.—F.
[230]Note folio 388,A.D.1583. “On the eighteenth daie of September, John Lewes, who named himself Abdoit, an obstinate heretike, denieng the godhead of Christ, and holding diuers other detestable heresies (much like to his predecessor Matthew Hamont), was burned at Norwich.”—Holinshed, iii. 1354, col. 2, l. 62.—F.
[231]A.D.1577-8.—“On the ninth of March seven pirats were hanged at Wapping in the ouze, beside London.”—Holinshed, iii. 1271, column 1, lines 59-61.—F.
[232]On serving-men, see the striking passage in Sir Thomas More’sUtopia, pp. 27-29, edition of 1852, and “A Health to the Gentlemanly Profession of Seruing-men; or, The Seruing-man’s Comfort: with other thinges not impertinent to the Premises, as well pleasant as profitable to the courteous Reader,” 1598, reprinted in W. C. Hazlitt’s Roxburghe Library,Inedited Tracts, 1868. Also “The Serving-man and the Husbandman: a Pleasaunt New Dialogue,”Roxburgh Ballads, Ballad Society, 1870, i. 300.—F.
[233]Here follows a paragraph about the legendary foundation of the universities. See Appendix.—W.
[234]Cambridge burned not long since.—H.
[235]Here follows an account of Oxford and Cambridge castles, and the legend of the building of Osney Abbey by Robert and Edith D’Oyley. See Appendix.—W.
[236]This Fox builded Corpus Christi College, in Oxford.—H.
[237]So much also may be inferred of lawyers.—H.
[238]He founded also a good part of Eton College, and a free school at Wainfleet, where he was born.
[239]Compare the later, and no doubt distinct,Two Noble Kinsmenby Shakspere and Fletcher.—F.
[240]See the notes on Theatres in the “New Shakspere Society” reprint.—W. [Also the notes to John Lane in my Tell-Trothe volume.—F.]
[241]Unless this can be shown to have been written later, it must modify Mr. Halliwell’s argument and statement, in hisIllustrations, pp. 36, 42, against the early theatres and houses—those before “The Theatre” (Burbage’s) in 1576—being “built” for play-acting. He says, p. 36, “In Northbrooke’s Treatise, 1577-8, Youth asks,—‘doe you speake against those places also whiche are made uppe and builded for such playes and enterludes, as the Theatre and Curtaine is, and other suche lyke places besides?’ By ‘othersuche lykeplaces,’ that is, similar places, the writer perhaps alludes [or perhaps does not] to houses or taverns in which interludes were performed, speaking of such buildings generally, the construction of the sentence not necessarily implying that he refers to other edificesbuilt especiallyfor dramatic representations.” (Yet surely the fair and natural inference from the words is that the “other lyke places” were built for the same purpose as “the Theatre and Curtaine.”) Again, at p. 42, “When Gosson, in hisPlayes Confuted, c. 1580, speaks of ‘Cupid and Psyche plaid at Paules, and a greate many comedies more at the Blacke friers and in every playe house in London,’ heunquestionablyrefers tohouses or taverns temporarily employedfor the performances alluded to.” And, after quoting Rawlidge’sMonster Late Found out, 1628,—“some of the pious magistrates made humble suit to the late Queene Elizabeth of ever-living memorie, and her Privy Counsaile, and obteined leave from her Majesty to thrust those players out of the Citty, and to pull downe the dicing houses; which accordingly was affected; and the play-houses in Gracious street, Bishopsgate street, nigh Paules, that on Ludgate hill, the Whitefriars, were put downe, and other lewd houses quite supprest within the liberties, by the care of those religious senators”—Mr. Halliwell says, “The ‘play-houses’ in Gracious or Gracechurch Street, Bishopsgate Street, and on Ludgate Hill, were the yards respectively of the well-known taverns called the Cross Keys, the Bull, and the Belle Savage.[242]There is no good reasonfor believing that the other ‘play-houses’ mentioned, those near St. Paul’s and in the Whitefriars, were, at the period alluded to, other than buildings made for the representation of plays,not edifices expressly constructed for the purpose.”—F.
[242]He quotes from Flecknoe’sShort Discourse of the English Stage, 1664, “about the beginning of queen Elizabeths reign they began here to assemble into companies and set up theaters, first in the city, as in the inn-yards of the Cross-Keyes and Bull, in Grace and Bishopsgate street, at this day is to be seen.”—Illustrations, p. 43.—F.
[243]See Crowley’s Epigrams on this, E. E. T. Soc. p. 17.—F.
[244]Very short men or very tall tobacco.—W.
[245]Passions or Patience, a dock so called, apparently from the Italian name under which it was introduced from the South,Lapazio, a corruption ofL. lapathum, having been mistaken forla Passio, the Passion of Jesus Christ,Rumex Patientia, L. Dr. Prior,Popular Names of British Plants, p. 175.—F.
[246]The use of tobacco spread very fast in England, to the disgust of Barnaby Rich, James I., and many others. Rich, inThe Honestie of this Age, 1614, pp. 25-6, complains of the money wasted on it. He also contests the fact admitted by Harrison above, of tobacco doing good; says it’s reported that 7000 houses live by the trade of tobacco-selling, and that if each of these takes but 2s. 6d. a-day,—and probably it takes 5s.—the sum total amounts to £399,375 a year, “all spent in smoake.” “They say it is good for a cold, for a pose, for rewms, for aches, for dropsies, and for all manner of diseases proceeding of moyst humours: but I cannot see but that those that do take it fastest, are as much (or more) subject to all these infirmities (yea, and to the poxe itself) as those that have nothing at all to do with it.... There is not so base a groome that commes into an ale-house to call for his pot, but he must have his pipe of tobacco; for it is a commoditie that is nowe as vendible in every taverne, inne, and ale-house, as eyther wine, ale, or beare; and for apothicaries shops, grosers shops, chandlers shops, they are (almost) never without company that, from morning till night, are still taking of tobacco. What a number are there besides that doe keep houses, set open shoppes, that have no other trade to live by, but by the selling of tobacco!” See Sir John Davies’s Epigram ‘Of Tobacco, xxxvi.’ (Marlowe’sWorks, ed. Cunningham, p. 268) singing its praises in 1598; and also that ‘In Syllam, xxviii.’, p. 267, on the boldness of the man who horrified ‘society’ then, “that dares take tobacco on the stage,” ‘dance in Paul’s,’ etc. (and contrast with him the capital description of a Gull in Epigram II., p. 263). Also the Epigram ‘In Ciprium, xxii.’, 7, p. 266, col. 1.—F.
[247]Lady Dorothy Stafford’s son, and not the William Stafford who wrote theCompendious & briefe Examination, 1581. See my Forewords to the Society’s edition.—F.
[248]Will the memory of this do for theMidsummer Night’s Dreamcontagious fogs, corn rotted (II. i. 88-100), and empty fold? The rainfloods of 1594 suit better, no doubt; see the end of myStaffordForewords.—F.
[249]Charles Howard, afterwards Earl of Nottingham, a half-cousin of the poet Surrey.—W.
[250]The respective “minions” (i.e., “darlings”) of the second Edward and the second Richard; but both, unlike Dudley, died wretchedly, one in exile, the other by the block.—W.
[251]“The 10. of Aprill the Parliament brake vp at Westminster, for the time, wherein was granted three subsidies of 2.s. 8.d. the pound goods, and foure s. lands, and 6. fifteenes.”—Stowe’sAnnals, ed. 1605, p. 1272. (A good ‘Oration of her maiesty to the parliament men’ follows.)—F.
[252]MS. corrected. I’m not sure of either word. ‘Comeling’ is Harrison’s word for ‘foreigner’; ‘homeling’ for ‘native.’ Can’t we revive ’em? They’re a nice pair.—F.
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To those unfamiliar with the charm of Russian fiction, and especially with the works of Count Tolstoï, these volumes will come as a new revelation of power.The following Volumes are already issued—A RUSSIAN PROPRIETOR.THE COSSACKS.IVAN ILYITCH,and other Stories.THE INVADERS,and other Stories.MY RELIGION.LIFE.MY CONFESSION.CHILDHOOD, BOYHOOD, YOUTH.THE PHYSIOLOGY OF WAR.ANNA KARÉNINA. (2 Vols.)WHAT TO DO?WAR AND PEACE. (4 Vols.)THE LONG EXILE,and other Stories for Children.Ready December 21st.SEVASTOPOL.London:Walter Scott, 24 Warwick Lane, Paternoster Row.NEW BOOKLETS.Crown 8vo, in White Embossed Boards, Gilt Lettering, One Shilling each.By COUNT LEO TOLSTOÏ.WHERE LOVE IS, THERE GOD IS ALSO.THE TWO PILGRIMS.WHAT MEN LIVE BY.Published originally in Russia, as tracts for the people, these little stories, which Mr. Walter Scott will issue separately early in February, in “booklet” form, possess all the grace, naïveté, and power which characterise the work of Count Tolstoï, and while inculcating in the most penetrating way the Christian ideas of love, humility, and charity, are perfect in their art form as stories pure and simple.ADAPTED FOR PRESENTATION AT EASTER.London:Walter Scott, 24 Warwick Lane.Windsor Series of Poetical Anthologies.Printed on Antique Paper. Crown 8vo. Bound in Blue Cloth, each with suitable Emblematic Design on Cover, Price 3s. 6d. Also in various Calf and Morocco Bindings.Women’s Voices. An Anthology of the most Characteristic Poems by English, Scotch, and Irish Women. Edited by Mrs. William Sharp.Sonnets of this Century. With an Exhaustive Essay on the Sonnet. Edited by Wm. Sharp.The Children of the Poets. An Anthology from English and American Writers of Three Centuries. Edited by Professor Eric S. Robertson.Sacred Song. A Volume of Religious Verse. Selected and arranged by Samuel Waddington.A Century of Australian Song. Selected and Edited by Douglas B. W. Sladen, B.A., Oxon.Jacobite Songs and Ballads. Selected and Edited, with Notes, by G. S. Macquoid.Irish Minstrelsy. Edited, with Notes and Introduction, by H. Halliday Sparling.The Sonnets of Europe. A Volume of Translations. Selected and arranged by Samuel Waddington.Early English and Scottish Poetry. Selected and Edited by H. Macaulay Fitzgibbon.Ballads of the North Countrie. Edited, with Introduction, by Graham R. Tomson.Songs and Poems of the Sea. An Anthology of Poems Descriptive of the Sea. Edited by Mrs. William Sharp.Songs and Poems of Fairyland. An Anthology of English Fairy Poetry, selected and arranged, with an Introduction, by Arthur Edward Waite.Songs and Poems of the Great Dominion. Edited by W. D. Lighthall, of Montreal.London:Walter Scott, 24 Warwick Lane, Paternoster Row.RECENT VOLUMES OF VERSE.Edition de Luxe. Crown 4to, on Antique Paper, Price 12s. 6d.SONNETS OF THIS CENTURY.By WILLIAM SHARP.Crown 8vo, Cloth, Bevelled Boards, Price 3s. 6d. each.IN FANCY DRESS.“IT IS THYSELF.”By MARK ANDRE RAFFALOVICH.Crown 8vo, Cloth, Bevelled Boards, Price 3s. 6d.CAROLS FROM THE COAL-FIELDS: AND OTHER SONGS AND BALLADS.By JOSEPH SKIPSEY.Cloth Gilt, Price 3s.LAST YEAR’S LEAVES.By JOHN JERVIS BERESFORD, M.A.Crown 8vo, Cloth Gilt, Price 3s. 6d.BALLADS AND OTHER POEMS.By GEORGE ROBERTS HEDLEY.Fourth Edition, Crown 8vo, Cloth Gilt, Price 3s. 6d.TALES AND BALLADS OF WEARSIDE.By JOHN GREEN.Second Edition. Price 3s.ROMANTIC BALLADS AND POEMS OF PHANTASY.By WILLIAM SHARP.Parchment Limp, 3s.DEATH’S DISGUISES and Other Sonnets.By FRANK T. MARZIALS.London:Walter Scott, 24 Warwick Lane, Paternoster Row.Small Crown 8vo.Printed on Antique Laid Paper. Cloth Elegant,Gilt Edges, Price 3/6.Summer Legends.ByRUDOLPH BAUMBACH.TRANSLATED BY MRS. HELEN B. DOLE.This is a collection of charming fanciful stories translated from the German. In Germany they have enjoyed remarkable popularity, a large number of editions having been sold. Rudolph Baumbach deals with a wonderland which is all his own, though he suggests Hans Andersen in his simplicity of treatment, and Heine in his delicacy, grace, and humour. These are stories which will appeal vividly to the childish imagination, while the older reader will discern the satirical or humorous application that underlies them.London:Walter Scott, 24 Warwick Lane.
A NEW SERIES OF CRITICAL BIOGRAPHIES
Edited by ProfessorEric S. Robertson, M.A.
MONTHLY SHILLING VOLUMES.
VOLUMES ALREADY ISSUED—
LIFE OF LONGFELLOW. By Prof. Eric S. Robertson.
“A most readable little work.”—Liverpool Mercury.
“A most readable little work.”—Liverpool Mercury.
LIFE OF COLERIDGE. By Hall Caine.
“Brief and vigorous, written throughout with spirit and great literary skill.”—Scotsman.
“Brief and vigorous, written throughout with spirit and great literary skill.”—Scotsman.
LIFE OF DICKENS. By Frank T. Marzials.
“Notwithstanding the mass of matter that has been printed relating to Dickens and his works ... we should, until we came across this volume, have been at a loss to recommend any popular life of England’s most popular novelist as being really satisfactory. The difficulty is removed by Mr. Marzials’s little book.”—Athenæum.
“Notwithstanding the mass of matter that has been printed relating to Dickens and his works ... we should, until we came across this volume, have been at a loss to recommend any popular life of England’s most popular novelist as being really satisfactory. The difficulty is removed by Mr. Marzials’s little book.”—Athenæum.
LIFE OF DANTE GABRIEL ROSSETTI. By J. Knight.
“Mr. Knight’s picture of the great poet and painter is the fullest and best yet presented to the public.”—The Graphic.
“Mr. Knight’s picture of the great poet and painter is the fullest and best yet presented to the public.”—The Graphic.
LIFE OF SAMUEL JOHNSON. By Colonel F. Grant.
“Colonel Grant has performed his task with diligence, sound judgment, good taste, and accuracy.”—Illustrated London News.
“Colonel Grant has performed his task with diligence, sound judgment, good taste, and accuracy.”—Illustrated London News.
LIFE OF DARWIN. By G. T. Bettany.
“Mr. G. T. Bettany’sLife of Darwinis a sound and conscientious work.”—Saturday Review.
“Mr. G. T. Bettany’sLife of Darwinis a sound and conscientious work.”—Saturday Review.
LIFE OF CHARLOTTE BRONTË. By A. Birrell.
“Those who know much of Charlotte Brontë will learn more, and those who know nothing about her will find all that is best worth learning in Mr. Birrell’s pleasant book.”—St. James’ Gazette.
“Those who know much of Charlotte Brontë will learn more, and those who know nothing about her will find all that is best worth learning in Mr. Birrell’s pleasant book.”—St. James’ Gazette.
LIFE OF THOMAS CARLYLE. By R. Garnett, LL.D.
“This is an admirable book. Nothing could be more felicitous and fairer than the way in which he takes us through Carlyle’s life and works.”—Pall Mall Gazette.
“This is an admirable book. Nothing could be more felicitous and fairer than the way in which he takes us through Carlyle’s life and works.”—Pall Mall Gazette.
LIFE OF ADAM SMITH. By R. B. Haldane, M.P.
“Written with a perspicuity seldom exemplified when dealing with economic science.”—Scotsman.
“Written with a perspicuity seldom exemplified when dealing with economic science.”—Scotsman.
LIFE OF KEATS. By W. M. Rossetti.
“Valuable for the ample information which it contains.”—Cambridge Independent.
“Valuable for the ample information which it contains.”—Cambridge Independent.
LIFE OF SHELLEY. By William Sharp.
“The criticisms ... entitle this capital monograph to be ranked with the best biographies of Shelley.”—Westminster Review.
“The criticisms ... entitle this capital monograph to be ranked with the best biographies of Shelley.”—Westminster Review.
LIFE OF SMOLLETT. By David Hannay.
“A capable record of a writer who still remains one of the great masters of the English novel.”—Saturday Review.
“A capable record of a writer who still remains one of the great masters of the English novel.”—Saturday Review.
LIFE OF GOLDSMITH. By Austin Dobson.
“The story of his literary and social life in London, with all its humorous and pathetic vicissitudes, is here retold, as none could tell it better.”—Daily News.
“The story of his literary and social life in London, with all its humorous and pathetic vicissitudes, is here retold, as none could tell it better.”—Daily News.
LIFE OF SCOTT. By Professor Yonge.
“For readers and lovers of the poems and novels of Sir Walter Scott, this is a most enjoyable book.”—Aberdeen Free Press.
“For readers and lovers of the poems and novels of Sir Walter Scott, this is a most enjoyable book.”—Aberdeen Free Press.
LIFE OF BURNS. By Professor Blackie.
“The editor certainly made a hit when he persuaded Blackie to write about Burns.”—Pall Mall Gazette.
“The editor certainly made a hit when he persuaded Blackie to write about Burns.”—Pall Mall Gazette.
LIFE OF VICTOR HUGO. By Frank T. Marzials.
“Mr. Marzials’s volume presents to us, in a more handy form than any English, or even French handbook gives, the summary of what, up to the moment in which we write, is known or conjectured about the life of the great poet.”—Saturday Review.
“Mr. Marzials’s volume presents to us, in a more handy form than any English, or even French handbook gives, the summary of what, up to the moment in which we write, is known or conjectured about the life of the great poet.”—Saturday Review.
LIFE OF EMERSON. By Richard Garnett, LL.D.
“As to the larger section of the public,... no record of Emerson’s life and work could be more desirable, both in breadth of treatment and lucidity of style, than Dr. Garnett’s.”—Saturday Review.
“As to the larger section of the public,... no record of Emerson’s life and work could be more desirable, both in breadth of treatment and lucidity of style, than Dr. Garnett’s.”—Saturday Review.
LIFE OF GOETHE. By James Sime.
“Mr. James Sime’s competence as a biographer of Goethe, both in respect of knowledge of his special subject, and of German literature generally, is beyond question.”—Manchester Guardian.
“Mr. James Sime’s competence as a biographer of Goethe, both in respect of knowledge of his special subject, and of German literature generally, is beyond question.”—Manchester Guardian.
LIFE OF CONGREVE. By Edmund Gosse.
“Mr. Gosse has written an admirable and most interesting biography of a man of letters who is of particular interest to other men of letters.”—The Academy.
“Mr. Gosse has written an admirable and most interesting biography of a man of letters who is of particular interest to other men of letters.”—The Academy.
LIFE OF BUNYAN. By Canon Venables.
“A most intelligent, appreciative, and valuable memoir.”—Scotsman.
“A most intelligent, appreciative, and valuable memoir.”—Scotsman.
LIFE OF CRABBE. By T. E. Kebbel.
“No English poet since Shakespeare has observed certain aspects of nature and of human life more closely;... Mr. Kebbel’s monograph is worthy of the subject.”—Athenæum.
“No English poet since Shakespeare has observed certain aspects of nature and of human life more closely;... Mr. Kebbel’s monograph is worthy of the subject.”—Athenæum.
LIFE OF HEINE. By William Sharp.
“This is an admirable monograph,... more fully written up to the level of recent knowledge and criticism of its theme than any other English work.”—Scotsman.
“This is an admirable monograph,... more fully written up to the level of recent knowledge and criticism of its theme than any other English work.”—Scotsman.
LIFE OF MILL. By W. L. Courtney.
“A most sympathetic and discriminating memoir.”—Glasgow Herald.
“A most sympathetic and discriminating memoir.”—Glasgow Herald.
LIFE OF SCHILLER. By Henry W. Nevinson.
“Presents the leading facts of the poet’s life in a neatly rounded picture, and gives an adequate critical estimate of each of Schiller’s separate works and the effect of the whole upon literature.”—Scotsman.
“Presents the leading facts of the poet’s life in a neatly rounded picture, and gives an adequate critical estimate of each of Schiller’s separate works and the effect of the whole upon literature.”—Scotsman.
LIFE OF CAPTAIN MARRYAT. By David Hannay.
“We have nothing but praise for the manner in which Mr. Hannay has done justice to him whom he well calls ‘one of the most brilliant and the least fairly recognised of English novelists.’”—Saturday Review.
“We have nothing but praise for the manner in which Mr. Hannay has done justice to him whom he well calls ‘one of the most brilliant and the least fairly recognised of English novelists.’”—Saturday Review.
Complete Bibliography to each volume, by J. P. Anderson, British Museum.
Volumes are in preparation by Goldwin Smith, Frederick Wedmore, Oscar Browning, Arthur Symons, W. E. Henley, Hermann Merivale, H. E. Watts, T. W. Rolleston, Cosmo Monkhouse, Dr. Garnett, Frank T. Marzials, W. H. Pollock, John Addington Symonds, Stepniak, etc., etc.
LIBRARY EDITION OF “GREAT WRITERS.”—Printed on large paper of extra quality, in handsome binding, Demy 8vo, price 2s. 6d.
London: WALTER SCOTT, 24 Warwick Lane, Paternoster Row.
Edited by William Sharp.
In SHILLING Monthly Volumes, Square 8vo. Well printed on fine toned paper, with Red-line Border, and strongly bound in Cloth.
THE FOLLOWING VOLUMES ARE NOW READY.
London: WALTER SCOTT, 24 Warwick Lane, Paternoster Row.
Crown 8vo, Cloth.Price 3s. 6d. per Vol.;Hlf. Mor. 6s. 6d.
THEContemporary Science Series.
Edited byHAVELOCK ELLIS.
Most of the vols. will be illustrated, containing between 300 and 400 pp. The first vol. will be issued on Oct. 25, 1889. Others to follow at short intervals.
The Contemporary Science Series will bring within general reach of the English-speaking public the best that is known and thought in all departments of modern scientific research. The influence of the scientific spirit is now rapidly spreading in every field of human activity. Social progress, it is felt, must be guided and accompanied by accurate knowledge,—knowledge which is, in many departments, not yet open to the English reader. In the Contemporary Science Series all the questions of modern life—the various social and politico-economical problems of to-day, the most recent researches in the knowledge of man, the past and present experiences of the race, and the nature of its environment—will be frankly investigated and clearly presented.
The first volumes of the Series will be:—
THE EVOLUTION OF SEX. By Prof.Patrick GeddesandJ. Arthur Thomson. With 90 Illustrations, and about 300 pages. [Now Ready.
ELECTRICITY IN MODERN LIFE.By G. W. de Tunzelmann.With 88 Illustrations. [Ready 25th November.
THE ORIGIN OF THE ARYANS. By Dr.Isaac Taylor. With numerous Illustrations. [Ready 25th December.
The following Writers, among others, are preparing volumes for this Series:—
Prof. E. D. Cope, Prof. G. F. Fitzgerald, Prof. J. Geikie, G. L. Gomme, E. C. K. Gonner, Prof. J. Jastrow (Wisconsin), E. Sidney Hartland, Prof. C. H. Herford, J. Bland Sutton, Dr. C. Merrier, Sidney Webb, Dr. Sims Woodhead, Dr. C. M. Woodward (St. Louis, Mo.), etc.
London: Walter Scott, 24 Warwick Lane, Paternoster Row.
Crown 8vo, about 350 pp. each, Cloth Cover, 2s. 6d. per vol. Half-polished Morocco, gilt top, 5s.
Crown 8vo, about 350 pp. each, Cloth Cover, 2s. 6d. per vol. Half-polished Morocco, gilt top, 5s.
COUNT TOLSTOÏ’S WORKS.
Arrangements have been made to publish, in Monthly Volumes, a series of translations of works by the eminent Russian Novelist, Count Lyof. N. Tolstoï. The English reading public will be introduced to an entirely new series of works by one who is probably the greatest living master of fiction in Europe. To those unfamiliar with the charm of Russian fiction, and especially with the works of Count Tolstoï, these volumes will come as a new revelation of power.
The following Volumes are already issued—
A RUSSIAN PROPRIETOR.THE COSSACKS.IVAN ILYITCH,and other Stories.THE INVADERS,and other Stories.MY RELIGION.LIFE.MY CONFESSION.CHILDHOOD, BOYHOOD, YOUTH.THE PHYSIOLOGY OF WAR.ANNA KARÉNINA. (2 Vols.)WHAT TO DO?WAR AND PEACE. (4 Vols.)THE LONG EXILE,and other Stories for Children.
Ready December 21st.SEVASTOPOL.
London:Walter Scott, 24 Warwick Lane, Paternoster Row.
NEW BOOKLETS.
Crown 8vo, in White Embossed Boards, Gilt Lettering, One Shilling each.
By COUNT LEO TOLSTOÏ.
WHERE LOVE IS, THERE GOD IS ALSO.THE TWO PILGRIMS.WHAT MEN LIVE BY.
Published originally in Russia, as tracts for the people, these little stories, which Mr. Walter Scott will issue separately early in February, in “booklet” form, possess all the grace, naïveté, and power which characterise the work of Count Tolstoï, and while inculcating in the most penetrating way the Christian ideas of love, humility, and charity, are perfect in their art form as stories pure and simple.
ADAPTED FOR PRESENTATION AT EASTER.
London:Walter Scott, 24 Warwick Lane.
Windsor Series of Poetical Anthologies.
Printed on Antique Paper. Crown 8vo. Bound in Blue Cloth, each with suitable Emblematic Design on Cover, Price 3s. 6d. Also in various Calf and Morocco Bindings.
Women’s Voices. An Anthology of the most Characteristic Poems by English, Scotch, and Irish Women. Edited by Mrs. William Sharp.Sonnets of this Century. With an Exhaustive Essay on the Sonnet. Edited by Wm. Sharp.The Children of the Poets. An Anthology from English and American Writers of Three Centuries. Edited by Professor Eric S. Robertson.Sacred Song. A Volume of Religious Verse. Selected and arranged by Samuel Waddington.A Century of Australian Song. Selected and Edited by Douglas B. W. Sladen, B.A., Oxon.Jacobite Songs and Ballads. Selected and Edited, with Notes, by G. S. Macquoid.Irish Minstrelsy. Edited, with Notes and Introduction, by H. Halliday Sparling.The Sonnets of Europe. A Volume of Translations. Selected and arranged by Samuel Waddington.Early English and Scottish Poetry. Selected and Edited by H. Macaulay Fitzgibbon.Ballads of the North Countrie. Edited, with Introduction, by Graham R. Tomson.Songs and Poems of the Sea. An Anthology of Poems Descriptive of the Sea. Edited by Mrs. William Sharp.Songs and Poems of Fairyland. An Anthology of English Fairy Poetry, selected and arranged, with an Introduction, by Arthur Edward Waite.Songs and Poems of the Great Dominion. Edited by W. D. Lighthall, of Montreal.
Women’s Voices. An Anthology of the most Characteristic Poems by English, Scotch, and Irish Women. Edited by Mrs. William Sharp.
Sonnets of this Century. With an Exhaustive Essay on the Sonnet. Edited by Wm. Sharp.
The Children of the Poets. An Anthology from English and American Writers of Three Centuries. Edited by Professor Eric S. Robertson.
Sacred Song. A Volume of Religious Verse. Selected and arranged by Samuel Waddington.
A Century of Australian Song. Selected and Edited by Douglas B. W. Sladen, B.A., Oxon.
Jacobite Songs and Ballads. Selected and Edited, with Notes, by G. S. Macquoid.
Irish Minstrelsy. Edited, with Notes and Introduction, by H. Halliday Sparling.
The Sonnets of Europe. A Volume of Translations. Selected and arranged by Samuel Waddington.
Early English and Scottish Poetry. Selected and Edited by H. Macaulay Fitzgibbon.
Ballads of the North Countrie. Edited, with Introduction, by Graham R. Tomson.
Songs and Poems of the Sea. An Anthology of Poems Descriptive of the Sea. Edited by Mrs. William Sharp.
Songs and Poems of Fairyland. An Anthology of English Fairy Poetry, selected and arranged, with an Introduction, by Arthur Edward Waite.
Songs and Poems of the Great Dominion. Edited by W. D. Lighthall, of Montreal.
London:Walter Scott, 24 Warwick Lane, Paternoster Row.
RECENT VOLUMES OF VERSE.
Edition de Luxe. Crown 4to, on Antique Paper, Price 12s. 6d.
SONNETS OF THIS CENTURY.
By WILLIAM SHARP.
Crown 8vo, Cloth, Bevelled Boards, Price 3s. 6d. each.
IN FANCY DRESS.
“IT IS THYSELF.”
By MARK ANDRE RAFFALOVICH.
Crown 8vo, Cloth, Bevelled Boards, Price 3s. 6d.
CAROLS FROM THE COAL-FIELDS: AND OTHER SONGS AND BALLADS.
By JOSEPH SKIPSEY.
Cloth Gilt, Price 3s.
LAST YEAR’S LEAVES.
By JOHN JERVIS BERESFORD, M.A.
Crown 8vo, Cloth Gilt, Price 3s. 6d.
BALLADS AND OTHER POEMS.
By GEORGE ROBERTS HEDLEY.
Fourth Edition, Crown 8vo, Cloth Gilt, Price 3s. 6d.
TALES AND BALLADS OF WEARSIDE.
By JOHN GREEN.
Second Edition. Price 3s.
ROMANTIC BALLADS AND POEMS OF PHANTASY.
By WILLIAM SHARP.
Parchment Limp, 3s.
DEATH’S DISGUISES and Other Sonnets.
By FRANK T. MARZIALS.
London:Walter Scott, 24 Warwick Lane, Paternoster Row.
Small Crown 8vo.
Printed on Antique Laid Paper. Cloth Elegant,
Gilt Edges, Price 3/6.
Summer Legends.
ByRUDOLPH BAUMBACH.
TRANSLATED BY MRS. HELEN B. DOLE.
This is a collection of charming fanciful stories translated from the German. In Germany they have enjoyed remarkable popularity, a large number of editions having been sold. Rudolph Baumbach deals with a wonderland which is all his own, though he suggests Hans Andersen in his simplicity of treatment, and Heine in his delicacy, grace, and humour. These are stories which will appeal vividly to the childish imagination, while the older reader will discern the satirical or humorous application that underlies them.
London:Walter Scott, 24 Warwick Lane.
Transcriber’s Notes:
Additional spacing after some of the quotes is intentional to indicate both the end of a quotation and the beginning of a new paragraph as presented in the original text.
The mismatched quotation mark before footnote marker ten is presented as in the original text.