Page:Notes and Queries - Series 10 - Volume 7.djvu/295

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NOTES AND QUERIES:

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LITERARY MEN, GENERAL READERS, ETC.

" When found, make a note of." CAPTAIN CUTTLE.


No. 170. [S.] SATURDAY, MARCH 30, 1907.


OXFORD JJNIVERSITY PRESS.

THE OXFORD ENGLISH DICTIONARY.

PIPER POLYGENISTIC. A Triple Section. By Dr. J. A. H. MURRAY. 7. fid. The next issue (July 1) will be a portion of M, by Dr. BRADLEY. Already published, A L. M MISBIRTH, N NICHE, 0, P POLYGENISTIC, Q and R RESERVE.

THE OXFORD TREASURY OF ENGLISH LITE- RATURE. By G. E. HADOW and W. H. HADOW. Crown 8vo, cloth, 3s. M. each. Vol. I. OLD ENGLISH TO JACOBEAN. Vol. II. GROWTH OF THE DRAMA.

THESH1RBURN BALLADS, 1585 1616. Edited, with

Introduction and Notes, by ANDREW CLARK. Demy 8vo, cloth, with 40 Illustrations from Black-Letter Copies, 10s. Qd. net.

Tribune. "Mr. Andrew Clark has edited the volume with a painstaking care that will earn the

gratitude of all students of ballad literature The compiler of the Shirburn manuscript had a truly

eclectic taste, and almost every variety of ballad literature is represented in his selection Mr. Clark's

book is full of varied interest, and may be safely commended to all students of the early English ballads in particular, and to all ballad-lovers in general."

SAMUEL JOHNSON. The Leslie Stephen Lecture

delivered in the Senate House, Cambridge, February 22, by W. RALEIGH. 8vo, Is. net. Daily Mail. "Admirable both in matter and expression. We have rarely met with a juster or more concise bit of Johnsonian appreciation."

STURLA THE HISTORIAN. By William Paton Ker,

M.A. The Romanes Lecture delivered in the Schools, Oxford, November 24, 1906. 8vo, Is. net.

THE THEORY OF GOOD AND EVIL. A Treatise on

Moral Philosophy. By H. RASHDALL. 8vo, 2 vols. 14s. net.

THE CULTS OF THE GREEK STATES. By Lewis

RICHARD FARNELL, M.A. 8vo, cloth, Vols. I and II. with 61 Plates and over 100 Illus-

trations, 32s. net ; Vols. Ill and IV. with 86 Plates, 326. net. The Right Hon. JOHN MOKLEY said of Vols. land II. : "You only need turn to such a book,

for example, as Mr. Farnell's book on 'The Cults of the Greek States' to 'see how efficiently

archaeology may help xis to surprise, in the midst of great masses of uncouth and heterogeneous facts, strange secrets in the mysterious modes and simple faiths of the older world."


London: HENRY FROWDE, Oxford University Press, Amen Corner, E.C.