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PITMAN'S CATALOGUE OF GENERAL LITERATURE


LIFE OF REGINALD POLE. By Martin Haile. In demy 8vo, cloth gilt, gilt top, with eight photogravures, 21s. net.

" An excellent book, based on a first-hand acquaintance with documents, some of which are here utilised for the first time. It gives a vivid and most faithful picture of the last Archbishop of Canterbury who acknowledged the See of Rome."—Daily Chronicle.

THE LETTERS OF PERCY BYSSHE SHELLEY. Containing about 480 letters. Collected and edited by Roger Ingpen. With 42 illustrations and two photogravures. In two volumes, large crown 8vo, cloth gilt, gilt top, 25s. net. Hand-made paper edition de luxe, limited to 200 copies, half leather, large demy 8vo, 42s. net.

" Mr. Ingpen has done all that can be done to provide us with a perfect edition of one of the most interesting series of letters in English literature. The edition is worthy of the magnificent material with which it deals."—Daily News.

THE LIFE AND WORK OF BISHOP THOROLD. Rochester, 1877-91; Winchester, 1891-95. Prelate of the most noble Order of the Garter. New and cheap edition. By C. H. Simpkinson, M.A. In crown 8vo, cloth gilt, gilt top, 6s.

MRS. E. M. WARD'S REMINISCENCES.Edited by Elliott O'Donnell. In royal 8vo, cloth gilt, gilt top, with six photogravure plates, 12s. 6d. net.

" Mrs. E. M. Ward throughout all these pages displays a wide sympathy, a charming personality, and an interesting acquaintance with men and things which make her book a sweet, wholesome, and delightful volume .... will win an established place among the records of the Victorian Era."—Daily Telegraph.

" As might have been expected, Mrs. Ward's reminiscences are good reading. Mrs. Ward's capacious memory takes in all manner of men and things. She tells piquant stories of royal sitters and visitors; gives glimpses of Windsor in the days when Queen Victoria was a young and happy wife; gossips about dress in the days of the crinoline and poke bonnet; recalls to life Dickens, Thackeray, Lytton, and the other literary lions of an age which is beginning to seem very distant; and gives her narrative an undercurrent of purely personal reminiscence which reminds one that Mrs. Ward was not only in her time a great painter, and the wife of a great painter, but also the mother of several talented children. The book is written in a simple, straightforward, vivid way that makes it very easy and pleasant reading."—Standard.

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