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Specimens of Prose Composition.
16mo. Cloth. Per volume, 50c., net.

Prose Narration.

Edited by WILLIAM T. BREWSTER, Tutor in Columbia College. xxxviii +209 pp.

Includes Selections from Scott, Thackeray, Hawthorne, Jane Austen, George Eliot, Stevenson, and Henry James. Part I. Elements of Narrative-Plot, Character, Setting, and Purpose. Part II. Combination of the Elements of Narration. Part III. Various Kinds of Narrative. Part IV. Technique of Good Narrative.

Prose Description.

Edited by CHArles Sears BALDWIN, Ph.D., Instructor in Yale College. xlviii+145 pp.

Includes: Ancient Athens (Newman); Paris Before the Second Empire (du Maurier); Bees (Burroughs); Byzantium (Gibbon); Geneva (Ruskin); The Storming of the Bastille (Carlyle); La Gio. conda, etc. (Pater); Blois (Henry James); Spring in a Side Street (Brander Matthews); A Night Among the Pines, etc. (Stevenson). Exposition.

Edited by HAMMOND LAMONT, Professor in Brown University. xxiv+ 180 pp.

Includes: Development of a Brief; G. C. V. Holmes on the Steam-engine; Huxley on the Physical Basis of Life; Bryce on the U. S. Constitution; "The Nation" on the Unemployed; Wm. Archer on Albery's "Apple Blossoms"; Matthew Arnold on Wordsworth; etc.

Argumentation. MODERN.

Edited by GEORGE P. BAKER, Professor in Harvard College. 16m0. 186 pp.

Lord Chatham's speech on the withdrawal of troops from Boston, Lord Mansfield's argument in the Evans case, the first letter of Junius, the first of Huxley's American addresses on evolution, Erskine's defence of Lord George Gordon, an address by Beecher in Liverpool during the cotton riots, and specimen brief.

Postage 8 per cent. additional.

HENRY HOLT & CO., 29 W. 23d St., New York.

In English Literature and Language

PANCOAST'S STANDARD ENGLISH POEMS

Selected and edited by Henry S. Pancoast, author of An Introduction to English Literature, etc. 749 pp. 16mo. $1.50, net. Some 250 complete poems, besides selections from longer ones.

BEERS' ENGLISH ROMANTICISM-XVIII. CENTURY

Gilt top. 455 PP.

12mo. $2.00, retail.

HANCOCK'S THE FRENCH REVOLUTION AND THE ENGLISH POETS. With an introduction by Professor Lewis E. Gates of Harvard. xvi+ 197 pp. 12mo. $1.25, retail.

EIGHTEENTH CENTURY LETTERS. Under the general editorship of R. Brimley Johnson. With gravure portraits. 12mo. $1.75, net, per vol.

Swift, Addison, and Steele. (Poole.) xxviii+251 pp.

I vol.

Johnson and Lord Chesterfield. (Birkbeck Hill.) x1 + 244 PP. I vol.

YALE STUDIES IN ENGLISH. A number of monographs by various authors, edited by Professor A. S. Cook of Yale. (List on Application.)

SHAKESPEARE'S MACBETH. Edited and provided with questions for study, by Professor L. A. Sherman of the University of Nebraska. With reduced reproductions from the First Folio of the Droeshout portrait and of pages from Romeo and Juliet and Macbeth. xxvi + 199 pp., 16mo. 60 cents, net.

SELECTIONS FROM LANDOR'S IMAGINARY CONVERSATIONS. Edited by Professor A. G. Newcomer of Stanford University (Cal.)-English Readings. lix + 166 pp., 16m0. cents, net. (List of English Readings, free.)

50

BUCK AND WOODBRIDGE'S EXPOSITORY WRITING. By Dr. Gertrude Buck and Dr. Elizabeth Woodbridge, both of Vassar. 292 pp., 12mo. $1.00, net.

BUCK'S ARGUMENTATIVE

WRITING.

By Dr. Gertrude

Buck of Vassar. 206 pp., 12mo. 80 cents, net. Features of these two books are (1) inductive character: principles are derived from abundant practice; (2) the subjects chosen for analysis and argument are interwoven with the student's daily experiences; and (3) the logical basis of argumentation is referred to psychology.

HENRY HOLT & CO.

xii '99.

29 West 23d Street New York

...

"It covers almost every known phase of its subject, . and yet it is compact and readable."—Outlook.

LAVIGNAC'S MUSIC AND MUSICIANS

By Professor ALBERT LAVIGNAC of the Paris Conservatory, author of "The Music Dramas of Richard Wagner." Edited for America by H. E. KREHBIEL, author of "How to Listen to Music," and translated by WILLIAM MARCHANT. With 94 illustrations and 510 examples in musical notation. 12mo. $3.00. (Descriptive circular free.)

A brilliant, sympathetic, and authoritative work covering musical sound, the voice, instruments, construction æsthetics, and history. Practically a cyclopedia of its subject, with 1000 topics in the index.

"A

W. J. Henderson in N. Y. Times' Saturday Review:
truly wonderful production ... a long and exhaustive ac-
count of the manner of using the instruments of the orches-
tra, with some highly instructive remarks on coloring.
harmony he treats not only very fully, but also in a new and
intensely interesting way... counterpoint is discussed with
great thoroughness. it seems to have been his idea when
he began to let no interesting topic escape. He even finds
space for a discussion of the beautiful in music . . . The
wonder is that the author has succeeded in making those
parts of the book which ought naturally to be dry so read-
able. Indeed, in some of the treatment of such topics as
acoustics the professor has written in a style which can
be fairly described as fascinating. . harmonics he has put
before the reader more clearly than any other writer on the
subject with whom we are acquainted. The pictures of
the instruments are clear and very helpful to the reader.
It should have a wide circulation... It will serve as a general
reference book for either the musician or the music-lover. It
will save money in the purchase of a library by filling the
places of several smaller books. . it contains references to
other works which constitute a complete directory of musical
literature. Taking it all in all, it is one of the most im-
portant books on music that has ever been published."

"One of the most important contributions yet made to literary history by an American scholar."-Outlook.

BEERS' ENGLISH ROMANTICISM

-XVIII. CENTURY

By Professor HENRY A. BEERS of Yale. 2d impression. Gilt top. 12mo. $2.00.

New York Commercial Advertiser: "The individuality of his style, its humor, its color, its delicacy. will do quite as much to continue its author's reputation as his scholarship.. . The work of a man who has studied hard, but who has also lived."

New York Times' Saturday Review: "Remarkably penetrating and scholarly. . . It is a noteworthy book by an acknowledged authority upon a most interesting period." New York Tribune: "No less instructive than readable." Nation: "Always interesting. On the whole, may be commended as an excellent popular treatment of the special subject of the literary revival of mediævalism in the eighteenth century in England."

HENRY HOLT & CO., 29 West 28d Street

iv '99

New York

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