0 1 0
John Ford, _Plays_: Mermaid Series 0 2 6
George Herbert, _The Temple_: Everyman's
Library 0 1 0
ROBERT HERRICK, _Poems_: Muses' Library
(2 vols.) 0 2 0
Edmund Waller, _Poems_: Muses' Library
(2 vols.) 0 2 0
Sir John Suckling, _Poems_: Muses' Library 0 1 0
Abraham Cowley, _English Poems_: Cambridge
University Press 0 4 6
Richard Crashaw, _Poems_: Muses' Library 0 1 0
Henry Vaughan, _Poems_: Methuen's
Little Library 0 1 6
Samuel Butler, _Hudibras_: Cambridge
University Press 0 4 6
JOHN MILTON, _Poetical Works_: Oxford
Cheap Edition 0 2 0
JOHN MILTON, _Select Prose Works_: Scott
Library 0 1 0
Andrew Marvell, _Poems_: Methuen's Little
Library 0 1 6
John Dryden, _Poetical Works_: Globe
Edition 0 3 6
[Thomas Percy], _Reliques of Ancient
English Poetry_: Everyman's Library
(2 vols.) 0 2 0
Arber's _"Spenser" Anthology_: Oxford
University Press 0 2 0
Arber's _"Jonson" Anthology_: Oxford
University Press 0 2 0
Arber's _"Shakspere" Anthology_: Oxford
University Press 0 2 0
_________
L3 7 6
There were a number of brilliant minor writers in the seventeenth
century whose best work, often trifling in bulk, either scarcely
merits the acquisition of a separate volume for each author, or cannot
be obtained at all in a modern edition. Such authors, however, may not
be utterly neglected in the formation of a library. It is to meet this
difficulty that I have included the last three volumes on the above
list. Professor Arber's anthologies are full of rare pieces, and
comprise admirable specimens of the verse of Samuel Daniel, Giles
Fletcher, Countess of Pembroke, James I., George Peele, Sir Walter
Raleigh, Thomas Sackville, Sir P
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