ear. Nevertheless, I have encountered
difficulties in the second rank; I have dealt with them in a spirit
of compromise. I think I may say that, though I should have included
a few more authors had their books been obtainable at a reasonable
price, I have omitted none that I consider indispensable to a
thoroughly representative collection. No living author is included.
Where I do not specify the edition of a book the original copyright
edition is meant.
PROSE WRITERS: IMAGINATIVE. L s. d.
SIR WALTER SCOTT, _Waverley, Heart of
Midlothian, Quentin Durward, Red-gauntlet,
Ivanhoe_: Everyman's
Library (5 vols.) 0 5 0
SIR WALTER SCOTT, _Marmion_, etc.:
Canterbury Poets 0 1 0
Charles Lamb, _Works in Prose and Verse_:
Clarendon Press (2 vols.) 0 4 0
Charles Lamb, _Letters_: Newnes's Thin
Paper Classics 0 2 0
Walter Savage Landor, _Imaginary Conversations_:
Scott Library 0 1 0
Walter Savage Landor, _Poems_: Canterbury
Poets 0 1 0
Leigh Hunt, _Essays and Sketches_: World's
Classics 0 1 0
Thomas Love Peacock, _Principal Novels_:
New Universal Library (2 vols.) 0 2 0
Mary Russell Mitford, _Our Village_:
Scott Library 0 1 0
Michael Scott, _Tom Cringle's Log_: Macmillan's
Illustrated Novels 0 2 6
Frederick Marryat, _Mr. Midshipman
Easy_: Everyman's Library 0 1 0
John Galt, _Annals of the Parish_: Everyman's
Library 0 1 0
Susan Ferrier, _Marriage_: Routledge's
edition 0 2 0
Douglas Jerrold, _Mrs. Caudle's Curtain
Lectures_: World's Classics 0 1 0
Lord Lytton, _Last Days of Pompeii_:
Everyman's Library 0 1 0
William Carleton, _Stories_: Scott Library 0 1 0
Charles James Lever, _Harry Lorrequer_:
Everyman's Library 0 1 0
Harrison Ainsworth, _The Tower of London_:
New Universal Library
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