UNITED STATES III 



Andre's journal; ed. by H. C. Lodge. Boston, 1903. 2 v. 4. 



A thousand Horatian quotations, with appreciations (testimonia) of 



Horace in ancient writers ; selected and classified by H. A. Met- 



calf. Boston, 1904. 8. 



Polish letters, by Jean Paul Marat. [Boston, 1905.] 2 v. 8. 

 Henry the leper (Der arme Heinrich) paraphrased by D. G. Rossetti. 



Boston, 1905. 2v. 4. 

 Sir Walter Raleigh, by H. D. Thoreau, lately discovered among his 



unpublished journals and manuscripts. Boston, 1905. 8. 

 The first and last journeys of Thoreau, lately discovered among his 



unpublished journals and manuscripts; ed. by F. B. Sanborn. Bos- 

 ton, 1905. 2 v. 8. 

 The idylls and epigrams of Theocritus, Bion and Moschus. Ed. by 



H. A. Metcalf. Boston, 1905. 3 v. 8. 

 The letters of Charles Lamb. Boston, 1905. 5 v. 8. 

 Letters of John Paul Jones, printed from the unpublished originals in 



Mr. W. K. Bixby's collection. Boston, 1905. 8. 



Distribution. No exchange. Edition limited in number to enrolled membership. 

 Books may be offered for sale to non-members only by special authorization of 

 the council. 



Boston Browning Society. 



Address. Hotel Brunswick, Boston, Mass. 



History. Founded in 1885. Not incorporated. The library of the society 



forms a special Browning collection in the Boston Public Library, to 



which it has been presented. 



Object. Study of the poetry of Browning and promotion of more general interest 



in it. 



Meetings. 4th Tuesday of each month, Oct.-May, inclusive, at above address. 

 Membership. 250 active (limited to 250; annual dues, $3) ; 23 honorary. 



Publications. 



A pamphlet containing annual report, by-laws, program, and list of 



members is published each year. 

 The Boston Browning Society papers, selected to represent the work of 



the society from 1886-97. New York, London, 1897. 8. 

 Distribution. No exchange. In the trade. 



Boston Mycological Club. 



Address. Corresponding Secretary: Hollis Webster, Cambridge, Mass. 

 History. Organized in 1895 ; incorporated July 7, 1900. 



Object. To study native fungi, particularly those useful for food or otherwise of 

 economic importance, and to collect, record, and make known in regard to them 

 information that shall have both scientific and practical value. 



