Life of Longfellow. By Prof. Eric S. Robertson. 



" A most readable little book." — Liverpool Mercury. 



Life of Marryat. By David Hannay. 



"What Mr. Hannay had to do — give a craftsman-like account of a 

 great craftsman who has been almost incomprehensibly undervalued — 

 could hardly have been done better than in this ^little volume." — Man- 

 chester Guardian. 



Life of MilL By W. L. Courtney. 



" A most sympathetic and discriminating memoir." — Glasgow Herald. 



Life of Milton. By Richard Qarnett, LL.D. 



" Within equal compass the life-story of the great poet of Puritanism 

 has never been more charmingly or adequately told." — Scottish Leader. 



Life of Renan. By Francis Espinasse. 



" Sufficiently full in details to give us a living picture of the great 

 scholar, . . . and never tiresome or dull." — Westminster Review, 



Life of Dante Gabriel Rossetti. By J. Knight. 



"Mr. Knight's picture of the great poet and painter is the fullest and 

 best yet presented to the public." — The Graphic. 



Life of Schiller. By Henry W. Nevinson. 



" This is a well- written little volume, which presents the leading facts 

 of the poet's life in a neatly rounded picture." — Scotsman. 



" Mr. Nevinson has added much to the charm of his book by his spirited 

 translations, which give excellently both the ring and sense of the 

 original. " — Manchester Guardian. 



Life of Arthur Schopenhauer. By William Wallace. 



" The series of Great Writers has hardly had a contribution of more 

 marked and peculiar excellence than the book which the Whyte Professor 

 of Moral Philosophy at Oxford has written for it on the attractive and 

 still (in England) little-known subject of Schopenhauer." — Manchester 

 Guardian. 



Life of Scott. By Professor Yonge. 



" For readers and lovers of the poems and novels of Sir Walter Scott 

 this is a most enjoyable book." — Aberdeen Free Press. 



Life of Shelley. By William Sharp 



" The criticisms . . . entitle this capital monograph to be ranked with 

 the best biographies of Shelley." — Westminster Review. 



New York : Charles Scribner's Sons. 



