THE WORLD'S CLASSICS 



List Ot Titles — continued 



ioo-*io8. Shakespeare's Plays and Poems. With a 

 Preface by A. C. Swinburne, Introductions to the 

 several plays by E. Dowden, and a Note by T. Watts- 

 DuNTON on the special typographical features of this 

 edition. Nine Volumes. Vols, i — 6 now ready. Vols. 

 7 — 9 ready shortly. 



•log. George Herbert's Poems. With an Introduction 

 by Arthur Waugh. 



*iio. Mrs. Gaskell's Cranford, The Moorland Cot- 

 tage, etc. With an Intro, by Clement Shorter. 



*ii5. Essays and Sketches by Leigh Hunt. With 

 an Introduction by R. Brimley Johnson. 



*ii6. Sophocles. The Seven Plays. Translated into 

 English Verse by Professor Lewis Campbell, 



♦117. Aeschylus. The Seven Plays. Translated into 

 English Verse by Professor Lewis Campbell. 



*li8. Horae Subsecivae. By Dr. John Brown. With 

 an Introduction by Austin Dobson. 



*II9. Cobbold's Margaret Catchpole. With an In- 

 troduction by Clement Shorter 



•120, *I2I. Dickens's Pickwick Papers. With 43 Illus- 

 trations by Seymour and " Phiz." Two Vols, 



*i22. Mrs. Caudle's Curtain Lectures, and other 

 Stories and Essays, by Douglas Jerrold. With 

 an Intro, by Walter Jerrold, and 90 Illustrations. 



*I23. Goldsmith's Poems. Edited by Austin Dobson. 



*I24. Hazlitt's Lectures on the English Comic 

 Writers. With an Intro, bv R. Brimley Johnson. 



*I25, *i26. Carlyle's French Revolution. With an 

 Introduction by C. R. L. Fletcher. Two Vols. 



*i27. Home's A Ne^v Spirit of the Age. With an 

 Introduction by Walter Jerrold. 



*I28. Dickens's Great Expectations. With 6 Illustra- 

 tions by Warwick Goble. 



*i29. Jane Austen's Emma. Intro, by E. V. Lucas, 



*I30, *I3I. Don Quixote. Jervas's translation. With an 

 Introduction and Notes by J. Fitzmaurice- Kelly, 

 Two Vols. 



*I32. Leigh Hunt's The Town. With an Introduction 

 and Notes by Austin Dobson, and a Frontispiece. 



*I33. Palgrave's Golden Treasury, with additional 

 Poems. F'ifth Impression. 



