THE WORLD'S CLASSICS 



List of Titles — continued 



*i34. Aristophanes. Frere's translation of the 

 Acharnians, Knights, Birds, and Frogs. 



With an Introduction by W. W. Merry. 



*i35. Marlowe's Dr. Faustus, and Goethe's Faust, 

 Part I (Anster's Translation). Intro, by A. W. Ward. 



*i36. Butler's Analogy. Edited by W. E. Gladstone. 



*137. Brow^nings Poems. Vol. II (Dramatic Lyrics and 

 Romances, Men and Women, and Dramatis Personae.) 



*I38. Cowper's Letters. Selected, with an Introduction, 

 by E. V. Lucas. Second Impression. 



*I39. Gibbon's Autobiography. With an Introduction 

 by J. B. Bury. 



*I40. Trollope's The Three Clerks. With an Intro- 

 duction by W. Teignmouth Shore. 



*i4i. Anne Bronte's Agnes Grey. 



*i42. Fielding's Journal of a Voyage to Lisbon. 

 With Introduction and Notes by Austin Dobson, and 

 Two Illustrations. 



*I43. "Wells's Joseph and his Brethren. Introduc- 

 tion by A. C. Swinburne, and a Note on Rossetti and 

 Charles Wells by Theodore V/atts-Dunton. 



"^144. Carlyle's Life of John Sterling. With an In- 

 troduction by W. Hale White. 



*i45. Ruskin's Sesame and Lilies, and The Ethics 

 of the Dust. Ruskin House edition. 



*i46. Ruskin's Time and Tide, and The Cro^A7n of 

 Wild Olive. Ruskin House edition. 



*I47. Ruskin's A Joy for Ever, and The Two 

 Paths. Ruskin House edition. 



*i48. Ruskin's Unto this Last, and Munera Pul- 

 veris. Ruskin House edition. 



*i49. Reynolds's Discourses, and his Letters to 

 the ' Idler.' With an Intro, by Austin Dobson. 



*i5o. W^ashington Irving's Conquest of Granada. 



*I5l, *I52. Lesage'S Gil Bias. (Smollett's translation.) 

 Intro, and Notes by J. Fitzmaurice-Kelly. 2 Vols. 



*I53. Carlyle's Past and Present. Introduction by 

 G. K. Chesterton. 



"^154. Mrs. Gaskell's North and South. Introduction 

 by Clement Shorter. 



♦155. George Eliot's Scenes of Clerical Life. In- 

 troduction by Annie Matheson. 



