PUBLISHED BY GEORGE ROUTLEDGE AND CO. 3 



NEW AND CHEAP EDITION OF LORD EXMOUTH'S LIFE. 



In foolscap 8vo, price 2s. 6d., cloth gilt, 



ADMIE^L VISCOUNT EXMOUTH'S LIFE. By 

 Edward Osler. 



" A new revised edition, with portrait of Lord Exmouth, which appears most op- 

 portunely now, at the commencement of hostilities whose extent and duration none 

 can foresee. It is the wisdom of those to whom England will hereafter commit the 

 honour of her flag, to study well the examples of the great sea officers whose services 

 illustrate the annals of their country. Among these bright examples, none is more 

 worthy of careful study than Admiral Lord Exmouth." 



NEW VOLUME OF 



"pOUTLEDGE'S EDITION OF THE POETS. Edited 

 -LV by the Rev. R. A. Willmott. 



GRAY, COLLINS, PARNELL, WARTON, and GREEN'S POETICAL 

 WORKS, complete in 1 volume, with Biographical Notices of each 

 Author, and numerous Notes, with illustrations by Birket Foster and 

 Edward Corbould. Fcap. 8vo, cloth, gilt edges, price 5s. 



" Had Gray written nothing but his • Elegy,' high as he stands, I am not sure that 

 he would not stand higher. It is the corner-stone of his glory." — Lord Byron. 



"Parnell occupies a distinguished post amongst our English Poets. He is an 

 earlier Goldsmith, vrith a scholarly taste. His poems are pre-eminently the offspring 

 of refinement. The more he did, the better he did it. His fancy was a tree that 

 burst into richer bloom the often er it shed its leaf." — Extract from Life of Farnell. 



"A volume of unusual merit and excellence." — The Guardian. 



MR. AINSWORTH'S NEW NOVEL. 

 In 1 vol., price 5s., cloth gilt, 



THE FLITCH OF BACON ; or, THE CUSTOM OF 

 DUNMOW. A Tale of EngHsh Home. By William Harrison 

 AiNSWORTH, and illustrated by John Gilbert. 



" As a thoroughly national story — in truth as well as in title a Tale of English Home 

 — it is the most acceptable of his many popular romances ; the happiest of his many 

 successful literary achievements." — Sun. 



"■ There is an air of rural simplicity and joviality in this book, which is almost as 

 new in such stories as it is refreshing when found." — Weekly News. 



" Certainly no custom was ever more popular ; the fame of it is bruited throughout 

 the length and breadth of the land — it is a subject that gives excellent scope to a 

 writer of fiction; and Mr. Ainsworth, by skilful treatment, has rendered it most 

 entertaining. The materials are put together with dramatic force and spirit." — 

 Examiner. 



" In our judgment, one of the best of Mr. Ainsworth's Romances : it is a right good 

 story of Old English life and manners." — Scottish Citizen, 



