The Paston Letters 

 1422-1509 A.D 



A REPRINT OF THE EDITION OF 1872-5, WHICH CONTAINED 

 UPWARDS OF FIVE HUNDRED LETTERS, ETC., TILL 

 THEN UNPUBLISHED, TO WHICH ARE NOW 

 ADDED OTHERS IN A SUPPLEMENT 

 AFTER THE INTRODUCTION 



The 4th Volume containing 



INTRODUCTION AND SUPPLEMENT 



By JAMES GAIRDNER, C.B 



Now Ready. Price los. 6d. net. With Photogravure Frontispiece. 

 4 vols, in box. 215'. net. 



Ephemera Critica 



PLAIN TRUTHS ABOUT CURRENT LITERATURE 



By JOHN CHURTON COLLINS 



Second Edition. Crown 8vo, 7^. 6d. 



" A book ot uncommon interest and importance. A collection 01 essays 

 united in a common aim, and inspired by a genuine enthusiasm for literature 

 it has something to say and says it without fear or favour." — Literature, 



Letters of T. E. Brown 



Author of " Betsy Lee" and " Fo'c'sle Yarns." 



Edited with an Introductory Memoir by SIDNEY T. IRWIN 

 Third Edition. 2 Vols. Crown 8vo. Price \2s. 



"A delightful, hearty book of letters by a scholar, a humorist, a man full ot 

 noble qualities. The book is a book to be read." — Mr. Andrew Lang in 

 the Daily Nezus. 



"These volumes are not only fascinating ; they confirm a fame which, 

 although never wide, was always unquestioned within its range." — From an 

 article on "T. E. B." by Mr. A. T. Quiller-Couch in The Monthly Review 



Oliver Cromwell 



By THEODORE ROOSEVELT 



Demy 8vo, fully Illustrated, \os. 6d. net. 



" The interest of this book lies mainly in the personality of the author and 

 the qualifications which his own history and experience have given him as a 

 critic of Cromwell's career. An American of the old ' Knickerbocker' families, 

 who has been a dashing cavalry leader in war and a prominent official of the 

 Government in peace, who is at this moment in the front of the great Presiden- 

 tial contest in the United States, has opportunities forjudging the career of the 

 Protector from a practical experience such as none of the previous biographers 

 (and hardly Mr. Morley himself) have possessed."— Mr. Frederic Harrison 

 in The Speaker. 



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