38 GENERAL CATALOGUE. 



Trench (Archbishop) {continued)— 



SACRED LATIN POETRY, Chiefly Lyrical. Selected and arranged 

 for Use. Second Edition, Corrected and Improved. Fcap. 8vo. 

 is. 



" The aim of the present volume is to offer to members of our English 

 Church a collection of the best sacred Latin poetry, such as they shall be 

 able entirely and heartily to accept andapproiie — a collection, that is, in which 

 they shall not be enermore liable to be offended, and to have the current of 

 their sympathies checked, by coming upon that which, however beautifrd as 

 poetry, out of higher respects they must reject and ccnde?nn — i?i which, too, 

 they shall not fear that sjtares are being laid for them, to entangle them 

 unawares in admiration for ought 7vhich is i7iconsistent with their faith 

 and fealty to their otun spiritual mother. — Preface. 



Turner. — SONNETS. By the Rev. Charles Tennyson 

 Turner. Dedicated to his brotlier, the Poet Laureate. Fcap. 

 8vo. 4J. 6d. 



" The Sonnets are dedicated to Mr. Tennyson by his brother, and have, 

 independently of their merits, an interest of association. They both love to 

 write in simple expressive Saxon ; both love to touch their imagery in 

 epithets rather than in formal similes ; both have a delicate perception 

 of rhythmical movement, and thus Air. Turner has occasional lines which, 

 for phrase and music, might be ascribed to his brother. . . He knows the 

 haunts of the wild rose, the shady nooks where light quivers through the 

 leaves, the ruralities, in short, of the land of imagination." — Athen.EUM. 



SMALL TABLEAUX. Fcap. 8vo. d^. U. 



" These brief poems have not only a pecidiar kind of interest for the 

 student of English poetry, but are intrinsically delightful, and will reward 

 a careful a7id frequent perusal. Full of naivete, piety, love, and knviuledge 

 of natural objects, and each expressing a single and generally a simple 

 subject by means of minute and original pictorial touches, these sonnets 

 have a place of their own." — Pall Mall Gazette. 



