Tae UNEVER SITY: OF CHICAGU PREGe 
Assyrian and Babylonian Letters Belonging to the Kouyunjik Col- 
lections of the British Museum. Edited by Robert Francis 
Harper, Professor of the Semitic Languages and Literatures in 
the University of Chicago. 
Part I, pp. xvi +116 plates of texts, 8vo, cloth; postpaid $6.13. 
Part II, pp. xvi+112 plates of texts, 8vo, cloth; postpaid $6.14. 
Part IIL, pp. xvi+116 plates of texts, 8vo, cloth; postpaid $6.14. 
Part IV, pp. xvi+116 plates of texts, 8vo, cloth; postpaid $6.14. 
Part V, pp. xvi+120 plates of texts, 8vo, cloth; postpaid $6.15. 
Part VI, pp. xvi+120 plates of texts, 8vo, cloth; postpaid $6.14. 
Part VII, pp. xx+120 plates of texts, 8vo, cloth; postpaid $6.15. 
Part VIII, pp. xxx-+120 plates of texts, 8vo, cloth; postpaid $6.16. 
Part IX, pp. xxvi+120 plates of texts, 8vo, cloth; postpaid $6.15. 
The following have just been published: 
Part X, pp. xvi+120 plates of texts, 8vo, cloth; postpaid $6.15. 
Part XI, pp. xvi+120 plates of texts, 8vo, cloth; postpaid $6.15. 
Sir Perceval of Galles: A Study of the Sources of the Legend. By 
Reginald H. Griffith, Adjunct Professor of English in the 
University of Texas. 
140 pages, 8vo, cloth; postpaid $1.35 
The long list of books devoted to the study of the legends 
that gathered about the knights of King Arthur’s Round Table 
receives a noteworthy addition in the volume by Professor 
Griffith. The particular knight whose fortunes the author fol- 
lows is Perceval, who is best known to modern readers through 
Tennyson’s Idylls of the King and Wagner’s Parsifal, but who 18 
also the titular hero in two of the best of the poems of the Middle 
Ages, Wolfram von Eschenbach’s Parzival and Crestien de Troye’s 
Perceval, ou le conte du Graal. 
Dial. The volume is essentially technical in nature, but it is by no means 
devoid of the graces of style, and is concerned with processes that must 
prove interesting to the student of general folk-lore as well as to the 
specialist in Arthurian legend. 
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