tHE UNIVERSI ITS OF? CI CAGCO. PSS 
Questions on Shakespeare: A Plan of Study Intended to Develop 
the Student's Personal Judgment. By Albert H. Tolman, 
Associate Professor of English Literature in the University of 
Chicago. 
Part I, INTRODUCTION: 220 pages, 16mo, cloth; postpaid 81 cents 
Part II, First Histories, Po—EMs, AND COMEDIES: 364 pages, 16mo, cloth; 
postpaid $1.09 
The exercises on each play follow a logical order, embracing 
general questions, questions on individual acts and scenes, char- 
acter-study, the relation of the play to its sources, and questions 
concerning the text or meaning. Part I is introductory to the 
series. It includes “The Study of Shakespeare’s Language,” 
“The Study of Shakespeare’s Verse,” and a select general 
bibliography. Part II contains detailed questions for the study 
of Shakespeare’s four early histories (the three parts of Henry 
VI, and Richard IIT) which deal with the fall of Lancaster and 
the coming of Tudor; the early poems; and the first comedies, 
Love’s Labour's Lost, The Comedy of Errors, The Two Gentlemen 
of Verona, and A Midsummer Night’s Dream. | 
Dr. Horace Howard Furness, Editor of the Ah ew Variorum Shakespeare. 1 
are concerned—within so small a space. | 
Petrarch’s Letters to Classical Authors. A Translation of Selected 
Epistolae with Notes by Mario E. Cosenza, Instructor in the — 
_ Latin Language and Literature in the College of the City of New 
York. oo | = 
224 pages, 12mo, cloth; postpaid $1.09 
ment and object, and a valuation of previous translations. The _ 
__ book gives a vivid picture of the intellectual world of the Renais- _ 
Se ee Soe ee 
