LIBRARY OF HUMOUR 



Cloth Elegant, Large i2mo, Price %\.2^ per vol. 



VOLUMES ALREADY ISSUED. 



THE HUMOUR OF FRANCE. Translated, with an 

 Introduction and Notes, by Elizabeth Lee. With numerous 

 Illustrations by Paul Frenzeny. 



"From Villon to Paul Verlaine, from ^2X&\&%% fabliaux to news- 

 papers fresh from the kiosk, we have a tremendous range of 

 selections." — Birmingham Daily Gazette. 



" French wit is excellently represented. We have here examples 

 of Villon, Rabelais, and Moliere, but we have specimens also of 

 La Rochefoucauld, Regnard, Voltaire, Beaumarchais, Chamfort, 

 Dumas, Gautier, Labiche, De Banville, Pailleron, and many others. 

 . . , The book sparkles from beginning to end." — 6^/(C?^(? (London). 



THE HUMOUR OF GERMANY. Translated, with 

 an Introduction and Notes, by Hans Miiller-Casenov. With 

 numerous Illustrations by C. E. Brock. 



An excellently representative volume. — Daily Telegraph (London). 



"Whether it is Saxon kinship or the fine qualities of the collec- 

 tion, we have found this volume the most entertaining of the three. 

 Its riotous absurdities well overbalance its examples of the oppres- 

 sively heavy. . . . The national impulse to make fun of the 

 war correspondent has a capital example in the skit from Julius 

 Stettenheim."— A'ljzf/ York Independent. 



New York : Charles Scribner's Sons. 



