22 Works published by Henry S. King 6° Co. 



POETRY— (continued.) 

 xm 



THE POETICAL AND PROSE WORKS OF ROBERT 



BUCHANAN. Preparing for publication, a Collected Edition, in 



5 vols. [In the press. 



Contents of Vol. I. 



Daughters of Eve ; 



Undertones and Antiques ; 



Country and Pastoral Poems. 



SONGS OF LIFE AND DEATH. By John Payne, Author 

 of 'Intaglios,' 'Sonnets,' 'The Masque of Shadows,' &c. Crown 

 8vo. 55. [Just out. 



XV 



SONGS OF TWO WORLDS. By a New Writer. Second 

 Edition. Fcp. 8vo. cloth, 5.9. 



4 The " New Writer " is certainly no tyro. No one after reading the first two 

 poems, almost perfect in rhythm and all the graceful reserve of true lyrical 

 strength, can doubt that this book is the result of lengthened thought and 



assiduous training in poetical form These poems will assuredly take 



high rank among the class to which they belong.' — British Quarterly Review, 

 April 1. 



' If these poems are the mere preludes of a mind growing in power and in 

 inclination for verse, we have in them the promise of a fine poet. . . . The 

 verse describing Socrates has the highest note of critical poetry.' — Spectator, 

 February 17. 



'No extracts could do justice to the exquisite tone, the felicitous phrasing, 

 and delicately wrought harmonies of some of these poems.' — Nonconformist, 

 3Iarch 27. 



'Are we in this book making the acquaintance of a fine and original poet, or 

 of a most artistic imitator ? And our deliberate opinion is, that the former hypo- 

 thesis is the right one. It has a purity and delicacy of feeling like morning 

 air. — Graphic, March 16. 



XVI 



THE INN OF STRANGE MEETINGS, AND OTHER 



POEMS. By Mortimer Collins. Crown 8vo. 5s. 



1 Abounding in quiet humour, in bright fancy, in sweetness and melody of ex- 

 pression, and, at times, in the tenderest touches of pathos.' — Graphic. 



1 Mr. Collins has an undercurrent of chivalry and romance beneath the trifling 

 vein of good humoured banter which is the special characteristic of his verse. 



„ . The " Inn of Strange Meetings" is a sprightly piece.' — Athenaeum. 



EROS AGONISTES. By E. B. D. Crown 8vo. 3s. M. 



1 The author of these verses has written a very touching story of the human 

 heart, in the story he tells with such pathos and power, of an affection cherished 



so long and so secretly It is not the least merit of these pages that 



they are everywher-e illumined with moral and religious sentiment, suggested, 

 not paraded, of the brightest, purest character.' — Standard. 



65 Corn/iill, and 12 Paternoster Row, London. 



