72 Cheap JEJcUtions of Standard and Popular* Works. 
B^omtledg'e's Poetis, price 5s.. eacb, cloth, g'ilt edg-es. 
GOLDSMITH, JOHNSON", SMOLLETT, and SHEN^ 
STONE'S POETICAL WORKS. In One Volume. 
" Can any author— can even Sir Walter Scott — be compared with Goldsmith, fo?" 
the variety, beauty, and power of his compositions ? You may take and ' cut hini 
out in littie stars,' so many lights does he present to the imagination." — Athenaum. 
QPENSER'S FAERIE QIJEENE. To which is added, 
O his EPITHALAMION. With a Glossary. 
" The nobility of the Spensers," says Gibbon, " has been illustrated and enriched 
by the trophies of Marlborough ; but I charge them to consider the ' Fairie Queene* 
as the most precious jewel of their coronet. As far as Spenser's writings are road, 
he exerts the most salutary influence in inspiring a love for the just, the beautiful, 
the true. The grand procession of stately and beautiful forms— the chivalrous glow 
— the stirring adventures — the noble sentiments — the picturesque descriptions — the 
charming poetry — all tend to make the ' Fairie Queene' a poem of unequalled rich- 
ness and beauty." 
pH AUGER'S CANTERBURY TALES, &c. Erom the 
yj Text of Tyrwhitt. 
'* Chaucei-'s * pure well of English undefiled,' as Spenser termed his * Canterbury 
Tales,' formed a standard of composition through the national distractions that 
follo^wed. Warton says Chaucer's genius was like a genial day in an English spring, 
when a brilliant sun enlivens the face of nature with unusual warmth and lustre." 
KIRKE WHITE'S POETICAL WORKS AND RE- 
MAINS. With Life by Southet. 
♦* Kirke White's poems have long enjoyed popularity ; and the feeling and melody 
of his writings will long retain its hold on good taste. The touching circumstances 
of his history and the attractive picture of his disposition, drawn by Southey, will 
ever charm. In this volume there is an added eloquence in Mr. Foster's beautiful 
illustrations." 
QOUTHEY'S JOAN OF ARC, MINOR POEMS, 
O BALLADS, and LYRICAL PIECES. 
"Joan of Arc," says Mr. Hazlitt, "is a work in which the love of liberty is inhaled 
like the breath of spring — mild, balmy, heaven-born. And is full of fears and virgin 
sighs, and yearnings of alfection after truth and good, gushing warm and crimsoned 
from the heart." 
■pEYDEN'S POETICAL WORKS. Complete Edition. 
" The versification of Dryden is admirable ; his narratives and descriptions are 
full of life. To this day 'Palamon and Arcite,' * Cymon and Iphigenia,* ' Theodore 
and Honoria,' are the delight both of critics and of school-boys. Of lyric poets he 
is the most sublime, the most brilliant and spirit-stirring." — Macaulay. 
In 1 vol. price 5s • cloth gilt. 
qiR WALTER SCOTT'S POETICAL WORKS ; com- 
O prising Lay of the Last Minstrel, Marmion, Lady of the Lake, 
Kokeby, Bridal of Triennain, Ballads, Lays, Lyrical Pieces, and The 
Lord of the Isles. With Eight Illustrations by Corbould. 
" This one-volume edition contains the * Bridal of Triermain,' which is omitted 
in most editions. It has been thoroughly collated with the first issues of Sir Walter 
Scott's Poems, and many Kotes added. It is the best one-volume edition that has 
yet appeared.'* 
