2 APRIL 1898, Page 24

NEW EDITIONS.—Leaves of Grass. By Walt Whitman. (G. P. Pntnam's

Sons.)—The poems in this reprint are well and clearly printed, and compressed into a single manageable volume.— Selected Poems. By George Meredith. (A. Constable and Co.)—All lovers of Mr. Meredith's verse will be glad to possess this volume, though, in our opinion, poets are seldom the best selectors of their own works. We should have preferred in the present case a larger number of the sonnets from "Modern Love."—Three Sunsets, and other Poems. By Lewis Carroll. (Macmillan and Co.)—This is a reprint of Lewis Carroll's more serious Terse. Charming as it often is, it has nothing like the style and distinction which belong to the true nonsense Terse. There, and there only, was Lewis Carroll inspired.— The Student's History of France. By W. H. Jervis, M.A. Revised and partly rewritten by Arthur Hassall. With a chapter on Ancient Gaul, by F. Haverfield, MA. (Murray.) —The Formation of Christendom. By T. W. Allies, M.A. Vol. IV. (Burns and Oates.)—Ethical Principles. By James Seth, M.A. (W. Blackwood and Sons.)—The Psalms at Work. By Charles L. Marson. With an Appendix. (Elliot Stock.) —Law of Civilization and Decay. By Brook Adams. (Mac- millan and Co.)—The Round Towers of Ireland. By Henry O'Brien. (Thacker and Co.)— Condition of Labour. By Henry George. A Popular Edition. (Swan Sonnenschein and Co.)— Cranford. By Mrs. Gaskell. (Ward, Lock, and Co.)—The Vicar of Langthwaite. By Lily Watson. (J. Clarke and Co.)—Poultry for Table and Market. By W. Tegetmeier. (Horace Cox.)