New EDITIONEL—The Poetical Works of John Keats. Edited by William
T. Arnold. (Macmillan and Co. 3s. 6d.)—The volume contains an introduction (fifty pages) and a note on the text (ten pages) in which the principle on which the poems or fragmente of poems have been included is stated. We heartily agree that "it is a little hard that all the verses, good, bad, or indifferent, which a poet may have written, should be brought up against him after his death." The book belongs to the "Globe" Series.—Adonis—Attis—Osiris. By J. G. Frazer. (Same publishers. 10s. net.)—This is Part IV. of "The Golden Bough."—The Poems of William Collins. Edited by Christopher Stone. With Memoir, and an Appendix containing Letters written by or addressed to the Poet. (H. Frowdo. 25. 6d. net.)— In the "Red Letter Library" (Blaekie and Son, 28. (3d. net per vol.), Poems by Thomas Hood, with Introduction by Sir F. C. Buy- nand; Eot hen, by A. W. Kinglake ; and Imagination and Panty, by Leigh Hunt.—In the "Red Letter Shakespeare" (same pub- lishers, is. 6d. net per vol.), Antony and Cleopatra, Troilus and Cressida, and Twelfth Night.