29 OCTOBER 1904, Page 26

N8w EDITIONS AND Rzenurrs.—Guiliver's Travels. Illustrated by S. B. de

la Bere. (A. and C. Black. 6s.)—This volume, with its quaint coloured illustrations (which, by the way, would have seemed very odd, and even inappropriate, to Swift), is a very handsome edition of " Gulliver." " Bowdlerised " presentments of classical authors are not, we are aware, in much favour just now—dubious books are recommended by the epithets " un- abridged," " unaltered "—yet we cannot help thinking that "Gulliver" would be all the better for a little excision.—Uncle Tom's Cabin. With 8 Full-Page Illustrations in Colour by Simon Harmon Vedder. (Same publishers. 6s.)—The Diary of Samuel Pepys. Edited by Henry B. Wheatley. Vols. I. and II. (G. Bell and Sons. 5s. each.)—Durny's History of France. Translated by Mrs. M. Carey, with Introductory Notice and Continuation to 1896 by J. Franklin Jameson, Ph.D. (Dean and Son. 8s. 6d. net.) —First Principles. By Herbert Spencer. (Williams and Nor- gate. 7s. 6d.)—The Flower of the Mind. A Choice among the Best Poems Made by Alice Meynell. (Grant Richards. 4s. 6d. net.) PUBLICATIONS OF THE WEEK.