Galahad, by Sir Thomas Malory, and The Vision of Sir
Launfal, by J. R. Lowell, booklets of forty-two and eighteen pages respectively, very 'good to see with their dead-white paper and black type.—The " Hampstead Edition" of The Works of Shake- speare (J. Finch and Co., 303. net), 4 vols. in case, well printed, and on good paper.—The- Life of an Actor, by Pierce Egan (Methuen and Co., 4s. 6d. net), first published in 1825, and dedicated to. Edmund Kean, a volume of the "Illustrated Pocket Library of Plain and Coloured Books."----In the " Library of Standard Biographies," Queen Elizabeth, by Agnes Strickland (Hutchinson and Co., Is. and 2s.), abridged, but still running to more than three hundred pages, with notes and an appre- ciation.—Essays of Elia, by Charles Lamb (T. N. Foulis, 2s. 6d. not), the first of a projected series named " The Library of English Prose," an attractive volume in every way.----The Master of Ballantrae and The Black Arrow, by R. L. Stevenson (Cassell and Co., 2s. net each), a "pocket edition," making the thirty-third of reprints and new editions.—Shelley at Orford, by Thomas Jefferson Hogg (Methuen and Co., 12s. net), with an Introduction by R. A. Streatfeild, in which a brief account of T. J. Hogg is given. There are few stranger things in biography than the relations between these two friends.—A third edition, considerably enlarged, has been published of A Guide to the Best Historical Novels and Tales, by Jonathan Nield (Elkin Mathews, 4s. net). The book has grown from 124 to 235 pages.—The Reciter's Treasury of Verses. By Ernest Pertwee. (Rohtledge and Sons. 3s. 6d.)—Great Expectations, and Hard Times. By Charles Dickens. (Macmillan and Co. 3s. 6d.)—Bygone Eton. (Spottiswoode and Co. ls. 6d.)—A series of permanent photographs, with notes, in which the history of the old College buildings is traced.