VOL. XIV. Butler's Analogy of Religion. Voltaire's Candide. Johnson's Rasselas. Goldsmith's Vicar of Wakefield. (A.D. 1736 to A.D. 1766.] XV. Sterne's Tristram Shandy. Two Speeches on Concilia tion with America, and Two Letters on Irish Questions by Edmund Burke. Sheridan's Plays. (A.D. 1759 to A.D. 1779. ] XVI. The Two Parts of Goethe's Faust (with Marlowe's Faustus), Schiller's Poems and Ballads, translated by Edward, Lord Lytton. [.1.1). 1780 to A.D. 1831.] XVII. Tales of Terror and Wonder, by M. G. Lewis. con fessions of an English Opium - Eater, Thomas de Quincey. Essays of Elia, Charles Lamb. (4.1). 1800 to A.D. 1824.] XVIII. Southey's Life of Nelson. Scott's Demonology and Witchcraft. Coleridge's Table-Talk. (A.D. 1813 to A.D. 1834: ) XIX. Stories of Ireland, by Maria Edgeworth. Popular Songs of Ireland, collected by Thomas Crofton Croker; Traditional Tales of the English and Scottish Peasantry, by Allan Cunningham. [A.D. 1800 to A.D. 1839.) XX. Praed's Essays. Walker's Original; and Cobbett's Ad vice to Young Men. [A.D. 1821 to A.D. 1835.1 XXI. Vestiges of the Natural History of Creation. Essays, Representative Men and Society and Solitude, by R. W. Emerson. THE CARISBROOKE LIBRARY continues the work of its predecessor, in half-crown volumes, with some changes of form and method. The volumes are published in alternate months. VOL. I. The Tale of a Tub, and other Works, by Jonathan Swist. Amantis" of John Gower. Defoe. V. English Prose Writings of John Milton. and Frere. VII. Tasso's Jerusalem Delivered, translated by Edward Fairfax. VIII. London under Elizabeth: being the “Survey of London," by John Stow. IX. Ben Jonson's Masques. X. Ireland under Elizabeth and James. |