“A true English story of English life, truthfully seasoned with pleasant passages and quaint little adventures, while its main flow rolls smoothly and deeply on.”—Morning Advertiser.

MOON, G. W.—The Dean’s English. A Criticism on the Dean of Canterbury’s Essays on the Queen’s English. By G. Washington Moon, Fellow of the Royal Society of Literature. Sixth Edition. Fcap. cloth, 3s. 6d.

“Demonstrating that while the Dean undertook to instruct others, he was himself but a castaway in matters of grammar.”—The Edinburgh Review.

“Coming out for wool, in fact, the Dean went back shorn; rushing forth to teach, he went home taught.”—The Record.

“We think Mr. Moon entitled to the gratitude of all lovers of our language in its purity for this exposure of the Dean’s English.”—The Churchman.

“It merits the attention of all students of our tongue.”—The English Journal of Education.

“It is one of the most masterly pieces of literary criticism in the language.”—Newsman.

—— Elijah the Prophet. An Epic Poem. By G. Washington Moon, F.R.S.L. Second Edition. 4to. cloth gilt, 10s. 6d.

“The poem is one of unusual interest and beauty.”—Evangelical Christendom.