v. 2. Mosses from an old manse.

v. 3. The house of the seven gables. The snow image, and other twice-told tales.

and so on through the rest of the volumes. Wherever possible, the tabulated contents of such works should be summarised when considered sufficient for all reasonable purposes, as

Gray, Thomas.

Works; ed. by Edmund Gosse. 4 v. 1884

v. 1. Poems, journals, and essays.

v. 2-3. Letters.

v. 4. Notes on Aristophanes and Plato.

To give a list of the essays contained in the first volume is unnecessary, as all Gray’s miscellaneous essays are in that volume.

64.—There are books, or rather editions of books, of a composite nature, where an editor has joined together works by different authors into one volume. Examples of these are