In 12 volumes, 5s. each.

VOL. I.A TALE OF A TUB and other Early Works.
Edited by Temple Scott. With a biographical introduction by
W. E. H. Lecky, M.P. With Portrait and Facsimiles.
VOL. II.THE JOURNAL TO STELLA. Edited by Frederick
Ryland, M.A. With two Portraits of Stella and a Facsimile of
one of the Letters.
VOLS. III.& IV.WRITINGS ON RELIGION AND THE CHURCH.
Edited by Temple Scott. With Portraits and Facsimiles of Title-pages.
VOL. V.HISTORICAL AND POLITICAL TRACTS—ENGLISH.
Edited by Temple Scott. With Portrait and Facsimiles of Title-pages.
VOL. VI.THE DRAPIER'S LETTERS. Edited by Temple Scott.
With Portrait, Reproductions of Wood's Coinage,
and Facsimiles of Title-pages.
VOL. VII.HISTORICAL AND POLITICAL TRACTS—IRISH.
Edited by Temple Scott. With Portrait and Facsimiles of Title-pages.
VOL. VIII.GULLIVER'S TRAVELS. Edited by G. Ravenscroft Dennis.
With Portrait, Maps and Facsimiles.
VOL. IX.CONTRIBUTIONS TO THE "EXAMINER,"
"TATLER," "SPECTATOR," &c. Edited by Temple Scott.
With Portrait.
VOL. X.HISTORICAL WRITINGS. Edited by Temple Scott.
With Portrait.
VOL. XI.LITERARY ESSAYS. Edited by Temple Scott.
With Portrait. [In the press.
VOL. XII.FULL BIBLIOGRAPHY AND INDEX TO COMPLETE WORKS.
Together with an Essay on the Portraits of
Swift, by the Hon. Sir Frederick Falkiner, K.C. With two
Portraits. [In the press.

SOME PRESS OPINIONS

"An adequate edition of Swift—the whole of Swift, and nothing but Swift—has long been one of the pressing needs of students of English literature. Mr. Temple Scott, who is preparing the new edition of Swift's Prose Works, has begun well, his first volume is marked by care and knowledge. He has scrupulously collated his texts with the first or the best early editions, and has given various readings in the footnotes.... Mr. Temple Scott may well be congratulated on his skill and judgment as a commentator.... He has undoubtedly earned the gratitude of all admirers of our greatest satirist, and all students of vigorous, masculine, and exact English."—Athenæum.

"The volume is an agreeable one to hold and to refer to, and the notes and apparatus are, on the whole, exact. A cheap and handy reprint, which we can conscientiously recommend."—Saturday Review.

"From the specimen now before us we may safely predict that Mr. Temple Scott will easily distance both Roscoe and Scott. He deserves the gratitude of all lovers of literature for enabling Swift again to make his bow to the world in so satisfactory and complete a garb."—Manchester Guardian.

"Mr. Temple Scott's introductions and notes are excellent in all respects, and this edition of Swift is likely to be one most acceptable to scholars."—Notes and Queries.

"The new Bohn's Library edition of the prose works of Jonathan Swift is a venture which proves itself the more welcome as each instalment is issued.... This edition is likely long to remain the standard edition."—Literary World.

"'Bohn's Libraries' need no push, and the magnificent edition of 'The Prose Works of Jonathan Swift,' edited by Mr. Temple Scott, is in every respect worthy of that great collection of classics. It is an ideal edition, edited by an ideal editor, beautifully printed, handsomely bound, and ridiculously cheap. I have no hesitation in saying that this edition supersedes all its forerunners."—Star.