(Author of ‘The Dilettante,’ and ‘The Tale of Florentius.’)

Tales of the Sarai. Crown 8vo, sewed, 2s. 6d. net.

‘Very delightful ... for humour we want nothing better. We have not derived more pleasure for some time from any book of verse.’—The Times.

EDITH SITWELL.

Wheels: An Anthology of Verse. Edited by Edith Sitwell. Impl. 16mo, boards with design, 3s. 6d. net.

‘They have not as a body very much in common.’—The Times.

‘The names of the poets are unfamiliar to us.’—Everyman.

‘Conceived in morbid eccentricity and executed in factitious gloom.... The fœtidness of the whole clings to the nostrils.’—The Pall Mall Gazette.

‘The poets ... present such identity of mood and even imagery that it might seem that the mood and its emotion had been agreed upon.’—The Oxford Chronicle.

‘The names speak for themselves.’—The Observer.