9th. CHARLES DICKENS, d. 9 Je. 1870
I. Charles Dickens, 17-Pt. I:99-120

10th. EDWARD EVERETT HALE, d. 10 Je. 1909
I. My Double and How He Undid Me, 8-Pt. I:124-142

If an author be worthy of anything, he is worth bottoming. It may be all very well to skim milk, for the cream lies on the top; but who could skim Lord Byron?
—GEORGE SEARLE PHILLIPS.

JUNE 11TH TO 17TH

11th. I. Wells’s Tragedy of a Theatre Hat, 9-Pt. II:50-55
II. One Week,9-Pt. II:151
III. The Poster Girl, 8-Pt. II:92-93
IV. A Memory, 9-Pt. I:116-117

12th. CHARLES KINGSLEY, b. 12 Je. 1819
I. Oh! That We Two Were Maying, 12:175-176
II. The Last Buccaneer, 14:240-242
III. The Sands of Dee, 10:261-262
IV. The Three Fishers, 10:262-263
V. Lorraine, 11:306-308

13th. WILLIAM BUTLER YEATS, b. 13 Je. 1865
I. Ballad of Father Gilligan, 10:314
II. Fiddler of Dooney, 14:310

14th. Flag Day
I. Whittier’s Barbara Frietchie, 10:210-213
II. Key’s Star-Spangled Banner, 12:213-215
III. Drake’s American Flag, 12:215-217
IV. Holmes’s Old Ironsides, 12:217-218

15th. I. Leacock’s My Financial Career, 9-Pt. II:19-23
II. Hawthorne’s Gray Champion, 3-Pt. I:139-152

16th. I. Lanigan’s The Villager and the Snake, 9-Pt-I:19
II. The Amateur Orlando, 9-Pt. I:26-30
III. The Ahkoond of Swat, 8-Pt. I: 37-38