+ −Dial. 43: 123. S. 1, ’07. 320w.

“The book will bear reading and rereading both by officers and by private citizens.”

+Educ. R. 34: 210. S. ’07. 60w.
+Ind. 63: 1309. N. 28, ’07. 570w.
J. Pol. Econ. 15: 569. N. ’07. 100w.

“The book is worth reading not once, but twice. This is a rich bill of fare spread exactly in the ripeness of appetite for the meal. May good digestion wait on appetite, and the community will be the better for it.” Edward A. Bradford.

+ +N. Y. Times. 12: 417. Je. 29, ’07. 1460w.

Reviewed by Montgomery Schuyler.

+Putnam’s. 3: 227. N. ’07. 270w.
R. of Rs. 36: 384. S. ’07. 100w.
Yale R. 16: 225. Ag. ’07. 160w.

Hadow, Gerald Elliot, and Hadow, William Henry. Oxford treasury of English literature. 3v. ea. *90c. Oxford.

7–6793.

v. 1. Old English to Jacobean. This volume indicates the chief landmarks in prose and poetry (not dramatic) from Beowulf to the writers of the Jacobean age, with good introductions.