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1-228 The Publishers''• Circular q<^ h i...
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From Messrs. George Bell & Sons.—'The
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Note: This text has been automatically extracted via Optical Character Recognition (OCR) software. The text has not been manually corrected and should not be relied on to be an accurate representation of the item.
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1-228 The Publishers''• Circular Q<^ H I...
1-228 The Publishers' '• Circular q <^ h iSq 9 I
From Messrs. George Bell & Sons.—'The
From Messrs . George Bell & Sons . —' The
arranged Poetical Works and edited of John , with Keats a memoir / , chronologicall , by Lord y Hbughton . An editorial note informs us that
' the object of the chronological arrangement of this edition and the consequent insertion of some pieces of comparatively little value is to
present a faithful self-drawn literary picture of a short and sad poetic life . ' We are glad to have everything that Keats wrote , if not
always for its merit ( though he produced little that was not truly poetic ) , at least as part of a luminous record of the development of one of
the most richly endowed minds that have ever lived contributed to turn to his ^ Eng promise lish literature into performance . Had Keats the
world would , no doubt , be glad to dispense with , his juvenile productions , but , as it is , they are all welcome , and very touching some of them
now are . Lord Houghton's memoir is appreciative and not too long . The volume is well printed and nicely bound .
From the same . — ' The Poetical Works of William Blake , ' edited , with a prefatory X . V memoir , by •/
William Michael Rossetti . Admirers of Blake will be moved to fresh enthusiasm by the excellent and grap CJ JLhic memoir which the editor
has written for this volume . Though Mr . Rossetti modestly assures us it is based on Gilchrist - — — — —~ —¦— — — — '— s work -- — - — , it ___ is _ . _ reall _ __ y an independent — — — j— ^ — —— - —¦ —'— - —
study of Blake ' s life and labours , and as such will be useful to the student and general reader alike . Blake was an erratic man of
genius , original and fearless , and his poems are of very unequal merit , but they are poems , which is much . Like the precedingthe book
is prettily got up . X < j , — ~ From Mr . Spencer Blackett . — ' Edelweiss / by
' Rita . ' The scene of this charming story is laid amongst the Alps . Early one morning the child Edelweiss is found by a peasant high up
in the mountains . He takes «/ her j . home , adop O— t s . her , and she grows up a beautiful and good young woman . She makes the acquaintance of Conrad
Reichenburg , a young Austrian engineer employed on the Rigi railway . Conrad lends her booksand the two become fast friends ; but a
great calamity , overtakes her in the death of Hans ki Krauss lled while , her guiding foster-father a party , who of tourists is accidental . Edel ly
weiss thus finds herself homeless and friendless . In the midst of her sorrow Franz Bruhl comes g he allantl is rejected y forward and and fired proposes with jealousy marria he ge , vows but
to kill Conrad , who , he fanciesis to , be the lucky one . When , , the railway , is finished , Conrad ' s step-mother and his betrothed come
to the opening JL ceremony . The Austrian girl meets Edelweiss , is struck with her appearance , hears her story - i / , and finally ^ discovers that — she
has found her half-sister . Edelweiss is the daughter of a prince , though the fact is known only to Paulineand had been left by .. he ______ r nurse
where mf the old peasant , had found her . Pauline perceives that Conrad loves Edelweiss , and she does all in her power to torture them tooth .
She . is , eminently successful . Edelweiss loses her life in . an heroic endeavour to protect Conrad from danger ; and Pauline suffers for her
cruelty and selfishness . The story is short , but it is sweet and striking . In the character of
Edelweiss ' Rita * has achieved a rare triumph . JSt ' ¦ . ' ¦ ¦ ¦ ~
From Blackie & Son , Xiim . ited-. ~' Blackie's Modern — Cyclopedia ^ M - _ - ^ l of Universal — Information - _ ^ ^^ ^_^^^ H * fc ^ F _* ^ fc ^^^ ^^ £ A '
edited by Charles Annandale , M . A ., LL . D . Vol . VII ., Pot-Ska . To the busy man who has little time h for ¦ ¦ resear ¦ 1 ¦ ch < Blacki 1 e ' s Cyclopedia '
is - —» ~" r an — —^ *^^ invaluable ¦ ~— _ w _^^^» ~^* .- ^ r ^^— work — ° " ^^ ^^ p ~^ _~ ~^ m —¦ — of , ^ m ¦ ^™^ reference —^ ~^ " ~ ^ ¦ ^^ ™_»~ — ~— . —^^ - ^ . Consider ^^^ w ^^ ^^^ M ^^ p ^ v ^ ^^ rf ^^ ^^ ^ W ^ V - ing its scope , which , is literally universal , the fulness — — — — of - _ - its — information - _ - — — — - _ —— . _ - _ is — really -, ^_ - — — ^^ g astonishing __ — - _ ¦ - ~_ - — - ^^^ mr ^ v ^^ ^^ ^^^ ^^^ , a
to and secure it is evident accuracy that . The no effort present has volume been spared shows the same careful and successful editing that
marked the preceding ones . The longer and well more written important , and articles some of are them without are models exception of
clearness and condensation . There is a sketch of the history of Russia and another of that of Scotland which could hardly j be surpassed in
conciseness — — - — — — - — and — —— — — concinnity — — — — - _ - - _ — — —— — . The - _ - — biograp _ — * — — — ^ v hi - _ - - ^ c al ^ ^^^^ ti notices cularl of well famous done . peop Indeed le are the likewise work is par a - y
monument of learning , industry , , and good editing , and will be found to deserve a place in every library that is not merely ornamental .
From Messrs . Brook & Chrystal , Manchester . — b * The y Emil Folks y Foster of Fernlei . A gh prolix : a Country , rambl Ch ing ronicle story , , '
full of gossip and love-making , and describing many marriages . There are too many characters in the book , and none of them has any particular
individuality the best of them . Anna . A , the disguised Quaker ' earl s daug pla hter ys , is important - part « - - toward . _ . s _ the __ close wr __ v which may - ¦< ¦—
From be an the inducement Clarendon —^ — to some — — Press — to read . — ^^ __ ( Dup , the _ _ leix story . — / . by — w
Colonel Series ) . Malleson There are , C few . S . I . greater (' Rulers or of more India in- ' terestin — - g g v figure ^^^ k — s — in ° the — - ¦ history - — ¦ ^ v -m ^ ^^ v of - *^ ^^ h ^ India ^^ v ^~ - ^^ . « ^^ ^^ r ^ than ^ v ^—^^ ^^^^^^^
l ess , leix capacious . A man , and of inventive vast ambition mind / as , of Macaulay ' a restlong ago described .- _ - _ him .-. . j he p J— layed — ¦ - - — a great •^¦¦ mr-r game
^ -j ^ j — , _ — ^_ — — ^_ — in Indian politics , and if he did ^ not succeed in doing for France quite what Clive did for England it was assuredly from no want of
press talent the or resolution imagination . His like g t i gantic e dreams schemes of some imgifted romancerand yet he ¦ had no b p I I lan that he
could g ^^ J no — t — have , W carried — ' ' ^ M ^^ " ~ " ~ ¦ out ~^ ^^^ had ^^^ ^^ B ^ m ^ he ^^ ' ^ ,. ^»^ had " ^^ ^ " ^^^ ' ^ the —^" proper tools . Those who desire to understand the policy of the English in India during the
ac last coun century t of will Dlei find x it necessary his doi to tak e close to enable them to up da this , Colonel ng M , alleso , ' s
compact biography may be unhesitatingly recommended . From his own Indian experiences the autho - ~ ~— r is - - w- in a - ^ posit _ i ion ! ¦ to l 1 f- ap f M / preciate what
the illustrious — Frenchman . _ ~ - - *^ ^» - —w ~ —m ^^ w ^ " —— - » ^^ achieved ^^ —^^^ H ^ ' ^^ ^^ and ^^ ^^^ ~^ ^ . ^^^ ^^ to ^^ ™ shed " bio light on her many must points have remained which to obscure an ordinary . The gp
history of French enterprise in the East from the when — ~ ¦ - ¦ ¦ - ~ earlies D m ¦ le t ix t ¦— i ¦— m ~ - ~ es is rap on idl the y sket scene ched t w h « % , so reader •—¦ - ^ ~ that - " — ' — up ^ — —r — ' ^ " p M pears a ^^ ^^ . * 11 ^ *^^^ ^ fc ^ ^^ i . ^ ^^^ p ^^ ^^^ ^^^ Hj , ^^^ ^ jt ^ ^*^
easily grasps the situation in which the young administrator found himself . The contentions of the English and French are described at
considerable tiality . Clive length and and Dupleix with praiseworth are contrasted y impar ; the - facts , so far as their careers bore on each other , are his set own down jud , and gments the reader Colonel is mai Malleson nly left to admits form
but tUat , following so far as India the . path is concerned which the , Eng genius land of is
opened France To the opened is general well f out shown reader VUtV to her VA in however / the How book that perhaps before path was the us .
ohief - "" ^^ «** - * interest ^^ m ^ ' ** -M *^ SM « , of ^* A the work , * m *\ jr will Iff % , / V % lie SM , * ^ in r ^ rm , m the ^^ r ^ jg" -- very
successful presentation of Dupleix as a man . ' '' ~* rr
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Citation
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Publishers’ Circular (1880-1890), Oct. 1, 1890, page 1228, in the Nineteenth-Century Serials Edition (2008; 2018) ncse.ac.uk/periodicals/pc/issues/tec_01101890/page/70/
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