GEORGE ELIOT-Silas Marner-HANCOCK. CHAUCER-Selections-GREENLAW. COLERIDGE-The Ancient Mariner, 1 vol.-MOODY DE QUINCEY-The Flight of a Tartar Tribe-FRENCH. EMERSON-Essays and Addresses-HEYDRICK. GASKELL (Mrs.)-Cranford-HANCOCK GOLDSMITH-The Vicar of Wakefield-MORTON IRVING-Life of Goldsmith-KRAPP.. BURKE-Speech on Conciliation with America-DENNEY. COOPER-Last of the Mohicans-LEWIS.. DE QUINCEY-Joan of Arc and Selections-MOODY... General Editor: LINDSAY TODD DAMON, A. B., Professor of English Literature and Rhetoric in Brown University ADDISON-The Sir Roger De Coverley Papers-ABBOTT BUNYAN-The Pilgrim's Progress-LATHAM. 30c 40c 30c 25c 25c 40c 40c 25c 25c 25c 30c 40c 50c 25c 35c 30c 35 30c 30c HAWTHORNE-The House of the Seven Gables-HERRICK 35c HAWTHORNE-Twice-Told Tales-HERRICK AND BRUERE.. 40c 40c IRVING-The Sketch Book-KRAPP... 40c IRVING-Tales of a Traveller-and parts of The Sketch Book-KRAPP 40c LAMB-Essays of Elia-BENEDICT.. 35c LONGFELLOW-Narrative Poems-POWELL.. 40c LOWELL-Vision of Sir Launfal-See Coleridge. MACAULAY-Essays on Addison and Johnson-NEWCOMER. 30c MACAULAY-Essays on Clive and Hastings-NEWCOMER 35c MACAULAY-Essays on Milton and Addison-NEWCOMER. 30c MILTON-L'Allegro, Il Penseroso, Comus, and Lycidas-NEILSON.. POPE-Homer's Iliad, Books I, VI, XXII, XXIV-CRESSY AND SCOTT-Lay of the Last Minstrel-MOODY AND WILLARD. 25c SCOTT-Marmion-MOODY AND WILLARD.. 30c SHAKSPERE-The Neilson Edition-Edited by W. A. NEILSON, AS You Like It, Hamlet, Julius Caesar, Macbeth, Twelfth Night, Henry 25c SHAKSPERE-Merchant of Venice-LOVETT. 25c STEVENSON-Inland Voyage and Travels with a Donkey-LEONARD 35c STEVENSON-Treasure Island-BROADUS. 25c THACKERAY-Henry Esmond-PHELPS. 50c THACKERAY-English Humorists-CUNLIFFE AND WATT Three American Poems-The Raven, Snow-Bound, Miles Standish- 30c 25c The Lake English Classics EDITED BY LINDSAY TODD DAMON, A.B. Professor of English Literature and Rhetoric in Brown University American speeches have always been studied enthusiastically by Americans; not primarily because of their literary value, but because of their satisfying statement of American ideals. The words of Washington, Webster, and Lincoln express the national aspiration in ways that are forever memorable. Their phrases have passed into maxims and into the daily speech of their countrymen. The appeal they make is to the historical imagination. Consequently they can be appreciated best by those who bring to the reading the fullest knowledge of the historical events and governmental principles to which they refer. For this reason the notes explain, or put the student in the way of explaining for himself, the leading historical ideas with which Washington, Webster, and Lincoln deal in their addresses. But while the interest in these addresses is. primarily historical, the editor has not neglected the literary and rhetorical phase of the study. To this phase are devoted a part of the introduction and a considerable body of the notes. COLUMBUS, OHIO, January, 1910. |