The Practical Elements of Rhetoric. By JOHN F. GENUNG, Ph.D., Professor of Rhetoric in Amherst College. 12mo. Cloth. xiv + 483 pages. Mailing price, $1.40; for introd., $1.25. THE treatment is characterized by good sense, simplicity, originality, availability, completeness and ample illustration. It is throughout constructive and the student is regarded at every step as endeavoring to make literature. All of the literary forms have been given something of the fulness hitherto accorded only to argument and oratory. No important principle has been presented without illustrations drawn from the usage of the best authorities. Genung's Rhetoric, though a work on a trite subject, has aroused general enthusiasm by its freshness and practical worth. Among the many leading institutions that have introduced it are Wellesley, Smith, Vassar Colleges; Cornell, Johns Hopkins, Vanderbilt, Northwestern Universities; and the Universities of Virginia, North Carolina, Illinois, Minnesota, Kansas, Michigan. C. F. Richardson, Prof. of English, T. W. Hunt, Prof. of Eng. LiteraLiterature, Dartmouth College, and ture, Princeton College, Princeton, author of a History of American N. J. It impresses me as a philoLiterature: I find it excellent both sophic and useful manual. I like in plan and execution. especially its literary spirit. Miss M. A. Jordan, Prof. of Rhet- W. H. Magruder, Prof. of English, oric, Smith College, Northampton, Agricultural and Mechanical College Mass. The critic is conscious of a of Mississippi: For clearness of feeling of surprise as he misses the thought, lucidity of expression, aptorthodox dulness. The analysis of ness of illustration,-in short, for topics is clear, the illustrations are real teaching power, I have never pertinent and of value in themselves, seen this work equalled. the rules are concise and portable. A Handbook of Rhetorical Analysis. Studies in Style and Invention, designed to accompany the author's Practical Elements of Rhetoric. By JOHN F. GENUNG, Ph.D., Professor of Rhetoric in Amherst College. 12mo. Cloth. xii + 306 pages. Mailing Price, $1.25; Introduction and Teachers' Price, $1.12. THIS handbook follows the general plan of the larger text-book, being designed to alternate with that from time to time, as different stages of the subject are reached. J. H. Gilmore, Prof. of Rhetoric, | C. L. Ehrenfeld, Prof. English, University of Rochester, N.Y.: This Wittenberg College, Springfield, strikes me as a very significant at- Ohio: Its actual use in class work tempt to open a road that college has confirmed my former favorable students especially need to travel. judgment of it. Selections in English Prose from Elizabeth to Victoria. 1580-1880. By JAMES M. GARNETT, Professor of the English Language and Literature in the University of Virginia. 12mo. Cloth. ix+701 pages. By mail, $1.65: for introduction, $1.50. THE selections are accompanied by such explanatory notes as have been deemed necessary, and will average some twenty pages each. The object is to provide students with the texts themselves of the most prominent writers of English prose for the past three hundred years, in selections of sufficient length to be characteristic of the author, and, when possible, they are complete works or sections of works. H. N. Ogden, West Virginia Uni-| versity; The book fulfills my expectations in every respect, and will become an indispensable help in the work of our senior English class. F. B. Gummere, Prof. of English, Haverford College: I like the plan, the selections, and the making of the book. Macaulay's Essay on Milton. Edited, with Introduction and Notes, by HERBERT A. SMITH, Instructor in English in Yale University. 12mo. Paper. price, cents; for introduction, cents. pages. Mailing ACONVENIENT and well-edited edition of Macaulay's masterly essay on Milton. The introduction and notes are especially valuable to students. DeFoe's History of the Plague in London. Journal of the Plague Year. Edited by BYRON S. HURLBUT, Instructor in English in Harvard introduction, cents. THE book is intended to meet the requirements of students preparing to take the college entrance examinations, and to supply a convenient edition for general use. Biography. Phillips Exeter Lectures. By Rev. PHILLIPS BROOKS, D.D. 12mo. Paper. 30 pages. Mailing price, 12 cents; for introduction, 10 cents. Minto's Manual of English Prose Literature. Designed mainly to show characteristics of style. By WILLIAM MINTO, M.A., Professor of Logic and English Literature in the University of Aberdeen, Scotland. 12mo. Cloth. 566 pages. Mailing price, $1.65; for introduction, $1.50. THE main design is to assist in directing students in English composition to the merits and defects of the principal writers of prose, enabling them, in some degree at least, to acquire the one and avoid the other. The Introduction analyzes style: elements of style, qualities of style, kinds of composition. Part First gives exhaustive analyses of De Quincey, Macaulay, and Carlyle. These serve as a key to all the other authors treated. Part Second takes up the prose authors in historical order, from the fourteenth century up to the early part of the nineteenth. Hiram Corson, Prof. English Lit-terest. The criticisms and comments erature, Cornell University: With- on authors are admirable- the best, out going outside of this book, an ear- on the whole, that I have met with nest student could get a knowledge in any text-book. of English prose styles, based on the soundest principles of criticism, such as he could not get in any twenty volumes which I know of. Katherine Lee Bates, Prof. of English, Wellesley College: It is of sterling value. John M. Ellis, Prof. of English Literature, Oberlin College: I am using it for reference with great in J. Scott Clark, Prof. of Rhetoric, Syracuse University: We have now given Minto's English Prose a good trial, and I am so much pleased that I want some more of the same. A. W. Long, Wofford College, Spartanburg, S.C.: I have used Minto's English Poets and English Prose the past year, and am greatly pleased with the results. Minto's Characteristics of the English Poets, from Chaucer to Shirley. By WILLIAM MINTO, M.A., Professor of Logic and English Literature in the University of Aberdeen, Scotland. 12mo. Cloth. xi +382 pages. Mailing price, $1.65; for introduction, $1.50. College Requirements in English. Entrance Examinations. By Rev. ARTHUR WENTWORTH EATON, B.A., Instructor in English in the Cutler School, New York. 12mo. Cloth. 74 pages. Mailing price, 90 cents; to teachers, 80 cents. The Art of Poetry: The Poetical Treatises of Horace, Vida, and Boileau, with the translations by Howes, Pitt, and Soame. Edited by ALBERT S. COOK, Professor of the English Language and Literature in Yale University. 12mo. Cloth. lviii+303 pages. Mailing price, $1.25; for introduction, $1.12. Bliss Perry, Prof. of English, as well as his scholarship. . . . I Princeton College: The fullness and wish to express my admiration of accuracy of the references in the such faithful and competent editnotes is a testimony to his patience ing. Shelley's Defense of Poetry. Edited, with Introduction and Notes, by ALBERT S. COOK, Professor of English in Yale University. 12mo. Cloth. xxvi+86 pages. Price by mail, 60 cents; for introduction, 50 cents. John F. Genung, Prof. of Rhetoric, | ture; and in the introduction and Amherst College: By his excellent notes, which evince in every part the editions of these three works, Pro- thorough and sympathetic scholar, fessor Cook is doing invaluable as also in the beautiful form given service for the study of poetry. The to the books by the printer and works themselves, written by men binder, the student has all the help who were masters alike of poetry to the reading of them that he can and prose, are standard as litera- desire. Cardinal Newman's Essay on Poetry. With reference to Aristotle's Poetics. Edited, with Introduction and Notes, by ALBERT S. COOK, Professor of English in Yale University. 8vo. Limp cloth. x+36 pages. Mailing price, 35 cents; for introduction, 30 cents. Addison's Criticisms on Paradise Lost. Edited by ALBERT S. COOK, Professor of the English Language and Literature in Yale University. 12mo. Cloth. xxvi +200 pages. Mailing price, $1.10; for introduction, $1.00. V. D. Scudder, Instructor in Eng-| be welcome as an addition to our lish Literature, Wellesley College: It store of text-books. seems to me admirably edited and to "What is Poetry? Leigh Hunt's Answer to the Question, including Remarks on Versification. Edited by ALBERT S. COOK, Professor of the English Language and Literature in Yale University. 12mo. Cloth. 104 pages. Mailing price, 60 cents; for introduction, 50 cents. Bliss Perry, College of New Jer- | prove to the teacher one of the most sey, Princeton, N.J.: Professor useful volumes in the series it repreCook's beautiful little book will sents. The Beginnings of the English Romantic Move ment. A Study in Eighteenth Century Literature. By WILLIAM LYON PHELPS, Ph.D., Instructor in English Literature, Yale University. 12mo. Cloth. viii+192 pages. Mailing price, $1.10; for introduction, $1.00. THIS book is a study of the germs of English Romanticism between 1725 and 1765. No other work in this field has ever been published, hence the results given here are all the fruit of first-hand investigation. The book discusses, with abundant references and illustrations, the various causes that brought about the transition of taste from Classicism to Romanticism such as the Spenserian revival, the influence of Milton's minor poetry, the love of medieval life, the revival of ballad literature, the study of Northern mythology, etc. It is believed that this book is a contribution to our knowledge of English literary history; and it will be especially valuable to advanced classes of students who are interested in the development of literature. Archibald MacMechan, Professor | English, Harvard University: All of English, Dalhousie College, Hal- along I have thought it among the ifax, N.S.: It is a valuable contri- most scholarly and suggestive books bution to the history of English of literary history. It is cer literature in the eighteenth century. tainly based on an amount of origBarrett Wendell, Professor of inal study by no means usual. Studies in the Evolution of English Criticism. By LAURA JOHNSON WYLIE, Graduate Student of English in Yale University. 12mo. Cloth. viii+212 pages. Mailing price, $1.10; for introduction, $1.00. THE critical principles of Dryden and Coleridge, and the con ditions on which the evolution of their opposite theories depended, are the subjects chiefly discussed in this book. The classical spirit is first traced from its beginnings in the sixteenth century to its adequate expression by Dryden; the preparation for a more philosophic criticism is then sought in the widening sympathy and knowledge of the eighteenth century; and, finally, Coleridge's criticism is considered as representing the reaction against the philosophy of the preceding school. |