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Mr. Grant White combines the qualifications of a perfect editor of Shakespeare in larger proportion than any other with whose labors we are acquainted. He has an acuteness in tracing the finer fibres of thought worthy of the keenest lawyer on the scent of a devious trail of circumstantial evidence; he has a sincere desire to illustrate his author rather than himself; he is a man of the world as well as a scholar; he comprehends the mastery of imagination; a critic of music, he appreciates the importance of rhythm as the higher mystery of versification. The sum of his qualifications is large, and his work is honorable to American letters. - JAMES RUSSELL LOWELL.

The Riverside Shakespeare

EDITED BY

RICHARD GRANT WHITE.

With Glossarial, Historical, and Explanatory Notes. In Six Volumes: I.-II. COMEDIES. III-IV. HISTORIES AND POEMS. V.-VI. TRAGEDIES.

Crown 8vo, cloth, $10.00; half calf,

$18.00; half calf, gilt top, $19.00; half levant, $24.00. (Sold only in sets.)

From Mr. W. ALDIS WRIGHT, of Trinity College, Cambridge, England, one of the Editors of the famous Cambridge Edition of Shakespeare.

Mr. Grant White's name is a sufficient guarantee for the goodness of the text, and the notes he has done wisely to make brief and few, so that the attention of the readers is directed to what the author wrote, and not to what others have written about him.

From Harper's Monthly, December, 1883.

His introductions are marvels of terseness, and yet contain everything that an intelli gent reader cares to know; his glossarial, historical, and explanatory notes are brier, luminous, and directly to the point; his text is as perfect as the most industrious research and painstaking study could make it; and the concise and excellent life of Shakespeare which he has prefixed to the first volume sets forth every fact that is really known with regard to the life, character, dis position, habits, and writings of the poet. By reason of its convenient size, its judicious arrangement, its thoroughly trustworthy text, and the wise reserve with which it has been edited and annotated, this serviceable edition deserves, above all other editions with which we are familiar, to be made the favorite companion of the man of letters in his study, and of all readers of cultivated literary taste in the seclusion of their libraries, or in their hours of leisure.

From the New York Tribune.

As an edition for general use, the Riverside Shakespeare must take its place at once in the very front rank. The notes are always brief, but they are abundant and satisfying. The editor's acquaintance with the time and the materials from which he freely prising clearness, precision, and completeness. illuminate the text. They make the Riverside editor goes, probably the most comfortable of all

literature and history of Shakespeare's borrowed give these short notes a surThey are never pedantic. They reallv Shakespeare, so far as the work of the editions to read.

From the Liverpool Post.

The first Shakespearean scholar in America is probably Mr. Richard Grant White. He is a scholar, a thinker, a critic, a high æsthetic authority, and an elegant essay writer, - -in his way almost a genius.

From The Nation.

He possesses a rare faculty of delicate and acute literary criticism and insight, combined with a hardly less rare faculty of expressing fine distinctions of thought.

For sale by all Booksellers. Sent, postpaid, on receipt of price by the Publishers,
HOUGHTON, MIFFLIN AND COMPANY,

4 PARK STREET, BOSTON; 11 EAST 17TH STREET, NEW York; 28 LAKESIDE BUILDING, CHICAGO.

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HOUGHTON, MIFFLIN & COMPANY
Boston: 4 Park Street; New York: 11 East 17th Street
Chicago: 28 Lakeside Building

The Riverside Press, Cambridge

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