Single Number, $125 Vol. CCVII. QUARTERLY REVIEW PUBLISHED QUARTERLY. 5 CONTENTS: 1. NINETEENTH CENTURY SPAIN. II. WILLIAM BLAKE. BY T. STURGE MOORE. III. THE ENGLISH BOROUGH. BY H. W. C. DAVIS. IV. JOHNSON'S LIVES. BY PROFESSOR J. CHURTON COLLINS. V. THE RELIGION OF JAPAN. BY SIR CHARLES ELIOT, K.C.M.G. VI. ARIOSTO. BY R. WARWICK BOND. VII. THE EIGHT HOURS' DAY IN COAL MINES. VIII. THE POETRY OF MR. ALFRED AUSTIN. IX. THE RIGHT TO WORK. X. THE HAGUE CONFERENCE. BY PROFESSOR WESTLAKE. XI. GREEK TEMPLES AND EARLY RELIGION. BY PROFESSOR R. CARR BOSANQUET. XII. THE JUBILEE OF THE ALPINE CLUB. BY SIR MARTIN XIII. MR. BIRRELL'S RECORD IN IRELAND. NEW YORK: LEONARD SCOTT PUBLICATION COMPANY, BARR FERRES, PROPRIETOR PUBLISHERS OF NINETEENTH CENTURY AND AFTER CONTEMPORARY REVIEW FORTNIGHTLY REVIEW BLACKWOOD'S EDINBURGH MAGAZINE LONDON: JOHN MURRAY. Registered at New York Post Office as Second Class Matter. A PRIMER A NEW HISTORY OF PENNSYLVANIA By BARR FERREE Secretary of the Pennsylvania Society. A book of facts. The whole history of Pennsylvania admirably condensed and conveniently arranged. It contains more information than many larger books and is intended at once as a book of reference and a book that will tell the reader every essential fact in the history of Pennsylvania. "Every reader will learn much that he cannot find as easily elsewhere."-The Athenaeum (London).-"The best and most concise story of the origin, progress and development of our Commonwealth that has so far been written. Its value as a book of reference can hardly be over-estimated."-New Era (Lancaster, Pa)." We can only wish that every State in the Union had its merits described with so much fullness and detail."-The Sun (New York).—" Remarkably valuable."-Public Ledger (Philadelphia.)" It would be difficult to find its equal for compactness, clarity, completeness of information and reliability as a ready reference work."-Post (Boston).“ Unusually comprehensive."-North American (Philadelphia).-"Remarkably interesting and valuable contains a vast amount of information to be found in no other single volume."-Transcript (Boston).-"The essential facts of Pennsylvania affairs and history."-Pittsburg Gazette.-"Contains primary facts in a way that meets the approval of those who want to get at the meat of the subject."-Philadelphia Inquirer.—“A handy book of reference."-The Nation (New York).-"It covers a a much broader field than many larger histories."—WilkesBarre Record." Concise and authoritative and well adapted for practical general use."-Book News (Philadelphia).-Governor Pennypacker says:-"You have done good work: I congratulate you upon its success." 164 ILLUSTRATIONS PRICE, CLOTH, GILT TOPS, $3.00 LEONARD SCOTT PUBLICATION COMPANY 7 and 9 Warren Street : : : : New York CONTENTS ART. I.-NINETEENTH-CENTURY SPAIN 1. Modern Spain, 1815-98. By H. Butler Clarke. With 2. Historia de España y de la Civilizacion Española. 1. The Poems of William Blake. Edited by W. B. Yeats. London: Lawrence and Bullen, 1893. 2. The Poetical Works of William Blake. A new and verbatim text from the originals, with notes and pre- faces by J. Sampson. Oxford: Clarendon Press, 1905. 1. Records of the Borough of Leicester. Edited by Mary Bateson. Three vols. Cambridge: University 2. Cambridge Gild Records, 1298-1389. Edited by Mary Bateson. Cambridge: University Press, 1903. ART. IV.—DR JOHNSON'S 'LIVES OF THE POETS' 1. Lives of the English Poets. By Samuel Johnson, LL.D. Edited by George Birkbeck Hill, D.C.L. Three vols. Oxford: Clarendon Press, 1905. 2. Lives of the most Eminent English Poets, with critical observations on their works. By Samuel Johnson. Edited, with notes corrective and explana- |