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TRISTRAM OF LYONESSE-

1. Dedicatory Sonnet

II. Selection from "The Sailing of the Swallow
III. Selection from "The Maiden Marriage"
IV. Selection from "The Last Pilgrimage"
HERSE

SONNET: "Hope and Fear"

A CENTURY OF ROUNDELS--
1. To Catullus

11. In Guernsey

DAVID GRAY (1838-1861)

EMPEDOCLES

THE LUGGIE-

Winter (a selection)
THE YELLOWHAMMER
OCTOBER (a selection)

THE HAREBELL.

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Sonnets I., II., and III.

IN THE SHADOWS-

MY EPITAPH

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James Ashcroft Noble 355

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HERMAN CHARLES MERIVALE (1839)J. A. Blaikie 371

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Alfred H. Miles 391

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408

A LOST MORNING

AUSTIN DOBSON (1840)

OLD-WORLD Idylls—

I. A Dead Letter

11. The Ballad of " Beau Brocade

PROVERBS IN PORCELAIN-

"Good Night, Babette "

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FABLES OF LITERATURE AND ART-

The Poet and the Critics
ESSAYS IN Old French FORMS-
A Ballad of Prose and Rhyme
"In After Days'

WILFRID SCAWEN BLUNT (1840)

SONNETS AND SONGS-

1. In the Night .

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Richard le Gallienne 425

II. Sonnets-The Sublime

III. At a Funeral.

THE LOVE-SONNETS OF PROTEUS-

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1. To Manon, comparing Her to a Falcon
II. To Juliet, exhorting Her to Patience
III. Farewell to Juliet: "Lame, Impotent Con.
clusion"

IV. Farewell to Juliet: "Farewell, then "
v. Laughter and Death

vi. On the Shortness of Time

IN VINCULIS-

SONNETS

"

442

1. "From Caiaphas to Pilate I was sent
II. "There are two voices with me in the night" 442

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II. "To-day there is no cloud upon thy face"
III. "For thus it is. You flout at kings to-day" 445
IV. "Gods, what a moral! Yet in vain I jest " 445
v. "How strangely now I come, a man of

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William Morris.

1834-1896.

WILLIAM MORRIS was born at Walthamstow on the 24th of March, 1834, and died at Hammersmith on the 3rd of October, 1896. He was educated at Marlborough and at Exeter College, Oxford; and in 1856 he was articled to the late George Edmund Street, the architect. His early sympathies with what is noblest in architecture may be traced in his literary work of this period, preserved in a remarkable periodical in which he was associated with several brilliant young contemporaries. The Oxford and Cambridge Magazine, founded, and supported so far as funds are concerned, by Morris, was also largely indebted to his pen for its contents; and it was during the year 1856, in which its twelve numbers appeared, that he made a solid start in literature. The magazine contains poems of his, critical papers, and a series of notable prose stories. It is in some of these that he showed, in a dreamy and sensitive way, the keen sympathy with the craftsmen of the middle ages that in later years led him into the eager polemics of that practical undertaking, the Society for the Protection of Ancient Buildings, dreaded, though not yet sufficiently dreaded, by the destructive Philistine. Those early stories, though crude in form, bear unmistakable marks of genius; and no man of judgment reading them as the work of a youth of one or two and

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