44. Buddhism. By MRS. RHYS DAVIDS, Lecturer on Indian Philosophy, Manchester.
46. English Sects: A History of Nonconformity. By W.B. SELBIE, Principal of Manchester College, Oxford.
60. Comparative Religion. By PROF. J. ESTLIN CARPENTER.
88. Religious Development Between Old and New Testaments. By R.H. CHARLES, Canon of Westminster. Shows how religious and ethical thought grew between 180 B.C. and 100 A.D.
LITERATURE AND ART
73. Euripides and His Age. By GILBERT MURRAY, Regius Professor of Greek, Oxford.
81. Chaucer and His Times. By GRACE E. HADOW, Lecturer Lady Margaret Hall, Oxford; Late Reader, Bryn Mawr.
70. Ancient Art and Ritual. By JANE E. HARRISON, LL.D., D.Litt. “One of the 100 most important books of 1913.”—New York Times Review.
61. The Victorian Age in Literature. By G.K. CHESTERTON.
97. Milton. By JOHN BAILEY.
59. Dr. Johnson and His Circle. By JOHN BAILEY. Johnson’s life, character, works, and friendships are surveyed; and there is a notable vindication of the “Genius of Boswell.”
58. The Newspaper. By G. BINNEY DIBBLE. The first full account, from the inside, of newspaper organization as it exists to-day.
62. Painters and Painting. By SIR FREDERIC WEDMORE. With 16 half-tone illustration.
64. The Literature of Germany. By J.G. ROBERTSON.
48. Great Writers of America. By W.P. TRENT and JOHN ERSKINE, of Columbia University.
87. The Renaissance. By EDITH SICHEL, author of Catherine de Medici, Men and Women of the French Renaissance.
101. Dante. By JEFFERSON B. FLETCHER, Columbia University, An interpretation of Dante and his teachings from his writings.
93. An Outline of Russian Literature. By MAURICE BARING, author of The Russian People, etc. Tolstoi, Tourgenieff, Dostoieffsky, Pushkin (the father of Russian Literature), Saltykov (the satirist), Leskov, and many other authors.
40. The English Language. By L.P. SMITH. A concise history of its origin and development.
45. Medieval English Literature. By W.P. KER, Professor of English Literature, University College, London. “One of the soundest scholars. His style is effective, simple, yet never dry.”—The Athenaeum.
89. Elizabethan Literature. By J.M. ROBERTSON, M.P., author of Montaigne and Shakespeare, Modern Humanists.
27. Modern English Literature. By G.H. MAIR. From Wyatt and Surrey to Synge and Yeats. “One of the best of this great series.”—Chicago Evening Post.
2. Shakespeare. By JOHN MASEFIELD. “One of the very few indispensable adjuncts to a Shakespearean Library.”—Boston Transcript.
31. Landmarks in French Literature. By G.L. STRACHEY, Scholar of Trinity College, Cambridge. “It is difficult to imagine how a better account of French Literature could be given in 250 pages.”—London Times.