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Heidelberg, Slavica, 6) nachzutragen wären. Dann bespricht E. die früheren werke über denselben gegenstand und verbreitet sich des näheren über plan und umfang seines buches. Es soll nicht bloss die etymologie der einzelnen ortsnamen in geographischer ordnung geben, sondern auch die verteilung der namentypen und die art der siedlung (Kelten, Engländer, Skandinavier) zeigen; auch gibt der verfasser die heutige aussprache der namen an, obgleich diese nicht immer von besonderem wert ist. Sodann werden die elemente der ortsnamen in alphabetischer reihenfolge und in den ältesten englischen oder nordischen formen vorgefürt (von á bis wudu). Eine kurze darlegung der lautlehre des dialekts von Lancashire beschliesst dieses einleitende kapitel.

Im hauptteil seines werkes führt E. die einzelnen namen mit den belegen aus den verschiedenen jahrhunderten vor, um dann eine etymologische deutung zu versuchen. Sind die namen aus sehr alter zeit überliefert, so ist die erklärung gewöhnlich leicht und sicher; liegen aber erst spätere formen aus urkunden und geschichtswerken vor, so entstehen häufig zweifel, zuweilen ist jede etymologie ünmoglich. Es gewährt einen eignen reiz, zu sehen, wie die namen im laufe der zeit oft verunstaltet und entstellt werden gerade wie in anderen ländern. Hätte man die alten belege nicht, dann wäre meist jede deutung unmöglich.

Eine zusammenfassung der ergebnisse (S. 224 ff.) behandelt die Britten, Angeln und Skandinavier in Lancashire, soweit sich deren wohnsitze aus den ortsnamen ergeben. Hier hat der verf. einige wichtige tatsachen durch sprachliche kriterien ermittelt z.b. dass im nördl. teile der grafschaft Nordhumbrier, im südl. aber Merkier wohten, der Ribble also die grenze bildete. Neben vorwiegend norwegischen namen erscheinen auch einige dänische, was auf, wenigstens teilweise, besiedelung durch Dänen schliessen lässt.

Zum schluss führt der verf. diejenigen namen vor, die kulturhistorischer bedeutung sind, d.h. sich auf alte strassen, gebäude, soziale einrichtungen, klassen, personen, flora und fauna, landbau und volkskunde beziehen. Ein alphabetischer index beschliesst das ausgezeichnete buch, das als muster für ähnliche untersuchungen bezeichnet werden darf.

Kiel.

F. HOLTHAUSEN.

Bibliography.

POETRY, FICTION, DRAMA.

Layamon's Brut. Selections, edited with introduction, notes and glossary, by JOSEPH HALL. Pp. xx + 150. Milford, 1924. 6/6 net. [A review will appear.]

Cavalier and Puritan. Ballads and Broadsides illustrating the period of the Great Rebellion 1640-1660. Edited, with an Introduction and Notes, by HYDER E. ROLLINS. 9 × 6, xv. +532 pp. New York: University Press.

The Complete Poetical Works of Austin Dobson. (The Oxford Poets.) 8 X 5. xxiii + 325 pp. Milford, 1924. 7 s. net.

The Best Poems of 1923. Selected by THOMAS MOULT. Decorated by PHILIP HAGREEN. 7 X 5, 135 pp. Jonathan Cape, 1924. 6 s. net.

Poetry in Australia. 1923. Preface by NORMAN LINDSAY. 8×5, xiii. + 143 pp. Sydney: Vision Press. 1924.

A Book of Australian Verse. Chosen by WALTER MURDOCH. 7, X 51⁄4, viii. + 287 pp. Milford, 1924. 4 s. net.

A Cure of Souls. A Novel. By MAY SINCLAIR. 73 × 5, 288 pp. Hutchinson. 7 s. 6 d. net. Undream'd of Shores. By FRANK HARRIS. 7×5, 297 pp. Grant Richards, 1924. 7/6 n.

Celestina, or the Tragi-Comedy of Calisto and Melibea. Translated from the Spanish by JAMES MABBE. Also an Interlude of Calisto and Melebea. The whole edited, with appendices and an introduction on the Picaresque Novel, by H. WARNER ALLEN. (Broadway Translations.) 8, × 53⁄4, xci. +345 pp. Routledge. 12 s. 6 d. net.

The Tragicall Historie of Hamlet Prince of Denmarke. By WILLIAM SHAKESPEARE. 7, × 5, xxxi.+73 pp. Bodley Head Quartos. John Lane, 1924. 3 s. net.

A reprint of the First Quarto. Introduction by G. B. Harrison.

The Lady of Belmont. A Play in Five Acts. By ST. JOHN G. ERVINE. 72 X 5, 95 pp. Allen and Unwin. 1924. 3 s. 6 d. net.

Ayuli: A Play in Three Acts and an Epilogue. By LAURENCE BINYON. 103 pp. The Prince. By GWEN JOHN. 88 pp. Four One-Act Plays. 125 pp. The Lilies of the Field: A Comedy in Three Acts. By JOHN HASTINGS TURNER. 116 pp. 7 X 5. Oxford: Blackwell, 1924. 3 s. 6 d. net each.

HISTORY OF LITERATURE, CRITICISM.

Beowulfskalden och nordisk tradition. By C. W. voN SYDOW. Yearbook of the New Society of Letters at Lund. 1923. pp. 77-91.

Rhetoric and Poetry in the Renaissance: A Study of Rhetorical Terms in English Renaissance Literary Criticism. By DONALD LEMEN CLARK. 8 X 53⁄4, x. + 166 pp. New York: Columbia University Press; London: Milford. 9 s. net.

In this study. published in the United States in 1922, the author, who is Assistant Professor of English in Columbia University, seeks to trace the influence of classical rhetoric on the criticisms of poetry published in England between 1553 and 1641. [T.]

John Davies of Hereford (1565?-1618) und sein Bild von Shakespeare's Umgebung. By HANS HEIDRICH. Palaestra CxLiii. Roy. 8vo, vI.+ 124 pp. Leipzig: Mayer u. Müller, 1924. James Harrington's Oceana. Edited with Notes by S. B. LILJEGREN. Publications of the New Society of Letters at Lund. 4. Heidelberg 1924. Carl Winter. xxiii + 372 pp. Price 10 Swedish crowns.

De Nederlandsche Vertalingen en Navolgingen van Thomson's Seasons. Door B. G. HALBERSTADT. Frankenstein & Wagner, Leipzig. 1923. viii.+ 170.

Diss. Amsterdam.

Das Ausland in Smolletts Romanen. By ERNA SCHUDT. Roy. 8vo, iv. + 35 pp. Giessen: Selbstverlag des Engl. Seminars, 1923.

Robert Burns: An Address delivered to the Ninety Burns Club of Edinburgh, January 25, 1924. By JOHN Drinkwater. 9 × 6, 18 pp. Edinburgh: Messrs. James Thin. Wordsworth's "Prelude". By THE RIGHT HON. VISCOUNT GREY OF FALLODON, K.G. 9 × 64, 15 pp. English Association (4, Buckingham-gate, S. W. 1.) 1 s.

Lord Grey's Presidential Address before the English Association on May 26 last year.

Byron, the Poet. Edited by WALTER A. BRISCOE. A Collection of Addresses and Essays. A Centenary Volume. 9 × 6, xvi.+ 288 pp. Routledge. 1924. 12 s. 6 d. net.

Byron: The Last Journey, April, 1823-April, 1824. By HAROLD NICOLSON. 9 × 61⁄4, xiii. 288 pp. Constable. 1924. 12 s. 6 d. net.

Byron in England. His Fame and After-Fame. By SAMUEL C. CHEW. 9 × 53⁄4, ix. + 415 pp. Murray. 1924. 21 s. net.

La Vie de Lord Byron. Par ROGER BOUTET DE NOUVEL. Paris, Plon. 1924. 12 fr.
Byron. 1788--1824. Par E. RODOCANACHI. Paris, Hachette. 1924. 12 fr.

Letters of Anne Thackeray Ritchie. With Forty-two Additional Letters from her Father, WILLIAM MAKEPEACE THACKERAY. Selected and Edited by Her Daughter, HESTER RITCHIE. 83 × 6, x. +314 pp. Murray. 1924. 15 s. net.

Bronte Moors and Villages, from Thornton to Haworth. By ELIZABETH SOUTHWART. John Lane, 1923. 15/— net.

Unpublished Letters of Matthew Arnold. Edited by ARNOLD Whitridge. 7×5, 70 pp. New Haven: Yale University Press. London: Milford. 6s. 6d. n.

Robert Browning. Poet and Philosopher, 1850-1889. By FRANCES M. SIM. 9×6, 251 pp. Fisher Unwin. 1923. 10s. 6d. n.

Taine et l'Angleterre. Par F. C. ROE. Thèse de doctorat. Paris, 1923.

Freiligraths Übersetzungen englischer Dichtungen. By FRIEDR. AUG. ROESCHEN. 8vo, 30 pp. Giessen: Engl. Seminar d. Univ., 1923.

Selected Essays of Robert Louis Stevenson. With Introduction and Notes by H. G. RAWLINSON. 7X5, xxii.+188 pp. Oxford University Press. 4s. 6d. n.

The Life of Robert Louis Stevenson. By ROSALINE MASSON. 9X6, xiii.+358 pp. Chambers. 10s. 6d. n.

R. L. Stevenson: A Critical Study. 195 pp. George Gissing: A Critical Study. 200 pp. By FRANK SWINNERTON. 8 × 53. Martin Secker. 1924. 7 s. 6 d.

First published in 1914.

George Meredith: les cinquante premières années (1828-1878). Par RENÉ GALLAND, docteur ès lettres. Pp. xv.+430. Paris, Les Presses Universitaires, 1923. [A review will appear.]

George Meredith and British Criticism (1851-1909). Par RENÉ GALLAND. Pp. xii.+120. Paris, Les Presses Universitaries, 1923. [A review will appear.]

Das Naturgefühl bei Thomas Hardy im Zusammenhang mit seiner Weltanschauung. By OTTO KARL MÜLLER. M.S. Diss., Jena, 1923. Summary 1923, 8vo, 2 pp.

Die englische Literatur des 19. u. 20. Jahrhunderts. By BERNHARD FEHR. Part IV. Handbuch der Literaturwissenschaft, Lief. 8. 4to, 32 pp. Berlin-Neubabelsberg: Athenaion 1923. Der Zionismus in der englischen Literatur. By PAUL SILBERSTEIN. MS Diss., Greifswald 1923. Summary 1923. 8vo, 4 pp.

Essays on Poetry. By J. C. SQUIRE. 735, 228 pp. Hodder and Stoughton. 1923. 7s. 6d. n. Most of the articles in this volume are brought together from the columns of the Observer and the London Mercury. The English Secret: And Other Essays. By BASIL DF SELINCOURT. 91⁄4×6, 173 pp. Oxford, Clarendon Press. Milford. 1923. 10s. 6d. n.

H. G. Wells. By IVOR BROWN. (Writers of the Day Series.) 63/X4, 128 pp. Nisbet 2s. n. Pencillings. Little Essays on Literature. By JOHN MIDDLETON MURRY. 8, X6, viii.+277 pp. Collins. 7 s. 6 d. net.

The Life of Olive Schreiner. By S. C. CRONWRIGHT-SCHREINER. 9 × 6. xiv. + 414 pp. Fisher Unwin. 1924. 21 s. n.

Arnold Bennett, By F. J. HARVEY DARTON. (New and Revised Edition.) 6 X 5, 128 pp. Nisbet. 1924. 2 s. net.

Notes on Life and Letters. By JOSEPH CONRAD. (Uniform Edition.) 8 × 6, x. +262 pp. Dent. 1924. 10 s. 6 d. net.

This volume completes Messrs. Dent's Uniform Edition of Mr. Conrad's works. Any subsequent and hitherto unpublished works will be added in due course. [T]

Proceedings of the British Academy. 1919-1920. 10 × 6, xiv. +496 pp. For the British Academy. Milford, 1924. 40 s. net.

Among the literary papers here reprinted may be mentioned those of Dr. Farnell on the value and methods of mythologic study, of Sir Charles Holmes on Leonardo da Vinci, of Mr. George Saints. bury on recent studies in English prosody, of Sir A. W. Ward on Shakespeare and the "Makers of Virginia", of Mr. John Bayley on "Poetry and Commonplace", of the late Mr. Bernard Bosanquet on Croce's Aesthetic, and of Professor H. J. C. Grierson on Byron, Arnold, and Swinburne. [T]

A Short History of American Literature. Edited by WILLiam PeterfielD TRENT, JOHN ERSKINE, STUART P. SHERMAN, and CARL VAN DOREN. With an Introduction by CARL VAN DOREN. 961⁄4, xii. +428 pp. Cambridge University Press. 1924. 15 s. net.

An abridged rearrangement of the Cambridge History of American Literature in four volumes, the chapters being the work of various collaborators. Bibliographical notes, general and for each chapter, at the end. Index 14 pp. [T.)

Nationalism and Imagism in Modern American Poetry. By R. F. JONES. Reprinted from Washington University Studies, vol. XI, Humanistic Series, No. 1, pp. 97-130, 1923. The Mummers' Play. By the late R. J. E. TIDDY. With A Memoir. 9 × 6, pp. 258. Milford, 1923. 14/- net.

The Theory of Poetry. By LASCELLES ABERCROMBIE. 7 X 54, 221 pp. Martin Secker. 1924. 5 s. net.

These studies in the theory of poetry are based on the author's lectures on the subject in the Universities of Liverpool and Leeds. The argument has been considerably elaborated on the one hand, and on the other a good deal of the illustrative quotation has been omitted. [T.] John Masefield. A Study by CECIL BIGGANE. Heffer, 1924. Pp. 53. 2/6 net. [A review will appear.]

The Profession of Poetry. By H. W. GARROD. Milford, 1924. 1/6 net.

The inaugural lecture delivered before the University of Oxford on Feb. 13, 1924, by the newly elected Professor of Poetry, who succeeds the late W P. Ker.

Essays and Studies by Members of the English_Association. Vol. IX. Collected by the late W. P. KER. Clarendon Press, 1924. pp. 144. 7/6 net.

Contents: I The Trojans in Britain, by GEORGE GORDON. II. The Original Language of the Ancren Riwle, by DOROTHY M. E. DYMES. III. Long Will, Dante, and the Righteous Heathen, by R. W. CHAMBERS IV The Life of Christ in the Ballads, by EDITH C. BATHо. V. Joseph Warton, by EDITH J. MORLEY. VI. On the Teaching of Case, by J ́ H. G. GRATTAN. VII. The Modern Consciousness in English Literature, by BARKER FAIRLEY.

LANGUAGE, HISTORY, BIBLIOGRAPHY.

Distribution of Dialect Characters in Middle English. By MARY S. SERJEANTSON. 34 pp. Amsterdam, Swets & Zeitlinger, 1924.

A reprint of the article in ES. vol IV, 1922.

The Vocabulary of Dan Michel's Ayenbite of Inwyt. A phonological, morphological, etymological, semasiological and textual study. By J. K. WALLENBERG. Inaugural Dissertation. Uppsala 1923. XVIII + 348 pp.

Cambridge Anglo-Norman Texts. Edited by O. H. PRIOR. Poem on the Assumption. Edited by J. P. STRACHEY. Poem on the Day of Judgment. Edited by H. J. CHAYLOR. Divisiones Mundi. Edited by O. H. PRIOR. 9×54, xxviii+66 pp. Cambridge University Press. 1924. 7s. 6d. n.

The first volume to be issued by the Cambridge Anglo-Norman Society contains three texts, each edited with introduction and notes, and representative of three genres; a purely didactic poem on geography, a legend of the Virgin, and a Biblical subject. The whole is prefaced by a sketch of the language and its history by Professor O. H. Prior. [T]

An English Grammar for Dutch Students. By E. KRUISINGA. Vol. I: A Shorter Accidence and Syntax. 3rd ed. Kemink, Utrecht, 1924. XIV +240. f 3.50.

Logic and Grammar. By OTTO JESPERSEN. Great and Little Britain. By D. MACRITCHIE and W. H. STEVENSON. Š. P. E. Tract No. xvi. Correspondence and Report. 9, X6, 40 pp. Oxford: Clarendon Press; London: Milford. 1924. 3s. 6d. n.

Englische Stilistik. By PHILIPP ARONSTEIN. 8 vo, VIII+ 194 pp. Leipzig: Teubner 1924. Concerning Certain Great Teachers of the English Language. An inaugural lecture delivered in University College, London. By R. W. CHAMBERS. 8X52, 24 pp. Arnold. 1s.

The Quain Professor of English at University College, London, here writes principally of three of the great leaders in the study of the English language-Morley in London, Earle in Oxford, and Skeat in Cambridge. He vigorously defends them against certain strictures in the Report on the Teaching of English, in England, denying both that they were under the influence of German ideas and methods, and that in their study of Anglo-Saxon they divorced language from literature and history. [T.) The Roxburghshire Word-Book: Being a Record of the Special Vernacular Vocabulary of the County of Roxburgh, with an Appendix of Specimens. By GEORGE WATSON. 9X6, viii.+344 pp. Cambridge University Press 1923. 20s. n.

"A record of the special vernacular" that is to say, not a full vocabulary, but a collection of distinctive terms, past and present, with a vocabulary of 300 pages giving every word current in the shire that is not standard English or generally Scottish. A bibliographical list contains a hundred authorities from 1619 to 1922. [T.]

An Essex Dialect Dictionary. By EDWARD GEPP. (Second Edition revised.) 9X6, 198 pp. Routledge. 10s. 6d. n.

The first ed. was reviewed in ES. III, 28.

Relativ Frequency of English Speech Sounds. By GODFREY DEWEY. 9X6, xii.+148 pp. Cambridge, Mass.: Harvard University Press; London: Milford. 12s. 6d. n.

The object of this study is to determine the relative frequency of occurrence in good English, as written and spoken to-day, of the various simple sounds and commoner sound combinations, syllables and words, of the English language. The work adopts throughout a system of phonetic spelling. [T.] Wortschatz und Wirtschaft im Grossbritannischen Kriegsenglisch. By WILHELM Eichler. Diss., Greifswald, 1923, 8vo, 36 pp.

The Cries of London. By W. ROBERTS. With an Introduction by C. REGINALD GRUNDY. 12 X 5, x. +14 pp. and 13 Plates. The Connoisseur. 1924. 15 s. net.

Readings in English Social History. From pre-Roman days to A.D. 1837. Edited by R. B. MORGAN. 9×61⁄4, xxx.+585 pp. Cambridge University Press. 1923. 6s. n. Mediaeval England. A New Edition of Barnard's "Companion to English History". Edited by H. W. C. DAVIS. Oxford: Clarendon Press. London: Milford. 1924. 21 s. net. The Christmas Prince. Printed for the Malone Society, at the Oxford University Press. Edited by Dr. F. S. Boas and Dr. W. W. Greg. A 17th c. MS. giving a full account of the revels at St. John's College, Oxford, in the winter of 1607 to 1608. Includes six Latin and three English Plays. Peeps at English Folk-Dances. By VIOLET ALFORD. 7X5, viii.+88 pp. Black. 38. n.

This is an excellent short account of the English sword dance, Morris, maypole, and country dances. It is concerned more with history and interpretation and less with the actual figures, for which the reader is referred to Mr. Cecil Sharp's various collections. The author brings out well the sacrificial origin of the sword dance, in which there is a representation of a decapitation. It is a survival, of course, of a death and revival ritual such as enters also into the Mummers' Play. The section on country dancers is equally interesting. The author shows how the beautiful English country dances spread all over Europe, and pleads for their revival in place of the "tuneless clamour" of to-day. [T] Seven XVIIIth Century Bibliographies. John Armstrong, William Shenstone, Mark Akenside, Oliver Goldsmith, William Collins, Charles Churchill, Richard Brinsley Sheridan. By IOLO A. WILLIAMS. 9 × 6, 244 pp. Dulau. 1924. 18 s. net.

The Year's Work in English Studies, 1922. Edited for the English Association by SIR SIDNEY LEE and F. S. BoAs. 9X6, 221 pp. Milford. 1924. 7 s. 6d. net.

The English Catalogue of Books for 1923. Giving in One Alphabet Under Author and Title the Size, Price, Month of Publication, and Publisher of Books Issued in the United Kingdom. 10 × 63, 414 pp. Publishers' Circular, 1924.

A Bibliography of the Works of Rudyard Kipling (1881-1923). By E. W. MARTINDELL. (A new edition much enlarged.) 9×6. xvi.+222 pp. J. Lane. 1923. 25s. n.

First published in 1922. The present edition contains much new matter, including the particulars and dates of Mr. Kipling's Indian work for which the author has searched the files of the Civil and Military Gazette (Lahore), The Pioneer and the Pioneer Mail (Allahabad.) [T.;

The Library of Edmund Gosse. Being a Descriptive and Bibliographical Catalogue of a portion of his collection. Compiled by E. H. M. Cox. With an Introductory Essay by Mr. Gosse. 9 × 53, 300 pp. Dulau. 1924. 18 s. net.

Catalogue of the Library of Sanki Ichikawa, Professor of English Philology in the Imperial University of Tokyo. Part I: English and Comparative Philology. vii.+194 pp. Tokyo, 1924. Privately printed.

PERIODICALS.

De Drie Talen. Bundel uitgegeven bij den aanvang van den 40en jaargang. English Section: J. Bouten, A few general remarks about ballad poetry in English literature (113-117). — G. A. Dudok; Iets over de Brontës (119-126). — J. A. Falconer, Celt and Saxon in England (127—135). P. Fijn van Draat, Detached: Detachment (137-142).-W. van der Gaaf, The infinitive and the present participle in connection with verbs of perception (143–153). E. Kruisinga, Methoden van spraakkunststudie (155-160). Th. Neervens, S. J., To the Editor of "De Drie Talen" (161–165). Fr. A. Pompen, Over Verbal Nouns (167—173). H. Poutsma, Observations on expedients to express intensity and emphasis (175-187). J. H. Schutt, Enige opmerkingen over het onderwijs in de moderne talen (189-199).

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Modern Language Review. XIX, 1. Jan. 1924. A. B. Taylor, On the History of Old English ea, eo in Middle Kentish. H. Dugdale Sykes, John Ford, the author of The Spanish Gypsy. W. J. Lawrence, Was Peter Cunningham a Forger? Jeffery, Italian and English Pastoral Drama of the Renaissance.

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The Quarterly Review. No. 478. Jan. 1924. Lord Ernle, Our English Villages. R. M. Gunmere, Matthew Arnold. J. H. Morgan, The Personality of Lord Morley. The Criterion. II, 5. Oct. 1923. W. P. Ker, Byron. W. J. Lawrence, A New Shakespearian Text. Id. II, 6. Febr. 1924. T. S. Eliot, Four Elizabethan Dramatists (Webster, Tourneur, Middleton, Chapman) I. — J. H. Robertson, Evolution of English Blank Verse.

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Contemporary Review. No. 697. Jan. 1924. C. K. Allen, Joseph Conrad.
Fortnightly Review. Jan. 1924. Cecil Roberts, Byron in Venice.

Edinburgh Review. Jan. 1924. A. B. Walkley, The Novels of Jane Austen. Stephen Gwynn, Maurice Hewlett.

Journal of English and Germanic Philology. XXII, 4. Oct. 1923. L. I. Bredvold, The Naturalism of Donne in relation to some Renaissance traditions. A. Morton Turner, Wordsworth and Hartley Coleridge.

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E. H. Hespelt, Shelley and Spain. as a critic of literature.

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Publications of the Modern Language Association of America. XXXVIII, 4. Dec. 1923. W. L. Bullock, The Genesis of the English Sonnet Form. H. Spencer, Hamlet under the Restoration. F. Hubbard, The readings of the First Quarto of Hamlet. S. T. Williams, Walter Savage Landor G. R. Elliott, The Arnoldian lyric melancholy. Studies in Philology. XX, 3. July 1923. K. Campbell, The relation of Poe to his times. P. E. More, A note on Poe's method. N. Foerster, Quantity and quality in Poe's aesthetic. J. Erskine, Whitman's Prosody. E. Holloway, Whitman as critic of America. Id. XX, 4. Oct. 1923. A H. Gilbert, The outside shell of Milton's world. T. S. Graves, Some Chaucer allusions (1561-1700). — H. R. Patch and R. Menner, Bibliography of Middle English dialects.

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Modern Language Notes. XXXIX, 2. Febr. 1924. Includes: A. S. Cook, Beowulf, 1422. J. M. Beatty Jr., Doctor Johnson and 'Mur'. Id. 3, March 1924. H. H. Clark, A study of melancholy in Edward Young, Part I. F. B. Kaye, Mandeville on the origin of language. F. E. Pierce, Blake and seventeenth century authors. Tilley, Good drink makes good blood (Much Ado, I. 1. 250). A. H. Krappe, A Byzantine source of Shakespeare's Othello. H. M. Belden, The Jew's Daughter and the Myth of Zagreus.

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