Page:The bibliography of Tennyson (1896).pdf/66

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THE BIBLIOGRAPHY
[1875-

Collation:—Title; Table of Contents; Monograph, pp. xii.

"The Lovers Tale"; "No More"; "Anacreontics"; "A Fragment"; Sonnet, "Check every outflash, every ruder sally"; Sonnet, "There are three things that fill my heart with sighs"; Sonnet, "Me my own Fate to lasting sorrow doometh"; "The New Timon and the Poets"; "Here often, when a child, I lay reclined"; "Sonnet to Macready"; "What time I wasted youthful hours"; "Hands all Round"; "Britons, guard your own"; Stanzas added to the National Anthem; "The War" (May, 1859); Inscription for the Mausoleum of the Duchess of Kent; "Old and New Year" (1865-1866).

"The Lover's Tale" was originally printed (1870) by Strangeways and Walden, and again (1875) with the Minor Poems, by Ogden, The latter reprint is disfigured by two clerical errors unobserved in the final proof-sheets and which had to be corrected by errata, The former reprint is therefore preferable (where procurable) as regards the principal poem: as the pagination is the same either will fit into the volume. The contents and monograph were printed in 1875 by Messrs. Brawn; and the copies bound in boards and otherwise were bound by De Coverly.

Queen Mary. By Alfred Tennyson. London: H. S. King and Co., 1875, green cloth, pp. 278.