Part 39 (1/2)

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Swords and Flutes. Poems. By WILLIAM KEAN SEYMOUR. Crown 8vo, cloth. 4s. net.

4s. 0d. NET. Inland Postage, 3d.

WHAT THE CRITICS SAY OF MR. SEYMOUR'S WORK.

”We recognise not so much audacity of experiment as a sound loyalty to the best standards of the past, and an almost acute appreciation of beauty both of vision and form.... Mr. Seymour's poetry is full of rich and multi-coloured pageantry, a sheer delight to the eye and imagination.”--THE BOOKMAN.

”Mr. Seymour's verse is full of a haunting, fugitive sense of beauty, and owes allegiance to a school of lyric craftsmans.h.i.+p which is rapidly falling out of date. But it is something more than this. Mr. Seymour believes that poetry should not only beautify, but interpret life.”--DAILY TELEGRAPH.

”The Measure” and ”Down Stream.” Two Plays. By GRAHAM RAWSON, Author of ”Stroke of Marbot,” etc. Crown 8vo. Paper Cover.

4s. 0d. NET. Inland Postage 3d.

”The Measure” is an amusing comedy of contemporary life, in a prologue and two acts, dealing with the adventures of two bachelors who become entangled in a family containing three daughters.

”Down Stream” is a one-act play whose action takes place in a supposit.i.tious country in South-Eastern Europe, where the King traps one of his Ministers neatly, and then deals with him in an unexpected fas.h.i.+on.

Of Mr. Rawson's previous volume (”The Stroke of Marbot,” Fisher Unwin, 1917) the _Times_ said: ”They are effective plays which should act well, and the stage directions are so given as to make them quite good reading for the study.”

LATEST ADDITION TO THE TALBOT PRESS BOOKLETS

The Spoiled Buddha. An Eastern Play in two Acts. By HELEN WADDELL.

Paper Covers.

1s. 0d. NET Inland Postage 3d.

The play is about the Buddha, in the days before he became a G.o.d; and about Binzuru, who was his favourite disciple, and who might have become even as the Buddha, only that he saw a woman pa.s.sing by, and desired her beauty and so fell from grace.

Songs of the Island Queen. By PEADAR MacTOMAIS. Paper Covers.

1s. 0d. NET. Inland Postage 3d.

”Those are songs of a dreamer of Eire, A scion of a race that is old --Of a race that is strong, A people begotten of freemen, Rocked on the cradle of song.”

West African Forests and Forestry. By A. HAROLD UNWIN, D.Oec., M.Can.S.F.E. Author of ”Future Forest Trees.” With upwards of 150 Ill.u.s.trations. Cloth. (Spring, 1920.)

3 3s. NET. Inland Postage, 6d.

The author, late Senior Conservator of Forestry in Nigeria, having spent eleven years in West Africa in forestry work, has had exceptional experience. He starts by dealing in general with West African forests, then successively in geographical order, with the trees and forests of Gambia, Sierra Leone, Liberia, the Ivory and Gold Coasts, Togo, Nigeria, and the British Sphere of the Cameroons. He supplies notes on timber trees both for export and local use, and gives throughout the botanical and vernacular names of indigenous trees. Dr. Unwin has also chapters on the oil beans, seeds and nuts of the West African forests; on the oil palm and palm kernel industry, and the question of the forest in relation to agriculture. The work is an elaborate one, marked by singular thoroughness in its execution.

Collected Fruits of Occult Teaching. By A. P. SINNETT. Demy 8vo, cloth. (Spring, 1920.)