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Back Matter Source: Journal of British Studies, Vol. 6, No. 1 (Nov., 1966) Published by: Cambridge University Press on behalf of The North American Conference on British Studies Stable URL: http://www.jstor.org/stable/175198 . Accessed: 08/05/2014 20:25 Your use of the JSTOR archive indicates your acceptance of the Terms & Conditions of Use, available at . http://www.jstor.org/page/info/about/policies/terms.jsp . JSTOR is a not-for-profit service that helps scholars, researchers, and students discover, use, and build upon a wide range of content in a trusted digital archive. We use information technology and tools to increase productivity and facilitate new forms of scholarship. For more information about JSTOR, please contact [email protected]. . Cambridge University Press and The North American Conference on British Studies are collaborating with JSTOR to digitize, preserve and extend access to Journal of British Studies. http://www.jstor.org This content downloaded from 169.229.32.137 on Thu, 8 May 2014 20:25:19 PM All use subject to JSTOR Terms and Conditions
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Back MatterSource: Journal of British Studies, Vol. 6, No. 1 (Nov., 1966)Published by: Cambridge University Press on behalf of The North American Conference on BritishStudiesStable URL: http://www.jstor.org/stable/175198 .

Accessed: 08/05/2014 20:25

Your use of the JSTOR archive indicates your acceptance of the Terms & Conditions of Use, available at .http://www.jstor.org/page/info/about/policies/terms.jsp

.JSTOR is a not-for-profit service that helps scholars, researchers, and students discover, use, and build upon a wide range ofcontent in a trusted digital archive. We use information technology and tools to increase productivity and facilitate new formsof scholarship. For more information about JSTOR, please contact [email protected].

.

Cambridge University Press and The North American Conference on British Studies are collaborating withJSTOR to digitize, preserve and extend access to Journal of British Studies.

http://www.jstor.org

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The following articles will appear in the next issue of the Journal of British Studies:

Robert Brentano - The Sound of Stubbs

Carolyn Andervont Edie - New Buildings, New Taxes, and Old Interests: an Urban Problem of the 1670s

Alfred F. Havighurst - Paperbacks on English History

John F. C. Harrison - "The Steam Engine of the New Moral World": Owenism and Education, 1817-1829

George D. Heath III - Making the Instrument of Government

James William Johnson - Horace Walpole and W. S. Lewis

Donald N. Lammers - Britain, Russia, and the Revival of "Entente Diplomacy": 1934

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From the Dreadnought to Scapa Flow The Royal Navy in the Fisher Era, 1904-1919 Volume III: Jutland and After

By ARTHUR J. MARDER, University of California at Irvine. Professor Marder brings depth to his examination of the plans for the battle of Jutland and the maneuvers of the battle through his use of unpublished and restricted material. He assesses the effects of the events of the battle on public and official thinking, the way in which the battle was the test of years of planning by Fisher, Churchill, and others, and traces developments to December, 1916. One further volume will complete the work. 9 plates, 16 charts. $11.20

Newcastle-Upon-Tyne and the Puritan Revolution A Study of the Civil War in North England

By ROGER HOWELL, JR., Bowdoin College. Based extensively on local records, this book presents a detailed picture of Newcastle-upon-Tyne and the surrounding areas during the course of the Puritan Revolution. The back- ground of opposition in the town is studied thoroughly from the beginnings of the seventeenth century. The author argues that local circumstances had the greatest effect upon loyalties, and that the town was, despite its reputation as a royalist stronghold, uncommitted to any side. $10.10

The Complete Letters of Lady Mary Wortley Montagu Volume I: 1721-1751

Edited by ROBERT HALSBAND, Columbia University. This second volume of Lady Mary's complete letters contains two important correspondences never before published. The first set of these, to Francesco Algarotti, reveals her infatuation with this young man, and explains why she spent virtually all of the rest of her life abroad. Also included are letters from Lord Hervey, Lady Mary's rival for Algarotti's affections. The other new correspondence is that with Madame Michiel, a Venetian lady who was one of Lady Mary's close friends. In reviewing the first volume, the Johnsonian News Letter said: "The work seems to us a model of the way these wonderful letters . . . should be presented." 8 plates. $13.45

Canterbury under the Angevin Kings By WILLIAM URRY. The author investigates the history of the early English borough, Canterbury. He discusses various aspects of the borough during the period of the Angevin Kings, including accounts of the holders of land in Canterbury, borough government, the monks and their servants in relation to the citizens, trades and occupations, and a detailed description of the borough's topography. Map. $16.80

Oxford University Press / New York

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Chichester Towers by L. P. Curtis Intrigue, humor, and illuminating insights into the social structure of eighteenth-century England are entwined in this engaging work of historical craftsmanship. The story illustrates what used to be known as the alliance between church and state; and it suggests the degree to which ecclesiastical politics were subordinated to the secular needs of the state. $5.00

The Pilgrim's Progress and Traditions in Puritan Meditation by U. Milo Kaufman This reexamination of Bunyan's masterpiece argues that the work is much more than religious allegory, that its use of the materials of authoritarian faith bears witness to the intellectual unsettledness of an age much like our own. $6.50

Poems on Affairs of State Augustan Satirical Verse, 1660-1714: Volume 3: 1682-1685

edited by Howard H. Schless Comment on every major event of the final years of Charles II's reign is included in this volume of the authoritative Yale Edition.

Johnson on Shakespeare $17.5 The Yale Edition of the Works of Samuel Johnson Volumes VII and VIII edited by Arthur Sherbo, with an Introduction by Bertrand Bronson Of special interest in this first accurate text of an important segment of the Johnson canon are the notes of his first and revised editions of Shakespeare, the Preface and General Observations, the Miscel- laneous Observations on the Tragedy of Macbeth, the Preface to Mrs. Lennox's Shakespear Illustrated, and the Proposals for an edition. the set, $25.00

Proceedings in Parliament 1610 Volume 1: The House of Lords; Volume 2: The House of Commons edited by Elizabeth Read Foster Edited together, proceedings of both Houses give an unusual picture of the Parliament of 1610 as a whole, telling the story of the Great Contract, filling out the constitutional debate on the legality of im- positions, and adding to existing biographies. the set, $17.50

YALE UNIVERSITY PRESS 13 NEW HAVEN AND LONDON 13E! Canadian orders: McGill University Press

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Spenser's Image of Nature by Donald Cheney Demonstrating that pastoral motifs are used throughout The Faerie Queene as a counterpoint to the epic program, Mr. Cheney sees Spenser's presentation of Nature as more than an image of man's physical environment before it is shaped by divine grace or human art, and shows how the poem derives its unity and intelligibility from the figure of the poet striving through his art to create meaning. $6.50

Coleridge and the Idea of the Modern State by David P. Calleo At once a nationalist, a conservative, and a radical reformer, Samuel Coleridge developed an extraordinarily comprehensive and sug- gestive theory of the modern constitutional state. Here his political ideas are examined in relation to his general philosophy, his Romantic world-view, and his psychological insights. $5.00

The Search for Environment The Garden City: Before and After by Walter L. Creese The industrial revolution forced man to adapt his environment; the English adaptations, both admirable and appaling, form the subject of this pioneering study. Mr. Creese describes the evolution of the Garden City and suburb, concentrating on the relationship of its chief architects, Park and Unwin, to other planners and social phil- osophers connected with the movement. $15.00

Complete Prose Works of John Milton Volume IV: 1650-1655 edited by Don M. Wolfe Volume IV of this distinguished series contains A Defence of the English People, Second Defence of the English People, Defence of Himself, Private Correspondence, and Phillips' Responsio.

New Yale Paperbounds 2 volue set $1750 The Poems of Alexander Pope A Reduced Version of the Twickenham Text edited by John Butt $3.45 The Paradise Within Studies in Vaughan, Traherne, and Milton

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THE HISTORICAL JOURNAL Editor: F. H. HINSLEY

Contents of Volume IX, No. 2, 1966

ARTICLES: I. Filmer's Patriarchal History. By W. H. Greenleaf.

II. The Establishment of 'Europe' as a Political Expression. By H. D. Schmidt.

III. The Loyalist Association Movement of 1792-93 and British Public Opinion. By Donald E. Ginter.

IV. Gladstone and the Composition of the Final Court in Eccle- siastical Causes, 1850-73. By M. D. Stephen.

V. Moltke-Conrad: Relations between the Austro-Hungarian and German General Staffs, 1909-14. By Norman Stone.

REVIEW ARTICLES: 1. An Anatomy of the American Whig. By J. R. Pole. 2. Professor Cobban and his Critic. By Betty Behrens.

OTHER REVIEWS Subscription price per volume of 3 parts $7.00

Copies may be ordered from your bookseller or from CAMBRIDGE UNIVERSITY PRESS 32 East 57th Street, New York, N. Y. 10022

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HISTORICAL MAGAZINE

OF THE PROTESTANT EPISCOPAL CHURCH

U.S.A. $1.50 the Copy - $6.00 the Year

A journal of the historical narrative, bibliography, docu- ments and interpretation in the field of the Protestant Episcopal Church and the Anglican Communion.

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Twentieth-Century Britain, Second Edition Alfred F. Havighurst A comprehensive, integrated survey of the social, economic, intellectual, political, and diplomatic history of England from 1900 to 1965. Material on the

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Society and Politics in England, 1780-1960 A Selection of Readings and Comments John F. C. Harrison

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THE NEWMAN BROTHERS An Essay in Comparative Intellectual Biography By WILLIAM ROBBINS

The philosophical ferment of the mid-19th century is nowhere more vividly illustrated than in the divergent careers of Cardinal Newman and his brother Francis. Mr. Robbins' lucid study striking- ly reveals the master currents of the times that carried these symbolical figures in such different directions. Illustrated. $6.00

UNIVERSITIES: BRITISH, INDIAN, AFRICAN A Study in the Ecology of Higher Education By SIR ERIC ASHBY

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CHANGING VIEWS ON BRITISH HISTORY Essays on Historical Writing since 1939 Edited by ELIZABETH CHAPIN FURBER

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THEIR PROPER SPHERE

A Study of the Bronte Sisters as Early- Victorian Female Novelists By INGA-STINA EWBANK

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THE TRIUMPH OF TIME A Study of the Victorian Concepts of Time, History, Progress, and Decadence By JEROME H. BUCKLEY Mr. Buckley's subject is the quite peculiar degree and the emotional intensity with which the Vic- torians responded to the awareness of time. A study of the four levels of temporality - past, present, future, and eternity - as they appear in nineteenth-century English literature, the author frequently glances back to the Romantics and ahead to the early Moderns. Belknap Press. $4.50

ENGLISH TRAITS By RALPH WALDO EMERSON Edited by HOWARD MUMFORD JONES Still unsurpassed as a searching contemporary estimate of England at the very crest of her power in the mid-nineteenth century, this neglected book presents Emerson in the unfamiliar role of a hard- headed Yankee realist impressed by undeniable national greatness. The brilliant introduction by Mr. Jones places the book in its own time and makes clear its present significance. The John Harvard Library. $5.00

JOSEPH CONRAD AND THE FICTION OF AUTOBIOGRAPHY

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PAST AND PRESENT First published 1952.

Forthcoming articles in No. 35 (December 1966 issue) will include:-

Peter Brunt: The Roman Mob

Denis Twitchett: Chinese Social History from the Seventh to the Tenth Century: The Tunhuang Documents and their Implications

Elena Lourie: A Society Organized for War: Medieval Spain

A. L. Beier: Poor Relief in Warwickshire during the Personal Rule and Interregnum

Roy M. MacLoed: Social Policy and the "Floating Population". The Administration of the Canal Boats Acts 1877-1899

A. G. Hopkins: The Lagos Strike of 1897. An Exploration of Nigerian Labour History

Recent issues have included -

Jerrold E. Seigel: "Civic Humanism" or Ciceronian Rhetoric? (July 1966) D. R. Watson: Educational Reform in France 1900-1940 (July 1966) James loll: The 1914 Debate Continues (July 1966) Arno J. Mayer: Post-War Nationalisms 1918-1919 (July 1966) M. Malowist: The Western Sudan in the Middle Ages (April 1966) Lawrence Stone and Alan Everitt: Social Mobility in England 1500-1700

(April 1966) Norman Stone: Army and Society in the Habsburg Monarchy 1900-1.914

(April 1966) T. W. Mason: Labour in the Third Reich 1933-1939 (April 1966)

Annual Subscription 25/-. ($4.25). Single issue 15/-. ($2.50) Reduced Annual Subscription for Students 15/-. ($2.50).

All past issues available - Classified Table of Contents free on request.

Write: Business Manager,

PAST AND PRESENT, Corpus Christi College, Oxford, England

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---zTitles of Interest

THE ILL-FRAMED KNIGHT A Skeptical Inquiry into the Identity of Sir Thomas Malory. WILLIAM MATTHEWS. Since Kittredge's studies in the 1890's, the author of Le Morte Darthur has been identified as an obscure knight of Newbold Revel whose jail career constitutes a paradox with this great classic of chivalry. The Ill-framed Knight is the first attempt in 70 years to challenge the Kittredge attribution. Matthews examines the problem with new evidence and arrives at an attribution to a man never previously mentioned in the matter. "I am en- chanted by the substance of the book: a wonderful piece of research."

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CHARLES IIs ESCAPE FROM WORCESTER Edited by WILLIAM MATTHEWS. In September 1651, Charles Stuart's army was routed by Cromwell's superior forces upon the battlefield of Worcester. For six weeks Charles lay in hiding, a price upon his head until, aided by friends and Royalist sympathizers, he escaped to exile abroad. Nine years later, in May 1660, a company of courtiers and officials set out for the Netherlands to bring Charles back to England: among these was Samuel Pepys.

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THE WORKS OF JOHN DRYDEN, VOLUME IX Plays: The Indian Emperour, Secret Love, Sir Martin Mar-all. Edited by JOHN LOFTIS and VINTON A. DEARING. A definitive edition of three of Dryden's most famous plays. In his commentary to The Indian Emperour, Or, The Conquest of Mexico by the Spaniards, Mr. Loftis examines the back- ground in travel literature and historical fiction for Dryden's account of the Conquest, and demonstrates for the first time Dryden's probable debt to Mon- taigne. Secret Love is a serious play, for which Dryden deliberately adopted French neoclassic style. Mr. Loftis' commentary on Sir Martin Mar-all em- phasizes the play's affinities with Italian commedia dell'arte, and presents new evidence for the Duke of Newcastle's major participation in the writing of the play. $10.00

Volume IX in The California Edition of Dryden's lorks. (Spring, 1967).

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from Cambridge

POLITICS AND PROFIT ARTHUR JOSEPH SLAVIN

In this study of Sir Ralph Sadler (1507-1547), the author

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THE GROWTH OF RESPONSIBLE GOVERNMENT IN STUART ENGLAND

CLAYTON ROBERTS

A well-documented study tracing the transfer of power from

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political developments hastened the growth of responsible government. $13.50

THE STUART CONSTITUTION, 1603-1688 J. P. KENYON

Documents illustrating constitutional, political and ecclesiastical

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Eighteenth Century Constitution. Cloth $12.50 Paper $4.95

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_ i. from Cambridge

THE VICTORIANS

JOAN EVANS

This handsome book, with 102 illustrations accompanied by extracts from

contemporary writings and commentary by Joan Evans, presents the

Victorian world in England as seen by a scholar who is both sympathetic and critical. .

General subjects covered are society,

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W. E. Gladstone, by Phil May, 189 E. Gladstone, by PhiMay, 89ans from The Victorians

EVOLUTION AND SOCIETY

J. W. BURROW

Dr Burrow examines the emergence of an evolutionary approach to the

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He deals particularly with H. S. Maine, Herbert Spencer and E. B. Tylor and their faith that sociology could uncover laws analogous to those of

the natural sciences. $8.50

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Edward Weeks *THE LOWELLS AND THEIR INSTITUTE Of the Lowell Institute, Oliver Wendell Holmes said, "No no- bler or more helpful institution exists in America." Now Ed- ward Weeks gives a lively ac- count of the New England mind from 1840 to the present - and what the Lowell family has done to cultivate it. $5.75

C. Vann Woodward REUNION AND REACTION: The Compromise of 1877 and the End of Reconstruction A reissue of the classic work on the Reconstruction period.

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Peter Stansky and William Abrahams

"'JOURNEY TO THE FRONTIER: Two Roads to the Spanish Civil War A dual biography of Julian Bell and John Cornford, English poets who died in the Spanish Civil War. "The best picture of the times I have read."-Ste- phen Spender. Illus. $7.50

Arthur M. Schlesinger, Jr. A PILGRIM'S PROGRESS: Orestes A. Brownson First published in 1939, this new edition of the definitive biography of the controversial philosopher of the Emerson period features a new fore- word by the author.

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THE JOURNAL OF BRITISH STUDIES

TRINITY COLLEGE

HARTFORD, CONNECTICUT

The Journal of British Studies is published under the auspices of the Conference on British Studies. It was founded in 1961 as a result of the imaginative generosity of a Trinity alumnus, Mr. Frederick E. Hasler (Hon. LL.D. 1957). Trinity College and Mr. George M. Ferris (B.A. 1916) have since joined Mr. Hasler to support publication of the Journal.

The Journal appears twice in the academic year, in the autumn and in the spring.

The annual subscription is $5.00. Commonwealth and foreign subscribers may remit by personal check or by check through their bankers, depending on their national exchange regulations.

Checks for subscriptions and enquiries concerning advertising rates should be addressed to the Business Manager, British Studies, Box 1315, Trinity College, Hartford, Connecticut, 06106.

Correspondence concerning manuscripts should be: sent to Profes- sor Willson H. Coates, Department of History, University of Rochester, Rochester, New York, 14627.

Volume VI, No. 2 will be published in May, 1967.

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New in the Series Britain in the World Today"

Britain and the Old Dominions by I. D. B. Miller $6.50

Starting with the growth of the common background of Canada, Australia, New Zealand, and South Africa in the nineteenth century, this study goes on to discuss the individual development of each, followed

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The Individual and Society in the Middle Ages by Walter Ullmann $5.00

The author shows on a practical plane the historical conflict between the medieval concept of the individual as a mere subject and the modern idea of the citizen. The last tremors of this conflict are still being felt. The central problem down to the nineteenth century is the assertion or denial of autonomous rights on the part of the individual as a citizen. The historical analysis of this crucial topic contributes to a better understanding of the divergent developments of different countries and nations in our world today.

The Johns Hopkins Press

I BALTIMORE

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