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Literary Taste: How to Form It - With Detailed Instructions for Collecting a Complete Library of English Literature by Arnold Bennett
page 77 of 90 (85%)
Cassell's National Library 0 0 6
MATTHEW ARNOLD, *Poems:* Golden Treasury Series 0 2 6
MATTHEW ARNOLD, *Essays:* Everyman's Library 0 1 0
Coventry Patmore, *Poems:* Muses' Library 0 1 0
Sydney Dobell, *Poems:* Canterbury Poets 0 1 0
Eric Mackay, *Love-letters of a Violinist:* Canterbury Poets 0 1
0
T. E. Brown, *Poems* 0 7 6
C. S. Calverley, *Verses and Translations* 0 1 6
D. G. ROSSETTI, *Poetical Works* 0 3 6
Christina Rossetti, *Selected Poems:* Golden Treasury Series 0 2
6
James Thomson, *City of Dreadful Night* 0 3 6
Jean Ingelow, *Poems:* Red Letter Library 0 1 6
William Morris, *The Earthly Paradise* 0 6 0
William Morris, *Early Romances:* Everyman's Library 0 1 0
Augusta Webster, *Selected Poems* 0 4 6
W. E. Henley, *Poetical Works* 0 6 0
Francis Thompson, *Selected Poems* 0 5 0
£5 7 0

Poets whom I have omitted after hesitation are: Ebenezer Elliott,
Thomas Woolner, William Barnes, Gerald Massey, and Charles Jeremiah Wells.
On the other hand, I have had no hesitation about omitting David Moir,
Felicia Hemans, Aytoun, Sir Edwin Arnold, and Sir Lewis Morris.
I have included John Keble in deference to much enlightened opinion,
but against my inclination. There are two names in the list which may be
somewhat unfamiliar to many readers. James Clarence Mangan is the author
of *My Dark Rosaleen*, an acknowledged masterpiece,
which every library must contain. T. E. Brown is a great poet,
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