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KING LEAR.

IN WEEKLY VOLUMES, price 3d.; or in Cloth, 6d.

Edited by HENRY MORLEY, LL.D.

List of Volumes now in course of publication.

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62. The Tempest ..

63. Rosalind

64. Isaac Bickerstaff

65. Gebir, and Count Julian

66. The Earl of Chatham

67. The Discovery of Guiana, &c.

68 & 69. Natural History of Selborne. 2 vols.

70. The Angel in the House

71. Trips to the Moon

JOHN KEBLE.

CHARLES WATERTON.

J. SHERIDAN KNOWLES.
THOMAS LOVE PEACOCK.
PLUTARCH.

LORD MACAULAY.
ISAAC BARROW, D.D.

WM. SHAKESPEARE.
THOMAS LODGE.
STEELE and ADDISON.
W. S. LANDOR.
LORD MACAULAY.
SIR WALTER RALEIGH.
REV. GILBERT WHITE.
COVENTRY PATMORE.
LUCIAN.

72. Cato the Younger, Agis, Cleomenes, &c.. PLUTARCH.
73. Julius Cæsar..

74. The Diary of Samuel Pepys (1664-1665).
75. An Essay on Man, and other Poems
76. A Tour in Ireland.-1776-1779

..

77&78. Knickerbocker's Hist.of N.York. 2 vols. 79. A Midsummer-Night's Dream

80. The Banquet of Plato, and other Pieces 81. A Voyage to Lisbon

82 My Beautiful Lady, &c.

83 & 84. Travels in Interior of Africa. 2 vols. 85. The Temple

86. The Diary of Samuel Pepys (Jan. to Oct., 87. King Henry VIII. ..

88. An Essay on the Sublime and Beautiful 89. Lives of Timoleon, Paulus Æmilius, &c. 90. Endymion, and other Poems

91. A Voyage to Abyssinia

92. Sintram and his Companions, &c.
93. Human Nature, and other Sermons

94. The Diary of Samuel Pepys (Nov., 1666,
95. The Life and Death of King John
96. The History of the Caliph Vathek

97. Poems

98. Colloquies on Society

99. Lives of Agesilaus, Pompey, & Phocion oo. The Winter's Tale

101. The Table-Talk of John Selden.

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WM. SHAKESPEARE.

ALEXANDER POPE.
ARTHUR YOUNG.
WASHINGTON IRVING.

WM. SHAKESPEARE.

PERCY BYSSHE SHELLEY
HENRY FIELDING.
THOMAS WOOLNER.
MUNGO PARK.

GEORGE HERBERT.
1666).

WM SHAKESPEARE.

EDMUND BURKE.
PLUTARCH.
JOHN KEATS.
FATHER JEROME LOBO.
LA MOTTE FOUQUE.
BISHOP BUTLER.
to May, 1667).

WM. SHAKESPEARE.
WILLIAM BECKFORD.
JOHN DRYDEN.
ROBERT SOUTHEY.

PLUTARCH.

WM. SHAKESPEARE.

102. The Diary of Samuel Pepys (June to Oct., 1667). 103. An Essay upon Projects

104. The Cricket on the Hearth ..

105. Anecdotes of Samuel Johnson, LL.D. 106. Prometheus Unbound ..

107. Lives of Solon, Publicola, &c.

108. King Lear

..

DANIEL DEFOE.

CHARLES DICKENS.
HESTHER LYNCH PIOZZI
PERCY BYSSHE SHELLEY
PLUTARCH.

WM. SHAKESPEARE.

The next Volume will be

Seven Discourses on Art.-By SIR JOSHUA REYNOLDS.

*For List of the First 52 Volumes of CASSELL'S NATIONAL LIBRARY see advertisement pages at end of this Book.

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INTRODUCTION.

KING LEAR made his first substantial appearance in our literature in Geoffrey of Monmouth's "History of British Kings." That history, produced about the year 1147, was the work of an ingenious Welshman, who, five years afterwards, was made Bishop of St. Asaph. He resolved to balance the growing family of English chronicles, which took small note of anything before the modern days of Hengist and Horsa, with a more interesting chronicle of British kings, of kings who ruled in Britain before the English came, and who were the strong men before any English Agamemnon. This chronicler, well versed in Breton tales and Welsh traditions, gifted also with a quick imagination of his own, produced a book that was a fountain-head to much of the best romance of later years. He brought in King Arthur as our national hero, representing him, as it was complained at the time by honest chroniclers who stuck to fact, with a little finger stronger than the back of Alexander the Great. that chronicle the earliest English tragedy, Gorbeduc, derived its plot, and it was our first source of the story of King Lear.

From

In Geoffrey of Monmouth's "Chronicles of British Kings" Leir was the son of Bladud, who built the town now known as Bath, and made hot baths there about the time when the prophet Elias prayed that it might not rain upon earth, and it did not rain for three years and six months. Bladud was a very ingenious man, and practised magic till he tried to fly with wings, and went high into the air, but fell, and was dashed to pieces by falling on the Temple of Apollo, in the city of Trinovantum-that is to say, in London, where St. Paul's Cathedral now stands, on the top of Ludgate Hill. Then Leir became

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