Edited by MARY HARRIOTT NORRIS, Instructor, New York. Edited by HENRY H. BELFIELD, Chicago Manual Training School. Carlyle's The Diamond Necklace 42.. Edited by W. F. MOZIER, High School, Ottawa, Ill. Macaulay's Essays on Milton and Addison Edited by JAMES CHALMERS, Ohio State University. Lays of Ancient Rome Edited by VIOLA V. PRICE, Southwest Kansas College. Selections from the Speeches of Henry Clay. 42 [Nearly ready] [Nearly ready] Edited by CHARLES H. RAYMOND, Lawrenceville School. Edited by JAMES ARTHUR TUFTS, Phillips Exeter Academy. Charles Sumner's True Grandeur of Nations. [Nearly ready] Edited by GEO. L. MARIS, Friends' Central School, Philadelphia. Selected Orations and Speeches [Nearly ready] Edited by C. A. WHITING, University of Utah. Several others are in preparation, and all are substantially bound in cloth. LEACH, SHEWELL, & SANBORN, Publishers, The Students' Series of English Classics. JOHNSON'S HISTORY OF RASSELAS PRINCE OF ABYSSINIA EDITED WITH AN INTRODUCTION ON METHODS OF STUDY BY FRED N. SCOTT, PH.D. ASSISTANT PROFESSOR OF RHETORIC IN THE UNIVERSITY OF MICHIGAN LEACH, SHEWELL, & SANBORN. 788.5530 Harvard University, TRANSFERRED TO HARVARD COLLEGE LIBRARY 1932 COPYRIGHT, 1891, C. J. PETERS & SON, PRESS OF BERWICK & SMITH. PREFACE.. Although a cheap edition of Johnson's "Rasselas " stands in small need of recommendation to teachers of English literature, a few words regarding the characteristic features of the present volume may not be entirely out of place. 1. The Text. The standard text of Rasselas, or at all events the most carefully edited text which has appeared up to the present time, is that issued in 1879 from the Clarendon Press, Oxford. The same plates, without change in any particular, were used in G. Birkbeck Hill's edition of 1887. This text, in all its essential features, is the one here reproduced. The most noticeable departures from it will be found in the orthography, which has been made to conform to American usage, and in two verbal corrections, called for by the context and sanctioned by the Oxford edition of 1825. These last consist in the substitution of "could" for "can," line 3, p. 180, and of "offers" for "offered," line |