Page:Salt-water poems and ballads by Masefield, John, 1878-1967 Published 1916.djvu/248

 BY THE SAME AUTHOR The Story of a Round-House, and Other Poems By JOHN MASEFIELD Nezv and revised edition, $1.30. Leather, $1.60 " The story of that rounding of the Horn ? Never in prose has the sea been so tremen- dously described." — Chicago Evening Post. " A remarkable poem of the sea." — San Francisco Chrofiicle. "Vivid and thrillingly realistic." — Current Literature. "A genuine sailor and a genuine poet are a rare combination; they have produced a rare poem of the sea, which has made Mr, Masefield's position in literature secure beyond the reach of caviling." — Everybody s Magazine. " Masefield has prisoned in verse the spirit of life at sea." — N. V. Sun, The Everlasting Mercy and The Widow in the Bye Street (Awarded the Royal Society of Literature's prize of $500) Ne7v and revised edition, %i,2^. Leather, %i.6o " Mr. Masefield comes like a flash of light across contemporary English poetry. The improbable has been accomplished; he has made poetry out of the very material that has refused to yield it for almost a score of years." — Boston Evening Transcript. "Originality, force, distinction, and deep knowledge of the human heart." — Chicago Record- He ra Id. " They are truly great -^xt-c^^." — Kentucky Post. " A vigor and sincerity rare in modern English literature." — The Indepetident. "John Masefield is the man of the hour, and the man of to-morrow too, in poetry and in the playwriting craft." — John Galsworthy. " — recreates a wholly new drama of existence." — William Stanley Braithwaite, N. v. Times. THE MACMILLAN COMPANY Publishers 64-66 Fifth Avenue New York