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Mis à jour: 11 mai 2025


Published under the direction of the committee of general Literature and Education, appointed by the Society for Promoting Christian Knowledge. London, Society for Promoting Christian Knowledge, 1880. London, Chatto and Windus, 1882. Robert Burns, three lectures, by Rev. DAVID MACRAE. Dundee, J. P. Mathew and Co, 1886. London, Elliot Stock, 1887.

On trouve d'intéressantes notes bibliographiques sur Burns et une liste des éditions clairement disposées par années, dans: The Burns Calendar. Kilmarnock, Printed and Published by James Mac Kie, 1874.

I have long been desirous that a complete French translation of the books I have written should be made, and should be published in an uniform series.

Paterson's Guide to Glasgow, the Clyde, and Land of Burns. Edinburgh, William Paterson, n. d. Guide to Ayr and the Land of Burns, Ayr, Printed and Published by H. Henry, n. d. Se trouve réimprimé dans l'édition de Blackie. Rambles through the Land of Burns, by ARCHIBALD R. ADAMSON. Kilmarnock. Dunlop and Drennan, 1819.

These established his reputation as a writer of taste, and during the next twenty years he wrote a large number of stories and tales, most of which were originally published in newspapers and reviews. His constant aim was not only to please the reading public, but also to inculcate the principles of sound morality.

Life and Works of Robert Burns, by P. HATELY WADDELL. Glasgow, Printed and published by David Wilson, 1867.

History of the Abbey and Palace of Holyrood-House, by JOHN PARKER LAWSON. Edinburgh, Henry Courtoy, 1848. History of the Abbey and Palace of Holyrood, published by DUNCAN ANDERSON, Keeper of the Chapel-Royal, n. d. The History of the High School of Edinburgh, by WILLIAM STEVEN. Edinburgh, Maclachlan and Stewart, 1849. History of the Cross of Edinburgh, by THOMAS ARNOLD. W. Paterson, London.

A definitive edition of the works of Daudet has been published by Houssiaux, in octavo, 1899 ff. Convenient editions of most of them are published by Flammarion, Lemerre, Fasquelle, and others.

"Le Petit Chose," his first long work, had been begun in 1866 during his stay in Provence; it was published in 1868. The first part, which is of great interest, is largely autobiographical and covers the childhood and youth of the writer up to his first years in Paris; the second part is a colorless romance of no particular merit.

He did not, however, entirely renounce literature, but published numerous articles in various periodicals, the most noted of which was a series entitled "Les Derniers Bretons," which appeared in "La Revue des Deux Mondes."

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