POEMS WORTHY OF CONSIDERATION.—LOW/On Sonnets. By Humbert Wolfe. (Oxford :
Blackwell. 2s. 6d. net.)—Excel - lent minor verse.—Poems: In Time -of War. In Tim: of Peace. By C. Kennett Burrow. (Coffins. 5s. net.)—The poem upon a little French girl, Cerisette, redeems a volume otherwise merely competent.—Walls and Hedges. By J. Redwood Anderson. (Sidgwick and Jackson. 3s. net.)— Mr. Anderson has an eye for the beauty of ordinary things- shop-Nvindows, bunting, crowds, and warehouses—but on the technical side he has too much faith in the efficacy of repetition. —Reflections in Verse. By V. T. Pemberton, M.C. (Grant Richards. 3s. 6d. net.)—Civilian and war poems ; the war poems are perhaps. the better.-.--Selected Poems. By Lady Margaret S_ackville. (Constable. 68. net.)—Pieces that give the effect of having been written as tee hnical exercises, but which are not without charm. Mr. Blunt provides a rather inept Preface.
Spring 'Songs. By T. Geoffrey W. Henslow, M.A. (The Electrical Press. lse 6d. net.)— A book of verse chiefly remark- able for its delightful illustrations, which appear to be by the author.