Scholartis Press

Scholartis Press was a small, private press in London, England, founded by Eric Partridge in 1927. The press closed in 1931, when the Great Depression began in Britain.

Writers published

 * William Blake, Poetical Sketches. With an Essay on "Blake's Metric" by Jack Lindsay, 1927
 * Nicholas Breton, Melancholike humours. Edited, with an Essay on "Elizabethan melancholy", by G.B. Harrison
 * Richard Henry Horne, Orion, 1928
 * Elza de Locre, I See the Earth: Poems, 1928. Illustrated by Peter Meadows, pseudonym for Jack Lindsay
 * Norah Hoult, Poor Women!, 1928
 * Nicholas Rowe, Three plays: Tamerlane, The Fair Penitent, Jane Shore, 1929
 * Laurence Sterne, A Sentimental Journey. Edited with Introduction and Notes by Herbert Read, 1929
 * Edmund Spenser, Daphnaïda and other poems, 1929
 * Horace Walpole, The Castle of Otranto, 1929
 * Natalie Clifford Barney, The One Who is Legion or A.D.'s After Life. Printed with two illustrations by Romaine Brooks, 1930
 * Maude Meagher, White Jade, 1930
 * George Sand, The Country Waif and "The Castle of Pictordu", tr. Eirene Collis, 1930
 * Irene Clyde, Eve's Sour Apples, 1934
 * Edmund Spenser, A view of the State of Ireland, 1934

Book series

 * Benington Books
 * An Elizabethan Gallery
 * Nineteenth-Century Highways and Byways Series
 * Scholartis Eighteenth-Century Novels