2 DECEMBER 1893, Page 12

vigorous and pleasing picture does the madcap make in the

first prickly, repellent form, does not suggest the dainty creatures part of the book ; and we can quite imagine ourselves going to which Miss Burnside's imagination, aided by Mr. Cooper's

the fair and watching his pranks, always redeemed by some saving pencil, has, created for us. Their doings will entertain young generosity. His behaviour to Judge Gascoigne reads as a painful readers, for whose further delight some songs have been fur- surprise to one who follows with a tender feeling the wild young nished with music by Mr. M. Birkett Foster.