4 JULY 1863, Page 23

successfully pursues his system of applying photography to the illus-

tration of books connected with local scenery. One of his latest pro- ductions, however, is an elegantly got up album, precisely similar to those ordinarily used for cartes de visite, containing twenty-four photo- graphs of scenes connected with the "Lady of the Lake," taken by Mr.

Ogle, who also took those in Mr. Bennet's edition of the poem. The little volume on the scenery of the Wye—the letter-press taken from the Howitta' work on the "Abbeys and Castles of England"—contains several very pretty photographs, those of Tint,ern Abbey and Raglan Castle being especially noticeable.