30 MARCH 1867

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Mr. Hardy, in a vigorous reply, which, when read with

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the com- mentary of Mr. Disraeli's unlimitel concessions on the following day, seems to have had a singular affectation of firmness and resolve, taunted Mr. Gladstone with not...

The only other speech of much mark on Monday night

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was Mr. Roebuck's,—and that was of mark only for its Tory tone and rancid temper. Mr. Roebuck began by saying that, as a legis- lative assembly, the Howse of Commons is...

On Tuesday night Mr. Bright was unusually conciliatory. He rose

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late in the evening to say that the Bill was a bad Bill, but he could wait for the redistribution of seats, declared his willingness to omit the residuum or lees of the house-...

"I never give the wall to a snob," says a

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ruffian in Joe Miller to a gentleman on the footpath. "I always do," retorts the gentleman, as he sidles into the gutter. That was Mr. Dis- raeli's attitude on Tuesday night,...

Mr. Gladstone commenced the debate on the second read- ing

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of the Reform Bill on Monday with a long and very elaborate criticism on the details of the Government measure, expressing incidentally a certain almost tender regret for the...

NEWS OF THE WEEK.

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T "political kaleidoscope has shifted again. Last week it seemed certain that the Government would go out, this week everybody is talking of the ease with which, after their...

NOTICE TO ADVERTISER.3. — The Publisher requests that Advertise- ments may be

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sent- in eth early in the week - as possible, in order to insure insertion, in future, the latest time will be 2 o'clock on Friday Afternoons.

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Mr. Darby Griffith has been, for once in his rife,

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of use. He is a soldier's son, and on Thursday he reminded the House of a fact everybody is always forgetting, that the power of the Queen over the Army is not derived from...

The Emperor of the French has, it is said, sanctioned

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a curious experiment. A Parliament of workmen, consisting of 302 dele- gates, elected by all the Trades in France, is to assemble in Paris during the Exhibition, to discuss all...

• This day week a deputation of artisans waited on

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Mr. Gladstone to represent their views on Reform. They were very strong for a lodger franchise, expressed great distrust of the Tories, and ample confidence in Mr. Gladstone,...

Count von Bismarck is. clearly not going . to. give

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up: either Posen or North Schleswig. Of- the.former, he says-that Poland: has done Germany quite as much harm as Germany has dona her, and she shall not have the opportunity...

There is a serious affair astir on the Continent. The

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Grand Duchy of Luxemburg, with an area of 1,000 square miles, 200,000 people, and a fortress-capital of great strength, was a State of the Germanic Confederation, and the King...

Mr. Otway, it will be remembered, carried his motion for

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the abolition of flogging in the Army by a majority of one. Sir John Pakington appears, from his speech on Thursday, to have been willing to accede, but the Duke of Cambridge...

The remaining speakers in the debate were not of the

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first importance. Mr. Butler-Johnstone on Tuesday let off one of his sputtery fireworks, but the main points of his speech were only a fear that "the country gentlemen, with...

The Engine-Drivers and Firemen of the Brighton and South- Coast

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line struck on Tuesday. The Company had conceded the question of hours, reducing them to ten per diem, and the wages, giving 7s. 6d. a day to every competent driver, but the men...

The four Continental Powers have agreed to advise the Porte

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to cede Candia to Greece. Lord Derby on Thursday stated, in answer to Lord Denbigh, that he did not think Turkey would yield, unless pressure were applied ; but the combined...

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There were some curious confessions in the House of Lords

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on 'Thursday night, on occasion of a motion by Lord Lyveden for the proceedings taken under the Ecclesiastical Titles' Bill, with a view to its repeal as an irritating dead...

The poet Young, to whose very questionable claim to a

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pension 4i in recognition," as the official Gazette announcing his pension put it, "of his services as an historical and agricultural poet in Ireland," we drew attention on...

Mr. Young himself wrote a letter of self-defence to the

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Standard of yesterday, in which he gives an account of his career, com- mencing with the following eccentric observation :—" From causes too tedious to narrate, I was born in...

The stock of bullion in the Banks of England and

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France' having further increased, National Securities have been somewhat firm this week. Consols, for money, have marked 911, ; ditto, for account, 911, 1. Reduced and New 3 per...

The House of Commons has sanctioned a guarantee of 4

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per .cent. on 3,000,000/. for the IntercolonialRailway of 'Canada. The vote- was resisted by Mr. Lowe, who said the Americans would . seize the railway the moment war broke out,...

The Rev. William Alexander, Dean of Emly, has been brought

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forward as a candidate for the vacant Chair of Poetry at Oxford. He is far the most formidable rival whom Sir Francis Doyle is likely to have. Mr. Alexander is a real...

The closing prices of and on Friday week are

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Meriean Spanish Passtve Do. Certificates . Turkish 6 per Cents., igse „ 1862 Unit ' ea States 5.20's .. the leading Foreign Securities yesterday subjoined :— Friday,...

Yesterday and on Friday week the leading British Railways left

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off at the annexed quotations :— Friday, Mardi 211: Friday, March 29. Great Eastern .. ... Groat Northam Great Western.. Lancashire and Yorkshire .. London and Brighton...

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TOPICS OF THE DAY.

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THE COMPROMISE. having been the author of the Savings' Bank qualification, and Mr. Gladstone himself of the franchise based upon direct taxation—but he gives them up, leaves...

Page 5

DISRAEUS LAST FORTRESS.

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W E may assume that Mr. Disraeli has been driven out of every one of his special positions, from every stand he has taken up on the Government Reform Bill except one, on which...

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THE EUROPEAN POSITION. E VERY grown man in Germany outside Austria

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competent, to bear arms is to become a drilled soldier. The King of Prussia is ex officio Commander-in-Chief of all such soldiers. That is the substance of the Treaties between...

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THE NEW STEP TOWARDS A DECENT HOUSING FOR ARTIZANS.

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IR. lit'CULLAGH TORRENS, in the very able speech in which he moved the second reading of his Bill for improv- ing the dwellings of artisans and labourers in boroughs, pointed...

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KILLING NO MURDER. "I T seems to me probable that at

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some future time Patlia. ment will further limit the punishment of death. Consequently, until it does, I shall suspend the law of the land." That seems to us an accurate...

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'H t. ITALIANS IN SOUTH A MPRICA. D URING the week

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attention has been called by the Pall Mall Gazette and other journals to the fact of the remarkable emigration from the sea-board of Italy, and par- ticularly from the...

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THE ENGINE-DRFFERS' STRIKE.

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S C°31WHERE or other among the Directors, and Managers, and Saperintendents.of the Brighton and South Coast Rail- way, there must be a man whom Mr. Disraeli should find out and...

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THE IMAGINATION OF ELEPHANTS.

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T HE reperusal of Sir J. Emerson Tennent's delightful chapters on the Wild Elephant reprinted in a separate form from his great work on Ceylon, suggests one of the most curious...

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THE PROVINCIAL HISTORY OF ENGLAND.

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XXIII.-SUSSEX AND SOUTH SURREY.---KELTIC AND ROMAN PERIODS. T HE population by which this Province was inhabited when the Romans first became acquainted with it, appears to...

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FEMALE SUFFRAGE.

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[To THE EDITOR OF THE " SPECTATOR:] SIR,—The remarks of "L. E. B." are chiefly variations of one inquiry, viz. : —Why should we not apply precisely the same teats to female...

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INDIAN REDUCTIONS.

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[To THE EDITOR OF THE "SPECTATOR."] Sra,—The obliging way in which you notice my services in your paper of March 23, induces me to offer you some explanation with reference...

THE REPRESENTATION OF MINORITIES. [To THE EDITOR OF THE "SPECTATOR."]

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SIR,—There seems to be a general feeling that in the probable event of a large extension of the franchise taking place, it is desirable that some plan should be adopted which...

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TWO EPITAPHS.

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I. ON THE REV. R. H., WHO DIED OF TYPIILTS FEVER. IN DERRY CATHEDRAL. DOWN through our crowded lanes and closer air, 0 Friend ! how beautiful thy footsteps were. When...

FEMALE PHYSICIANS.

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rrO THE EDITOR OF THE "SPEcrAr0n.1 Sm,—As it is very important to female physicians that the cre- dentials of every woman assuming their office shall be clearly known and...

BOOKS.

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SWEDENBORG.* IT would be possible with very little trouble to make a very good life of Swedenborg out of the materials which Mr. White has so assiduously collated, and such a...

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SIR J. NOEL PATON'S POEMS.*

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• Spindrift. By Sir Noel Paton. tendon: Blackwood. Sin Nom PATON'S verses arc generally pleasant to read, con- taining often true lyrical feeling and now and then a real...

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A MESMERIC EXTRAVAGANZA.*

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Tins novel contains two volumes of lively rattle, about im- possible, or rather entirely absurd and imaginary mesmeric facts, and one volume of very dull prosing about possible,...

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LADY ADELAIDE'S OATH.*

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MRS. WOOD has been, we think, the victim of a somewhat unfair persecution about this book, and some others. She published it originally, as we understand, in America, and, as we...

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Vegetables, and How to Grow Them. By Elizabeth Watts. Every-

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.Day Cookery. (F. Warne and Co.)—Two shilling manuals of an art that. is always necessary and constantly neglected. Mrs. Watts writes for those who have a little plot of...

Earnest and the Pilgrim Poet. By A. Gordon Middleton. (Edinburgh

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: W. P. Nimmo.)—According to an advertisement of this book, the first poem in it was written when the author was too much imbued with the spirit implied by the title to pay...

The British Captives in Abyssinia. By Charles T. Bake. (Long-

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mans.)—Dr. Beke's volume should be read by all who would make up their minds on the character of the Negus, or Emperor, Theodore, of whom we hare heard so mach, and on the...

The British Association in Jeopardy, and Professor De Morgan in

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the Pillory without Hope of Escape. By James Smith. (Simpkin and Marshall).—Mr. James Smith modestly requests the reader not to stop when half-way through his pamphlet, but to...

Historical Acrostics. By N. L. B. (Bosworth.)—We sometimes think that

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it is bad enough to expect us to read all the books which come to us. It is far worse if we have to guess their contents, and we must respectfully decline to do so.

On Sherman's Track; or, the South aft.m. the War. By

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John H.. Kennaway. (Seeley.)—Mr. Kennaway's tour coat him 160i. to 1801.„ and took him through a part of America which has not been rendered fit for comfortable travel since...

CURRENT LITERATURE.

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Half-Hours with the Best Letter-Writers and Autobiographers. By Charles Knight. (Routledge.)—The contents of this book are almost more miscellaneous than is warranted by the...

A Visit to Vichy. By M. Prosser James, M.D. (Williams

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and Co) —Dr. James calls on every one that is diseased to come to these waters, though he does not extend the invitation to those who have no money.. His account of Vichy is...

Poems. By Elizabeth Akers. (Florence Percy.) (Boston, Ticknor and Fields

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; London, Triibner.)—Snffiaient judgment has not been shown in weeding these poems, as a good many are insignificant, and the repetitions of others are tedious. But some...

The Duke of Friedland. A Play in four acts. By

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William Boerhaave. (Murray and Co.)—Mr. Boerhaave has not plagiarized from Schiller, indeed we question if he has read Schiller's Wallenstein before emulat- ing it. We also...

The Russian Government in Poland. With a narrative of the

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Polish Insurrection of 1863. By W. A. Day. (Longmans.)—" The Russian Theory of Government in Poland" would have been a better title for this pro-Russian narrative. We cannot...

The Pulpit Analyst. Edited by Joseph Parker, D.D. Vol I.

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(Jack- son, Walford, and Hodder.)—The title of this book gives but a slight. idea of its contents, which are miscellaneously religions. Sermons,. sketches of sermons,...

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Tfigottometry for Beginners. By J. Todhnnter. (Macmillan.)—This It a Mae

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work intended to serve as an inn-eduction to the larger treatise en - the same subject by the same author. A short extract will perhaps show - the nature of the volume:— "...

The Handbook of Engraved Gems. By C. W. King. (Bell

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and DaMy.) —This is a book for use, but it is also a book for show. The many en- gravings of engravings on gems which adorn its pages justify the latter description, while the...

Spanish Papers and Other Miscellanies, hitherto Unpublished or Uncol- lected.

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By Washington Irving. (Sampson Low.)—Mr. Pierre Irving, Washington Irving's nephew, and biographer of "the Goldsmith of our time," tells us in his preface to these two volumes...

A Voice fi - om the Muses. By James Bird. (Simpkin, Marshall,

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and 0o.)—The author dedicates his book to the working men of Bowling and Bradford, with a statement that front his sixth year he was com- pelled to toil for his bread in a...

The Fasti of Ovid. The Eclogues and Georgics of Virgil.

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By John Benson Rose. (Derrell and Son.)—Mr. Rose has translated The Fasti and The Eclogues and Georgics into English verse, with a laudable wish to be faithfuL But he never...

Outlines of Political Economy. By George Henry Smith. (Longmans.) —These

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outlines are intended for schools and junior students, and are perfectly clear and simple ; at the same time they convey great and astonishing novelties to young minds, and if...

Character and Characteristic Men. By Edwin P. - Whipple. (Bo s t o n, Ticknor and

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Fields ; London, Trilbner.)—Mr. Whipple writes or lectureS pleasantly, and has always an anecdote at hand to keep his audience in a good humour. But he shows a tad want of...

English Church Furniture at the Period of the Reformation. Edited

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by Edward Peacock. (J. C. Hotten.)—Mr. Peacock has published here a collection of returns from various parishes in Lincolnshire of the ecclesiastical ornaments destroyed by...

Hours of Work and Play. By Frances Power Cobbe. (Trubner.)--

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Miss Cobbe's uninterrupted industry rather contradicts her present title-page. She seems a disciple of all work and no play, although the effect produced on her is not the same...

Perry and Co.'s I3ostonite Petpetual Diary. The Bostonite slate, tablets,

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and diary before us are exceedingly convenient, as the Bos- tanks material is of a kind on which it is as easy to rub out com- pletely what you have written without rendering...

Classical Studies : their True Position and Value in Eth , cotion.

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By Rev. Joshua Jones, M.A. (Longmans.)—There is nothing very novel in Mr. Jones's essay, but there is still less in it than is antiquated. Be would retain Classical studios,...

A Joui-ney of Life, in Long and Short Stages. By

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Frank Foster. (Elliot Stock.)—It is but the other day that we noticed a similar story by the same author. Had he fused the two stories into one, and taken snore pains with the...

The Triumph over Midian. By A. L. 0. L (T.

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Nelson and Sons.)—A strange idea of interweaving sermons with a story. It is true that the sermons bear on the story, and that the lessons of the one are com- pleted by those...

Life of Benjamin Silliman, M.D., LLD. By George P. Fisher.

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Two vols. (Sampson Low.)—Although this biography mast needs be most interesting to an American public, Professor Silliman had many friends and admirers in England, and indeed...

Australian Capers; or, Christopher Cockle's Colonial Experience. By Old Boomerang.

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(Routledge.)—Fast, spun out, rollicking, and tedious, this story seems meant to warn people against going to Australia, if they are not fit to live there. The warning would be...

County Courts' Equitable Jurisdiction. By Henry Mainwaring Sladen. (Wildy and

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Sons.)—" The present work contains :—Firstly, the portions of the County Courts' Equitable Jurisdiction Act which appeared to merit particular attention, with notes....

The Shakespeare Expositor. By Thomas Keightley. (J. Russell Smith.)—The main

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contents of this volume are Shakespeare emenda- tions without the plays, so that any of the former editions may be elucidated. But Mr. Keightley has also discoursed learnedly...

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Meta's Letters. A Tale. By Mrs. Ensell. (Saunders and Otley.)—

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A young lady's tale in young-lady letters. We will not profane its mysteries by exposing them to the public gaze in these columns.

The Modern Peach - Pruner. By the Rev. T. Collings Brehaut. (Cottage

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Gardener Office.) — We are always happy to eat peaches, and we are therefore grateful to all who attempt to improve or propagate the species.

Life of Jefferson Davis. By a South Carolinian. (Bacon and

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Co.)— We cannot see the object of this life, which merely relates a few facts about Jefferson Davis, and which might have been written by an incon- stant reader of newspapers....

Connected Poems. By Charles Seabridge. (Triamer); The Rose of Cheriton.

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By Mrs. SewelL (Jerrold and Sons); The Edda of Spentund the Learned, from the Old Norse or Icelandic. (Triihner.)—Three small volumes, which in one sense or another profess...

Occasional Essays. By Chandes Wren Hoskyns. (Longmans.)— Mr. Hoskyns has

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written so charmingly on the subject of a clay farm, of all other subjects the least attractive, that we are rather disappointed in these essays. The papers on "Landlord" and...

A Typographical Gazetteer Attempted. By Rev. Henry Cotton, D.C.L. (Oxford

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: Clarendon Press.)—Dr. Cotton's object is to pre- serve the date at which printing was first introduced in each of the places mentioned in this gazetteer. The number of...

Types from the Hebrew and Greek Scriptures, as Illustrated in

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the Colours of the Rainbow. By Mrs. Kelly. (Darton and Co.)—The less said of this strange patchwork the better. Mrs. Kelly does not seem to reflect that the colours of the...

A history of Ancient Christianity and Stwred Art in Italy.

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By Charles J. Homans. (Williams and Norgate.)—Mr. tremens, we believe, is or was what some call a convert, and others a pervert. We had no right to read this valuable...

A Practical Treatise on Banking, Currency, and the Exchanges. By

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Arthur Crump. (Longmans.)—Mr. Crump has given us a book of much interest, some amusement, and considerable information, but ho is not very originaL He appears to have borrowed...

Aristotle on Fallacies. By Edward Poste, M.A. (Macmillan.)—Text of the

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S3phistici Elenchi, with translation and notes by a Fellow of OrieL Mr. Poste alludes in his preface to this very scholarly book to the objection that the whole subject of...

Plain Papers by Pikestaff. (Trtibner.)—The author of these essays alludes

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to an old adage, and proceeds to exemplify it. We never knew how plain a pikestaff was till we read these papers.

My First Cruise. By W. H. G. Kingston. (Cassell.)—A story

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for boys who are too young to take interest in Marryatt and Basil Hall. We are free to confess that we have passed that age.

The Passion Week. By the Rev. William Hanna, D.D. (Edinburgh

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: Edmonston and Douglas.)—These lectures take us from Palm Sunday to Holy Thursday, combining in one the narratives of the Four Evangelists. Dr. Hanna may also lay claim to...

The Religious Opportunities of the Heathen before Christ. By W.

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F. Slater. (Sunderland : Hills.)—Mr. Slater is a Wesleyan minister, and of the five chapters in this book four have appeared in the Wesleyan Methodist Magazine. They are not...

Specimens of Early English, Selected from the Chief English Authors,

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A.D. 1250—A.D. 1400. By R. Morris Esq. (Oxford : Clarendon Press.) —Wordsworth censured the Johnsonian collection of the English Poets for not beginning with Chaucer. This...

The Common Nature of Epidemics. From Writings and Reports by

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Southwood Smith, M.D. Edited by T. Baker, Esq. (Triibner.)—Dr. Southwood Smith's name is well known as that of a benefactor to humanity. But the cattle plague and the cholera...

E Fur Si .Jfuove. By N. A. Nieholson, M.A. (Triibner.)—One

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of the essays in this, volume will be read with interest, and deserves the praise of ingenuity. It is the essay on "Space," which occupies four pages, though it cannot be said...

The Clergy and the Pulpit in their Relations to the

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People. By M. l'Abb6 Isidore Mullois. Translated by George Percy Badger. (Smith and Elder.)—Suggestions, criticism, experience abound in this book, and we can recommend it...

A Sabbath - Day Journey. (Houlston and Wright.)--We are told in the

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preface that this book was written in a time of affliction, and we refrain from criticizing it.

Anderkigh Ha& A Novel in Verse. By Edmund C. Nugent.

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(Bentley.)—The verse is the verse of Ingoldsby, but the hand is the hand of Mr. Nugent. Perhaps the cleverest part of the volume is the "alliterative apology" with which it...

A. Handbook of the Art of Illumination as Practised during

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the Middle Ages. By Henry Shaw, F.S.A. (Bell and Daldy.)—Mr. Henry Shaw has produced a volume which, though sumptuous in its way and beautiful in every way, is comparatively...

The Lost Cause; a New Southern History of the War

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of the Coale- ckrates. By Edward A. Pollard. (Triibner and 0o.)—An enormous book, calling itself "the Standard Southern History of the Late War," and breathing extreme...

Dr. Goethe's Courts*. A Tale of Domestic Life. From the

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German. (Routledgo.)—The subject of this story was important enough for the world, as but for it Goethe could hardly have been born. But the book was scavely worth writing,...

Tales, Songs, and Sonnets. By J. W. Dalby. (Longmans.) A

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Waif on the Stream. By S. M. Butchers. (Trabner.)—We sit with sad civility over the books of verse which pour in upon us, feeling with Pope that to laugh were want of goodness...

Bertha Devreux : an Incident in the Wars of the

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Roses. (Bentley.)— A long and level tract of rhyme. The incident fieW1111 tO have been omitted.

Crimson Pages. A Story of the Sixteenth Century. By John

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Tillotson. (S. 0. 13eeton.)—One of those unpleasant books in which all the good people are always being heretics, and being tortured or burnt. We are not advocates of...

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The Mission of Great Sufferings. By Elihu Burritt. (Sampson Low

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and Son.)—" Made perfect through suffering" is the moral and the motto of Mr. Burritt's volume. With this end in view he goes through the history of martyrdom and heroism from...

The Life and Letters of James Gates Percival. By Julius

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H. Ward. (Boston, Ticknor and Fields ; London, Trubner.)—It is as rare for a life to be well written as to be well spent. Such, or something similar, is Carlyle's dictum. If...