The new number of Good Words contains two papers, the
one by the Princess Louise, and the other by the Marquis of Lorne, which will, of course, excite deep interest in a great number of people who are eagerly loyal to the throne, and to those with whom the Royal Family are closely allied. The Princess's sketches of Qaebec are as effectively rendered in the woodcuts of Good Words as we could expect, and are taken from scenes of very great beauty. The Mar- quis's verso is flowing and generally graceful, though he overdoes now and then the effort at literary force, as when he says that he watched-
" The loops of plunging foam that beat The rocks at Montmorenei's feet, Slob the deep gloom with moonlit rap."