Cornhill Magazine.—september.—tho Padding Of The Number...
though appreciative account of Bishop Atterbury, whom the writer believes to have been a mis- taken patriot, though no lover of still waters or a quiet life. He is said to have......
Awat Tudy's Magazine.—september. (george Bell And Sons.)—...
is fresh this month with the very air of the moors. We hear the gurgle and the ripple of the mountain stream, and scent the gorse on the breeze above, or the wet mosses and......
Maud Atherton. By Alfred Leigh. 2 Vols. (james Blackwood And
Co.)—We have a strong suspicion that Alfred Leigh is a young lady's nam•deplume. If not, the author is a young man of essen- tially feminine—not effeminate—nature. The tone of......
Sermons.—we Are Obliged By Want Of Space To Pass By
with a very brief notice a number of volumes of Sermons. Sermons on Daily Life and Duty, by George Dawson, M.A., edited by his wife. (C. Regan Paul and Co.) ; and by the same......
Blackwood's Magazine.—septoraber.--the Writer Of The...
to exalt the Ministry, describing the Treaty of Berlin as "a great, bloodless triumph of states- manship," and ridiculing the experienced Indian statesmen who prophesied......
The Gentleman's Magazine.—september.—besides Mrs. Lynn...
?" this month's number Con- tains an interesting account of the "Missing Links," which should, if evolution is the law, connect the different species of nature; an account by......