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NOTES AND QUERIES. [9 th s. xii. OCT. 10, 1903.

' On the Influence of John Lyly,' according both that of a bird. ' Sportie,' described by Miss Con- praise and blame to the recently published edition stance E. Maud, is a displeasing specimen of a of that dramatist's work. The reviews are by Yankee boy. It is to be hoped such

Sir Archibald Geikie, Mr. T. F. Henderson, Dr. George Neilson, Miss Mary Bateman, and other well-known writers. In its new shape the review makes an admirable start.

AN article in the Fortnightly, by M. Octave Uzanne, on ' The Evolution of French Contem-

examples are

not common. In Longman's Mr. Fred W hishaw has a pleasing article on ' Loafing Time,' with an excellent jackdaw story. Mr. Lawrence Gibbs deals with ' Egyptian Irrigation Works.' Mr. Lang, writing from the Highlands, has something to say about an interesting Highland and Jacobite exhi- bition at Inverness, which brings him on to the sub-

porary Literature,' is interesting and slightly pessi- I ject of Queen Mary and the Casket Letters. He mistic in tone. The sense that in France, as deals with a question of literary ethics first opened elsewhere, there is at present a dearth of great out in the Athenivum.ln the Gentleman's 'The men permeates it. To the influence of the Dreyfus England of the Paston Letters' is agreeably anti- affair the writer attributes the profanation of the quarian. Mr. Percy Fitzgerald writes on ' Jane temple of literature. A noteworthy expression of Austen's Novels,' a subject much to the fore of opinion on the part of Ernest Renan is quoted to late. In ' A Literary Highway ' the associations of trie effect that in fifty years' time no one will open the Dover road are described. Dr. Japp has some a book. This seems a hard saying, and to us it is interesting correspondence concerning cuckoos in impossible of acceptance; but the average man, it captivity. Mrs. John Quincy Adams's 'Narrative must be owned, reads little. ' Legend and Marie of a Journey from St. Petersburg to Paris in 1815,' Bashkirtseff,' by Prince Bpjidar Karageorgevitch, with an introduction by her grandson, Brooks proves that the famous diary is anything rather | Adams, constitutes the article of greatest interest

in Scribner's. It is accompanied by a portrait of Mrs. Adams from a miniature. Mr. W. S. Harwood writes on 'State Universities,' his paper being illustrated from photographs. ' The South- West . . from a Locomotive ' is interesting and instructive.

our columns, sends to the Nineteenth Century an Some coloured illustrations of merit accompany a admirable paper on 'The Gardens of Ancient Rome contribution on 'Shooting,' a matter outside our and what Grew in Them.' In the time dealt with | ken. The number is excellent, the woodlands " were not regarded as places of delight and attraction." They were "not yet 'vocales' or ' venerabiles ' so much as dangerous, black, and oracular." The hortus signified indif- ferently an orchard and a garden. Mr. Baddeley dwells upon the homeliness of such Latin aristo- cratic names as the Fabii, the Lentuli, and the Pispnes. His paper is, indeed, full of pleasant antiquarian erudition. Mrs. Maxwell Scott con- cludes her enthusiastic eulogy of Joan of Arc, for

than the " exact, absolute, faithful truth " which the maid asserted it to be. At the time when she presented herself as a little girl of twelve she was sixteen or seventeen. Mr. St. Clair Baddeley, whose name is sometimes pleasantly conspicuous in

is

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ON all communications must be written the name and address of the sender, not necessarily for pub- lication, but as a guarantee of good faith.

which the Nineteenth Century scarcely seems the most appropriate place. Mr. W. H. Wilkins, well known for his writings on English queens, deals admirably with ' Augusta, Princess of Wales, 3 who escaped being a British queen. Mr. Walter Ray- mond has an excellent and most amusing sketch i - - - -

of London boyhood in ' London in the Lane ' p ot P a P er > Wltn the signature of the writer and In the Pall Mall the article of most interest is that? address as he wishes to appear. When answer-

Vk*r i Vt A i, J I t , ,. ^ * I >U i 1 AT ^.1 TIT j-i I inO" mi Pril^S CIV ma L"l nor -nrifoa ix ri i- V v^i/vo -*>s3 4-*-*. ft-*w.^ VT C A

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by the editor on 'Phil May, the Man Artist,' the illustrations to which present many aspects of May's remarkable talent. There is in much of his work a vein of notable pathos, to which the critic does full justice. Phil May is indeed, a fine humourist, after whose works the prudent collector should look. Specially to be commended are the designs of ' Launce and his Dog 'and 'The Intruder.' Excellent illustrations accompany 'The Brighton Road' and 'The Motor Car ' and the instalment of ' The Queen's Quhair ' Mr Sharp's 'Literary Geography ' deals with the hnghsh lakes. 'Hotels and Hotel Life in New York ' has some faithful, but gruesome-looking views from photographs. ' The Discovery of Radium ' is good so far as it goes.-' In Guipi'ucoa,' by Mrs Woods, in the Cornhill, describes the shrine of ""Ha, whose life is also briefly told. Mr. Basil

3, or making notes with regard to previous entries in the paper, contributors are requested to put in parentheses, immediately after the exact heading, the series, volume, and page or pages to which they refer. Correspondents who repeat queries are requested to head the second com- munication " Duplicate."

E BAILEY (Philadelphia). Ask the librarian of the Historical Society for the volumes of ' N. & Q.* and consult the Indexes.

the harp of life," &c.). 1. 33.

J. H. S. (" Love took u- See Tennyson's ' Locksley

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