140
NOTES AND QUERIES.
. I. FEB. 12, 5 98.
of 1776 on Lake Champtain.' The illustrations to
these articles assign the whole a very warlike look.
A curious picture is furnished of ' The Police Con-
trol of a Great Election.' Mr. T. R. Sullivan deals
with ' Wilton Lockwood,' a portrait painter con-
cerning whom Englishmen will have to know more
than now they know, and reproduces some very
fine portraits. ' A Book-lover s Wish ' is for a first
edition of Herrick's ' Hesperides,' a legitimate and
not an unrealizable aspiration. The author of
' Silverspot ' claims friendship with a crow. We
maintain that he never reached even intimacy, nor,
indeed, got beyond recognition. In Temple Bar
Mr. Arthur G. Chater writes on 'Shakspere and
Wagner,' indicating many points of resemblance.
In Wagner he finds a man who at the time when,
in the middle of the century, aesthetic thinkers in
Germany were anticipating that " a future German
Shakspeare would arise to found a greater art than
that of Goethe and Schiller "was even then work-
ing in their midst, to be rejected, as the Jews
rejected their Messiah, because " He was not in
conformity with their preconceived notions." Mr.
Ralph Nevill gives a dramatic account of 'Jean
Cavalier, Camisard Chief and English General,' the
most distinguished of the insurgent chiefs of the
Cevennes, the son of a peasant and the apprentice
of a baker, who had an interview with Louis XIV.,
was the hero of the battle of Almanza, was Lieu-
tenant-Governor of Jersey, and is buried in Chelsea
Churchyard. His memoirs constitute attractive
reading. Mr. Nevill imparts some romance to his
early career. To the Gornhill the Rev. W. H.
Fitchett sends a second of his ' Fights for the Flag,'
dealing with Blake and the Dutchmen. 'Some
Real Tiger Stories' are sufficiently startling and
amusing. Under the title ' A Gay Cavalier Miss
Eva Scott describes " wild George Goring," of un-
savoury reputation. 'A Desert Dream is very
impressive. ' The Brigands of Calabria,' ' My First
Shipwreck,' and ' Concerning Breakfast ' are inter-
esting portions of a capital number. Col. Jarrett
continues in Macmillans ' Macaulay and Lucian,' a
somewhat startling conjunction. A copy of the
works of the great satirist, the most modern of
ancient writers, which came into his hands having
previously belonged to Macaulay, by whom it had
been carefully read and underlined supplies the
basis of the paper. It is a scholarly and readable con-
tribution, though we are not so profoundly impressed
as is the Colonel with the coincidences brought to
light. ' Some Memories of a Prison Chaplain 'pre-
sent prisoners in an unfamiliar light. Col. Sir G. S.
Clarke deals with Mr. Hannay's ' Short History of
the English Navy.' ' The French Invasion of Ire-
land' is concluded. Mr. T. S. Omond contributes
to the Gentleman's, under the title of 'English
Prosody,' some valuable observations on English
versification. ' The Story of a Famous Society '
describes the formation of the unfortunate Guild of
Literature and Art. ' Up Stream ' may be read
with interest. Mr. Strong's article in Longman's
on 'The Kindest-Hearted of the Great' attracts
much attention, supplying as it does the further
fortunes of the characters in ' Vanity Fair ' as told
by Thackeray to the sixth Duke of Devonshire.
Tne same paper contains two unpublished letters of
Dickens. The general contents are eminently read-
able, and Mr. Lang is once more at his best.
' Monarchs at Home,' in the English Illustrated,
depicts the life of the King and Queen of the
Belgians. Some studies of the first Napoleon, under
the title ' The Great Adventurer,' are good in them-
selves, and very agreeably illustrated. 'A Won-
derful Woman of Merrie England' supplies an
account of Lady Elizabeth Percy, who was thrice
married before she was sixteen, and depicts the
murder of Thomas Thynne in Pall Mall, 12 Feb
1682. 'The Queen's Personal Interest in India' is
jvioiiuyKe nas some nne illustrations. Chapman s,
which reaches us late, has a translation of Tolstoi's
rather severe ' Guy de Maupassant and the Art of
Fiction.'
A REPUBLICATION of Cassell's Illustrated History of England, to be completed in fifty-three sixpenny weekly parts, has begun, and is to be entitled " The Diamond Jubilee Edition." Each part contains about ninety pages, strikingly and profusely illus- trated. Each subscriber is entitled to a plate, 30 in. by 24 in., at a purely nominal sum, of the Thanks- giving Service at St. Paul's on 22 June, 1897. In this plate previous marvels in the way of cheapness are eclipsed. Cassell's Gazetteer, Part LIII ex- tends from Styal to Tealby. Its most important articles are on Sunderland, Swansea, Tamworth, and Taunton. It has views of Taplow, the Tay Bridge, the Crystal Palace (under Sydenham), and many other spots, picturesque or noted.
MESSRS. SAMPSON Low & Co. write: "We are preparing to publish, early in the spring, Vol. V. of the ' English Catalogue of Books,' 189071897. As we wish to make it as complete as possible, may we ask those of your readers who have published books between 1 January, 1890, and 31 December, 1897, for the full titles, sizes, prices, month and year of pub- lication, and author s and publisher's names, to be sent as soon as possible, addressed to Editor, ' English Catalogue of Books,' St. Dunstan's House, Fetter Lane, London?"
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