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ENGRAVINGS-I. After the Battle, by P. H. Calderon, A.R.A.: II. The Rejected Poet. by W. P. Frith, R.A.; III. Satan contemplating the Serpent, by G. Doré.

LITERARY CONTRIBUTIONS-Memorials of Flaxman, by G. F. Teniswood, illustrated: Exhibition of Pictures by Deceased Painters; Seulptors' Quarries Alabaster and Serpentine, by Professor Ansted. F.R.S.: Art-Union of London: Royal Albert Hall of Arts and Sciences; Art-Gossip and Notabilia, &c. &c.

London: VIRTUE & CO., 26, Ivy Lane, E.C.

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THE

HE EDINBURGH REVIEW, No. 257, will be published on the 17th inst. ADVERTISEMENTS or BILLS intended for insertion cannot be received by the Publishers later than WEDNESDAY NEXT, the 10th instant.

London: LONGMANS and CO. 39, Paternoster Row, E.C.

Preparing for publication,

JOHN KNOX'S LITURGY,

AND

THE WESTMINSTER DIRECTORY,

IN ONE VOLUME;

WITH INTRODUCTION AND HISTORICAL NOTES.

WM. BLACKWOOD & SONS, Edinburgh and London.

Lately published in 2 vols. 8vo, price 17. 18.

THE HISTORY OF LORD SEATON'S REGI

MENT (the 52nd Light Infantry) at the BATTLE of WATERLOO. Also at Paris, in the North of France, and for many years afterwards. With a Portrait of Field Marshal Lord Seaton, and three Plans of Waterloo, to which are added many of the Author's Reminiscences of his military and clerical career. By the REV. WILLIAM LEEKE, M.A., Rural Dean, &c., who carried the 52nd Regimental Colours at Waterloo.

"The accounts of the Battle are written with much spirit and colour, and are well worth the notice of all our soldiers," &c. [Army and Navy Gazette. "We can testify to the interesting nature of the part of the work which relates to the Battle of Waterloo."-Athenæum.

"Full of stirring and varied interest," &c.-Record. "Will hold a prominent place among the narratives of Waterloo." [Cosmopolitan.

London: HATCHARD & CO., 187, Piccadilly.

Immediately, in demy 8vo.
SHINAR:

THE SCRIPTURE RECORD OF THE CONFUSION OF LANGUAGE, AND THE DISPERSION VERFIED BY MODERN DISCOVERY.

By DOMINICK Mc CAUSLAND, Q.C., LL.D.
RICHARD BENTLEY, New Burlington Street.

Now ready, crown 8vo, cloth, 7s. 6d. 448 pp.
THE EPITAPHS AND MONUMENTAL IN-
Collected by JAMES BROWN, Keeper of the Grounds. With an
Elaborate Historical Introduction by DAVID LAING, ESQ., LL.D.,
Translation of all the Latin Epitaphs. illustrated by Twenty-one Views
of the earlier and most interesting Monuments, occasional Foot-Notes,
an Appendix of Curious Matters, and a copious and carefully compiled
Index to the whole.

Edinburgh: J. MOODIE MILLER;
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This Day, crown 8vo, cloth, 48.

of DUDLEY CASTLE and PRIORY,

including a Genealogical Account of the Families of SUTTON and WARD. By CHARLES TWAMLEY, ESQ.

London: J. RUSSELL SMITII, 35, Soho Square.

3RD S. No. 288.

Just published,

ASTRONOMY WITHOUT

MATHEMATICS.

BY EDMUND BECKETT DENISON, ESQ., Q.C.

FOURTH EDITION.

London: SOCIETY FOR PROMOTING CHRISTIAN KNOWLEDGE,
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THE PEOPLE'S MAGAZINE for JULY, with Frontispiece, "The Shepherd Boy," printed in

Colours.

"UP AND DOWN THE LADDER," by WILLIAM GILBERT, Author of "De Profundis," "Dr. Austin's Guests," &c. &c.

"PARISIAN SKETCHES," with Illustrations by GUSTAVE DORÉ.

And the usual variety of Articles and Illustrations.

London: 77, GREAT QUEEN STREET, W.C.
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OLD

OLD BLACK-LETTER BALLADS AND In the press, to be published at the end of June, price 128. COLLECTION of SEVENTY-NINE BLACK-LETTER BALLADS and BROADSIDES. printed in the Reign of Queen Elizabeth, between the Years 1559 and 1597, all of the highest interest and curiosity, presumed to be unique, and hitherto unknown. Reprinted from the celebrated Folio Volume formerly in the Library of the late George Daniel, Esq.; accompanied with an Introduction and Illustrative Notes.

JOSEPH LILLY, 17 and 18, New Street (entrance also 5A, Garrick Street), Covent Garden, London.

The above is beautifully printed by Messrs. Whittingham & Wilkins, on fine toned paper size, post 8vo, consisting of above 300 pages, to range with the Collections of Percy, Ritson, &c.

A Detailed Prospectus and Descriptive Catalogue of the Seventy Ballads, consisting of sixteen pages 8vo, may be had on application, or will be forwarded on the receipt of two postage-stamps.

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JOSEPH LILLY, 17 & 18, New Street, and 5a, Garrick Street, Covent Garden, London.

On sale, 8vo, pp. 174, with many humorous cuts, extra cloth, 78. 6d. ANSACTIONS OF THE LOGGERVILLE LITERARY SOCIETY.

TRANSAC

A few copies of this privately printed volume on sale, of which the Morning Post says: "All the drawings are capital, full of genuine fun, and the biographical sketch of the President, Lumpkin Queer. Esq., is in the style of the introductory chapter to Martin Chuzzlewit,' but a much cleverer performance. Still better is the President's address, the grave and plausibie absurdity of which is almost painfully laughable A paper on Some Peculiarities of the French Language is, with its delightful literal translation of How doth the little busy bee' (the irrepressible insect being rendered L'abeille peu industrieuse '), one of the very best burlesques we have ever read; a Retrospective Review of Juvenile Literature' is a perfect gem of fun and ingenuity. The book is a complete success."

The Atheneum says: "The book is not one to be read through steadily, but it will furnish a good deal of mirth if dipped into during leisure half-hours. Of the papers, Some Observations on Ignorance,' A Tour in Cornwall,' and the notes to Dandyados, a Tragedy,' are the best, the notes in this case being superior to the dramatic extravaganza which they illustrate."

London: J. RUSSELL SMITH, 36, Soho Square.

VISIT of SQUITETY

VISIT of the ARCHEOLOGICAL SOCIETY

HOLDERNESS, with above 200 Engravings. 2 vols. 4to, neat, 216.; large paper, 30s.-H. W. BALL, Barton-on-Humber, near Hull, has purchased the small Remainder of the above, and offers on good terms to the Trade.

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MESSRS. ROUTLEDGE & SONS beg to announce that they have in the Press a Re-issue of this well-known book. It will be printed on excellent paner, forming two handsome demy 4to volumes, price 21. 128. 6d. A limited impression will be issued, on Large Paper, 2 vols. royal 4to, price 41. 48. On and after the 15th of July next these prices will be material y advanced, so that immediate orders should be given to the Booksellers.

The chief local facts, statistics, &c., of the principal towns will be brought down to a recent period. It is intended to give the substance of most of the Latin charters and documents in English, and to exclude certain portions of the work which have now become obsolete, and the best efforts of both Editor and Publishers will be devoted to make the book the most useful and interesting History of the County Palatine that can be produced.

*** It is intended to print a List of Subscribers to the Large-paper Edition (the impression of which will be limited) in each copy of that size, if Names are sent to the Publishers at once.

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LONDON, SATURDAY, JULY 6, 1867.

CONTENTS.-No 288. NOTES:- Original MS. of Eixwv Baσidiný, 1- English Cardinals, 2- William D'Avenant on Shakspere, 3-Shak"Hamlet"speariana: Hamlet to Guildenstern- -"The Merry Wives of Windsor " "King Henry VI. Part II," 16.-A Relic of Waterloo -Trivet: John of BolognaIrish Etymology - Lake Habitations -"Imperiale, a Tragedy by Sir Ralph Freeman," 4.

QUERIES:-John Peep: Different Versions of Stories, 5Who killed General Braddock? Ib. — Agnus Dei-“ Árticles to be Observed," 1549 - Rev. Dr. Blomberg - Robert Browning's Boy and Angel"-"The Chessboard of Life," by Quis The Word "Dole"-Dryden Queries -John Scotus Erigena - Flaxman's Design for Ceilings Ghosts in the Red Sea-The Hindu Trinity-The Irish Greyhound of Celtic Times-"Magius de Tintinnabulis" Master-Marks on China - Parc aux Cerfs-Quotations wanted Scottish Romance Strelley of Strelley, co.

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-

Now, certainly to within the last few years, Worsborough Hall has continued in the possession of the direct descendants of this gentleman, Henry Edmonds, Esq. The Rev. Joseph Hunter, in his History of the Deanery of Doncaster, published in 1831, gives the genealogy of the family, notices the picturesque old hall, and says that an old cabinet belonging to Sir Thomas Herbert, and brought there by his widow, is still preserved; and he goes on-with that gentle humour which appears peculiar to topographers, from Pennant downwards-to say, that he has never heard that the MS. of the Icon has been found in a secret drawer within it.

Thomas Allen also, in his History of the County mentions the hall and the Edmonds family.

Nottingham-The Tomb at Barbadoes-The Valley of of York, published in the same year as Hunter,
Mont-Cenis -"Vir Cornub." Seth Ward, Bishop of
Salisbury, 6.

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ORIGINAL MS. OF ΕΙΚΩΝ ΒΑΣΙΛΙΚΗ. Some time ago (3rd S. viii. 396) I ventured to ask a question as to the original MS. of the Icon mentioned by Sir Thomas Herbert. I still hold the opinion, that the inquiry after this MS. has been singularly neglected; so much so, as almost to give point to Mr. Hallam's sneering implication that it never had any real existence. That such a MS. did exist, and in a handwriting nearly resembling the king's, there can be no doubt; and it certainly is very strange, that, while so much inquiry has been made about the account of the Icon in Sir Thomas's narrative, no one seems to have thought of seeking for the MS. of the Icon itself.

We possess a series of facts which seem, at any rate, to encourage inquiry.

Wagstaffe says that the original MS. account of the last two years of King Charles I., written by Sir Thomas Herbert, and afterwards published, was in 1697 in the possession of his widow, who was "married to Henry Edmonds, Esquire, living in the town of Worsborough, in Yorkshire." It is, therefore, not unreasonable to suppose that such books and papers as Sir Thomas possessed at his death, among which appear to have been some given him by King Charles, were also in her hands; and hence it is not impossible but that the precious MS. of the Icôn may have been there also.

Is it too much to ask that some member of this family will inform us whether any such papers or books still exist-books given by the king would, doubtless, be preserved with great care; or whether anything was ever known in the family of such a manuscript? the account (called "Carolina Threnodia") of the Anthony Wood says that Sir Thomas sent him last two years of King Charles, about three years before his death. This might make us fancy that Sir Thomas distributed his MSS., &c., carelessly, if it was not clear from Wagstaffe's statementwhich describes the MS. as 66 a book in folio, well bound, fairly written, and consisting of 83 pages," and which is attested by five clergymen and two esquires, who themselves saw the book at Worsborough-that it must have been a copy only which was sent to Wood. Sir Thomas deposited papers in more than one public library, viz. the Bodleian, and that belonging to the cathedral at York (not the action of a careless man); and though it is not likely that the MS. of the Icon was among these, yet a search even here, by some one on the spot, might not be entirely a useless waste of time.

66

It is no doubt quite possible that this precious MS. may have gone astray, with those "short notes of occurrences," which Sir Thomas says are either lost or so mislaid in this long interval of time, and several removes of my family, that at present I cannot find them;" and the fact that he omits to state, that he actually possessed the MS. at the time he wrote his narrative, may strengthen this supposition. I am also unacquainted with the exact circumstances of the publication of his own MS., independently of Wood, in 1702; and cannot, therefore, say whether the

circumstances which led to it were such as would be likely to bring to light, or to cause the dispersion of other MSS.; but I think we have here a series of interesting and important facts. We have a positive assertion of Sir Thomas, that he possessed this MS.; we have the certainty that books

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