the treatment of his disease by the Abbot of Abingdon, which induced him to beseech his father on his death-bed to allow him to reward the services of the abbot by a gift of land. With the consent of the next heir a portion of the manor was cut off and given with the advowson of the church to the Abbot of Abingdon. Hence the new manor, which was driven like a wedge into the original manor and divided the southern from the northern portion of the parish, came to be known as St. Mary Abbot's. Subsequently the great estate was divided into four manors: (1) Earl's Court, so named from the Veres who became Earls of Oxford; (2) the Abbot's Manor; (3) the West Town; and (4) Notting Hill. Still later these were again reduced to two, viz., the manors of St. Mary Abbot's and Earl's Court. Some of the particulars relating to these changes are confusing, but Mr. Loftie has set them out with admirable clearness. His description of the boundaries is specially good; but the chapter in which he has placed the result of the most original research is that devoted to Kensington Palace and Kensington Gardens. Topographers have been in the habit of attributing the enlargement of Kensington Gardens to two queens. Queen Anne is supposed to have added thirty acres and Queen Caroline three hundred acres from Hyde Park; but Mr. Loftie shows that this is altogether a mistake, caused by a misreading of Bowack, and a confusion between the terms "park " and "gardens." What are now Kensington Gardens were formerly the gardens and park attached to Nottingham House (afterwards Kensington Palace), and the thirty acres which Queen Anne added to the gardens were taken from Nottingham Park and not from Hyde Park. A plan in the Crace collection, dated 1725 (twelve years before Queen Caroline died), shows the boundary between Kensington Gardens and Hyde Park to be the same as it is now. For setting right a matter in which all previous topographers have gone wrong Mr. Loftie deserves great credit. Kensington is full of interesting associations, and Mr. Loftie has done justice to those which cluster around the palace and the church, and the many old houses, such as Holland House, Campden House, &c. The names of distinguished inhabitants are too numerous to catalogue; but Kensington may be justly proud of counting among them those of Addison, Swift, and Newton, Talleyrand and Wilberforce, Macaulay and Thackeray. The famous artists also who now inhabit this district must not be forgotten. It is not with any wish to detract from the accuracy of the book that we point out a slight mistake, but rather to draw attention to the great changes which have taken place within the last few years in Notting Hill Road. General Fox did not live at Little Holland House, and the house he did live in was not pulled down at his death, but still stands, although in a somewhat dilapidated condition. This house was numbered 1, Addison Road, and attached to it were some beautiful gardens which joined Holland Park. About 1847 General Fox built along the Notting Hill Road a new brick wall to his grounds, which extended from Addison Road to Holland Park. Now the wall is replaced by houses, and the clearance of General Fox's grounds after his death accounts for the curious circumstance that there are two entrances to Addison Road from Notting Hill. We cannot praise the index, which seems to have been made by some one who did not know his business, for we notice such anomalies as Grinling Gibbons under Grinling, and Prince George of Denmark under P. The volume is beautifully got up, and the illustrations are so numerous as to run over into the index. These illustrations are so agreeable to the eye that they make even such commonplace houses as those in Silver Street look picturesque. It is not often that a suburb which has fallen in social position is able to reinstate itself; but Chelsea has done this, chiefly owing to its convenient position on the banks of the Thames. Although fallen, it always remained an interesting place; and when the embankment of the river was completed in 1874 fashion again deigned to inhabit the district which had once been called the village of palaces. It is not only by the river that this change has taken place, for Belgravia has found its borders too confined, and the barrier of Sloane Street has now been overpassed. Tite Street and Cadogan Square, however, have no great charms for the lover of Chelsea; he turns his eye with pleasure to Cheyne Walk, a pleasure which, unfortunately, is mingled with regret that the fine old houses and their beautiful iron gates are so fast disappearing. Mr. Martin has produced an interesting account of old Chelsea, and he has been well seconded by his coadjutor, who brings before us some of the picturesque bits which still abound in the place. The author does not trouble himself with documents, but, throwing over dry topographical details, he gives us a lively description of a summer's stroll. There is plenty of material without dealing with antiquarian research, and there are many great men and women to talk about. The history of Chelsea begins with Sir Thomas More, and from his time to this the parish has been the favoured home of authors and artists. The Hospital, looking like a bit of the old world which has lost its way in the nineteenth century, forms the chief feature of the present Chelsea. Nell Gwynne has the credit in popular esteem of being the founder of this institution, but the honour ought more justly to be divided between John Evelyn and Sir Stephen Fox. The Botanic Gardens and the old church retain their antique character, and it is to be hoped that they will long remain. The existence of these places helps to reconcile us to the replacement of the Old Swan tavern (which served as a goal for the London watermen who rowed from London Bridge for Dogget's coat and badge, and as a place of jovial enjoyment for Samuel Pepys) by a modern antique mansion. All vestiges of Ranelagh have passed away, and in this connexion may be noticed a curious mistake which the author falls into. He affirms that Sir Robert Walpole was proud "to parade his lovely mistress, Miss Chudleigh," at Ranelagh. The character of the Duchess of Kingston is bad enough without having this additional slur cast upon it. The historian of Chelsea has many changes to record, and the visitor or inhabitant of to-day finds it difficult to realize that fifty years ago this place was a retired village, and that at the end of the last century it was by no means an infrequent occurrence for the stage coach to London to be stopped by highwaymen in the King's Road. It is pleasant to find our American cousins coming over to this country and describing our oldworld districts, and we cordially welcome this work of one of them. Mental Evolution in Man: Origin of Human Faculty. By G. J. Romanes, F.R.S. (Kegan Paul, Trench & Co.) UNDER this somewhat grandiloquent title Mr. Romanes has written an interesting and ingenious book on the origin of language treated as a part of the Darwinian controversy. Taking the ordinary objections to the continuous development of organic life culminating in man, Mr. Romanes finds the only one of any plausibility to consist in the power of articulate speech, which seems to make a specific difference between man and brute which no amount of development can bridge over. It is accordingly Mr. Romanes's object in the present treatise to prove that the difference is only one of degree, not of kind. He does this by applying Mr. Galton's metaphor of the origin of "generic images" to obtain a middle term between the percept and the concept. The idea was originally Mr. Galton's, and the application of it to bridge over the gap between perception and judgment was made by M. Binet in an ingenious little essay on the principles of reasoning. But Mr. Romanes has the credit of seeing the applicability of M. Binet's reasoning to the problem of the origin of language, and his present book is less disjointed and shows firmer grip of his subject than his previous works would lead one to expect. Not that we think that M. Binet or Mr. Romanes has really succeeded in bridging over the gap between percept and concept. Mr. Galton's metaphor of generic images is ingenious, but, after all, it is only a metaphor. You see a number of elephants differing in colour, height, shape, &c.; these differences blur out, and you thus obtain a "generic image" of the elephant, just as you obtain a composite portrait by Mr. Galton'singenious photographic arrangement. Now in the case of visual objects there is possibly something in the psychophysical process corresponding to the behaviour of the photographic plate, and so far Mr. Galton's metaphor is helpful. But there is nothing analogous with the other senses, and especially in the important set of notions we get from the motor sense the metaphor entirely fails. Yet Mr. Romanes takes this metaphor as expressing the literal truth in psychogony, and developes an elaborate system of nomenclature to answer to it. He calls "generic images" recepts, distinguishing them from percepts and concepts, and he carries this distinction throughout his exposition of the logic and psychology of naming. He finds in these recepts the missing link between percepts and concepts, which opponents of evolution like the Duke of Argyll, Mr. St. George Mivart, or Prof. Max Müller have urged as an impassable barrier between brute and man. It is doubtful how far these will be satisfied or convinced by Mr. Romanes's innovation. They may urge that it is a petitio principii to posit a link which is the very thing in question that to give this link a name does not, therefore, prove its psychological existence or independence. And, above all, they may point out that the bridge between recept and concept is equally impassable as that between percept and concept; and Mr. Romanes here seems to agree that brutes cannot form concepts, though they can have generic images. Indeed, so far as Mr. Romanes's argument is effective it is distinctly against evolution, since concepts in the restricted sense in which he uses the term stand out as markedly different in quality from every other product of intellection common to man and brute, besides involving self-consciousness and conscious volition applied to thought, neither of which, even on Mr. Romanes's showing, has any analogy in the animal world. Thus Mr. Romanes's reasoning, so far as it goes, is in reality opposed to his main thesis, the continuity of mind between animal and man. Psychogenetically Mr. Romanes's position is opposed to all we know or can conjecture as to the beginnings of mind in the animal world or in the human individual. If there were any such distinction as he tries to make out between percepts and generic images or recepts, it is the latter, strange to say, which, as a matter of psychogenesis, come first. The mind does not first perceive individual objects with their minutest distinctions all marked out, but rather a vague generic image of the object. To the stranger in China all Chinamen are alike; to the baby all men are papa"; to the ordinary man all dogs are dogs, big or little, while to the dog-fancier they are terriers, or greyhounds, or dachshunds, or what not. As a matter of mind growth the genus is first, not the species, and still less the individual. In truth, Mr. Romanes shows himself wanting in knowledge of the first principles of evolution in not recognizing this. If there is any truth in Mr. Spencer's celebrated formula about homogeneity and differentiation, it is in reference to mind. Mr. Romanes is, as regards psychology, in a pre-evolutionist stage, and consequently his exposition tends rather to support the opposition than the true evolutionary theory of the develop ment of mind. ،، The truth is, Mr. Romanes is but an amateur in psychology, and shows none of the master's grip in handling psychological conceptions. The older theories of association, on which he relies, are completely antiquated. Psychology depends for its progress on that of the physical sciences: in the time of Hartley it was ruled by physical conceptions; in that of the Mills it was regarded as a kind of mental chemistry; nowadays biological ideas are finding their way into psychology, so that, instead of the association of mental atoms, we are coming to the idea of segmentation of a psychoblast, if we may invent such a term. It is strange that Mr. tion of the associationists. The difference of standpoint is important in the present connexion, as there are thereby introduced numberless shades of difference between presentation and judgment, instead of Mr. Romanes's crude conception of a recept. We have devoted so much attention to Mr. Romanes's attempt at a psychological novelty from the old associationist standpoint that we have left ourselves but scant space to refer to the other parts of his book, which contain a good summary of the present condition of the problem of the origin of language. He has made use of all the best authorities and most recent contributions to the subject, including Mr. Hale's remarkable discovery of the spontaneous tendency of children to invent languages. The only considerable omission we have noticed in his apparatus of authorities is Steinthal's admirable 'Ursprung der Sprache,' though he seems to be acquainted with other of Steinthal's works. Another point we might notice is the division of sign-making given on p. 89; the diagram does not answer to the genealogical table on the preceding page which it professes to illustrate: the predicative and denominative branches should both spring out of the connotative trunk. The point is of some importance, as, if fully worked out, it would show the illusory nature of Mr. Romanes's attempted distinctions. Mr. Romanes is an amateur in psychology, we have said; but it does not follow that an amateur may not help in the advancement of science. By coming to the study from a different standpoint, by ignoring its difficulties and thus simplifying its problems, by not being troubled with reconciling his particular problem with the general principles of the science, he is enabled to draw up clear and seeming solutions of intricate problems, which advance the science by giving a definite objective to work at and against. Mr. Romanes seems to have done this service in the use of the problem of the origin of language. Quite apart from this, he has brought together, according to his wont, a number of interesting anecdotes of animal and baby intelligence, and repeats his experiments with the monkey Sally in teaching her to count. The book is, perhaps, a little more bulky than it need have been, and Mr. Romanes's way of speaking pompously of "my" theory and "my" views is slightly ludicrous; but the style is clear and sufficiently interesting, and altogether Mr. Romanes has done better for his reputation as a serious thinker with his latest production than with any of his earlier books. The Life of Young Sir Henry Vane. By Romanes, who is a trained biologist, should should have kept to the old-fashioned posi- has, we assume, had the American, not the English public before his mind, and he has probably produced what will most commend itself to his countrymen. His is a portly book about things in general with which Vane was in some way connected, and as such has its uses; but to the student who wishes to learn all there is to know about Vane the discursive information it contains will be irritating. The second chapter, for example, gives a mass of useful information concerning the "old colonial time" in Massachusetts Bay which it is pleasant to read, but it does not in any marked way belong to the career of Vane. It is as much misplaced knowledge as if a biographer of Mr. Gladstone should give us a sketch of the history of Midlothian and a picture of Border warfare because that statesman represents Midlothian in the British Parliament. This is, however, but a slight eccentricity compared with much that we meet with further on. Castile and Arragon, the great race of Hohenstaufen, Simon de Montfort, and Richard II. flit before us, and as we pass along a hundred other memories are called up which are out of place in a biography of Vane. We do not blame Mr. Hosmer for dwelling in some measure out of proportion on Vane's American career. It is important to know what were the influences that moulded our Parliamentary heroes, and that America had left a deep stamp on Vane's feelings and imagination we think is clear. The great Western continent had not then become commonplace. It is mapped now, and if we have never been there ourselves we have met with hundreds of people who have. In the middle of the seventeenth century it was still a land of romance, of which only just a fringe washed by the Atlantic waves was known to the white man. In the far interior, where there are now cities as well known to Englishmen as Lille or Rotterdam, it was possible to imagine the existence of anything that was not a contradiction in terms. It may be mere dreaming on our part, but we seem to find in the mystical form which the then popular Calvinism assumed in Vane's mind an echo of the experiences of one who had meditated on the meaning of the universe and its destinies on the margin of that great wilderness. Vane was not great as a practical politician, but he saw more clearly than any of his contemporaries who have left a record of themselves the possibilities of our race. Could he have been told of the America of to-day, we do not think the new knowledge would have startled him as it would have startled Milton or Cromwell. It is the common belief among a large section of well-instructed persons that history should contain no moral judgments; that it is as much out of place to ticket the actions we have to chronicle by the names "bad" and "good" as it would be in a book on zoology to tell how The rage of the vulture, the love of the turtle, Now melt into sorrow, now madden to crime. There is some excuse for such an opinion. Good has been called evil and evil good so often that people may well be pardoned for desiring to be rid of all labels of the kind; but there can be no doubt that, whatever view we may entertain as to the origin of the human faculties, there is a duty incumbent on all who have to describe the : actions of their fellow creatures to mark the Zifference between good and evil. Mr. Hosmer has not spoken sufficiently strongly f the execution of Vane. The putting to death of the regicides in the first flush of the triumph of the restored monarchy may be pardoned. We can hardly conceive in these days the horror that the execution of the king had occasioned among those who in truth, and not as a mere form of words, believed in his divine right; but from the honest Cavalier's point of view we cannot see that Vane had done any act worthy of death. Mr. Hosmer is conspicuously mild in condemnation of those with whom he can have little sympathy. The one point on which he is enthusiastic is the future of the race of which his country and England form a part. He indulges in no wild dreams of a political unity, which is as much out of the question as the restoration of the Holy Roman Empire, but he longs for that slighter, yet more permanent tie which must be formed if the two nations continue to progress side by side in orderly freedom. One great bar-negro slavery has been removed. We trust that in a very few years the other main cause of rancour may have become equally a thing of the past a story to be discussed by historians, prosed over by philosophers, but remaining no longer an element in contemporary politics. Correspondance Politique de Odet de Selve, Ambassadeur de France en Angleterre (15461549). Publiée sous les Auspices de la Commission des Archives Diplomatiques. Par Germain Le Fèvre-Pontalis. (Paris, Baillière & Co.) ENGLISHMEN may feel a justifiable pride in observing the stimulus given to historical study in other countries by the publications of the Master of the Rolls. This volume appears to be the fourth of a series published by the French Government, partly on the model of the English calendars of State Papers, partly on that of the work of the late State Paper Commission. And it is a further source of satisfaction to our countrymen that out of the four volumes already issued, two are devoted to the diplomatic relations between England and France as exhibited in the despatches preserved in the Depôt des Affaires Étrangères. The first of these, containing records of the embassies of Castillon and Marillac from 1537 to 1542, was published a few years ago under the editorial care of M. Kaulek. It ended with the suspension of diplomatic relations between France and England on the outbreak of the war in which the English obtained possession of Boulogne. The present volume begins with their renewal four years later on the pacification of Ardres, and continues for two years after the death of Henry VIII. It was a time of stirring events and a momentous struggle, including as it does the story of Somerset's expedition into Scotland and the troubles connected with the issue and authorization of the first English Prayer Book. Yet it is not on questions of religion or the domestic history of England that these despatches afford most copious information. Of such matters De Selve was merely a passive spectator. He writes, indeed, with the feelings of abhorrence natural to a Catholic about such things as the removal of images and crucifixes from churches, or the licence accorded to a preacher in St. Paul's to revile the sacraments and ancient usages of the Church. But he was less concerned about the mere religious revolution than about external events calculated to affect international relations; and it is in respect of these things that his despatches are of special interest. What ships was the King of England dispatching to the relief of the besieged garrison at St. Andrews? What was his aim in sending money secretly to Antwerp? Would he really venture to attack Normandy if the French persisted in building a fort to overawe Boulogne? Questions like these are naturally uppermost with the ambassador, and they show in a most marked way the hollowness of the peace which had been concluded, and the delicacy of the task confided to him of preventing a new rupture. De Selve, indeed, was of a family of diplomatists. His father, Jean de Selve, had been more than once employed as ambassador and engaged in delicate negotiations with England. He himself was a councillor in the Great Council of France as early as 1542, when he was only about thirty-seven years old. In 1546 he was sent to England on the mission to which these despatches relate, and one material point in his instructions was to propose a reference of a matter left unsettled by the treaty-the amount of certain payments due by France to England under former treaties -to two commissioners to be named on either side. But a good deal more than this remained unsettled. The English were to retain for eight years their conquest of Boulogne and the Boulonnais; but the exact limits of the territory had not been laid down, and nothing had been fixed meanwhile as to the right of the French to raise fortifications outside commanding the town, or of the English to raise other fortifications within. There was also much to be determined as to the redemption of prisoners taken in the war; and the case of the Baron de Saint Blancard especially involved an immense amount of diplomacy. For the baron himself had made a private bargain with his captor Clement Paston, who was allowed at first to regard him as his own personal property; and it was only after a long negotiation, in the course of which he was permitted to go back for a time to his country on parole, that he at length regained full liberty. are It is to be observed that the whole of the despatches contained in this volume written from England by De Selve himself, though in one or two instances his temporary colleague, the Baron de la Garde, signs the letters along with him. None of the despatches which he received from the Court of France in reply appears to be extant. Still the correspondence is so complete on one side that the whole course of French diplomacy as regards England during the period is clear as noonday. As we have said, there is less positive intelligence than might have been expected with regard to what was going on in England itself. On the other hand, there is abundance of news from Scotland, which will be welcome as shedding a fuller light on the invasion of that country by Somerset, the battle of Pinkie, the capture of St. Andrews Castle (when John Knox was among the prisoners), and the negotiations of Somerset with the Earl of Huntley for his restoration to liberty and for peace between the two kingdoms. Altogether the volume is a highly important contribution to the materials from which history must in future be derived. NOVELS OF THE WEEK. Mistress Beatrice Cope: a Passage in the Life of a Jacobite's Daughter. By M. E. Le Clerc. 2 vols. (Hurst & Blackett.) Beyond Cloudland. By S. M. CrawleyBoevy. 2 vols. (Alexander Gardner.) Uncle Piper of Piper's Hill: an Australian Novel. By Tasma. (Trübner & Co.) MR. LE CLERC tells a homely and sympathetic story of North-country life in the early part of the eighteenth century. The heroine's father had been executed as a traitor towards the end of William's reign, and Beatrice herself has a chequered career. A story which goes back so far for its plot and surroundings must depend for success upon qualities out of the ordinary lines of imaginative authorship-qualities which a thousand failures in the writing of historical novels have proved to be decidedly rare. But there are distinct styles in historical fiction, and Mr. Le Clerc challenges notice by his attempt to reconstruct the domestic life of gently-nurtured folk on the less popular side of politics a hundred and fifty years ago. He takes the esoteric point of view, and it is pleasant to be able to say that he takes it very successfully, and produces a simple, natural, credible romance, charged with the colour of the time, and satisfying the mind of a thoughtful reader. 'Mistress Beatrice Cope' may be taken on trust as a novel worth ordering from the library. When a young woman is badly treated by her lover it is foolish of her to sit down and despair simply because earth seems to offer her no consolation. She has all the resources of science, to say nothing of the resources of civilization, at command; and the author of 'Beyond Cloudland' indicates a convenient mode of rising superior to mundane sorrow. Jilted in this world, the unfortunate may be justified of their faith in another planet, without the trouble of waiting for the dissolution of soul and body in this present sphere. Miss Blanche Murray sets out for cloudland with the ghost of a parson, and the two travellers are not very long before they reach the planet of love. There they meet, naturally enough, Mendelssohn, Col. Arthur Crompton, Beethoven, and Handel - the last in a full-bottomed wig, hurrying off to an evening concert. The story alternates between this world and th others, reality and fancy, the sublime and the ridiculous. Mr. Crawley-Boevy has a style of narration sufficiently uneven to match his subject. 'Uncle Piper' is a well-written story in one substantial volume, equal in substance to an ordinary two or three. It is full of commonplace incidents: the love-making of average young men and women; the interventions, conferences, and domestic diplomacy of their elders; the influences of wealth and poverty upon character, with an accident or two introduced to effect what | publications, and has been judiciously utilized by character cannot. But Tasma makes himself interesting, both by himself and through his personages. In particular his old men, Uncle Piper and the elder Cavendish, are good creations. CLASSICAL SCHOOL-BOOKS, The Eton Horace: Part I. Text. - The Eton Horace: Part I. Notes. By F. W. Cornish, M. A. (Murray.)- The Eton Horace,' it may be presumed, is designed to satisfy the needs of the Eton of to-day, but outside the precincts of that ancient foundation the excellence of the type and the arrangement of the edition with the notes in a separate volume will probably be more appreciated than the quality of text and commentary. Far more attention is paid to little niceties of translation than to questions of grammar and usage, as if it were intended to enable the student to prepare rapidly for a class lesson conducted with more haste than thorough ness. Mr. Fausset. We are told that the proof-sheets of the whole book, with the exception of part of the critical notes, have been carefully revised by Mr. H. J. Roby, and that Prof. Nettleship has contributed help and counsel. For scraps of translation we are referred to the version of Principal Peterson. As the book is designed for the use of more advanced students it is a great pity that the excellent commentary is placed at the end of the book. For the com pleteness of the edition, which reaches the point de lure, we refer our readers to the book itself, which all classical scholars will do well to study. author mentions two French works, "from both of which," she says, "I have derived the most invaluable assistance." One of these is M. Amé dée Thierry's 'Saint Jérôme.' If Mrs. Martin's book is compared with that of Thierry, it will be found that large portions of it are paraphrases of the French work, and that the author has borrowed not only facts, but opinions wholesale, The translations from St. Jerome seem to be made from the French. There is no proof that the author has studied the works of the saint in the original, and there are some curious transferences from the French to the English. Thus Thierry's Paul-Emile becomes Paulus Æmilia. The work is singularly inaccurate. Indifference to exactness makes its appearance in the preface and continues to the end. The title of Thierry's work is "Saint Jérôme, la Société Chrétienne à Rome et l'Emigration Romaine en Terre Sainte, par M. Amédée Thierry." This is how Mrs. Martin gives it: "The scholarly and delightful work of M. Amadée [sic] Thierry, 'Life of St. Jerome: Récits de l'Histoire Romaine au Ve The last part of the title is applied by Thierry to a series of works, and for his account of St. Jerome the form adopted in the first edition, not on the title, but as an advertisement, is more appropriate, 'Récits de l'Histoire Romaine aux IVe et Ve Siècles,' for a large portion of St. Jerome's life falls within the fourth century. The style of the book is marked by grace and fervour. The author writes with intense faith and a great glow of enthusiasm. She is enchanted with hersubject, and the work abounds in beautiful passages that appeal to the imagination and the heart. There is no table of contents and there is no index. Siècle." The rendering of scortum, Od. II. xi. 21, by "minstrel" is facetious, as also by an odd coincidence is Mr. Page's "maiden." In the same ode we observe two instances of unneces sary halting between two opinions, while there is no comment on "trepides in usum ævi." As the notes are intended for the lower and middle forms of a public school it especially behoved the editor to show decision, and to call attention to peculiarities of construction. Latin Exercises in the Oratio Obliqua. By the Rev. J. H. Raven. (Rivingtons.) -Mr. Raven has bestowed great pains on the production of a useful book of 'Exercises in the Oratio Obliqua.' If he succeed in encouraging the plan of translating into Latin viva voce, he will have done good service. The analysis of the construction of the accusative and infinitive is thoughtful and suggestive; but Mr. Raven's own view of the matter is incorrect, as he takes the infinitive for an accusative case, which it certainly is not, though opinions may differ as to whether it is instrumental or locative or dative. The passages from Cæsar, Cicero, and the poets are very neatly translated. It would be well if in a future edition Mr. Raven gave an exhaustive scheme of all possible sequences of tenses in oratio recta, and their corresponding forms in the different varieties of oratio obliqua, with examples. Cornelii Taciti Ab Excessu Divi Augusti : Annalium, Liber I. Edited, with Notes, by Rev. Edward Maguire. (Dublin, Browne & Nolan.)-Students who are asked to distinguish between decoră, děcără, and decorā cannot read Tacitus to much profit, and the edition before us may be better adapted for the cramming process which their case would require than a superior work. Mr. Maguire aims at assisting boys who, under the Intermediate Education system, have to encounter Tacitus on the very threshold of their Senior Grade year. It would require a more intimate acquaintance with the system in question than we possess to determine whether this not very exalted object has or has not been satisfactorily obtained. We confess to being ignorant whether correct spelling of Latin, such as ceteri, is to be preferred under the circumstances, or whether Mr. Maguire is wise in writing cæteri. It would not be easy to find a commentary burdened with fewer references to the author treated or other classical authorities. M. Tullii Ciceronis Pro A. Cluentio Oratio. Livy, Book XXII. Edited, with Introduction, Notes, and Maps, by the Rev. Launcelot Downing Dowdall. (Cambridge, Deighton, Bell & Co.; London, Bell & Sons.) - Mr. Dowdall provides a good text, chiefly based on that of Madvig, but with a few judicious deviations. The commentary given in foot notes is copious, and affords abundant evidence of learning, industry, and good scholarship. We do not invariably approve our editor's readings, renderings, and annotation. For instance, in chap. xiii. we find "sed Punicum abhorrens ab Latinorum nominum pronuntiatione os, Casilinum pro Casino dux ut acciperet, fecit." The use of os in the sense required, namely accent, is at any rate sufficiently rare in prose to demand illustration, which is not given. We prefer to read "P. a. ab Latino nomine, Casilinum p. С.," &c. When the ending of Casilinum got fixed on to nomin- by a slip of the eye, the change into Latinorum would be inevitable. On p. 70 occupatus is rendered "engrossed," which is a curious word to apply to the effect of a sudden resolution. On p. 71, chap. xv., we are told that the assertion that Mancinus was "omni parte virium impar" " is incorrect, as Mancinus has no infantry"; but "omni parte" does not mean "in every arm" so much as it implies that the Romans and their horses were more fatigued than was the case with the enemy, while again the Roman position would no doubt be comparatively weak and their numbers inferior. From the note on bina, p. 73, chap. xvi., it might be inferred that Virg., Ec. iii. 30, was the only instance in Latin poetry of the use of the distributive numeral for a cardinal. A few such instances of dormitandi detract little from the high value and great usefulness of Mr. Dowdall's work. It is a pity that there is no separate essay on the text to bring the most interesting points of criticism into focus, and that such excellent notes should not be thought worthy of an index. THEOLOGICAL BOOKS. Life of St. Jerome. By Mrs. Charles Martin. (Kegan Paul, Trench & Co.) - This is a life of St. Jerome written by a sentimental woman for sentimental women. She has an unbounded admiration for the saint, and she is specially taken with him because he associated much with pious and cultivated women of exalted aspirations. In the writer's conception St. Jerome and his lady friends were noble, generous, selfdenying, tender, sublime in their aims, and marvellous in the self-abnegation with which immaculate. St. Jerome's life is described in they executed them; in fact, they were nearly one passage as "strange, original, devoted, militant," and similar high-flown descriptionsabound. Christian Classics Series. - St. Basil the Great, Archbishop of Cesarea in Cappadocia, on the Holy Spirit. Translated, with Analysis and Notes, by the Rev. George Lewis, M. A. (Religious Tract Society.)-Mr. Lewis has produced a good translation. A minute critic might, indeed, find many points on which to make remarks. Thus a single case is mentioned by St. Basil of a man who, by simply nodding with his head in the course of his testimony for Christ, was judged to be a fulfiller of all piety. Mr. Lewis, following the Latin translation, generalizes this statement, and translates, "When at the present day, if a martyr for Christ does but nod his head, he is judged to have fulfilled all piety." The alteration here, however, is so slight, and the apprehension of the meaning is 80 completely in the line of St. Basil's thought, that it is somewhat captious to find fault with the rendering; only any reader who should wish to quote St. Basil's opinion on any point would do well to appeal to the original and not to the translation. Indeed, the translation, appearing as it does as one of a series of "Christian Classics," may be regarded as specially intended for the edification of general readers, and for this purpose it is admirably adapted. The translation reads like an English work. St. Basil's thoughts come straight home to the mind, and the student is not perplexed by strange combinations of words arising from a too literal transference of the Greek idiom to English. Perhaps, on the other hand, there are too many purely modern ex pressions, such as "connotation," ," microscopic," "conservative"; but this can be said in their favour that they give a correct notion of the ideas of the original. The book is furnished accurate and supplies the requisite information, with His opponents, on the other hand, were malicious, a short biographical notice, which is malevolent, jealous, spiteful, mean, vile, and Yorke Explanatory and Critical Notes by W. contemptible. No epithets are black enough and with an appendix, containing notes in the Mr. Fausset has made out a very good case in justification of this tillage of a field already tilled so skilfully by Prof. Ramsay. The text of the earlier edition does not find favour with so many scholars as does that of Classen, which is the basis of the text before us, while a great deal of fresh work bearing on this speech has been done during the interval between the two for them. Even if something like a fault in St. Jerome should force itself on the observation of Mrs. Martin, it is transformed into a virtue, and is the result of righteous indignation or a deep justice and of sound doctrine. She sometimes endows him with qualities which it is difficult to realize hintualities which its keep him always in the straight path." "the keen true scent of perfect orthodoxy to ." The work of St. Basil and similar matters. The Fathers for English Readers. St. Athana sius: his Life and Times. By the Rev. R. Wheler Bush, M.A. (Society for Promoting Christian Knowledge.) This work deserves high pristianst. Athanasius himself is the principal authority for his own actions as well as opinions, and therefore the first duty of his biographer to is to study and master his writings. Mr. Bush has done this. He has perused all his treatises with the utmost diligence, and he has taken pains to get at his meaning. Mr. Bush has also weighed the trustworthiness of the various notices of him that are scattered over the writings of the fourth and fifth centuries. Nor has he neglected to consult the modern works on St. Athanasius, and to note and quote any striking remark that has been made in regard him. Mr. Bush admires St. Athanasius intensely, and accordingly he takes the most favourable view of his character, and regards as trustworthy nearly every statement which the saint makes about himself. But he endeavours to be fair, he is not altogether blind to his faults, and he does greater justice to the saint's adversaries than the saint himself was inclined to do. Mr. Bush has arranged his materials well. His book is pleasant reading. It details in an interesting the phases of the saint's chequered career; it expounds clearly his opinions, and furnishes a brief but accurate account of his writings. It is well adapted to give an ordinary reader a good idea of the life and works of St. Athanasius. manner Euthymii Zigabeni Commentarius in XIV. Epistolas Sancti Pauli et VII. Catholicas. Nunc primum ad fidem Codicis Antiqui cum Prologo et Animadversionibus edidit Nicephorus Calogeras. Tomus Secundus. (Nutt.) -The first volume of this ancient commentary on the New Testament epistles was noticed in the Atheneum eighteen months ago. The second volume contains an interpretation of the epistles to the Ephesians, Philippians, Colossians, Thessalonians, Timothy, Titus, Philemon, the Hebrews, and the seven Catholic ones. The prologue states that the editor came to the knowledge of Cramer's catence after more than half the present volume had been printed; that he compared the catence on the Catholic epistles in the eighth volume of thather with the text of the MS. from which he was himself printing Euthymius's exposition, and found them nearly alike. But he gives seven reasons-not cogent ones, it must be admitted-for continuing the publication from his own manuscript. The volume is of the same character with its predecessor. Each epistle is preceded by a short summary, uncritical and commonplace. In regard to the Epistle to the Hebrews, it is assumed that Paul wrote it to the Jewish Christians in Jerusalem and Palestine, and that he withheld his name lest he should give offence. The opinion that it was written in Hebrew, and put into Greek by "Clement, Pope of Rome," is merely mentioned. The sacred text in Euthymius is the common one; but in 1 John v. 8 the three heavenly witnesses are omitted. In 1 Timothy iii. 16 the reading is Θεός ἐφανερώθη, which pleases the contact with them. His volume presents readable matter in a diffuse style, with constant digressions, so that others than scholars may be pleased as well as instructed. But it cannot stand rigid examination. As a literary production it is inferior; as a good commentary, perfunctory. The difficulties that present themselves in the way of the strictly historical view of Esther, the improbabilities, the marvels, require another handling than that which they receive from this conservative expositor. The close of the introduction prepares us for what follows : "It is much to be deplored that Jews distin guished themselves prominently in introducing rationalistic and unscientific doubts against the book of Esther, and that these were not obscure men. It was Spinoza (see Keil, Introd.,' p. 473) whom Gesenius, Bertheau, Ewald, Meier, &c., followed, who placed the date of the book of Esther in the time of the Ptolemies and Seleucian kings, for which there is no ground, and against which everything speaks. The criticism of Zunz was not so great as his diligent compilation of the fragments of post-biblical literature. What Fürst observes on the book of Esther ('Der Kanon des alten Testaments, Leipzig, 1868, p. 105) is a thoroughly unscientific conception of the Talmudical passages about the Megilla. To the followers of the rationalism of Spinoza and his disciples belonged also Herzfeld in his 'History of the Jews' (ii. 358). Incomprehensible are the insinuations of Grätz (in the Monatschrift für Wissenschaft des Judenthums, 1886, p. 425). Jewish authors particularly should take the trouble to dig deeply into the history of ancient Israel. To catch the spirit of universal history is a conditional qualification for true exegesis, which qualification even Spinoza and Zunz did not possess. Hasty formulas were found for hasty assertions of unauthenticity and interpolation. AntiSemitism needed only to appropriate the exegetical so carelessly arts of rationalism in order to break the stave over the people, amongst whom some handled their own canon of the Scripture." To the nothing to the clearing of the sense. first verse of the fourth chapter, which needs no exegesis, upwards of six pages are devoted. Fond as the author is of exhibiting his Hebrew and Rabbinical lore, his critical acquaintance with the former is not quite what it should be, else he would not connect אַשֶׁר,in chap. ii. 6, with the last-mentioned name instead of with Mordecai. Again, his attempts to improve the text by altering it and to explain it in a new way are arbitrary, as is shown by the suggested מתיחדים for מִתְיַהֲדִים in viii. 17; and by his new explanation of נָבוֹבָה which must be rejected. The appendices add nothing to the elucidation of Esther, though they occupy 140 pages. The first, which gives a translation of the second Targum, may interest scholars unacquainted with Aramean; the others merely increase the bulk of the volume. On the whole, this commentary is far inferior to Bertheau's in the Exegetisches Handbuch, and was scarcely worthy of an English dress. OUR LIBRARY TABLE. BIOGRAPHIES are growing more and more numerous. Among them are two volumes of The Life and Work of Duncan McLaren (Nelson & Sons), by Mr. J. B. Mackie. Mr. McLaren was a draper in Edinburgh who made his way by his own unremitting exertions, and, after taking an active part in local politics, finally obtained the object of his ambition, and was, in 1865, sent to Parliament as one of the members for Edinburgh. He retained his seat till old age compelled his retirement. The book is mainly taken up with Edinburgh politics, and will be perused with interest in Scotland. There are some letters of Cobden, but those of Macaulay are the most attractive things in the book. Mr. McLaren was active in forming the coalition by which Macaulay was ousted from his seat in 1847, a step of which Edinburgh speedily repented; and Mr. Mackie endeavours to prove, by printing letters of Macaulay's, and extracts from letters of Mr. Bright (whose brother-in-law Mr. McLaren became in 1848), that Macaulay was lukewarm in his support of the movement for repealing the Corn Laws. The charge was made The main point in the book of Esther is the institution of the feast of Purim, held by the Jews on the 14th and 15th of the month Adar, which is said to have arisen out of the incidents related of Mordecai and Esther. Here, too, is the chief difficulty, for the word pur, interpreted lot, is not a Persian word. Prof. Cassel throws no light on this peculiar term, but merely assumes what is stated in the text. Among the things thought to be improbable are the slaughter of 75,000 Persians by the Jews, who proved conquerors, the fact of a Jew being made grand vizier, the omission of Queen Esther and Mordecai to help their countrymen in Judea and Jerusalem, the revengeful spirit ascribed to both, the lack of a theocratic spirit in the book, and the absence of the name of God, who wrought so great a deliverance for His ancient people. The Persian king is mentioned by name 187 times: Jehovah never. How the professor can say that "the little book considers the whole affair of which it treats only from a religious and national point of compiled with a little more literary skill. Ellis view," it is impossible to conceive. His explanaof the name of Deity being absent from tion The editor greatly. The interpretation shows no critical per perception and elucidates little. reader will consult it in vain for the exposition of difficult passages, such as Philippians ii. ans ii. 6-8, where μορφὴ is simply said to be φύσις; and the σχήμα of a man is what is outside his οὐσία, that is, his ἰδέα and μορφὴ and ἐπιφάνεια and φαινόμενον. The editor's notes, though few, have among them very properly the various readings of Cramer's catence on the Catholic epistles. We cannot pronounce a more favourable opinion on the value of Euthymius's commentary than we did before. An Explanatory Commentary on Esther, with Four Appendices. By Prof. Paulus Cassel, D.D. Translated by A. Bernstein, B.D. (Edinburgh, Clark)-Prof. Cassel's commentary is eminently readable. The author, who appears familiar with Rabbinical literature-the Targums, Midrashim, and Jewish commentators-does not neglect opinions opposite to his own, but does not give sufficient attention to them. And it is obvious that he is conversant with the his tory of the Jewish people, as also with that of other Oriental peoples so far as they came into totally insufficient : it is "In Persia the enemy of the king was regarded as the enemy of everything good, and even of the at the time of the election of 1847, and as Sir G. Trevelyan has denied it in his well-known biography, he will probably notice this endeavour to substantiate it. The book is too purely political to be suitable for review in this journal.The late Mr. William Ellis deserves honourable remembrance for his efforts to improve education and benefit the masses of the people; and it is somewhat a pity that the Memoir of William Ellis, by E. E. Ellis (Longmans), has not been was a remarkable man, and hands of an artist in words the sketch of his life might have been made distinctly impressive. William Ellis's father, Ellis de Vezian, was of Huguenot extraction, and his mother was half Italian. He had Deity, because he was their personified idea of God. the Italian genius for finance together with memoir proves king derived only good from Mordecai and Esther. There is therefore no greater evidence of the genuineness, contemporariness, and prudence of the Megilla (scroll) Esther, than the very fact that it does not mention name of God )יהוה(. Haman accuses the Jews that they do not keep the laws, of שרשרתking is the product of the mind of his royal majesty, who is the representative of the Deity. Beside him no other god must be acknowledged or tolerated. If the Jews observe the דת of their God, they do it in opposition to the king. The book cannot and must not mention the name of the eternal God under the circumstances, when every thing depends upon the king. The author is very careful to show that he is the friend of the and that his book was not written against him, but against Haman." Of the same nature are his explanations of other improbabilities in the book. The commentary might have been improved by a close adherence to the text, and should not have been overloaded with numerous observations that contribute French frugality and love of method, and as a teacher he was admirably effective, although his power of writing was small and his books by no means revealed the capacity of the author. All this and much more may be gathered from Miss Ellis's volume, but unfortunately she has not put her matter into an attractive shape. A PRETTY little memorial of the dinner given to celebrate the completion of the 'Encyclopædia Britannica' has been issued in the shape of a report of the proceedings, daintily printed by Messrs. Clark, of Edinburgh. Mr. A. Black's speech reads exceedingly well, and M. Yriarte's graceful remarks, which the reporters " burked," are given in their integrity. DIARIES and annuals continue to accumulate on our table. The Perennial Diary (Heywood) will be found of advantage by those who care not to keep a diary regularly, yet wish to note important matters. - We have frequently praised |