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No 3218, JUNE 29, '89

confessions; for it was the substance of his
communications with his penitents that
brought him into trouble. Some of these
betrayed his secret exhortations, and said
that he had told them the king was not
really supreme head of the Church. On
this he was examined and confessed the
fact. Then being further interrogated why
he had taken the oath of supremacy to the
king, he replied that he had done it with
his outward man, "but his inward man

never consented thereunto." Does not this
simply mean that he took a false oath under
terror, and atoned for it afterwards by a
noble constancy at the stake? The fact, if
it be one, ought not to weaken our sym-
pathy, and we cannot agree with Mr.
Gasquet that there is anything in the de-
positions against him which goes to disprove
it. Nay, more, thanks to Mr. Gasquet's
own researches, we can almost certainly show
that it is true; for a document which he
quotes in his second volume, and which he
evidently had not seen when he wrote about
Friar Forest in the first, seems to prove
that Hall's statement about him was ab-
solutely correct. This paper, no doubt, is
but a party pamphlet, and full allowance
ought to be made for its bias; but it shows,
at least, that the imputation against Forest
had stuck, and was dwelt upon in that day
as a thing sufficiently notorious. "I cannot
but think the contrary," the writer says,
" but the old Bishop of London [Stokesley],
when he was on live, used the pretty medi-
cine that his fellow, Friar Forest, was
wont to use, and to work with an inward
man and an outward man-that is to say,
to speak one thing with their mouth, and
then another thing with their hearts." Friar
Forest evidently was not a man of stronger
nerve than the apostle St. Peter, and it was
a mistake en Mr. Gasquet's part to attempt
to prove that he was so.

But the friars generally only surrendered their houses in the year 1538, a few months after Forest suffered. That they surrendered under pressure, like the monks, it is needless to say. A form of surrender was in most, if not in all cases, prepared for them beforehand, and the same form was subscribed or accepted by very different houses. They were miserably poor, and in many cases deeply in debt. They were visited one by one by a man like Dr. London or Ingworth, Bishop of Dover, who jesuitically told them that he had not come to suppress them-he had no authority for that-but only to reform them and bind if upon them a set of rules which he knew quite well it was practically impossible for them to keep. But first of all the visitor

would take care they did not sell their jewels or dispose of any of their property by leases; and before anything else was done he took possession of the common seal of the convent, without which they were helpless. The effect was distinctly anticipated by the Bishop of Dover himself when he wrote: "I think before the year is out there shall be very few houses able to live, but they will be glad to give up their houses and provide for themselves otherwise, for there they shall have no living." Evidently a commission to suppress friars' houses was unnecessary when it was so easy to starve them into surrender.

We have by no means exhausted the

THE

ATHENEUM

But we

a very

is here

subjects of interest on which fresh light is
thrown by the volumes before us.
may say in brief, if what we have already
said is not sufficient to show it, that
important chapter of English history
treated with a fulness, minuteness, and
lucidity which will not be found in previous
accounts, and we sincerely congratulate Mr.
Gasquet on having made such an important
contribution to English historical literature.

NOVELS OF THE WEEK.

Lady Car: the Sequel of a Life. By Mrs.
Oliphant. (Longmans & Co.)
To Call Her Mine, &c. By Walter Besant.
(Chatto & Windus.)
Hilary St. John. By Mrs. A. Price. 2 vols.

(Hurst & Blackett.)
My Spanish Sailor. By Marshall Saunders.

(Ward & Downey.) Le Disciple. Par Paul Bourget. (Paris, Lemerre.)

Le Songe de l'Amour. Par Paul Meurice. (Paris, Calmann Lévy.)

THOSE who have read that tragic book The Ladies Lindores' will regret to find that Lady Car, the gentle creature who was handed over, as a bird to the fowler, to the rude grasp of rough Pat Torrance, fails in "the sequel" to find any compensation for her youthful sufferings. In the present book there is no distinct hero, like the old butler in the proem; rather there is a conspicuous absence of heroes, John Erskine, though an honest man, being more than a little commonplace. But Lady Car in her long martyrdom-for it is no less to one so tenderly organized as she-sufficiently rivets the attention and disgusts one with heroes. The ideal hero she made of her old lover Edward Beaumont, to whom she is married after her rude master, the navvy's son, leaves her a widow with two black-browed children, was to be a knight errant of the pen and platform, a man who by inspired verbosity was to redress social evils, and hasten the apotheosis of the simple citizen. But Beau has got elderly and lazy. He had brave dreams on that Swiss tour so many years ago, "instead of which " he is quite content to settle down on his wife's large income, and set his well-shaped hands to no work that can possibly be avoided. It is sad, after all her delicate wooing him to exertion, when she finds him in his study immersed in the engagement of painting a coat of arms for a flag intended, not altogether in a friendly spirit, for his stepson Tom Torrance. That carnal youth, wh who has assimilated all the newflown insolenceandinnate brutality of the moneyed lower orders, is in his frankly antagonistic way nearly as sad a disappointment as his gentlemanly stepsire. Nor is the daughter much more satisfactory. With twice Tom's brains and sympathy, she is quick to recognize and resent on

The pressure put upon a successful novelist
under the title of 'To Call Her Mine, &c."
disastrous effect. Mr. Besant's work shows
is most severe, and in some cases it has a
signs of the stress under which it has been
produced; but he is so well equipped that
he can always fill his pages with interesting
matter. With a little more leisure, perhaps,
hisimagination would be more varied and free,
could never be compelled to do anything less
and his best is so good that one wishes he
than his best. The volume contains three
stories. One of them, 'Katharine Regina,'
mas time, and has already been reviewed in
'To Call Her Mine' and
appeared in a separate form about Christ-
these pages.

'Self or Bearer' are the other two. Both
are good stories, full of incident and contri-
vance, and Mr. Besant, as he is wont, forges
the chain of destiny with hearty blows, so
that the evil which overtakes the wicked
and the happiness which is attained by the
good seem thoroughly satisfactory. But

much of the interest of Mr. Besant's books
lies in what in other books would be called
the padding. For one reader who skipped
pages in 'All Sorts and Conditions of Men'
for the sake of the plot, hundreds must have
put up with the plot for the sake of the
padding. And really in 'To Call Her Mine'
the descriptions of Dartmoor are the most
enjoyable part of it, although, to be sure,
much attention has been paid to the duty of
a teller of the shorter sort of stories, which
one's pages into many paragraphs and
consists to a great extent in breaking up
filling a large part of them with conversation.
'Self or Bearer' is full of fun. It is, in
a viscount and was extremely uncomfortable,
brief, the story of a poor doctor who became
and then lost his title and became happy.
This is not the gist of the plot, but the fun
of it depends upon this incidental con-
trivance of circumstances. It is not often
that so much good reading is to be found
in one volume.

Mrs. Price's new story is pleasant and
ladylike. If she does not succeed in touch-
ing any very profound depths of emotion,
her hero and heroine nevertheless pass
manner which rouses a due meed of sym-
through really pathetic vicissitudes in a
pathy and respect in the reader. The plot
offers no bloodcurdling incidents, but is
ingeniously contrived, and in the second
volume moves well. At first the story has a
tendency to drag and to dwell unduly on
slight incidents, which may have a relation
to the matter in hand, but which should be
The hero is a curate, and he is both
He is not, however,
more lightly touched and rapidly passed
over.

virtuous and manly.
an agreeable person, but perhaps for that
very reason may be the more calculated to
represent the ideal of masculine qualities to
a very young girl, whose own manners are,
at the outset at any rate, of a decidedly
aggressive character. Bevis, the young
water, but his "make-up" is somewhat too
clearly marked with villainy from the first.
The book ends well, which will gratify every-
one may pleasantly surprise most readers.
body, and the last important incident but

lawyer, is his behalf her mother's

Yet Janet has her merits.

disapproval.
She has some of her mother's apprehension
and a little of her tenderness; and when the
prolific author of her literary being has re-
covered from the shock of the sequel of poor
Lady Car's sad life, we hope to hear more
of Miss Torrance.

Mr. Besant must have been working hard
when he wrote the stories now published

certainly a

scoundrel of the first

The strange adventures of a heroine of seventeen summers, who sets sail for England from her indefinite "natal town" in the colonies, are related by herself, always

in the present tense, and with light-hearted though bewildering abruptness. The singular matrimonial alliance contracted by herself and Capt. Focus is no sooner grasped than surprise is paralyzed by her amazing manners and customs. By the time the erring father of the stolen child breaks upon the scene, the reader must feel that as an attempt to justify the ways of Dane or of any one else his retrospective villainy is wholly superfluous. However, all ends well, and both Nanette Fairfax and her husband live happily ever afterwards. Their peace was for a moment threatened (and the reader's destroyed) by a dangerously beautiful young man with "full, distinct, well-proportioned lips," who bestowed a "saucy look" upon Nanette after an unfortunate catastrophe at dinner.

We doubt if any one will be much pleased with M. Bourget's new book, except, indeed, "Gyp," and his other enemies if he has any. The work seems to be intended for a limited public consisting of the professors of moral and mental philosophy in the universities of Western Europe and of the United States; but then we confess to a fear that these gentlemen may, after all, only think M. Bourget's philosophy about equal in value to that of Mr. Mallock. "Gyp" herself can hardly have foreseen when she Les Psychologues' that wrote 'Ohé!

M. Bourget's next book would contain the word "psychologie " even more often than

any of his previous works, and that when he left off dissecting women, and took to performing, as in 'Le Disciple,' the same process upon men, he would be even duller than has unfortunately been habitual with him in the last few years. When M. Bourget ceases to write in his own name, and inserts a long composition professing to be by his hero, he ceases for a moment to remind us of British false philosophers and recalls 'Obermann'; but then M. de Senancour had the advantage over M. Bourget of writing for a generation that did not think even 'Adolphe' or 'Delphine' dull. The young man, the supposed author of this composition, himself explains in the course of his written confession of 228 pages, "I cannot expect to make myself intelligible to any one besides the psychologist whose disciple I am." As, then, M. Bourget wrote his book-for the confession forms twothirds of it-apparently only for the benefit of the philosopher of his own creation to whom the confession is addressed, why did he publish it through M. Lemerre and apparently expect his unfortunate admirers to buy it? and why did he polish up the first five-and-twenty pages of his novel so as to tempt us to think that his book was one of style, and prefix to it a sensational preface, which has little to do with the story, but which duly appeared in large type in the first column of the Figaro? The preface is an invitation to the good people and the Church to train up Frenchmen who shall be as unlike "le Disciple" as possible, and it forms a very able attempt on M. Bourget's part to reconcile himself with "the respectabilities"; but can it be that he is the author of the careful analysis of the motives of harlots now appearing week by week in the Vie Parisienne? because, if so, the proposed reconciliation comes indeed suddenly and soon. If our author occupies, under a

with languages whose structures are so different as those of English and Greek the attempt only results in giving the translation an eccentric and unnatural air which totally misrepresents the

false name, that place in the Vie Parisienne in which "Gyp" and Richard O'Monroy first became known to the French public, "Gyp" is revenged on him since she has taken, at the head of the list of contributors original. This is emphatically the case with The

to the Revue des Deux Mondes of the 1st of June, a place which M. Bourget no doubt thinks should be his own.

The volume of M. Paul Meurice strikes us as being far better than his previous works, and it is undoubtedly one of the chief novels of the year; but the inevitable conclusion, which is foreseen all through the book, is so sad as to be painful to the reader. The tale is a little love story almost without incident, the scene of which is laid nearly fifty years ago, for no reason that can be seen, unless it be to introduce a very elaborate portrait of M. Jules Janin at the moment when he had just become the leading critic of Paris. The description has this interest for the Atheneum, that M. Jules Janin was at that time our Paris correspondent.

CLASSICAL TRANSLATIONS.

MR. J. W. MACKAIL'S prose translation of the Æneid is sufficiently well known among scholars to make them ready to welcome the similar version of the Eclogues and Georgics, which has just been published by Messrs. Rivington. belongs to that school of translations of which Mr. Lang is the best-known exponent, the object of which is to combine accuracy with the most

It

appropriate and beautiful language available. Mr. Mackail has not quite the happy instinct and literary craftsmanship of Mr. Lang, and no doubt he has a harder task in dealing with Virgil, the most untranslatable of all the ancient classics. But he has produced a work which is at once graceful and likely to be useful to young scholars. That, after all, is the chief value of prose translations of the classics. The mature scholar ought not to need them, though he may take pleasure in reading work like that of Mr. Lang and Mr. Mackail; and to the person unacquainted with the language a prose translation will give no adequate idea of a poet. But to the young scholar who is studying the great classics a translation which shows him how to combine grace and style with accuracy is of inestimable

value.

as was

Instead of degrading the author,
using the ordinary Bohn's

the inevitable result of
translation, it elevates him in the eyes of the
student, and teaches the latter something of the
mysteries of literary style. Therefore Mr. Mackail
deserves sincere thanks for the first prose version
of the Eclogues and Georgics of the kind we have
described. The following specimen of the style
is a happy one; Mr. Mackail is not always so
smooth and effective in his language. It will be
recognized as part of the most famous passage
of the second Georgic :-

"Though no high proud-portalled house pours forth the vast tide of morning visitants that fill her halls; though they feed no gaze on doors inlaid with lovely tortoise-shell or raiment tricked out with gold is not stained with Assyrian dye nor the clear oliveor bronzes of Ephyre; though the fleece's whiteness oil spoiled for use with cinnamon; but careless quiet and life ignorant of disappointment, wealthy in manifold riches, but the peace of broad lands, caverns and living lakes, but cool pleasances and the lowing of oxen and soft slumbers beneath the trees, fail not there; there are the glades and covers of game, and youth hardy of toil and trained to simplicity, divine worship and reverend age; among them Justice set her last footprints as she passed away from earth."

A TRANSLATION from Greek verse into English which professes to preserve the metres of the original is foredoomed to failure. Where languages are closely cognate such a feat is possible, as has been proved in the case of English and German by Bayard Taylor's 'Faust' and some of the German translations of Shakespeare. But

of Euripides, "translated in the original metres, and supplied with stage directions, by H. B. L." (Williams & Norgate). From beginning to end-introduction, text, and notes-it is full of absurdities of form and language. The iambic portions are, indeed, intelligible with the assistance of the Greek; but the distortions of arrangement in every sentence, and the prosaic and colloquial language employed, make them a ludicrous perversion of the original. As for the lyric passages, they may become rhythmical, the translator suggests in his introduction, when set to music, but in their present condition they can only provoke laughter. It is impossible in a short space to do justice to the absurditis with which the translation abounds, but ce brief passage of dialogue will sufficiently inde cate the style :

KREOUSA. Ai, ai! Ai, ai! A sharp pang of ago

ny, in a spasm, has yerked to pierce through my lungs PRESBUS. Wail not, belov'd dame,KREOUSA. What's to restrain my laments? PRESBUS (continuing). Til' we're a'pris'd ifKREOUSA. Aught be dispatched to my inn?

It may be mentioned that spellings such as "a'pris'd," "a'peared," "co'mence," are fre quent, in order to suit the author's metrical scheme. Where everything combines to give a false impression of the original it is unnecessary to point out particular errors of scholarship, which are not unfrequent. As a burlesque the book is sufficiently amusing reading, but as a serious translation it is worse than useless. It should be added that the stage directions sug gest nothing so much as one of Gilbert and Sullivan's operas. The devotion to the classics of such labour as H. B. L. has evidently expended on this work is doubtless praiseworthy; but it is a pity that it takes a form which renders them ridiculous.

OUR LIBRARY TABLE.

COL. MALLESON has written for the "States men Series," published by Messrs. W. H. Allen & Co., a most excellent little life of the Marquess Wellesley, of which there is nothing to be said except that it is an almost perfect example of the manner in which to treat a biography in s condensed handbook form. Col. Malleson eridently has a full appreciation of the character and statesmanship of the great, but too little known Wellesley, and he interests his readers because he has been himself interested in his task.

We have received from Messrs. Swan Sonnen

schein & Co. the Rules, Customs, and Procedur of the House of Commons, by Charles Bradlaugh MP., a reprint, with additions, of an article by Mr. Bradlaugh in the Universal Review, and a most excellent little handbook to Parliamentary practice, to which is added a list of the members of the House of Commons.

FROM Messrs. Sampson Low & Co. comes The War Scare in Europe, an able, anonymous small volume of anti-German tendencies, in which we have noticed but one statement, given the bias of the writer, which is startling, namely, that there might be a possibility of detaching Bavaria from the German side in the event of s new war. From internal evidence the anonymous writer is far from youthful, and is probably diplomatist or a careful student of modern his tory.

THE interest excited by the "race to Edin burgh" last year has induced Mr. Foxwell and Mr. Farrer to write an interesting volume Express Trains (Smith, Elder & Co.). Ther take forty miles as the minimum speed for a British express, twenty-nine for a continental but then they justly point out that in Holland and France express trains usually keep them

1

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No 3218, JUNE 29, '89

time, while on some British lines the perform ance differs considerably from the promise of the time table. The speeds of the trains in the United Kingdom make an imposing show, but the authors are not blind to such defects as the confusion in which Scotch railway officials get involved in the tourist season and the "audacious unpunctuality" of the South - Eastern. The writers speak well of the expresses in Holland and France. Even the Midi, which we have always regarded as a species of French SouthEastern, comes out better in the matter of speed than we expected; and we think the writers are more lenient to the shortcomings of the P.L.M. than they might well be. Mr. Foxwell and Mr. Farrer speak in justly severe terms of the management of the Prussian State railways, which is not only not improving the fast trains of the companies bought ght up, but discontinuing them when it can, and is governed by Apolitical considerations :

it

"Thus between London and Berlin the services via Calais are simply an international disgrace, from the dislike of the Germans to send their mails through France (which they would be compelled to do by force of circumstances if this natural route were worked to full advantage), and from the BelFugian Government owning competitive steamers from Ostend to which route they wish to attract the traffic...... The sudden closing of the Alsace-Lorraine frontier is another instance showing how Govern ment railways can be used to help an intolerable system of Cæsarism. Had there been a dozen powerful railway companies taking traffic across the frontiers, instead of one Government monopoly, it would have been almost impossible for Prussia to have ruined all their passenger traffic at one blow. At any rate we should have heard much more about it. And comes the that the Prus

sian Government will absolutely prohibit the working of any foreign through carriages over its lines. They have already treated the International Sleeping Car Company very badly, and have practically boycotted their through cars.'

Of the administration of the smaller governments the following is a summary :

"The Bavarian, Wurtemberg, and Saxon railways are a disgrace to Europe as far as speed goes. It is positively two hours quicker to go from London to Vienna all the way round by Paris (100 miles further) owing to the slowness of the trains in Bavaria and Wurtemberg. The Governments of these countries have always owned their railways and worked them, and we have a good illustration of the sort of effeteness that State management produces after a time. There is practically no fast thirdclass accommodation in Bavaria or Wurtemberg. The Orient express' 'runs faster in Roumania than in Wurtemberg."

THE ATHENÆUM

the English girl who goes to Herrnhut to be educated is taught German thoroughly, and the warmhearted and kindly way in which our author speaks of her teachers seems thoroughly warranted. Here and there a curious custom strikes The women at Herrnhut (p. 129) occupy

us.

the body of the church, while the men are in
the gallery. This is exactly reversed in the
Greek Church, from which the Moravians profess
to be descended. They keep blowing trumpets
from their church towers on all solemn occa-
sions. When our author travels beyond present
matters she is not always a lucid or safe guide.
Here are two specimens. The Moravians who
first came to Herrnhut found it (p. 62) "boggy,
and apparently destitute of water."
place, indeed! But this is more curious: the
"The first edition was
Moravians were the first to print the Scriptures
in any living language :
at Venice about 1470, being the oldest

A strange

published
printed version of the Bible in any European
language." Is Latin not a European language?
and what about the Mazarin Bible?

Low's Handbook to the Charities of London
(Low & Co.) records a diminished revenue for
the London charities during the past year.
When one looks through this closely printed
volume one cannot help seeing that amalgama-
tion is much needed among these societies. It
is rather a good sign that only four new ones
were started in 1888. -Another excellent work
of reference, Mr. Hazard's Army and Navy
Calendar, has reached us from Messrs. Allen
& Co.

A GOOD deal of interest attaches to Mr.
Hardy's Desperate Remedies, now reprinted by

Downey: a youthful work full

Messrs. Ward & Down
of promise, but also marred by defects Mr.

It appeared

"in some re

Hardy has since vanquished.
anonymously, and was noticed as
spects an unpleasant story," but "undoubtedly
a very powerful one," in the Atheneum of
April 1st, 1871. The parish clerk we declared
to be "really almost worthy of George Eliot, and
so is the whole cider-making scene at the end of
the first volume."

the

We have on our table a number of new
editions of works of fiction: Mr. Le Fanu's
Wyvern Mystery (Ward & Downey); Neighbours
on Green, by Mrs. Oliphant; Schwartz, by
Mr. Christie Murray; Robbery under Arms, by
Rolf Boldrewood; and A London Life, Mr.
James's latest publication-all four issued by
Messrs. Macmillan, who also send

us a new

To the Austrian railways our authors apply the edition of Mrs. Oliphant's Love and Life, cleverly words of the old song :

Immer langsam voran, Immer langsam voran,

Dass die österreichische Südbahn nachfolgen kann.

North America figures well in this volume, and we can hardly credit the statement that the P.L.M. proposes to rival the "limited express" of the Pennsylvania Railway. It must undergo a second birth first.

In a pleasant little book called Moravian Schools and Customs (Sonnenschein & Co.) the anonymous author gives her own experiences. The Moravian community is a Church, and not a sect, as appears from the remarkable facts she adduces (p. 65) that the Anglican archbishop Potter in 1737, and the Bishop of Worcester in Parliament in 1749, declared it an apostolic creed, and not at variance with any tenets of the Church of England. It appears that there are ample MS. documents in the various settlements wherewith to write both the history of this Church and of its missions, and the snatches given in this little book create a strong desire in the reader for a special work with full detail. Here is a specimen (p. 124): when the Moravian missionaries tried to translate the Bible into language intelligible to Greenlanders, the expression "Lamb of God" had to be rendered by young seal," as the natives had never seen a sheep. The correctness of all the German quotations in the books shows, at all events, that

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illustrated by Mr. Hennessy.

THE title of The Newbery House Magazine (Griffith & Farran) is scarcely felicitous, in spite of the special pleading in the pleasant introduction to which it has given rise. The contents, generally speaking, are good. Mr. Rodwell and Canon Benham write sensibly; Sir R. S. Ball contributes an interesting article; and a new story is begun by Mr. Christie Murray and Mr. sonnets are singularly bad. Upon the whole, Herman. On the other hand, Mr. Stone's the new venture may be considered promising.

We

(interesting), Messrs. Garratt & Co., Mr. Nutt (modern languages and folklore), Mr. Qua(theological works), and Mr. Stibbs. ritch (illuminated MSS.), Messrs. Steffington have also received catalogues from Mr. Wilson of Birmingham, Mr. Miles of Bradford, Mr. Jefferies and Messrs. George's Sons of Bristol, Mr. Murray of Derby (two catalogues), Mr. Rooney of Dublin, Mr. Baxendine, Commin of Exeter, Mr. Teal of Halifax, Mr. Clay, and Mr. Thin of Edinburgh, Mr. Messrs. Young & Sons of Liverpool (theological works), Messrs. Jarrold & Sons of Norwich, Mr. Blackwell of Oxford (a capital catalogue), Sheffield. Messrs. Charavay have sent two valuMr. Glegg of Rochdale, and Mr. Brown of & Welford of New York also send us notable able catalogues of autographs. M. Cohn of Berlin, M. Neubner of Cologne, and Messrs. Scribner catalogues.

We have on our table The Leading Facts of French History by D. H. Montgomery (Ginn & Co.), The Dutch Home Labour Colonies, by H. G. Willink (Kegan Paul), - Henry M. Stanley, the African Explorer, y A. Montefiore (Partridge), -Ralph Waldo I merson, Philosopher and Seer, by A. B. Alcot (Stock), - An Essay on the Theology of the Didache with the Greek tion of the Peshito-Syriac Text of Hebrews, James, Text, by C. Taylor, D.D. (Bell), - A Transla1 Peter, and

1 John, by W. Norton (Bloom),

Knowing and Being, by J. Veitch, LL.D. (Blackwood), - Ars Quatuor Coronatorum: being the Transactions of the Lodge Quatuor Coronati, No. 2,076, London, edited by G. W. Speth, Vol. I. Parts I. to IV. (Margate, 'Keble's Gazette' Office), -Salmon Trout and Grayling, by F. M. Slums, by J. A. Ingham, jun. (Sonnenschein), Walbran (Leeds, Goodall & Suddick), City Pharisees Unveiled, by Mrs. G. Corbett (Tower Publishing Company), -John Ward, Preacher, by M. Deland (Warne), - Puck's Hall, by Mrs. R. H. Reade (Hamilton), - Queer People, by P. Cox by R. F. Hardy (Edinburgh, Oliphant, Anderson (Griffith & Farran), -Johnnie; or, Only a Life, & Ferrier), and The Young Queen, and other Stories, by E. S. Vicars (Bell).

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Truman's (J.) Afterthoughts, cr. 8vo. 3/6 cl.
History and Biography.

Dampier (W.), by W. C. Russell, cr. 8vo. 2/6 cl. (English

Men of Action.)

Dobson's (W. T.) A Narrative of the Peninsular Campaign,
1807-1814, abridged from Napier's History, 8vo. 7/6 cl.
Lincoln (Abraham), the True Story of a Great Life, by W. H.
Herndon and J. W. Weill, 3 vols. cr. 8vo. 21/cl.

Le Voyage de William Willoughby, by M.
Michaud, published by M. Calmann Lévy, is an
imitation of Jules Verne, and is likely to be
popular among boys. It describes an American
voyage to the North Pole, and is written in a
lively style; but some of the readers for whom it
is intended may be deterred by the preface and
by here and there a little bit of scientific or
pseudo-scientific explanation of phenomena. If Boyle's The Lost Towns of the Humbert

Reminiscences of a Regicide, edited from Original MSS. of
Sergent Marceau, by M. C. M. Simpson, 8vo. 14/ cl.
Smyth's (Lieut. B.) History of the 20th Regiment, 1688-
1888, 8vo. 15/cl.

they will skip this and the preface they will find
themselves interested.

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Philology.

Cæsar's Commentaries: The Gallic War, Books 3, 4, and 5 edited C. E. Moberly, 12mo. 2/6 cl.

CATALOGUES have reached us from the following London booksellers: Mr. Batsford (architec- Chaucer's The Legend of Good Women, edited by Rev. W.W.

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Baden-Powell's (Capt. R. 8. S.) Pigsticking or Hoghunting,
a Complete Account for Sportsmen and Others, 8vo. 18/

Bryce's (L.) Romance of an Alter Ego, 12mo. 5' cl.
Carr's (Mrs. C.) Margaret Maliphant, 3 vols. 25/6 cl.
Dean's (Mrs. A.) Isaac Eller's Money, 12mo. 2/ cl.
Dering's (R. G.) Giraldi, or the Curse of Love, 2 vols. 12/cl.
Evelyn's (J.) Captain Kangaroo, a Story of Australian Life,

cr. 8vo. 7/6 cl.

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THE 'PRECES PRIVATE' OF 1564.

19, Dean's Yard, Westminster, June 21, 1889. In the preface to the reprint of the 'Private

Prayers put forth by authority during the Reign of Queen Elizabeth, edited for the Parker Society by William Keatinge Clay, there is this sen

Private. Otherwise he is a likely man, as it is
known that he assisted Parker in revising the
liturgy of Edward VI. in 1558, and was one of
a commission for the revision of the Prayer
Book in 1560.
W. GUNION RUTHERFORD.

CHATTERTON MANUSCRIPTS.

Deardens, Bury, Lancashire, June 10, 1889.
MAY I, as a student of Chatterton, and in
behalf of others like myself, correct a few in-
accuracies in your correspondent's account of the
MSS.? In the first place, the title of "the prose

essay printed in Prof. Skeat's edition" is not, as
Mr. Crump gives it (I follow his orthography),
"The ancient form of money carefully gotten
for Master Jhn Cannynge by me Thomas Row-
ley," but "Of the auntiaunte forme of monies,
carefullie gotten for Mayster William Canynge
by mee Thomas Rowleie." It is a matter of not
vital importance, but why Mr. Crump should

tes,

have retained "gotten" and yet altered "monies"
is a mystery; while Jhn (John) and William
are two very different names.

It would be somewhat hard to say in what Mr.
Crump has added to our present knowledge of
the appearance of Chatterton's pseudo-antique
vellums, as both Prof. Skeat and Daniel Wilson
have amply described "the faded brown ink,"
"the back......discoloured with yellow paint,"
and "the small engrossing hand."

SIDNEY CROMPTON.

'EXEMPLAR LITERARUM MISSARUM E GERMANΙΑ
AD D. GUL. CECILIUM,' 1592.

IT is remarkable that this interesting little
work has been left unnoticed by historians.
Nevertheless there are two copies of it in the
Library of the British Museum besides the one
in the Grenville collection. They are entered
in the Catalogue as doubtfully printed in Lon-
don, but they have no name of place mentioned
on the title-page, and it was intended that they
should appear to have been printed at Leipzig,
as the writer of the dedication, Joannes Per-
nius, whoever he was, dates "Lipsiæ, Id. Mart.

1592."

The dedication to Lord Burghley states that the letter had come to the writer's possession by chance, and was by an unknown hand, but he thinks the contents will be pleasant and will give information to Burghley, to whom he professes himself much indebted. He thinks that as the letter is addressed from foreign parts to Cecil, who had not been abroad, it will be useful as informing him what foreigners say of affairs going on in England. He hopes the name of the writer will be known proximis tabellariis, and when he has ascertained it he will let Cecil know. Then follows an address from the printer that it had been entirely written by "Joannes Pernius, Anglus," that it had come into his to the reader, in which he says of the letter hands by chance, and that thinking it would

tence" As in the case of Elizabeth's Primer be of use, had taken upon himself the responsi

and Orarium, so as regards the 'Preces Pri

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more.

The Puritans are indignant gnant at the increase of Catholics, and the Calvinist ministers complain that their churches are deserted and profaned. They threaten the Queen, and are very angry with Chancellor Hatton for favouring Catholics and the Protestant ministers of the Establish ment. Whilst Leicester lived they depended on his influence with the Queen, whose successor in the crown he hoped to be, and for that purpose, though utterly indifferent to all religion, had taken up with the Puritans and promoted their adherents to valuable benefices and other offices of state, as well as more menial offices at court. And the Queen dare not get rid of them for fear of her life, Huntingdon being now their favourite for the succession, and they had become more insolent after the defeat of the Spanish Armada. Hatton had been wise enough to withhold his consent from the promulgation of the edict and had contrived to get it altered, and if he had lived* possibly things would have been better. The Catholics will be for the most part inoffensive if they are left alone, but it is a great mistake to trust those who hypocritically pretend to conform, whilst the persecution of the others will only drive them into more vehement oppo. sition. There is so great a desire for martyrdom that persecution only increases the number of Catholics, which already has become great.

The priests who are slaughtered are the most guileless of men, and are only desirous of restoring the morals which have been so corrupted by the Calvinian heresy. He then proceeds to give instances of the constancy of the martyrs of past times. And so it will be now; the more they slaughter, the more they will rouse up to follow in their steps, and many will become converted by witnessing their constancy. The accounts of their martyrdoms are of use to the whole Church, Christian princes to be more vigilant in sup pressing Calvinism. and the home persecution will only induce other

As the edict itself, the writer does not lika to attribute it to the Queen or her Council, but

vatæ,' we cannot in the least tell to whom the bility of printing it, but that the printing had desires to speak of it as if the scribe alone were

care of drawing it up was committed." Whether

been done SO

this is true of the Primer and Orarium I cannot end. Accordingly the errata appeared at the

say, but chance has thrown in my way the name of the compiler of the 'Preces Privatæ,' and it seems worth while to put it on record. It may help and interest those whose studies bring them

to such books.

In the statutes of the Cathedral Church of is directed that the special prayers suitable for Westminster, in the chapter "De Cultu Dei," it Christmas, Lent, Easter, Ascension Day, Whit

suntide, Trinity, and other seasons should be

precum privatarum edito a

lowed by the imprimatur "Permissu Superio-
pages, amounting nearly to a hundred, and fol-
rum." The work has 189 pages, the last three
not being paged; and on p. 1 the title is some-

of treason is most

hurriedly that there are many to blame for it. The charge errors which will be corrected a revival of what was unjust, and nothing but a revival old, and the Allen's apologies. charge has been sufficiently refuted by Cardinal The edict, he says, proceeds ridiculously to accuse the King of Spain of of having further has been done for designs upon England. This he Queen being under Henry VIII. and the prosperity of that

what enlarged by saying that the letter

jusdam Angli quibus respondet Protestanti

dam Regio Londini nuper promulgato," &c.
amico, petenti ipsius sententiam de Edicto quo- poor. He then proceeds to contrast the peace
tion issued from Richmond October 18th, 191. time with the ruin of trade and the separ
The allusion is the proclama- poverty
Omcopy of this proclamation is in the Record tion from the hate worse of tha

reverendo domino Billo, nobis quondam ab Office, translated into Spanish. It is said to be before.
eleemosynis et decano vigilantissimo ecclesiæ "for remedy of the treasons which under pre-

Queen,

the state frame stated that text of religion have been plotted by under pres Much excuse must be made for thirt first dean on Elizabeth's foundation, and if this the kingdom." It contains a bitter invective education has been compelled, as its the Ques first Elizabethed by William Bil, the and Jesuits who have been sent berries who by the unhappy condition of her binto

so, we

possible authority for against Philip of Spain, who in spite of the de

attributing to Bill the compilation of the 'Preces | feat of his Armada has seated in the Papacy a

* Hatton died November 20th, 1591.

dangerous state with the secure position of Philip of Spain, who had never injured her, but whose revolting subjects she had assisted, whereas he had been the means of her life being preserved in the reign of her sister.

The heresy of Calvin will follow all other heresies, which have been more widely propagated than this, and will be extinguished in England; and the martyrs' prayers will prolong the life of Philip, who will play the game of the Catholic faith in England as he now is doing in France. He will prosecute the war with England because of his love for the English, over ■ whom he was once king. His departure was lamented by all Catholics. The Spaniards, too, are friendly to English Catholics, and have ■ received those kindly who have been driven into exile; and Philip has supported the college at Rheims, and another at Pintra in Spain, Valladolid, and had been anxious to befriend Catholics before the Queen of Scots' death, contrary to what the edict says. The defeat of the Armada was only a visitation of God, like many upon Israel which afterwards were redeemed by success, as it will be with Philip helped by the power of the Pope, who except in extreme cases i would not interpose in temporal matters with his spiritual power.

Π

i. e.

He proceeds to quote previous instances of Popes' interference by way of justifying Pius V. iin making Allen a cardinal. Allen and Parsons have nothing to gain by their conduct in English affairs. Elizabeth's councillors do but pretend a zeal for religion, for which they do not care a straw; but they make their profit out of the war, and are afraid of having to restore the plunder of the Church, if Catholicism should be re-established. Neither the Pope nor Philip would take up arms if the Catholic religion were again established. The Catholics would muster strong, especially those who through fear have been induced to pretend to defend the Calvinists, and those who have been so persecuted by Leicester. Many have learnt to despise the sordid sect of Calvin after thirty years' experience of it. And as to soldiers, they have scarcely any fit for work. Many went into Holland, and had recourse then to Catholic priests, especially at Easter. And there will be more on Christ's

d

side than on Calvin's, as the conversions daily increase (p. 146). There is, indeed, every hope of

- the conversion of England, which has defaulted not from its own fault, but its rulers'. One single priest known to the writer had converted in a short space of time three hundred to the Catholic religion, and this notwithstanding all the dangers involved in such conversion.

The edict falsely says that no one is condemned or hanged for religion, but only for treason quietly ignoring the 60l. monthly penalty for all who refuse to communicate with the heretics. And here he mentions two brothers the elder of whom wanted to resign his inheritance to the younger on plea of becoming a priest; but the younger refused on the same plea, and both became ecclesiastics, having been brought up in Calvinism. One was educated at

exitus of Leicester,* the horrible stench of Walsingham's body and the despair in which he died, and alludes to the cases of Judge Bell at Oxford, Fettiplace, Cheke, and Harlston.

He adds a prayer for Elizabeth, whose death cannot be far off, that she would listen to Cyprian's advice. But unfortunately she is unusually exposed to the advice of bad councillors. And he ends with the advice to Cecil at least to mitigate the sufferings of the Catholics, and asks him to give them liberty of professing their religion, taunting him with the fact that heretics trust Catholics for servants and confidential friends rather than their own party. They at least do not make the Queen's palace infame lupanar. The Chancellor's family were mostly Catholic. The Queen satis jam voluptatibus indulsit. It is time for her to think of the end, and it is Cecil's duty to endeavour to bring her to a sounder mind. This is the answer to Cecil's letter, and if he corresponds with the writer's advice, so it may happen that God will guide him into that truth which he professes to be in search of. Vale.

NICHOLAS Рососк.

"THE CANTERBURY POETS": 'W.S. LANDOR. 45, Great Marlborough Street, June 24, 1889.

My name appears as the writer of the preface to a small volume in this series. My friend Mr. Sharp is "general editor." If he generally edits as he has edited me his days in that post are numbered.

I wrote the preface, and corrected "proof," and rested content. To-day I receive a copy of the book, and I find that what stands over my

name is not what I wrote.

Short as it was, it is curtailed. The first pages are mangled beyond recognition; the last are omitted wholly. For the rest, the intellectual and euphonic relations of sentences are utterly altered by the omission of many whose place had

been studied.

The "general editor" may have much to say upon his side; I have nothing to say on mineonly to deny emphatically that I am the author of this preface. I gave Mr. Sharp some trouble, and was late with my copy, and the rest. Also, I sought to beguile the weariness of labour by light occasional references to that school of poets of whose writings (to repeat an old jest) Mr.

Sharp remains the most volum-inous exponent. In thus making his composition mine he has joyed a hideous revenge. ERNEST RADFORD.

LAUREL OR CYPRESS.

en

June 21, 1889.

In the celebrated "Fountain of Arethusa"

letter attributed to Nelson there occurs the expression, "Be assured I will return either crowned with laurel or covered with cypress." In an article which I contributed to the United Service Magazine of May last, I pointed out that the fabricator of the letter had taken this expression from a genuine letter of June 18th, 1798, where it runs: "Tell her [sc. Lady Hamilton] I hope to be presented to her crowned with laurel or cypress." I have lately noted the

But the heims the younger died, still labouring for the conversion of the English. He goes on with a quotation from Tertullian that the blood of the martyrs is the seed of the Church, many Calvinists having been converted on the spot by the constancy with which Catholics have suffered martyrdom, and the edict with all its terrors has only added to the number of priests who want to come to England. He then gives the address made to the Pope by one of eight who were going off to England in the hope that under Clement VIII. the faith lost under Clement VII. should be restored, and the Pope's reply, who could not refrain from tears, having been protector of the English College.

Rome, the other at Rheims; original of the phrase in Campbell's 'Lives

Lastly, he enumerates the penalties inflicted by God of old on the persecutors of the Christians, which he parallels with the turpissimus

the Admirals' (vol. ii. p. 94), a book with which

Nelson was well acquainted. It is there attributed to Opdam van Wassenaer in 1665, on his receiving orders to fight, contrary to his own judgment and the judgment of a council of war. "To

morrow," he said, " "my head shall be bound with laurel or cypress." cess." Campbell refers to Basnage, 'Annales des Provinces Unies, vol. i. p. 741, where the phrase is given, "Je serai demain couronné de Lauriers ou de Cypres, Mort ou Vainqueur." It will be noticed that Nelson's words are a more literal translation of Basnage's than Campbell's are, but nevertheless I think Nelson took them from Campbell. I doubt if he ever saw Basnage: with Campbell I know that he was familiar. J. K. LAUGHTON.

* Leicester died September 4th, 1588, and Walsingham April 6th, 1590.

SALE.

MESSRS. SOTHEBY, WILKINSON & HODGE

sold the second portion of the library of the Earl of Crawford last week. The sale occupied four days, and realized 7,3241. 4s. 6d., making a sum of 26,3971. 14s. produced already by this magnificent library, the first portion of which (ten days' sale) was sold in 1887. When the remaining portions will be brought on is not known, but not half of the collection is yet dispersed. The following prices are the more important ones realized last week: Esopi Fabulæ, first edition of the Greek text, 1480, 36l. 10s. Amadis de Gaul, the English translation of, 1567, 231. 10s.; this book sold for 6l. 10s. in the Osterley Park sale. Accompt of the Progresse of the Gospel amongst the Indians in New England, 1659, 49l. Balbi, Catholicon, 1460, printed on vellum, 300. Budæi Commentarii Linguæ Græcæ, Paris, 1548, a beautiful specimen of binding from the library of Diane de Poictiers, 305l. Cancionero Geral, Lisbon, 1516, 32l. Cicero on Old Age and Friendship, printed by Caxton in 1481, 3207. Christine of Pisa, Book of Fayttes of Armes and of Chyvalrye, translated into English and printed by Caxton in 1489, 235l. Clementis V. Constitutiones, printed on vellum, 1467, 791. Conciliorum Sacrorum Collectio cura J. D. Mansi, 1759-98, 541. Du Bartas, Devine Weekes and Workes, 1613, 25l. Duns Scoti Opera Omnia, 12 vols., 1639, 65l. Froissart, Croniques de France, &c., 3 vols., Paris, 1495-1500, beautifully bound by Lortic, 811. Historiæ Augustæ Scriptores, 2 vols., first edition, 1475, 321. Horatii Opera Omnia, first edition with a date, 1474, 201. 5s. Isocratis Orationes, first edition, 1493, 20l. 10s. Historiæ Societatis Jesu, 8 vols., 22l. Assemani, Codex Liturgicus Ecclesiæ Universe, 13 vols. in 7, 1749-66, 731. Booke of Christian Prayers, 1578, 261. 108.

Booke of the Common Prayer (first edition of King Edward VI.'s Prayer Book), 1549, 1551. Boke of Common Prayer (Second Book of Edward VI.), printed by Whytchurche, 1552, 1000. Boke of Common Praier, printed by Grafton, 1552, 60l. Booke of Common Prayer (Queen Elizabeth's) and Psalms in Metre, 1571, in ornamental binding of the period, 140l. Institution of a Christian Man, 1537, 221. 10s. Horæ Beatissimæ Virginis Mariæ ad Legitimum Sarisburiensis Ecclesiæ Ritum cum XV. Orationibus B. Brigittæ, 1526, 20l. 10s. Livre des Prières Communes, 1553, translated from the Second Book of King Edward VI. for the use of the inhabitants of the Channel Islands, 701. Manuale quoddam secundum Usum Matris Ecclesiæ Eboracensis, 1509, 80l. Missale Mixtum et Breviarium secundum Regulam Beati Isidori dictum Mozarabes, 2 vols., 1500-2, 370l. Mis

sale ad Usum Celeberrimæ Ecclesiæ Eboracensis, 1516, 250l. Prymer in Englyshe, 1535, 971. Horæ Beatissimæ Virginis Mariæ ad Legitimum Eboracensis Ecclesiæ Ritum, 1517, 105l. Primer in Englishe, 1545, 28l. Prymer in Latin and Englishe, known as "Queen Mary's Book," 1555, 271. Prymer in Englysh and Latyn, after the Use of Sarum, 28l. Prymer in

Englishe, with the Catechism set forthin

year of the reign of Queen Eliza

beth, 1558-9, 120l. Prymer in Englyshe set forthe by Jhon Byshoppe of Rochester, 1539, 911. The Order of the Communion, 1548, 551. Mandeville, Voyage to Hierusalem, 1483, 41l. Martialis Epigrammata, 1471, 26l. Missale secundum Usum insignis Ecclesiæ Sarum, printed on vellum (imperfect), without date, 60l. Missale ad Consuetudinem Ecclesiæ Sarum, 1523, 601. Livre intitule le Triumphe des Neuf Preux, 1487,80l. Petrarca, Sonetti, Canzoni, et Trionphi, first edition, printed on vellum, Venice, 1470, 121l. Plinii Historia Naturalis, first edition, 1469, 60l.; another copy on vellum, 1472, 119l. Quatre Filz Aymon, Lyon, 1506, 1271. Rychardə Cuer de Lyon, printed by Wynkyn de Worde, 1528, 61l. Sept Sages de Rome, Geneve, 1494, 100l. Valerii Maximi Facta et Memorabilia,

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