CONTENTS of VOL. CCLXVIII. PAG 556 541 148 . . . 580 Across the Cordillera, from Chili to Buenos Ayres. By MAX 580 382 Book-Fires of the Revolution and Restoration. By J. A. FARRER. 361 Breton Fisherman's Song By C. E. MEETKERKE 427 Browning, Robert, as a Teacher. In Memoriam. By Mrs. Alex. IRELAND 177 Bunyan Warrant, How I Found the. By w. G. THORPE, F.S.A. : 192 Burglar's Blunder, The. By RICHARD MARSH 433 Canonbury Tower. By C. C. ROBINSON 372 Case, The, against Compulsory Vaccination. By A PHYSICIAN 201 “Characters,” The, of La Bruyère. By HENRY M. TROLLOPE 235 Chili to Buenos Ayres: Across the Cordillera. By MAX 302 Clubs and Fraternities. By W. H. DAVENPORT ADAMS 309 Colonel Newcome. By H. SCHÜTZ WILSON 497 Costa Rica and its Resources. By ALFRED J. H. CRESPI 87 Crotchet and Quaver Wit. By FREDERICK J. CROWEST 185 Dr. John Covel's Diary. By J. THEODORE BENT . 470 Droitwich. By AN OLD OXONIAN . 41 Druid Stone, The : a Phantasy. By ISABELLA WEDDLE East End, The Universities in the. By HAMLET E. CLARK Examining a Scotch School. By ALEXANDER GORDON 247 False Eyes and True. By B. MONTGOMERIE RANKING 537 Far West, Pantomime in the. By W. J. LAWRENCE 28 Flodden's Fatal Field. By GEORGE EYRE-TODD 171 Fraternities and Clubs. By W. H. DAVENPORT ADAMS 309 French Protestant, A, During the Revolution. Rabant SaintÉtienne. By E. PERRONET THOMPSON 281 Fresh-water Fish and their Associations. By the Rev. N. G. WATKINS, M.A. 20 Ha! Ha! Ha! By ARTHUR GAYE How I Found the Bunyan Warrant. By W. G. THORPE, F.S.A. 192 Hunting Songs. By LAURA ALEX. Smith Johnson Characteristics, Some. By H. W. MASSINGHẢM 155 La Bruyère, The “ Characters” of.' By HENRY M. TROLLOPE 235 Light from the Talmud. By LAUNCELOT CROSS 449 Little Tours. By PERCY FITZGERALD, M.A. . 409 Lost Prayer-Book, The. By MICHAEL KERNEY More about Models. By R. GRAHAM 165 Mountain Sheep. By A Hill SHEPHERD Mr. Ruskin, Artist and Publisher. By Percy Fitzgerald, M.A: 126 Mystery, An Artistic. By ARMIGER BARCZINSKY . 541 Newcome, Colonel. By H. SCHÜTZ WILSON 497 105 630 . 348 . 489 . . 615 528 PAGE 398 . . . . . 528 . New Forest, The, as a National School. By FRANCIS H. CANDY. 276 604 Ongar and its Great Forgotten Statesman. By F. T. NORRIS 618 On some Old Bee-Masters. By R. C. DAY Pantomime in the Far West. By W. J. LAWRENCE Pasteur at Home. By ALFRED J. H. CRESPI . 257 Petronius. By J. F. ROWBOTHAM 515 Philosopher's Stone, The. By the Rev. S. BARING GOULD, M.A.: 62 Prayer-Book, The Lost. By MICHAEL KERNEY 615 556 185 281 Revolution and Restoration, Book-Fires of the. By J. A. FARRER 361 Robert Browning as a Teacher. In Memoriam. By Mrs. ALEX. Ruskin, Mr., Artist and Publisher. 'By PercÝ FITZGERALD, M.A: 126 Russia, One Day in. By SIDNEY WHITMAN. 604 594 74 570 247 Sheep, Mountain. By A HILL SHEPHERD Some Johnson Characteristics. By H. W. MASSINGHAM Statesman, Ongar and its Great Forgotten. By F. T. NORRIS 618 510 Stone, The Philosopher's. By the Rev. S. BARING GOULD, M.A.: 562 Chaps. IX.-XI.. 217 325 463 Eighteenth Century Figures-Shakespeare's London—The 107 215 Conditions of Private Printing in Paris-Dr. Furnivall on Chaucer's Bibliography-Are there Two Chaucers of 1561?. 323 The Signatures in Books-History of the Signatures—The Laureate and Mr. Swinburne-Mr. Gladstone as a Bibliophile --Are there Two Chaucers of 1561 Among Old Books—The Book Sales of 1889 Further Contribution to the Chaucer BibliographyThe 1561 Chaucer in the Greenock Library—Manuscript Notes in the Greenock Library Chaucer 449 Theology, Salvage. By J. A. FARRER “ The Thin Red Line."' By John O'NEILL 340 Tours, Little. By PERCY FITZGERALD, M.A. . . . !” “BAMA Y come here ; I want to kiss you!" ANNY, He had spoken very softly; for although Mr. Maybanke, according to his evening habit, was apparently sound asleep in his easy-chair, yet old gentlemen are known to have a disagreeable way of suddenly awaking and demandirg, “What is the matter?"-when nothing is the matter. Leaning through the conservatory door, Carey blew a whiff from his cigarette, while his eyes followed every movement of the little figure in a mourning dress sitting at a table in the long drawingroom beyond. Her attention was wholly given to the book which she was reading, her hands all the time whirling her knitting-pins. Still, it was evident that she must have heard him, for the whispered VOL. CCLXVIII. NO. 1909. B |