days. Persons who wish to have accurate knowledge on the Eastern question should read it carefully. It will be found more profitable than any number of "atrocity pamphlets, however adroit the process of their manufacture may have been. Old Glasgow, the Place and the People, from the Roman Occupation to the Eighteenth Century. By Andrew Macgeorge. (Blackie & Son.) THIS is the third edition of a popular history of Glasgow. To write a book of local history that shall be at once learned and interesting is a feat that very few are able to achieve. Antiquarian plodding is one thing, the graces of style another, and they are seldom united in one person. Mr. Macgeorge has had several forerunners of the dully learned sort, and a herd past counting of scribblers who knew nothing well, and had not even the poor art of hiding their ignorance. He is, however, the first person who has given us the annals of Glasgow in a form that it is delightful to read. The scale on which the book is constructed has not permitted him to tell us so much of the Middle Age life of Scotland as we should like to have heard. What is given us is clear and accurate, entirely free from that foolish taint of theological bitterness which runs through many of the books produced north of tho Tweed. We have especially enjoyed the portion of the book devoted to the history of the planting and early growths of Christianity in Scotland. On such a subject it is now almost impossible to tell anything new, but Mr. Macgeorge has grouped his facts in a telling manner, which must needs impress the minds of his readers. His picture of serfdom, too, is clear and accurate. It is a subject which yet requires investigation. The condition of the unfree seems to have varied much in different parts of the island. The author seems to be unaware how long it lasted in England. There is evidence of the existence of bondmen in Yorkshire late in the reign of James I. A large part of the volume is devoted to times near our own. This is as it should be. The doings of the men of the eighteenth century are as well worth recording, and in some ways are as picturesque as those of knights, abbots, and reformers. The Glasgow Tobacco Lord was a most interesting character. We are very thankful to Mr. Macgeorge for having preserved the memory of men who were, in their virtues and their failings, the equivalents of the merchant princes of Venice, Genoa, and Amsterdam. The engravings with which the book is illustrated are works of art of a high order, and there is an excellent index. Historic Towns.-Cinque Ports. By Montagu Burrows, Capt. R. N. and Chichele Professor of Modern History in the University of Oxford. (Longmans & Co.) THOUGH Hastings, Sandwich, Dover, Romney, and Hythe were the original Cinque Ports, Winchelsea and Rye, officially known as the "two ancient towns," were added to the confederation soon after the Norman Conquest. To Hastings were attached the two corporate members of Seaford and Pevensey, as well as the six non-corporate members of Bulvarhythe, Hydney, Petit Iham, Bekesbourn, Grenche, and Northeye; to Sandwich the two corporate members of Fordwich and Deal, and the six non-corporate members of Reculver, Sarre, Stonor, Ramsgate, Walmer, and Brightlingsea, in Essex; to Dover the two corporate members of Folkestone and Faversham, and the seven non-corporate members of Margate, St. John's, Goresend, Birchington Wood, St. Peter's, Kingsdown, and Ringwould; to Romsey the one corporate member of Lydd, and the four non-corporate members of Old Romney, Bromehill, Dengemarsh, and Orwaldstone; to Hythe the one non-cor porate member of West Hythe; and to Rye the one corporate member of Tenterden. The history of this powerful and unique confederation, to which the control of the herring fishery and the defence of our Southern seaboard were entrusted, is one of singular interest. We are rather disposed to think that Prof. Burrows has erred in so completely subordinating the historical details relating to the various members of the confederation to the central idea of depicting "the infancy and early triumphs of the British Navy as practically represented by the Cinque Ports." We hope, however, that the sketch is only a forerunner of a complete work on the subject, which cannot be dealt with exhaustively within the prescribed and narrow limits of "Historic Towns." Four excellent maps accompany the letter-press, the one forming the frontispiece to the volume showing the relative positions of the seven head ports and the eight corporate and twenty-four non-corporate members. The Bairns' Annual. Edited by Alice Corkran. (Field & Tuer.) A PLEASING collection of fairy-tales and children's stories, all genuine, are illustrated by a large number of clever and original designs. Le Livre for November opens with a conte pour les bibliophiles, Le Bibliothécaire Van der Boecken de Rotterdam, Histoire Vraie,' a brilliant sketch, by Octave interesting of which is a reproduction of a caricature of Uzanne. This is illustrated by several designs, the most Charles Nodier, which originally appeared in the Pantheon Charivarique. These illustrations are by M. Albert Robida. James de Rothschild. M. Édouard Petit supplies also 'Portrait de Bibliophile' deals with the Baron La Vie Mondaine de Mignet,' 1830 to 1848. THE Universal Review, No. VII., contains a thoughtful article by Mr. Edward Garnett on Richard Jefferies.' This is followed by a composite paper on the subject of Competitive Examinations,' the authors of which are Sir John Lubbock, Mr. Walter Wren, Prof. Ray Lankester, and the Editor. A similar contribution is also sent on the Progress of Woman.' Notices to Correspondents. 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