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Notes and Queries, Number 186, May 21, 1853
THE DIARY AND HOURES OF THE LADYE ADOLIE,
A FAYTHFULLE CHILDE, 1552Edited by the LADY CHARLOTTE PEPYS"This work resembles several productions of the last few years. The Diary professes to be written by a noble young lady of the sixteenth century. 'Lady Adolie' has an advantage over most of its precursors in the greater depth and variety of the incidents. The Journal begins just before the accession of Bloody Mary, and ends with the martyrdom of the youthful writer at Smithfield.... The book is charmingly written; the kindly, simple, loving spirit of a girl in her teens, thrown much upon her own resources, is truthfully depicted, as well as the firm piety of that age."—Spectator.
"The familiar conversation of the day, as sought to be reproduced in this Diary, wears an appearance of singular truthfulness, and whether the topic be the deathbed of good King Edward, the merits of Somerset, Ladye Jane Grey, her Grace the Ladye Elysabeth, the Queen herself, or the demeanour of her Spanish husband, the proceedings of Cardinal Pole, the doings at the Tower prison, the volume reflects as in a faithful mirror the opinions current in the national mind."—Globe.
BY THE AUTHOR OF "CHILD'S PLAY."In medium 4to., handsomely bound, price 15sA CHILDREN'S SUMMER
Eleven Etchings on Steel by E. U. BILLUSTRATED IN PROSE AND RHYME BY M. L. B. & W. M. CIndia Proofs on Large Paper, in Portfolio, price 31s. 6d"What cordial admiration, what honest unaffected praise, have we to bestow on these etchings! Never did we see a more perfect harmony expressed throughout between accomplishment and grace of hand and moral beauty of mind. Not the most faultless of mere correctness of drawing could have the effect which these etchings produce. Within outlines imperfect as we have described them, often the most exalted fancies are found. The arrangement is almost always excellent—than the groupings of the figures, and the composition of each scene, nothing for the most part can be better. And the beautiful sympathy with children that is displayed, the enjoyment in their joy, their gay sports their tender little thoughtful gravities and their innocent purity of affection which brings round them the thoughts of angels—all this has most delightful expression in 'A Children's Summer.'"—Examiner.
In Two Vols. crown 8vo., price 12s., elegantly bound in cloth, gilt,GRIMM'S HOUSEHOLD STORIES
COMPLETE EDITIONThe celebrated Stories of the Brothers GrimmEmbellished with 200 small and 36 full-page Illustrations by E. H. WEHNERT"From time to time we have noticed the periodical appearances of this edition of the famous book of the Brothers Grimm, and have only now to mention the fact of its completion into two compact, well-filled volumes. The translation is done in just the simple, homely way which suits best with the stories.... Every juvenile library should possess this excellent 'Grimm.'"—Examiner.
"The two volumes of 'Household Stories,' translated from the Messrs. Grimm, are the completed form of an edition which was issued in numbers, and which has from time to time been mentioned by us as in course of publication. What with Mr. Wehnert's admirable illustrations (of which the number is almost countless) and the general elegance of production, the work now presents an appearance sufficiently seductive to the juvenile class of readers, to whom it is more particularly addressed."—Athenæum.
"We cannot again avoid alluding to Mr. Wehnert's illustrations to 'Grimm.' They are instinct with the most vital spirit of German legendary romance—remote, unreal, grotesque, and suggestive; with strange bits of landscape and beautiful human faces (those of the children remarkably so), and with a singular absence of strong contrast of light and shade, as though the sun which shone upon them was not the same which shines upon this earth."—Athenæum, second notice.
"The stories are delightful."—Leader.
In 8vo., handsomely bound in cloth gilt, price 5s., the First Volume ofTHE CHARM:
A BOOK FOR BOYS AND GIRLSTHE CONTRIBUTIONS BY MRS. HARRIET MYRTLE, ALFRED ELWES, J. H. PEPPER, FREDERICA GRAHAM, CLARA DE CHATELAIN, &cEmbellished with more than One Hundred Illustrations by LEJEUNE, KAULBACH, WEIR, WEHNERT, ABSOLON, SKILL, &c. &cThe Work is continued in Monthly Numbers, price Sixpence each"A word in praise of the charming periodical for children, 'The Charm,' which is more eagerly looked for by several youngsters we know than "Bleak House' is by their parents."—Leader.
"Children, we find, love this periodical."—Critic.
"'The Charm' is an excellent monthly periodical, full of pleasant stories and engravings."—Atlas.
"An attractive and well-varied book."—Spectator.
"'The Charm,' a book for boys and girls, is the completed volume, handsomely bound, of a book which has been appearing in monthly numbers during the year, and in which form we have several times noticed it with warm approval. It is full of interesting matter to read, and adorned with upwards of one hundred engravings, of admirable execution, illustrative of natural history, topography, juvenile science, costumes, and sports, drawn by the best artist."—Critic.
WITH FIVE HUNDRED PICTURESLarge 4to., 6s. in elegant Picture Binding, by LUKE LIMNER, a New Edition ofTHE PICTURE PLEASURE BOOK;
CONTAINING FIVE HUNDRED ILLUSTRATIONS BY THE MOST EMINENT ARTISTSAn Edition is also published mounted on cloth, price 12s"'The Picture Pleasure Book' is really the child's joy, for it gives him large folio pages full of woodcuts, executed in the best style of art, teaching him natural history, educating his eye to good drawing and graceful form, and telling stories in pictures. It is an admirable design, and no house that holds children should be without it."—Critic.
LONDON: ADDEY AND CO., 21. OLD BOND STREET1
This geographical morceau was nearly equalled by a scribe in the Illustrated London News, who stated that her Gracious Majesty's steam-yacht, with its royal freight and attendant squadron, when coasting round from Cork to Dublin in the year 1849, had entered Tramore Bay, and thence steamed up to Passage in the Waterford Harbour! A truly royal road to safety; and one that, did it exist, would have saved many a gallant crew and ship, which have met their fate within the landlocked, but ironbound and shelterless, jaws of Tramore Bay.
2
The titles of nearly twenty works relating to Sherlock's Trinitarian Controversy will be found s. v. in the Bodleian Catalogue, vol. iii. p. 462. See also Watt's Bibliotheca Britannica.
† A long account of Mr. Papin is given in Rose's as well as in Chalmers's Biographical Dictionary.
‡ Sir George Treby was Chief Justice of Common Pleas in 1697.
§ Bishop Trelawney, it appears, suspended Dr. Arthur Bury from the rectorship of Exeter College for some heterodox notions in his work, The Naked Gospel. The affair was carried by appeal from the King's Bench to the House of Lords, when Bishop Stillingfleet delivered a speech on the "Case of Visitation of Colleges," printed in his Ecclesiastical Cases, part ii. p. 411. Wood states that Dr. Bury was soon after restored. For an account of this controversy, and the works relating to it, see Gough's British Topography, vol. ii. p. 147., and Wood's Athenæ (Bliss), vol. iv. p. 483.
Any farther communications on the above Queries shall be forwarded to the correspondent.
3
In Luc. 10. tom. ii.: "Pigmi gigantum humeris impositi plusquam ipsi gigantes vident."—Preface, p. 8.