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books have fetched by public auction. As the volumes increase in number they will constitute a precious boon for the bibliographer, and the ordinary collector will see them multiply on his shelves with a contentment not always displayed in the case of rapidly augmenting serials. Excellent as the book is, however, we desire improvement in two respects; one easy, the other perhaps difficult. In the case of works of which there are various editions, instead of, as now, bringing them together, let the editor deal with the catalogues in the manner adopted by M. Willems in his bibliography of 'Les Elzeviers.' We should then have, instead of Paradise Lost,' followed by a lot of numbers-1445, 4407, 4642, 4782, &c.-have a list something like this: Par. Lost' (1668) 1445, (1669) 4642, (1827) 4782, and so forth. The number of foreign books given might also with advantage be increased. So welcome is, however, the work, we only hint at improvement, and speak with no intention of fault-finding.

The Story of the Nations.-Mediaval France, from
the Reign of Hughes Capet to the Beginning of the
Sixteenth Century. By Gustave Masson. (Fisher
Unwin.)

1678. The Great Plague of 1589, the siege of Hull, and the troubles of the Civil War all left their mark in the parish books. Marmaduke, still not an uncommon name in the East Riding, occurs very frequently. It probably came in with Marmaduke, Lord of Tweng, who in the thirteenth century obtained certain manors in Holderness by his marriage with Lucy, coheiress of Peter de Brus, with whom the older male line of the Bruces became extinct. The name of Conan may have come in with Alan of Brittany or some of his followers.

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66

EVERARD HOME COLEMAN.-("Arbour Day") See 7th S. iv. 85, 492.-(" Hark! the herald angels sing ") Is not the author of this Charles Wesley?

into the possession of Mr. Quaritch.
W. D. PINK ("Col. Chester's MSS.").-These came

E. S. ("God fulfils Himself in many ways ").-' Mort d'Arthur,' 1. 241.

R. M. SPENCE ("Crux ").-Will appear.

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M. MASSON, like many another man of letters, endeavoured to perform an impossible feat. To tell the history of medieval France in a volume of 350 pages ought never to have been attempted. Almost every year in the long national life of France is full of incident, and every force, every movement that has agitated Europe requires treating of if we are to understand the complex civilization of the latter Middle Ages. Orthodoxy and heresy, the claims of the Popes and the independence of the old French monarchy, a dozen kinds of feudal systems, and the growth of towns, the inner life of each of which was different from the rest, these and a hundred other matters require dealing with in a history of mediæval France. We do not doubt that M. Masson could have done these things well. An English history of France on an extended scale is much wanted; but this volume, though it shows great powers of description and a clear insight into national growth, cannot be regarded as even a stepping-stone to what we mean. It is a series of pictures, most of them accurate and brilliant, of persons and events in French history. As a book for amusement it ranks highly, but information so highly condensed and scrappy is not of much value to the grave student. Some of the pictures-sketched as they are in a few lines- SIR ANTHONY SHERLEY the AUTHOR of of the noble characters with which French history is studded are, however, very good. We never read a better account of St. Louis than that which M. Masson has given us, and the picture of Jeanne d'Arc is truthful and most touching. The chronological list of the French Chancellors is a very useful addition to the work, as is also the catalogue of sources of French history.

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