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Messrs Blackwood and Sons'

Tom Cringles Log.

A New Edition. With Illustrations by STANFIELD, WEIR, SKELTON, WALKER, &c., Engraved by WHYMPER. Crown 8vo, 6s. Another Edition at 2s.

"Everybody who has failed to read 'Tom Cringle's Log' should do so at once. The 'Quarterly Review' went so far as to say that the papers composing it, when it first appeared in 'Blackwood,' were the most brilliant series of the time, and that time one unrivalled for the number of famous magazinists existing in it. Coleridge says, in his 'Table Talk,' that the 'Log' is most excellent; and these verdicts have been ratified by generations of men and boys, and by the manifestation of Continental approval which is shown by repeated translations. The engravings illustrating the present issue are excellent."—Standard.

Mary Queen of Scots and her Accusers.

By JOHN HOSACK. A New and Enlarged Edition, continuing the Narrative down to the Death of Queen Mary. With a Photograph from the Bust on the Tomb in Westminster Abbey. Vol. I., in 8vo, 155.

"He has confuted those who, by brilliant writing and a judicious selection of evidence, paint the Queen of Scots as an incarnate fiend, and who are dramatic poets rather than historians."-Times.

"Whatever surmises may be formed about Mary's knowledge or assent, there can now be no doubt that the murder was contrived, not by Mary, but by her accusers."—Scotsman.

Memorials of the Castle of Edinburgh.

By JAMES GRANT. A New Edition. In crown 8vo, with 12 Engravings, 35. 6d.

The Scots Musical Museum;

Consisting of upwards of Six Hundred Songs, with proper Basses for the Pianoforte. Originally Published by JAMES JOHNSON; and now accompanied with Copious Notes and Illustrations of the Lyric Poetry and Music of Scotland, by the late WILLIAM STENHOUSE. With Additional Notes and Illustrations. New Edition, 4 vols. 8vo, half-bound, £2, 12s. 6d.

Count Montalemberf's History of the Monks of the West.

5 vols. 8vo, 2, 125. 6d. Volumes III. to V. contain the History of the Conversion of England by the Monks, and may be had as a complete book, 31s. 6d.

"The work of a brilliant and accomplished layman and man of the world, dealing with a class of characters who have generally been left to the arid professional handling of ecclesiastical writers. Montalembert sees their life as a whole, and a human whole; and, with all his zeal as an amateur hagiographer, he cannot but view them with some of the independence of a mind trained to letters and politics."—Pall Mall Gazette.