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CATTLE. Owing to the abundance of straw, and the improvement in the turnip crop, there has been a considerable de mand for cattle, and prices have been rising. At Doune Fair, cattle were 20s. At Old a-head higher than last year. Biggar Fair, cattle of the true Ayrshire breed sold readily at an advance of full 30 per cent over last year's prices. At Hallow Fair, held at Edinburgh on the 13th and 14th November, there was a brisk sale. The quantity of cattle in the market was at least a fourth less than last year. During the first day all the best lots changed hands at least 30 per cent above last year's market, and 20 per cent above prices obtained at last Falkirk tryst, the better description of cattle bringing an advance of about L.2 per head on the Falkirk and Doune prices. The principal part of the supply consisted of lean stock. Two-year-old Highland stots sold from 1.4, 10s. to L.7, 78. TwoThree-year-old do. L.7 to L.11. year-old Highland queys, from L.3, 10s. to L.5, 10s., quality inferior. There was but a poor supply of fat cattle in the market, prices from 5s. to 78. per imperial stone.

SHEEP have also been on the rise. At the October Spittal of Glenshee Fair,

Prime
held at Perth, the whole stock was
cleared off at an early hour.
black-faced wedders sold at from 20s. to
21s. and inferior down as low as 14s.
Prime ewes were bringing from 7s. 6d. to
12s.

At Doune Fair, on the 6th November,
there was a short supply, the demand par-
ticularly brisk, and prices from 2s. to 4s.
a-head above last year's market, and from
2s. 6d. to 4s. 6d. above last October Tryst
Wedders were sold at L.17
at Falkirk.
to L.24; and ewes from L.8 to L.11, per
clad score, and were all sold.

HORSES.-At the Newcastle Cow Hill Fair, the first rate horses brought for sale were few in number, and were disposed of before the regular fair commenced. There were a great many of an inferior description; such as were useful brought pretty good prices. Stags and ponies were numerous; the former varying from L.10 to L.20 each; the latter bringing, according to age and quality, from L.4 to L.12 each.

At Paisley Martinmas Fair, the best draught horses in the market were offered for L.35. At Hallow Fair, good draught horses brought good prices, but inferior animals were in little demand.

NEW PUBLICATIONS.

LEGENDS OF THE LIBRARY AT LILLIES. BY THE LORD AND LADY THERE. 2 VOLS.-The title which Lord and Lady Nugent have chosen for their stories will be apt to mislead simple readers. It will be imagined that the scene of their Legends is some fancy lithe summer or winter terary shop, blossom of a London root, transplanted and flourishing about the Pantiles, or the Marine Parade; and that they are consequently tales of fashion, and of modern manners. Let us correct this mistake. Lillies, or more properly Lilies, is a "Place charming spot thus described: yourself just midway between the three seas, which form the boundaries of Southern England, you will find yourself on a small knoll, covered with antique elm, walnut, and sycamore-trees, which rise out of a vale, famous in all time for the natural fertility of its soil, and the moral virtues of its people. On this knoll, fitly called by our ancestors the Heart of South Britain,' stood, distant about half a mile Longman, Rees, Orme, &c. London,

from each other, two monasteries, known
by the flowery appellatives of Lilies and
Roses. These edifices have for many cen.
turies been no more; but on the site of
the former of the two, standeth a small
mansion, of Tudor architecture, bearing
still its ancient name. Of the monastery,
little memorial beyond the name remains,
save only that, under a small enclosed
space, erewhile its cemetery, now a wil-
derness of flowers, the bones of the monks
repose." But the pools, the glades, the
shrubs and paths, and sportive colts, and
veteran steeds, we pass for "the warm
cheer of the little oak library (at Lilies)
-for the quaint coverings and tracery of
other times which abound therein-for
the awful note of the blood-hound baying
upon his midnight chain; the pleasing
melancholy of the hooting owl, from his
hereditary chamber in the roof; and for
the tunefulness of the cooing wood-quests
and the morning rooks, which bustle and
caw, and of the high winds which pipe
and roar, daily and nightly, through the
boughs; and for the deep, glossy verdure

of the pastures, stretching forth to the
brave distant hills, which fence the vale.
To those who take delight in such
things, Lilies still hath charms.

"From the fireside of the above-men-
tioned little oak library, the following le-
gends proceed."

A romantic birthplace and cradle, and fitting nursery of all the gentle, and tender, and quaint, and poetic fancies, which here break forth in tales and legends. If not very far mistaken, we have seen most of these legends and stories before; but a good tale cannot be the worse of being twice read, and most of these will bear a second reading, and even a third from the very patient. like Mr. Tudman, in And, perhaps, "Apropos of bread," we may have dreamed the lecture we recall. Of the piquant pieces, we must single out "The First Fit of the Gout," "Mrs. Allington's Pic Nic," and "The Lioness," of which we cannot have dreamt, as dreams never go beyond the walking imaginations of the dreamer. "The Old Angler's Story" is skilfully told, but painful withal, and the catastrophe somewhat revolting. "The Convent in the Forest," with more power, is less objectionable on this cardinal point. In a very different style is "The Old Soldier," a tale which it is delightful to hear Lord or Lady tell.

The Legends of the Library at Lillies will be eagerly read, from the name of the writers, by those who are not very exacting in the character and pretensions of their books of amusement, and will be valued for their intrinsic power of imparting pleasure at many other firesides; insinuating, meanwhile, some useful lessons to flirting husbands, and manœuvring mothers. In conclusion, we must say, that the best of Lord Nugent's works is his late address to the electors of Aylesbury, which also, we have no doubt, is an emanation of the Library at Lillies. It made us expect something more in these volumes than is found in the mere novel of the day, and we have not been disappointed.

LYRIC LEAVES. By CORNELIUS WEBBE. *-Where can Mr. Webbe have been dreeing his wierd for these twice seven years? Wherever it may have been, kindly do we welcome him back to middle earth with his garland of Lyric Leaves. He belongs to a group of old literary remembrances. He was game for certain Scotch critics or wits, in days when the ball was at their feet, and when there was no dread of it rebounding in their faces.

* Griffiths, London. Pp. 136.

395

A friend of theirs, who believed the aforesaid wits or critics more thoughtless and wanton in the abuse of power than actually conduct might have, and often had, all the malicious or bad-hearted, though their consequences of malice and bad heart; yet willing that they should not perish, but be brought to the knowledge and love devised at the time this moral penance of truth-we speak it in reverenceand discipline ;-that every Sunday morning, each writer, fresh and fasting, should hear read, or be compelled to read himself, remarks, sarcasms, personalities, incona sheet of his own rash judgments, bitter sistencies, scurility, &c. &c. &c. And that this sheet should begin with Wordsworth, include Byron, Coleridge, Hazlitt, Shelley, Hunt, Keates, &c. &c., and end Lyric Leaves. with Mr. Cornelius Webbe, the author of private penance, yet was really a most This appeared a simple of the single drop of water upon the bare cruel one. It was the continual falling scalp; the most ingenious of tortures; but, unlike that, was, we presume, to cease on the first sign of penitence, repentance, and a new life.

with his new volume, and he will, we have In the meantime, Mr. Webbe comes out no doubt, meet a more just award than he did formerly. The world has since its taste in joking has improved of late. grown soberer, and more in earnest; and sympathized with the pelted frogs, and A large though a quiet part of it always that part has increased, is increasing, and will no longer be either sneered, laughed, or bullied out of its own judgment, and sense of the true and fitting. This seems to wander from Lyric Leaves; but we are steadily keeping them in view, and with much admiration and kindness. These poems are very natural-natural even in their conceits, very pleasing, and very English. Did our limits permit, we could give many proofs of the soundness of this opinion. All that we can do is, to name a few of our favourite pieces :The Miller's Treat; the Fallen for Freedom; the Blind Musician's Son; the Old Love; the Farewell of a Pilgrim Father to England; the Autumnal Fireside; the Weaver's Wife, and, we might add, many others of these pleasant compositions. In the preface, the author says that he trusts, whatever may be the poetical sins of this little book, there is no part of it inimical to sociality, charity, and the same good will to all, which he wishes to have meted being inimical, is promotive of these out to himself. His book, instead of amiable and genial feelings; and his wish cannot fail to be realized in the good will of all.

HOMES ABROAD. By MISS MARTINEAU. No. X. of Tales Illustrative of Political Economy.-Emigration is the subject of this story. Unlike Cousin Marshal, it is a hopeful and cheering theme; so soon, at least, as we get the HOMES ABROAD, and out of Kent, into Van Dieman's Land. The question of emigration, and of who should be sent off, and who kept to pine and die at home; and whether there be not at home room for all, were home well managed, is a knotty point, on which we are loath, at present, to break our teeth. Miss Martineau has made up her mind upon it, while we DOUBT, and while many acute, and some profound thinkers stoutly dogmatize on the other side; and thus, while our wishes go with the latter, "home being still home," we waive the political part of the discussion, and keep to, and recommend the Tale for its own sake. It is told with Miss Martineau's usual clearness and vivacity; and is full of moral beauty, especially in the characters of Ellen and her brother Frank; and of interest in the pictures of their adventures abroad, and their new modes of life. Their voluntary emigration, undertaken in the spirit of noble independence, we heartily approve, and exult in their improved prospects, and in the certain reward of labour, which is the prop of virtuous industry in every clime. HOMES ABROAD, on its bright side, is one of Miss Martineau's most pleasing stories. And, before we part, all is steady increasing brightness with the emigrants.

THE COMIC OFFERING, or Ladies' Melange of Literary Mirth.-Edited by MISS L. H. SHERIDAN.* Embellishments above 100.-Miss Sheridan here makes her third appearance at the fair tribunal, to which she has chosen to make her annual appeal. She presents sixty pieces in prose and verse, more or less humorous, mirthful, odd, or satirical, and, in number (and value,) more embellishments than articles. Some of the engravings are clever, others grotesque, and a few comically extravagant, as the dance of the Jig-oh Sleeves, where those vitalized enormities actually step out, in a pas de deux, while another gigot performs on the violin, to the horror of a peeping lady's maid, who discovers their midnight revels. Bent on a measure gives us two coal-heavers, the one bending over the porter pot in which the other has fixed his proboscis. A Family of High Descent illustrates the best story in the volume. A wedded rural pair on their first night in London, are first alarmed by stories, and then by dreams of fire, and

• Smith and Elder, London. Pp. 316.

descending by a fire escape. A horse Breaker; backing the favourite to aheavy a-mount! is the irresistibly comic figure of an enormously fat, unhappy-like woman, in a small riding-hat and habit, smothering, lashing, and murdering the miserable animal, on which she is seated, both in a condition of most ludicrous distress. Long and Short Division shows a tall dandy moving along with an air of great complacency, pretending, and believing, he holds an umbrella over an unhappy, finely-dressed, short lady, suspended from his arm, on whom the umbrella showers down like cats and dogs. Quarles Emblems,-a party of boys and girls, cats and dogs, at fistycuffs, is a good engraved pun. Mrs. Bridges, an arch countenance, is amusing enough; and La Bell assemble! a group of children ga. thered round a fat bell-man reading a bill, is equally so. Skeleton Keys,—a skeleton formed entirely of keys, the head a padlock, is an odd extravaganza. The expression in the face of Dr. Stringer, “a Fiddle 'D 'D" is capital. An un-attached Major gives us a fat, gruff, artillery officer strutting on, his hands holding up the tails of his jacket, and his back turned to his poor lady sprawling on her back from an unsucessful attempt to cross a stile. "The Lily of the Valet" is a squab negress, full of mirth, singing roguishly to a spruce footman, who looks kindly down upon her. These are a few of Miss Sheridan's bon-bons. The literary part of the volume has no very close connexion with them; and is to be taken "for better for worse."

FRIENDSHIP'S OFFERING.—Though this Annual, which, we believe, is a favourite, has twelve embellishments, a few of them beautiful, and the worst of them pretty, its principal strength lies in its literary composition. The contributors in this department are among the most attractive of the current literary names of the day. Miss Mitford, Mr. Macaulay, and Mrs. Norton in the front ranks; and a reserve and main body stronger than the van; there are Hervey, the Howitts, Pringle, James Baillie Fraser, and a long list. The articles in prose and verse are so numerous and diversified in character, that we can only mention one or two,Cromwell's House, the Captive of Camalu, and, strange as the title is, the Bravo of Banff. This last is sure to be a favourite in the north of Scotland, and, we daresay, everywhere else. The heroine is a charming romantic creature; but Miss Thom for our money, as a genuine, kind, and true-hearted Banff lass, not a whit

Smith and Elder, London. Pp. 384

the less friendly and affectionate, when ut to the push, for a little harmless cuiosity, and the love of gossip, said to be unavoidable in towns under a certain rate

of population. There are many good, and some rich and rare things in FRIENDSHIP'S OFFERING.

HISTOIRE DE NAPOLEON BONAPARTE. A L'Usage de la jeunesse, et des Ecoles.

believes a truer theory of attraction, &c.
&c. Having communicated his discove-
ries to Lord Brougham, his Lordship
made no response; and Sir John Herschel
Hence Captain
has been equally remiss.
Forman's wrath.

LIVES OF THE TWELVE MODERN CESARS. By H. W. MONTAGUE. Napoleon is the first of this new line of His life is all that is yet published of the work. Who the other eleven are to be, whether the French Marshals, or the great modern Generals, we are left to guess. It is a neat little work, embellished with cuts by Branston, and traces Bonaparte from his cradle to his grave, noticing every thing remarkable in his career.

Cæsars. Par L. A. T. MORDACQUE.* -Another life of Napoleon, though in French, for the use of schools, is not a work which many English parents will be apt to select for the instruction of their children. The most improving part of Napoleon's history, his exile, and his sayings and doings in St. Helena, is skimmed over, and the close huddled up. Some of the more brilliant scenes of Napoleon's life are related with considerable animation; for the writer is a Frenchman, and has a Frenchman's admiration of his hero; yet he tells, that the military reign of Napoleon, from 1801 to 1815,"cost humanity five millions forty and three thousand lives!" The account of the battle of Waterloo shows an amusing struggle between the desire of being impartial, and the natural feelings of a Frenchman. The author, who does the justice which all Europe has done, to the amiable character of Josephine,+ and of cold Marie Louise, briefly says, "Elle y monta (the throne) en silence, elle en descendit de meme. On ne cite d'elle aucune action, aucune parole qui la rapelle aux Français." And his farther remarks are yet

more severe.

CAPTAIN FOR MAN'S LETTER TO LORD JOHN RUSSELL ON THE EXTRAORDINARY CONDUCT OF LORD BROUGHAM, &c. &c. &c.-Captain Forman has lost his temper; many a worthy man, even the Chancellor himself, has got into the same scrape. We think, moreover, that he is not a little unreasonable, in the manner of his late attacks, though he has not been over ceremoniously treated. Let him keep his temper; and, from all these noblemen, gentlemen, and knights philosophers, appeal to the public, in the plainest form of paper and print, and we warrant justice will be done to his discoveries; which, by the way, are not original, To our or, at least, not peculiar to him. readers it is proper to say, that Captain Forman meditates overturning the Newtonian system, and establishing what he

# Porquet and Cooper, London.

+ Save the Duchess of Abrantes, and a writer in the New Monthly of this month. November 1832.

NO. IX.-VOL. II.

A DICTIONARY OF DIET. By T. S. FORSYTH, Surgeon, Part I.+-This is something between a cookery book and a The first part compremedical one. hends, among other things, beef, beer, bread, butter, cheese, broth, butcher meat, &c. &c. It is calculated, from its plan, to be a useful family book; and though we are friends to the division of labour in practical science, medicine and cookery seem here to procced very amicably together. A portrait of the late Dr. Abernethy graces the beginning of the work.

A DICTIONARY OF THE FRENCH AND By M. LOUIS ENGLISH LANGUAGE. FENWICK DE POURQUET.-This is a handy, neat little volume, for the daily use of young persons learning the French language; and it may be found, in this view, of more utility to those who have only made a certain progress, than more ponIt seems accurate, derous dictionaries. and is accompanied by several useful tables, and by miscellaneous information, desirable to pupils and travellers. more important feature is the introduction of the new words created by the revolution, and now sanctioned by usage, and the omission of the impure or disgust. ing words which disgrace some of the voluminous older dictionaries.

A

ELLIS'S BRITISH TARIFF. Fourth Annual Edition.§-A useful Annual to mercantile and commercial people, and one which may give some information on affairs of national economy, revenue, &c. &c. To statists, to travellers and tou

Cremer, London.

+ Cremer, London.

↑ London.

Longman and Rees, London.

rists it will also be useful, by showing what they may fetch or carry openly, and what they must either smuggle or pay duty upon; what they may freely import or export; and what they will be tormented about at the Custom-house; how to proceed with their baggage; and how it is mercifully provided, that Paganini may claim his fiddle, that being his breadwinner; and how, according to the rank of the parties, (page 88,) oaths may either be exacted or passed from, at discretion, concerning certain articles, essential to elegance. N.B.-No lady is allowed to import, for private use, above a half pint of Eau de Cologne, or a pint of drinkable spirits; but turbots and lobsters may be landed without "the port entry or warrant." In short, besides being a serviceable guide, this book is a good running commentary on the wisdom of many of our extraordinary commercial regulations.

ANALYSIS OF THE ENGLISH, SCOTCH, AND IRISH REFORM BILLS. By JOHN GORTON. The title of this pamphlet fully explains its nature. It shews the boundaries, population, divisions, limits, and the number of ten-pound dwellings in every town and borough. It also contains forms of schedules for claims of registration; and also the other technicalities connected with the working of the new system of representation. Great pains appear to have been bestowed in making it complete and correct.

SHAKSPEARE, WITH 170 ILLUSTRATIONS. VALPY'S EDITION.*

After the Works of Scott, Byron, the Standard Novels, &c. &c. have appeared in a series of monthly volumes, we are glad to see SHAKSPEARE not for gotten. The first volume of a new, cheap edition, uniform with the new edition of Byron, is before us. To those who have no copy of Shakspeare, or to those who have but an indifferent one, we sincerely recommend this. It is cheap, and beautifully printed, in an open, clear type. The text is that of Malone's edition. The name of Mr A. J. Valpy is a guarantee for correctness. The illustrations, upon tinted paper, are from the plates of Boydell's Shakspeare; reduced in size, no doubt, but taken from one of the most splendid and expensive works

Chapman and Hall, London.

‡‡‡ ERRATA. In last month's Register of New Works, page 251, column 2d, for "efforts and intrigues of Lafayette," read "efforts and intrigues of Lafitte" and again, next sentence, for "attachment of Lafayette to the Duke," read "attachment of Lafitte to the Duke."

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NAVAL EVOLUTIONS-A MEMOIR OF SIR HOWARD DOUGLAS, Bart., with a Review and Refutation of Mr. Clerk of Eldin's claims, &c. &c."-So indifferent and selfish is the public to all that does not concern its own interests and amusements, immediate or relative, that we fear few, besides professional men, will now take much interest in this controversy. Every one must, however, sympathize with the spirit which leads the writer to defend the professional claims and reputation of his father. On the question of the real inventor of the manœuvre of breaking the enemy's line in sea-engagements, the Edinburgh Review rashly committed itself, attributing the discovery, on his own evidence, to Mr. Clerk. Much has since been said, and remains to be said, on both sides of the question, though the weight of evidence does incline to the claims of Sir Charles Douglas. It must, however, be noticed, that there is yet a third party, which does not appear at all in this controversy, who allege that this naval manœuvre was practised before either Mr. Clerk or Sir Charles Douglas were in existence, though never performed with such brilliancy, or decided effect, as in Rodney's victory. The first rude idea of this manœuvre of breaking the line may be seen in some of the desperate engagements of the Buccanneers against great odds.

MEMOIR AND CORRESPONDENCE OF THE LATE SIR JAMES EDWARD SMITH, M.D. Edited by LADY SMITH.+-This delightful work merits a fuller notice thav

Longman and Rees, London, + Boones, London,

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