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RUPTURES. BY ROYAL LETTERS PATENT.

WHITE'S MOC-MAIN LEVER TRUSS is

allowed by upwards of 500 Medical men to be the most effective invention in the curative treatment of HERNIA. The use of a steel spring, so often hurtful in its effects, is here avoided; a soft bandage being worn round the body, while the requisite resisting power is supplied by the MOC-MAIN PAD and PATENT LEVER fitting with so much ease and closeness that it cannot be detected, and may be worn during sleep. A descriptive circular may be had, and the Truss (which cannot fail to fit) forwarded by post on the circumference of the body, two inches below the hips, being sent to the Manufacturer.

MR. JOHN WHITE, 228, PICCADILLY, LONDON.
Price of a Single Truss, 168., 218., 26s. 6d., and 31s. 6d. Postage 1s.
Double Truss, 31s. 6d., 42s., and 52s. 6d. Postage 18. 8d.
An Umbilical Truss, 42s, and 52s. 6d. Postage 1s. 10d.
Pos Office orders payable to JOHN WHITE, Post Office, Piccadilly.

ELASTIC STOCKINGS, KNEE-CAPS, &c., for

LING of the LEGS, SPRAINS, &c. They are porous, light in texture, and inexpensive, and are drawn on like an ordinary stocking. Prices 43. 6d., 78. 6d., 10s., and 16s. each. Postage 6d.

JOHN WHITE, MANUFACTURER, 228, PICCADILLY, London.

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At 368., 428., 48s., and 608. Hochheimer, Marcobrunner, Rudesheimer, Steinberg, Liebfraumilch, 60s.; Johannisberger and Steinberger, 728., 848., to 120s.; Braunberger, Grunhausen, and Scharzberg. 488. to 848.; sparkling Moselle, 48s., 608., 668., 788.; very choice Champagne, 668., 78s.; fine old Sack, Malmsey, Frontignac, Vermuth, Constantia, Lachrymæ Christi, Imperial Tokay, and other rare wines. Fine old Pale Cognac Brandy, 60s. and 72s. per dozen. Foreign Liqueurs of every description.

On receipt of a Post Office order, or reference, any quantity will be forwarded immediately by

HEDGES & BUTLER,

LONDON: 155, REGENT STREET, W.

Brighton: 30, King's Road,

(Originally Established A.D. 1667.)

SPARKLING CHAMPAGNE, 36s. per doz.

And all the noted Brands at the lowest cash prices. Bordeaux, 158., 188., 248., 30s. 36s., to 988. per doz.; Chablis, 248.; Marsala, 24s. per doz.; Sherry, 248., 30s., 36s., 423., 488.. to 968. per doz.; Old Port, 24s., 30s., 368., 42s., to 1448. per doz.; Tarragona, 18s. per doz., the finest imported; Hock and Moselle, 24s., 30s., 368.. 48s. per doz.; Sparkling Hock and Moselle, 488, and 60s, per doz.; fine old Pale Brandy, 488., 60s. and 728. per doz. At DOTESIO'S Depot, 19, Swallow Street, Regent Street (successor to Ewart and Co., Wine Merchants to Her Majesty).

OLLOWAY'S PILLS.--For the cure of debility,RANT'S MORELLA CHERRY BRANDY,

HOLLOWAY'S

is so well known in every part of the world, and the cures performed by its use are so wonderful, that it now stands pre-eminent above all other remedies, more particularly for the cure of bilious and liver complaints, disorders of the stomach, dropsy, and debilitated constitution. In these diseases the beneficial effects of the Pills are so permanent that the whole system is renewed, the organs of digestion strengthened, and a free respiration promoted. They expel from the secretive organs and the circulation the morbid matter which produces inflammation, pain, fever, debility, and physical decay-thus annihilating, by their purifying properties, the virulence of the most painful and devastating diseases.

from the fine Kent Morella, besides being the most delicious Liqueur, is recommended by Medical Men of high standing in all cases of Weakness and for various Internal Disorders. It may be obtained through any Wine Merchant, or direct from T. GRANT, Distiller, Maidstone, at 42s. per dozen case.

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This day is published, price 16s., the First Volume of

MEMOIRS OF THE LIFE AND TIMES

OF

HENRY LORD BROUGHAM;

WRITTEN BY HIMSELF.

WITH AN ENGRAVING FROM THE PORTRAIT BY SIR THOMAS LAWRENCE,
TO BE COMPLETED IN THREE VOLUMES OCTAVO.

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Printed by GEORGE ANDREW SPOTTISWOODE, at 5, New Street Square, in the Parish of St. Bride, in the County of Middlesex ; and Published by WILLIAM GREIG SMITH, of 43, Wellington Street, Strand, in the said County.-Saturday, March 4, 1871.

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Now ready, small 8vo, 5s.

THER

TH vence.

W PRICE FOURPENCE.
Registered as a Newspaper.

Now ready, No. X. of

ILLUSTRATED REVIEW.-Price Three

CONTENTS:

Memoir and Portrait of the late T. W. ROBERTSON,

LEADING ARTICLES.
The Fortification of London.
Death in the Coal-Scuttle.
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Little Low Bushes.

Harold Erle.

Life and Poems of the Barones

Nairne (illustrated).

Our Soldiers.

Moral Heroism.

Men and Women of the English
Reformation.

The Life and Speeches of Charles Chronicles of the Castle of Amel

Dickens.

The Life Guardsman.

Beethoven: a Memoir.

Wonderful Stories from Northern

Lands (2 Illustrations).

My Schoolboy Friends.
Ierne.

Puck on Pegasus (3 Illustrations).

roy. Meletæ.

Metamorphoses of Publius Ovi

dius Naso.

Life and Times of the Rev. John
Wesley.

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Literary Gossip.

ORIGINAL PORTRAIT AND TWELVE SPECIMEN

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All Letters for the Editor and Books for Review, to be sent to Mr. S. R. TOWNSHEND MAYER, 25, Norfolk Street, Strand, London, W.C.

N.B. No. 11 will be Published on 15th of March, with 10 Illustrations, and will contain a Memoir and Portrait of ROBERT BROWNING. London: HOULSTON & SONS, 65, Paternoster Row, E.C., and all Booksellers, Newsagents, and Railway Bookstalls.

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SHUT UP IN PARIS, By Nathan Sheppard,

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THE POEMS and FRAGMENTS of CATUL HISTORY of the PRINCES DE CONDÉ

LUS. Translated in the Metres of the Original. By ROBINSON
ELLIS, M.A., Fellow of Trinity College, Oxford, Professor of Latin in
University College, London.

JOHN MURRAY, Albemarle Street.

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OLEMAN'S No. LXXIX. CATALOGUE OF THE OUTBREAK of the GREAT FRENCH

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CLARENDON PRESS PUBLICATIONS.

This day, in 4 vols. 8vo, price 31. 68.

PROFESSOR JOWETT'S

TRANSLATION of the DIALOGUES of PLATO, With Analyses and Introductions. This day, in 4 vols. 8vo, price 21. 18s.

WORKS OF GEORGE BERKELEY, D.D., formerly Bishop of Cloyne. Including many of his Writings hitherto unpublished. With Prefaces and Annotations by ARCHIBALD C. FRASER. M.A., Professor of Logic and Metaphysics in the University of Edinburgh. Works, 3 vols. 42s.; Life and Lettera, 16s.

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ELWIN'S EDITION OF POPE.

Now ready, with Portrait, Vols. I. and II. (to be continued alternate months), 8vo, 10s. 6d. each,

THE WORKS OF ALEXANDER POPE.

A NEW EDITION.

Collected in part by the late RIGHT HON. JOHN WILSON CROKER. With Introductions and Notes by the REV. WHITWELL ELWIN.. *** The NEXT VOLUME, to be published on MARCH 31st, will contain VOL. I. of the CORRESPONDENCE.

"The first characteristics which must strike everyone who takes in hand this volume is the pains and industry which have been laid out upon it. It is true Mr. Elwin has had twenty years at least to mature his work. But the result shows, not merely has he taken his time, but that he has brought to his work a spirit of thoroughness. Mr. Dilke's articles in the Athenæum' were very useful in this respect, and Mr. Elwin has not only availed himself of the results, but has adhered to his method. In 150 introductory pages he examines the circumstances attending the publication of Pope's correspondence. These circumstances were shrouded, not by the mist of time, but by the complicated artifices of Pope himself in such a tangled web of mystery as it must have taken long hours of patience to penetrate and unravel."—Saturday Review. "If the admirers of Pope have had their patience sorely tried while will confess that that patience has its reward in a collection of the poet's writings which promises to leave little scope for the labours of future commentators or future editors. While Mr. Elwin has availed himself freely and judiciously of the labours of preceding editors, he has with great advantage to the students of Pope brought his own critical powers to bear as much upon their judgments as upon the poet's writings, so that his comments on the commentators are far from the least instructive portion of the volume."-Notes and Queries.

Edited by waiting for this long promised edition of his works, few of them but

W. D. CHRISTIE, M.A. With Notes and Glossary. Containing:
Stanzas on the Death of Oliver Cromwell-Astræn Redux-Annus
Mirabilis-Absalom and Achitophel-Religio Laici-The Hind and
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[This day.

"Mr. Elwin has determined to discharge his duties as editor in a thorough and unflinching spirit. We have long been looking for the result of his labours, and the present instalment warrants a confident expectation that the edition when completed will be the one work to which the student will have to turn for a satisfactory knowledge of

XENOPHON: Selections adapted from, with Eng- Pope. Mr. Elwin has armed himself for the enterprise by long and

lish Notes and Maps. By J. SURTEES PHILLPOTTS, B.C.L., Assistant Master in Rugby School. Part I. Extra feap. 8vo, 38. 6d. [This day. OXFORD: printed at the CLARENDON PRESS, and published by MACMILLAN & CO., LONDON, Publishers to the University.

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MACMILLAN & CO., LONDON.

careful preparation, and will we believe succeed in producing a really standard edition of Pope."-Guardian.

"An important part of our duty is to make mention of the general completeness and excellence of the notes in this volume. Without giving way to the mania of annotation by which some editors have been afflicted, Mr. Elwin leaves no allusion unexplained, identifies almost every real character, and keeps the reader from missing the point of all the epigrams which Pope sprinkles over the surface of his poems. This is no slight service to such an author."-Spectator.

"It would be premature perhaps to judge decisively of Mr. Elwin's editorial capacity from a single volume of an extensive publication; but since in this preliminary volume, the mystery of the correspondence, which is by far the most difficult of all the Pope mysteries, is elaborately discussed, and, to our thinking, satisfactorily explained, we are justified in anticipating that the work as it progresses will fulfil the promise of its opening pages."—Athenæum.

"One of the most valuable contributions to English literary history which has ever appeared. The materials were collected in the first instance by Mr. Croker, and the editor has had access to Lord Oxford's papers, preserved at Longleat, which throw much light on Pope's character and conduct. The Caryll papers have also been most useful; and the services which Mr. Dilke rendered the editor, not only in reference to these papers, which he had so carefully annotated, but also by the advice and assistance which he afforded, are gratefully acknowledged."-John Bull.

"We are glad to welcome this new edition of a great English classic, which promises to do credit both to the editor and publisher. Mr. Elwin has been engaged upon the work for many years, and we know of no one better qualified to do justice to it than the former editor of the Quarterly Review.'"-Pall Mall Gazetle.

JOHN MURRAY, Albemarle Street.

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REPLIES:-"Fraser's Magazine," &c., 211-Mount Calvary, 215 Meaning of "Fog." 216 The Block-Books, 217 The Advent Hymn: Helmsley," Ib.- The Baltimore and "Old Mortality" Patersons, 218- Pennytersan (or Pennytersal), Cunstone, &c., 219-Alexander Jamieson, M.A.-Wife of George Neville, Lord Latimer-"The Hearts of Men which fondly," &c. -" Phi-Beta-Kappa " Society of Boston - Descendants of Charles Brandon, Duke of Suffolk - Patronymic Prefix "Mac"- Bows and Curtseys-"The Hob in the Well" - Samplers - The Print of Guido's Aurora - Origin of the Surname Cunningham-"God made Man," &c., 219. Notes on Books, &c.

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"It was no unusual thing in the history of this country, but far otherwise, for persons of the Royal House to bestow their hand upon British subjects."

The Premier made this statement in support of his motion to provide a dowry for the Princess Louise, "in view of her approaching marriage," with her Majesty's consent, to the son of a Scottish peer. It has become, therefore, an interesting question what precedents there are in English history of the daughters and sisters of the ing sovereign marrying British subjects with the royal assent. I have only been able to find three such instances-all of them in the thirteenth century, and all of them with personages of great power and wealth-who accepted the condition of receiving no dowries, and of resettling their vast estates with reversion to the Crown, to the exclusion of their own kindred. All the other marriages of English princesses to husbands not royal were either to foreigners of royal descent and connections, like Ingelram de Coucy, or were contracted without the leave of the sovereign. The daughters of Edward IV. cannot be quoted as an exception, for they were married after the fall of their dynasty, and after they had ceased to be regarded as princesses of the reigning House.

The first of these three marriages with the King's consent is that of Eleanor, the youngest daughter of King John, to William Mareschall, Earl of Pembroke. Her husband was the first subject in the realm, and his father had lately been the Regent of England; but Henry III. thought it necessary to apologise for consenting to such a match, and his letter to his proctors at Rome is still extant, and runs as follows, in a translation slightly abbreviated:

"Since there are some people perhaps who, by suggestion to the Lord Pope and the Cardinals, will try to put an evil construction on what has lately been done by us on the counsel of our magnates and lieges, we have undertaken to explain the whole course of the affair to put you more on your guard in refuting their insinuations. "Know then, that when the Bishop of Norwich was Legate in England, the Earl Marshal was still in possession of the royal castles of Marlborough and Ludyershall, and was proposing to take to wife the sister of Earl Robert de Brus, and there were also other magnates in England who were trying to draw him astray from us by alliances to our wrong. The question, therefore, of giving him one of our sisters was handled before the Lord Legate and our Justiciary and other magnates; for it was feared that, if the Earl Marshal married the sister of the Earl de Brus, this foreign alliance would give too free an ingress into England to foreigners, especially when Richard Marshall, the Earl's brother, held all his castles and honour in Normandy; and moreover, the illfeeling of those who were trying to draw away the Earl's heart from us was a subject of apprehension. Whereas, if we gave him one of our sisters, the said castles would be restored to us, which was a matter of great importance, and other magnates would be induced by his example to give up the castles which they held. Considering then the premises, and our tender age and the state of the realm, one of our sisters was by the authority of the Legate and the counsel of the magnates granted to the Earl Marshal on the terms that he gave his pledge to marry her, if it so pleased us and the magnates of the realm. Our Justiciary pledged himself to this concession to the Marshal, if the magnates consented; and the faithfully promised to use all diligence to get such conLegate and Justiciary, and the others who were present, sent. The said castles were then restored into the hands of the Legate on condition that, if the contract was not fulfilled within a certain period, which has long passed,

they should be restored to the Marshal without difficulty. reign-magnates, and particularly to the Earl of Chester, who had just come home from the Holy Land, the Earl loudly approved of it, and the others consented without a single dissentient. Afterwards, however, when certain quarrels ing, as will perhaps be said on their behalf in the Court had grown up, there were some who disapproved, assertat Rome, that we had no treasure of more value than the marriage of ourself and our sisters; and that, therefore, our sisters should be so placed in marriage as to give us a great alliance in foreign parts. Thus the business remained long uncompleted. But when the Earl Marshal had lately obtained an apostolic mandate, addressed to my lords of Canterbury and Salisbury, that they should either absolve him from his obligation to marry our sister or should see the contract fulfilled, the Marshal insisted that one of the two courses should be taken forthwith, as he refused to wait any shal, who was a man of great power both in England longer for a wife. It was now feared that the Marand Ireland, should take to wife the sister of the Earl de

When all this was intimated soon afterwards to the other

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