1 NOVEMBER 1902, page 37

Some Books Of The Week.

[tinder this heading we notice such Books of the week as hers wat boss reserced for renew in other forms.] Suffolk in the Seventeenth Century. With Notes by Lord Francis......

A Whaleman's Wife. By Frank T. Bullen. (hodder And...

6s.)—We are inclined to doubt whether Mr. Bullen shows his gifts to the best advantage when he writes a novel. He has many qualifications. Fla knows the sea, for instance, and......

Jan Van Elselo. By Gilbert And Marion Coleridge....

Co. 6s.)—Mr. and Mrs. Coleridge take us to the romantic shores of sixteenth-century Holland in their novel, which has the further irresistible attraction of the frequent appear-......

The Traitors. By E. Phillips Oppenheim. (ward, Lock, And Co.

6s.)—" Arms and the man" are as much the subject of this novel as of the book noticed above. Mr. Oppenheim, however, chooses (under a thin disguise) one of the Balkan States as......

Peplographia Dublinensis. (macmillan And Co. 8s. 6d....

which bears this curious title—surely requiring some other explanation, at least for the English reader, than that it is borrowed from Varro—contains eight "Memorial......

The Anglican Episcopate And The American Colonies. By...

Crosse, Ph.D. (Longinans and Co. 10s. 6d.)--This is an elaborate discussion of a matter of some importance in political and ecclesiastical history. The Bishop of London......

The Manor Farm. By M. E. Francis. (longmans And Co.

68.) — Those wise or fortunate people who read " Fiander's Widow" will expect much from The Manor Farm, and will not be dis- sPpointed. The farm is an old manor-house, divided......

The Black Diamond Men. By William Futhey Gibbons....

Revell. 69.)—This is a "Tale of the Anthracite Valley," the place which has been so r. , utely disturbing the economical politics of the world during the past few weeks. A tale......