156 



NOTES AXD QUERIES. 



[Aug. 25. 1855. 



members : but. on the other band, as the seat of the parent 

 society. The Society of Antiquaries, some doubt may 

 arise as to the necessity for any special Society to under- 

 take such investigations, _ ... 



But while some of our antiquaries are thus indulging m 

 instructive and health-giving wanderings among the 

 different nooks and corners of these islands, in which 

 various objects of historical interest are to be found, one 

 of them, Mr. A. H. Rhind, has from his quiet study put 

 forth, in a little pamphlet entitled British Antiquities; 

 their' Present Treatment and their Real Claims, a paper 

 read by him before the Society of Antiquaries of Scotland, 

 " with the view of furnishing some additional means for 

 directing more general attention to the subjects discussed, 

 and to the remedial measures of whatever nature which 

 are so essential, if British Archaeology is ever to attain to 

 fall vigour, and yield the results which under favourable 

 circumstances we have a right to expect from it." Of 

 course it is not within the limits of this notice to bring 

 under the attention of our readers the various topics 

 touched upon bv Mr. Rhind — his exposure of the sys- 

 tematic neglect by the Trustees of the British Museum of 

 our national antiquities, even when such offers as that of 

 the Faussett Collection are made to them ; his advocacy 

 of the establishment of special collections in London, 

 Edinburgh, and Dublin; his remarks on the superintend- 

 ing care of national monuments by resident proprietors ; 

 his proposals for the amendment of the law of treasure 

 trove. But the book is small, and low priced ; and while 

 it will take up but little room in the antiquary's carpet 

 bag, it will serve him well to wile away an evening when 

 taking his ease at his inn, after a long day's wanderings 

 among those hallowed and time-honoured relics which he 

 so loves to contemplate. 



Mr. Parker, of Oxford, has just published, as a com- 

 panion to his Glnssarri of Architecture, a Vocabularn of 

 Architecture, Enqlish- German and German- English. Use- 

 ful as such a work must obviously be, when our antiqua- 

 ries are turning their attention so earnestly and so bene- 

 ficially to the labours of their German brethren, this little 

 pamphlet is made yet more useful, by having prefixed as 

 by way of preface, a condensed translation of a few valu- 

 able pages bv Lubke, being a Preparatory Introduction to 

 a History of Church Architecture. 



Rhrtees' History op Durham. Vol. I. 

 Robson's British Herald. 4to. Vol. III. 

 Arch.9!oi,oo.a. Vols. III. IV. Vlir. 



Hodgson's History of NoRiauMBERtAND. Fart 2. Vol. III. and Part 3. 

 Vol. Ill , small pai)er. 



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Thb Race. 1766. 



Lieighton's L/iFE, by Jerment. 



The Opinio.vs op Sir Robert Peel expressed ix rARLiAMBNi and 



IN PoBLic. By W. T. Haly of the Parliamentary Galleries. 

 Baxter's T<ipe, by Orme. 2 Vols. Svo. 

 Wesley's Poems. 



KiCHARDSONlANA. 1776. 



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Tracts for the Times. Nos. 68, 69, 70. 



Wanted by W. Batclvdler, Bookseller, Dover. 



Bingham's Antiquities of the Christian Church. First Volume of 



8to. Edition. Ijondon, 1822. .^ 



IfiMBOD. By the Hon. Algernon Herbert. Part 1. of Vol. TV. 



Wanted by Henningham <J- HoUis, b. Mount Street, Grosvenor Scmare. 



Jamibso.n's EoiNBoann Philosophical Journal. A complete set. 

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No. 304.] 



The London Mosrum of Politics, Miscellanies, and Literature, 



4 Vols. Svo. 1769. 1770. 

 The Key to the Ddnciad. 1728. 



Ditto, 2nd Edition. >728. 



Collection op all the Remarkible and Personal Passaoes in The 



Briton, North Briton, and Auditor. 1766, 

 General Cockburn's Dissertation on Hannibal's Passage over the 



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 Thb Hibernian Magazine, or Compendium or Entertaining Know- 



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Wanted by W. J. Tlioms, 25. Holywell Street. Millbank, Westminster. 



Rbtnaro thk Fox. Translated by S. Naylor. Square Svo. 1844. 

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Ardley's New Collection of Voyages and Travels. 4 Vols. 4to. 

 1745. 



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A Country Bookworm. Your suggestion for the publication of a List 

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