21 I 
REVIEWS AND EXCHANGES. 
Field- Path Kambles, Series 31. S,roiid Part of the Eastbourne Series. Price is. 
net. And Field- Path Ka'ubles. Eastbourne Series. Price 2s. net. Hy 
Walker Miles. K. K. Taylor and Son. 
Nothing can be more in the spirit of the Selborne Society than the encournge- 
nient of the rational enjoyment of the country. Kastbourne is a fashionable 
watering-pl.ace, crowded in the season with visitors, many of whom find a difficulty 
in “killing time” : and yet, with numbers of pretty and interesting villages near 
by approached hy attr.active field-paths, one meets but few ramblers away from 
the town itself. Mr. Walker Miles has assuredly done his part and done it 
admirably, as usual, to remedy this neglected opportunity, by providing the needed 
itinerary, illustrated by numerous fascinating views. In the second part of the 
Series, of which we have previously noticed the first part, there are twenty-nine 
of these illustrations, including that of the unique pre-Reformation Clergy-house 
Pre-Reformation Clergy-house, Alfriston. 
at Alfriston, which the National Trust purchased, when in the last stage of 
dilapidation, for ten pounds. This view, by Messrs. R. E. Taylor and Son’s 
courtesy, we are able to reproduce here. Even with this ramble-book, however, 
few are likely to do much exploration round Eastbourne — few ladies especially — 
until the Parish, or Rural District Councils, do something to replace the disgrace- 
fully dangerous, or difficult stiles with which the neighbourhood abounds. 
The Eton College Hare Hunt. Three Prize Essays. By Philip Dickerson, 
Beatrice E. Kidd, and E. Crickmay. Humanitarian League. Price 6d. 
Certainly our friends of the Humanitarian League have taken the importunate 
widow for their exemplar, or that dropping water which weareth away even a 
stone. If persistence must win, they might have been expected ere this to have 
put an end to the utterly indefensible hare-hunting which the Eton boys are 
