December, 1901.
Telegrams:
'Scholarly, London.'
37 Bedford Street,
Strand, London.
Demy 8vo., with Photogravure Portrait, 16s.
THIRD IMPRESSION.
'These "Links with the Past" are well worth reading, for not only do they introduce you to many agreeable personalities, but they illumine in unexpected quarters a past that is fast vanishing beyond the reach of personal recollections.'—Morning Post.
'Few books of its kind that have lately appeared have been so entertaining and so full of interest as this, which, while it only professes to offer passing glimpses of bygone days, is a far more trustworthy and vivid record of social life during the greater part of the last century than many works of greater pretensions.'—World.
'Mrs. Bagot has had all the advantages which a long life and the best society give to the memoir writer. Add to these an excellent memory, keen perceptions, and a decided gift of expression, and we have all the materials for a most pleasant pot-pourri.'—Times.
'Every one who appreciates a volume of well-bred political and social gossip ought to read Mrs. Bagot's "Links with the Past."'—Standard.
'Rich and suggestive as this entertaining book is, it is clear that the author is not merely a keen observer of life and manners, but that she has enjoyed opportunities of the social kind that do not fall to many.'—Westminster Gazette.
DEAN OF DURHAM, 1869-1894.
Edited by his Widow, KATHARINE LAKE.
One volume, 8vo., with Photogravure Portrait, 16s.
At the time of his death in 1897, the late Dean of Durham was engagedupon his Reminiscences, but they were unfortunately left in a veryfragmentary and incomplete condition. Mrs. Lake has, however, put theMSS. in order, with the co-operation of Canon Rawlinson, of Canterbury,and supplemented it with such additional materials as were in herpossession, including a selection from the Dean's full and variedcorrespondence.
Dean Lake was a Fellow and Tutor of Balliol during the height of theOxford Movement, and was afterwards a member of the famous RoyalCommission on Education, which may be said to have laid the foundationfor all subsequent legislation on the subject. He was on intimate termswith the leading men in the English Church during an eventful period ofits history, but, though a strong Churchman, he was a thorough man ofthe world, of broad views and wide culture. Mrs. Lake has been permittedto publish letters to her husband from his numerous friends, includingArch-bishop Tait, Dean Church, Dean Stanley, Mr. Gladstone, CanonLiddon, Dr. Pusey, Lord Halifax, and others—letters that not only addconsiderably to our knowledge of those distinguished characters, butcontain many valuable comments upon large questions of permanentinterest.
LATELY CAPTA