"It is seldom indeed that we find history so written,—in a style at once vigorous, perspicuous, and picturesque. The author's heart is thoroughly with his subject; and he exhibits, ever and anon, flashes of the old Scottish spirit, which we are glad to believe has not decayed from the land."—Blackwood's Magazine.


LAYS OF THE SCOTTISH CAVALIERS, AND OTHER POEMS. By William Edmonstoune Aytoun, Professor of Rhetoric in the University of Edinburgh. Third Edition. With an APPENDIX, containing Examination of Statements in Macaulay's "History of England," relative to Grahame of Claverhouse. In fcp. octavo, Price 9s.

"Finer ballads than these, we are bold to say, are not to be found in the language."—The Times.

"A volume of verse which shows that Scotland has yet a poet. Full of the true fire, it now stirs and swells like a trumpet note—now sinks in cadences sad and wild as the wail of a Highland dirge."—Quarterly Review.


THE NEW STATISTICAL ACCOUNT OF SCOTLAND. In Fifteen large Volumes octavo, Price 16l. 10s.

The Counties may be had separately.


William Blackwood and Sons, Edinburgh, and 37. Paternoster Row, London.