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The Subscription for the ensuing year is fixed at 4/6; it includes Nos 96, 97 and 98. Subscribers who pay One Guinea in advance will be supplied with the Magazine for five years, dating from the Term in which the payment is made.

Resident subscribers are requested to pay their Subscriptions to Mr E. Johnson, Bookseller, Trinity Street: cheques and postal orders should be made payable to The Treasurer of the Eagle Magazine.

Subscribers are requested to leave their addresses with Mr E. Johnson, and to give notice of any change; and also of any corrections in the printed list of Subscribers issued in December.

Contributions for the next number should be sent in at an early date to one of the Editors (Dr Donald MacAlister, Mr G. C. M. Smith, W. McDougall, L. Horton-Smith, J. H. B. Masterman, H. A. Merriman).

N.B.-Contributors of anonymous articles or letters will please send their names to one of the Editors who need not communicate them further.

Large-paper copies of the plate of the College Arms, forming the frontispiece to No 89, may be obtained by Subscribers at the reduced price of 10d on application to Mr Merry at the College Buttery.

The Editors will be glad to hear from any Subscriber who has a duplicate copy of No 78 or No 84 to dispose of.

The INDEX to the EAGLE (vos i-xv) is now ready, and may be had from Mr Merry at the College Buttery, price half-a-crown.

The Eagle

a Magazine supported by Members of
St John's College

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E. Johnson, Trinity Street

Printed by Metcalfe & Co. Limited, Rose Crescent

Volume XVII

1892

Number XCIX

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HE letters which follow form the third and last instalment of the correspondence between Bishop Carey of Exeter and Dr Gwynn relative to the building of our Library.

Salutem in Xro.

Sr. At length I have speech with my lo: Keeper about your Colledg buisynes. When I showed to his lop: the model of the library wch Mr Spell brought vnto me, making knowen to his lop: that we had waited often but never found opportunity to present the same to his lop: sooner. I did demonstrate it in all the particulars submitting the liking or disliking of it to his iudgment.

First the fashion of the chambers below was very well pleasing to him, saying that 4 would serve the purpose of his mynd and the 5th might be at the disposing of the Mr of the Colledg.

Secondly I mentioned the great window to be at the end, whereat no exception was taken, for I sayd that it would be an ornament & beauty to the roome, giving great light and that the inconveniency of the air from the river might easily be corrected then I showed the space of the library, both in length & bredth whereto his lop gave good allowance, holding it fitt that the bredth of one foote be added to the desks on ech side, & the midl walk be streitened so much lesse.

After that we came to the windowes the forme and fashion whereof was most doubted, I told his lop: that some men of YY

VOL. XVII.

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