Anne Caldwell (Marsh), an English authoress, born at Lindley Wood, Staffordshire, near the close of the last century, died there in October. 1874. About the year 1820 she was married to Arthur Cuthbert Marsh, a London banker, who died in 1849. In 1858, upon the death of her brother, author of a " Treatise on the Law of Limitation," she succeeded to the family estates, and assumed as an additional surname that of her own family, being styled Anne Marsh-Caldwell of Lindley Wood. Her first work, "Two Old Men's Tales," was published in 1834. Others followed in rapid succession, two or three sometimes appearing in a single year, the last in 1857. They are: "Tales of the Woods and Fields," "Triumphs of Time," "Mount Sorel," "Aubrey.""The Admiral's Daughter," "Emilia Wyndham," "Father Darey," "The Protestant reformation in France," "Norman's Bridge" 'Angela," -Lady Evelyn," "Mordaunt Hall!" "Lettice Arnold." "The Wilmingtons," "Time the Avenger," " Uavenseliffe," " Castle Avon," "Ilie Song of Poland, chanted before the battle of Hastings" (translated from the Nor-man French), -The Heiress of Hau-hton," "Evelyn Marston," and "The Rose of Ash-urst." Most of these works have been republished m America. Her elder sister married a son of William Roseoe, author of "The Life of Lorenzo de' Medici," and a younger sister was the first wife of Sir Henry Holland.