THE CORSET CONTROVERSY must close with the letters of our correspondents printed in this number. At the end hereof, we are fain to betray our astonishment that so much could be said and would be said in favour of Tight-Lacing; and, it should be confessed, said so well. A handsome volume—with sketches of the kind of corset, stay, or compressor of whatever name that has been worn by Eve’s daughters of which any records or information can be found—is in the press on this subject. It possesses great interest for ladies, evidently, does this question of Lacing, in proof of which we have only to refer to the warm, almost passionate, utterances which we have printed in the Magazine during a great portion of the year.