Direots attention to the cruelties which showed a heroism that was the admiration
Harrap
are perpetrated in the procuring and manu- of her contemporaries.
Harrap
are perpetrated in the procuring and manu- of her contemporaries.
Athenaeum - London - 1912a
A dedication to The Dream-Spinners,'
Greening Mr. Phillpotts writes, naturally, much a successful Preface containing an interesting
Though this story has faults, notably better than the average purveyor of sensa- anecdote of the Prime Minister, and fourteen
those of exaggeration and a tendency to tion. We should not call this sort of story essays of very varying merit make up this
revive old jests, it is relieved and made his forte, but he is ingenious enough to slim volume. Mr. Carey is at his best when
readable by a fund of quiet and kindly while away the time of the traveller, and he he leaves the ephemera of politics, and
humour. We do not think that Jones, the spares us the preternaturally stupid persons wanders in the fruitful field of local history
little London clerk spending his conva- who often spoil this sort of fiction.
and topographical reminiscence. He writes
lescence on a Norfolk farm, could be such
of old Brighton and the South Coast with
a fool as the author would have us believo, Protheroe (Hope), His LORDSHIP'S BABY, 6/
and some of the other characters are some-
Century Press considerable charm and distinction. Some
what shadowy ; but the old farmer himself the title hardly leads one to expect, and demy.
A story full of strange intrigues which of the essays are reprinted from The Aca-
is delightfully drawn.
which, though improbable, holds the reader's Laurence (S. E. ), A NURSE'S LIFE IN WAR
Gissing (Algernon), THE TOP FARM, 6! interest. It deals with hereditary insanity AND PEACE, 5/
Smith & Elder
White & Co. in an old and noble family, a gruesome A generous endowment of humour and
The author fails to stimulate our interest cupboard skeleton,” an irregular descent, determination, noticeable even in the school.
in this incoherent story. We often find it murders, thunderstorms, and the arrival girl correspondence with which the book
difficult to imagine the motive underlying of a baby, the
heir. The old family butler opens, must have been needed to carry the
the actions of pers ing whose lack of vitality is the best-drawn of the characters; other author through the seemingly endless pano-
renders them ineffective. The climax - in wise they are mere puppets pushed to and rama of human suffering in hospitals at
the form of a double fatality—is obviously fro as the plot requires. Of these the earl's home and in the field abroad which she
arranged to further the matrimonial arrange. six-year-old daughter is the most unnatural describes. Reading her simple, unaffected
ments of the two chief characters. The book in her behaviour and conversation. Would narrative, and remembering that behind
for the most part deals with country life, any child of that age have the nerve to her outstanding example is a vast healing
and has some originality in conception. run away from her companions on her first army grappling, hourly with disease in
visit to å dark castle, and wake the echoes circumstances which have no glamour and
Horn (Kate), THE BRIDE OF LOVE, 6! with wild shrieks to frighten a detested scant reward, one is amazed and inspired by
Stanley Paul aunt! On the whole, the book is overlong, the passion for service which leads so many
We regret that we are unable to commend and insufficient care has gone to the writing to sacrifice their vigour and best energies
of it.
this book. In our opinion the author's
in the interests of mankind. The perfect
style and treatment do not justify her Richards (H. Grahame), LUCREZIA BORGIA'S nurse may be of those whose“ price is above
sensational melodrama or the length of it. ONE LOVE, 6/
Blackwood rubies," as suggested by Sir F. Treves in the
Those who like lurid descriptions of Preface; but this does not relieve the com-
Keays (H. A. Mitchell), THE MARRIAGE tortures and lingering deaths, passion, munity of the responsibility for providing
PORTION, 6/
Grant Richards poison, murder, fighting, and intrigue, will the rank and file with hire worthy of the
In spite of many pages of vivid writing, we discover here everything they desire. To worker, and better accommodation than the
cannot say that any clear-cut presentment of the critical the pigments may appear too ill-ventilated qubicle “small, dark, not a
the characters remains after a perusal of the lavishly laid on, and the style not always window to each, nor even a gas-jet to each ”
book. In seeking to transfer to the printed beyond reproach ; but for sheer vigour and
-which Mr. Sidney Holland found on
page the complexity of life the author has excitement the story will hold its own with recent visit to a provincial hospital.
obliterated defining lines; moreover her most.
Writing in letter form, Miss Laurence
manipulation of her puppets is too obvious. Tracy (Louis), A SON OF THE IMMORTALS, 6/
describes her experiences as a raw proba-
She would do well to remember that
tioner in a London hospital and work in
Ward & Lock various departments, a visit to Luxor with
thoughts daring in themselves iſ credited to
By a sudden turn of Fortune's wheel an
libertines lose for most people whatever they athletic young man, whose father is an
& private patient, and subsequent years in
have of good in them.
London. Then follow her South African
exiled monarch living in Paris, becomes King
Long's Sixpenny Cloth Novels : THE Eve Alexis III. of Kosnovia, and tries to restors experiences, and these will doubtless interest
the general reader most. Appointed, by a
OF ISTAR, by William Le Queux ; and order to that most disturbed little state. stroke of good fortune, as military sister
A WOMAN PERFECTED, by Richard There is plenty of incident and romance in in Princess Christian's Reserve, she toiled
Marsh.
the story, but we think that autocratic through a rough and anxious time in a
measures would have been more successful,
Macmillan's Sevenpenny Series :
both in effect and in interest, than were the hospital, the gift of one whose name is not
THE GIANT FISHER, by Mrs. Hubert hero's efforts for peace. The author often mentioned, fitted for 100 beds, but early
lapses into an archaic prose which adds number. No one will be surprised to find
Barclay.
accommodate double that
JOHN SILENCE, by Algernon Blackwood. nothing to the strength of the narrative, Miss Laurence adding her note to the chorus
For notice see Athen. , Oct. 3, 1908, p. 400.
and allows men of action to indulge in of lament that the sorrow and suffering
two-page monologues for which even their entailed by the war
THE LAW OF THE Bolo, by Stanley deeds cannot atone.
was increased by our
Portal Hyatt. For not. co see Athen. ,
want of preparation”; and again, The
Aug. 13, 1910, p. 179.
Turnbull (Clara), THE DAMSEL DARK, 6/ suffering would be enormously lessoned if we
Melrose were better organized in times of peace. "
THE STOLEN BACILLUS, by H. G. Wolls. By & plentiful use of such words as It would have been an additional attraction
For notice soe Athen. , Dec. 21, 1895, p. 868. "unked, branking, a-dither," mouldi- to a vivid narrative if a few photographs
warp," and "alauns” the author endeavours could have been included. Snapshots are
Mason (A. E. W. ), THE FOUR FEATHERS, to induce an old-world atmosphere ; but occasionally mentioned, but there is none,
7d. net.
Nelson we are unable to say that the general result unhappily, to immortalize either the con-
For notice seo Athen. , Nov. 15, 1902, p. 647. is a success.
valescent Scotchman who was left to exercise
8
66
## p. 413 (#313) ############################################
No. 4407, APRIL 13, 1912
THE ATHENÆUM
418
women.
OF
alone-his comrades preferring worsted-work, millinery” is slowly gaining ground, but
in spite of his contemptuous “They've all the public is less familiar with the tragedies
General
turnod blooming milliners ! - or a well- enacted to obtain fur and gloves. A sec-
known London surgeon grappling with a tional pamphlet such as this covers little Aoker (Paul), LES DEUX CAHIERS, 3fr. 50.
brokon washstand leg in the early unpacking ground, but the wholo question of the rights
Paris, Plon-Nourrit
days.
of animals may be studied under various M. Paul Acker, already well known in
Macmillan's Now Shilling Library :-
headings — horse - racing, abattoirs, lethal France as the author of Soldat Bornard,'
chambers, tortoiseshell, turkeys, tiny dogs, strikes a new note by the publication of this
ETERNAL HOPE, by the Rev. Fredericotter-hunting, &c. —in the publications of the book. It is a study, at once touching and
W. Farrar.
Society.
ironical, of the history of two generations of
GARDENING FOR THE IGNORANT, by
The mother, homely, cherishing her
FOREIGN
Mrs. C. W. Earle and Ethel Case.
illusions, and delighting in simple pleasures,
THE RENAISSANCE, by Walter Pater.
Tbeology.
is contrasted with the daughter, oager for
The appearance of Pater's work in a cheap Haby (Joseph), CHRISTUS: Manuel d'His- mentally alert. A quarter of a century
movement, liberty, and the open air, and
edition is particularly welcome.
toire des Religions. Paris, Beauchesne separates them, yet the difference
THE STORY OF THE GUIDES, by Col.
is
G. J. Younghusband.
This book has already reached a fourth
more than that of the advance of one
edition.
For notico see Athen. , June 13, 1908, p. 727.
It is an attempt on the part of a generation upon another, for it denotes the
group of Catholic theologians to give in a changed status of woman in France. The
Mill (John Stuart), THREE ESSAYS, 1/ net.
Christian sense
Frowde present state of knowledge in regard to analysis is skilful, and the emotion through-
.
Mill's essays on ‘Liberty, Representa- religions, not without reference to the relation
tive Government, and The Subjection of between the comparative study of religions Gaguier (G. ), LE CULTE SOLAIRE DANS LES
COIFFURES FÉMININES, Ifr. 50.
Women' in this neat and well - printed and Christianity. It is, as they say. &
edition are
an addition of real worth to
“ Manuel, visant à donner une touto pre-
Paris, Champion
This little brochure endeavours to demon-
popular reading. One of the World's Classics. mière initiation ”; yet it runs to over a
thousand pages, and deals, broadly; with strate the survival of solar worship and its
Quisque, THE SUPREMACY PUBLIC the religions of all the great peoples known symbolism among the "coiffures" of Brit-
OPINION (? PARLIAMENT) IN A Con to history, whether ancient or modern, with tany, Auvergne, and Savoy. The thesis
STITUTIONAL EMPIRE, 2/6 net.
the exception, however, of the ancient is by no means convincing, and the explana-
Century Press American civilization of Mexico and Peru. tory letterpress is confined to four and a half
The author in modestly describing his of the peoples of a lower culture it takes pages, while the evidence of the photog aphs
small volume as a stringing together of only African representatives.
is far from satisfactory. M. Gaguier's i heory,
plain platitudes concerning the present We can but congratulate M. Huby and interesting at first sight, is not commended
condition of our public life and of the his collaborators. Their work embodies by such slight and tentative treatm nt.
Constitution hardly does himself justice. the results of recent research, and is well Hugo (Victor), Les FEUILLES D'AUTOMNE,
His feasible suggestions as to extension of provided with bibliographies. It is of LES CHANTS DU CRÉPUSCULE ; and
usefulness, for instance, with regard to The necessity highly generalized, yet is not super- MARIE TUDOR, LA ESMERALDA, ANGELO,
London Gazette, are worth attention in a day ficial ; and both in conception and in the
Ifr. 25 net each.
Nelson
when we seem more intent on fashioning writing has the French graces of clarity,
Two more small and cheap editions of the
afresh than making proper use of what we brevity, and eloquence.
works of Victor Hugo, which Messrs. Nelson
already possess.
Bibliograpby.
are introducing in their entirety to the
Utopian (The), No. 3, Second Series, April
, Kircheisen (Frédéric M. ), BIBLIOGRAPHIE Savignon (André), FILLES DE LA PLUIE
English public.
6d. not.
A. C. Fifield
DU TEMPS DE NAPOLÉON COMPRENANT
The current issue of this magazine is almost L'HISTOIRE DES ÉTATS-UNIS: Vol. II.
(Scènes de la Vie Ouessantino), 3fr. 50
wholly filled by an appreciation of Giordano
Part I. Napoléon 1er et sa Famille
Paris, Grasset
Bruno, the Awakener," well written and Mémoires, Correspondances, Biographies,
This is an interesting collection of stories
sometimes eloquent, but, we think, pre- 8/ net.
Genova, Kircheisen ;
grouped together to form a central theme
senting its subject in no novel light.
London, Sampson Low peasant life in Ushant. They lack effective
unity, much of the force being in consequence
Pampblets.
toistory and Biograpby. lost. Where M. Savignon is simple and
Carfort (Comte le Nepvou de), Do Guay through ut there is too much insistenc on
direct, he is distinctly worth reading, but
Cohen (Israel), THE ZIONIST MOVEMENT,
TROÖIN, 3fr.
Paris, Champion
ITS AIM AND ACHIEVEMENTS, 2d.
The documents brought together in this their absence of a conventional standard.
the moral laxity of the peasantry, or rather
Speaight
small volume contribute little to our know- M. Savignon has, in our opinion, erred in
Here the aspirations, history, and organ- ledge of Troüin. Most renowned of the giving prominence to the under side of
ization of the Zionist movement are com- privateer captains of St. Malo, he afterwards Breton life, for, as certain chapters sbow,
pactly summarized, with further matter. on became lieutenant-general in the navy of he has both real dramatic force and feeling,
the adjustment of difficulties with the Louis XV. There is ample room for a good and a judicious power of description and
Ottoman Empire and the colonization of biography, and it is to be regretted that
Palestine. Wo doubt whether extensive the Comte de Carfort has not enlarged the
presentation.
results are to be expected from the movement, scope of his book beyond establishing the * Notices of other now books of the week will
the dispersal of the Jews among Christian birthplace and tomb of Troüin. It was be found under Science and Fine Ari.
and Moslem nations having benefited them written for the Antiquarian Society of St.
probably more than could any unification. Malo, and makes little but a local appeal.
We fail to conceive the denizens of Park Maugras (Gaston) et Croze-Lemercier (le
Lano or Maida Vale emigrating to the sandy
Comte P. de), DELPHINE DE SABRAN,
PORTHOOMING BOOKS,
wastes of the Holy Land.
MARQUISE DE CUSTINE, 7fr. 50.
APRIL
Theology.
Hungry Forties (The): Life under the Broad
Paris, Plon-Nourrit
Tax, with an Introduction by Mrs.
Few men have so catholic a knowledge of Rev. E. A. Litton, Now Editiou.
15 Introduction to Dogmatic Theology, by the
Rowert Scott
Cobdon Unwin, ld. Fisher Unwin eighteenth-century society in France as the 19 Canonical Hours (The), Third Edition, 5/
A reissue of a collection of letters and
authors, and there are few women better net.
Longmans
19 Bible Studies in Outline : the Purpose of
testimonies from contemporaries illustrating worth writing about than Delphine de
Sabran.
the poverty and starvation consequent upon
Queen of Roses," as Boufflers
the Fourth Gospel, by G. A. Gollock, paper covers,
1/ net ; cloth, 1/6 net.
Longmans
the price of food, before the abolition of the
named her, she seemed born to all the
27 Retreats for the People, by Charles Plater,
Corn Laws. We pointed out the striking felicities of this world, but know
much of S. J. , with a Preface by the Bishop of Salford,
character of the evidence in our notice of
its
We follow her with
5/ net.
Sands
Jan. 28, 1905,
diminished charm from the happy days of
27 St. Augustine of Hippo, being the Fourth
her youth-beautiful, adored, and strangely 3/6 net.
Volume of the Notre Dame Lives of the Saints,
Wade (Jossey), CRUELTIES IN DRESS, 2d.
Sands
romantic-down to the most dramatic and
MAY
Animals' Friend Society tragic hours of the Revolution, where she i Thoughts from Swedenborg, 1/6 net.
Direots attention to the cruelties which showed a heroism that was the admiration
Harrap
are perpetrated in the procuring and manu- of her contemporaries. Hor long and un-
13 Bonk of Prayers, by the late Rev. James
C. Struet.
Lindsey Press
facturing of sundry articles of apparel, happy liaison with Chateaubriand is also
31 Witnesses to the Historicity of Jesus, by
particularly of furs, feathers, and gloves. dealt with. The biography is agreeably Prof. Arthur Drewa, translated by Joseph McCabe,
Sympathy with the protest against “ murder I written, and its interest is wel sustained. 6/ not.
Watts
gorrows.
un-
p. 102.
## p. 414 (#314) ############################################
414
THE ATHENÆUM
No. 4407, APRIL 19, 1912
Watts
net.
an
MAY
1
APRIL
Philosophy.
IN their new volume, entitled 'Love
25 History of Ancient Philosophy, by A. W.
gilds the Scene, and Women guide the
Benn, New Edition, 1/ net.
Literary Gossip. Plot,' which will be published by Messrs.
Poetry and Drama.
Smith &_Elder next Tuesday, Mr.
19 Lyra Germanica, First Series, Reissue, 1/
MR. BUXTON FORMAN has sent to press and Mrs. Egerton Castle, whose novels
Longmans a new and revised edition of the Life during the last few years have been
History and Biography.
of Shelley' by Thomas Medwin, originally mostly of modern life and problems,
23 Cheiro's Memoirs, 7/6 net.
Rider
25 of
A History of the Royal Family of England, published in 1847. This is the book return to their earlier genre of an old-
by Francis Bagshawe, 2 vols. , 21/ net.
MAY.
mont as about to be published in 1869 the middle Georgian period. In Love
The , by
William Whiston, New Edition, 2 vols. ,6/ net eack (Letters of Edward John Trelawny,' | gilds the Scene,' indeed, will be met a
Chatto & Windus 1910, p. 221). The manuscript altera- number of the characters—now but a
APRIL
School-Books.
tions and corrections are very extensive ; few years older-who played their part
15 Grundzüge der Naturlehre, being
and it may be that the difficulty of de- in the Bath Comedy,
Introduction to Scientific German. by Dr. " J. G. ciphering Medwin's minute and indistinct Bellairs,' and French Nan. ' The tale
Wallentin, edited, with Notes and Vocabulary, writing kept the publisher from carrying told is of the same light-hearted, gallant
15 Mémoires d'un collégien. par A. Laurio
, out the intention to publish it. The humours of Mayfair and Bath, of the
edited, with Introduction, Notes," Exercises, and rifacimento has now been for several road and posting inns. The title is sug-
Vocabulary, by O. B. Super, 1/6 Harrap years in Mr. Forman's library awaiting
assisted by Mlle. Chapuzet, with Notes, Vocabu: fitting for the press, not to mention such
Contes de. Molière, by im. M. Daniels, treatment. It naturally required much gested by a, line from the Epilogue to
'
lary, and Exercises, 1/8
Harrap
Through all the drama, whether damned or not,
annotation as a not very exact nineteenth-
Love gilds the scene, and women guide the plot.
APRIL
Juvenile Literature.
century recorder's work would impose
15, Peter the Whaler, by W. H. G. Kingston, upon a twentieth-century editor.
A NEW novel by Mr. H. A. Hinkson
Boys' Library, 31d. net.
Collins
will shortly be published by Messrs.
15 Manor Pool Island, by Harold Avery,
Boys' Mr. Forman has found Medwin free Stephen Swift & Co. It is entitled 'The
Library, 3 d. net.
Collins
enough from intentional misrepresentation, Considine Luck,' and though the scene is
Science.
except in small matters of personal aggran- laid in Ireland of to-day, several of the
17 Wild Flowers as They Grow, Text by Mrs. dizement which were too tempting for most important characters are English,
Gi Clarke Nuttall, illustrated from photographi his vanity; and we are led to believe thus affording the writer an opportunity
19 Directions for a Practical Course in that Trelawny's final estimate of the man of contrasting the different points of view
Chemical Physiology, by W. Cramer, 2/ net. as “honest and consistent in his love" obtaining on each side of the Channel.
Longmans
19 Tho Nervous System, by J. D. Lickley, 61 of his poet cousin will be fully borne out
MR. HORACE ANNESLEY VACHELL'S
net.
Longmans by this new edition of the 'Life. ' It will
19 Tables and Diagrams of Steam, by L. S. be published by Mr. Henry Frowde.
novel 'Blinds Down : a Chronicle of
Marks and H. A. Davis, New Edition, 4/6 net.
Charminster,' which has been running its
Longmans
liguA Study of Splashes, by A. M. Worthighstan will presently inaugurate in the Pump will be published in volume form by Messrs:
THE MAYOR AND COUNCIL OF BATH serial course in The Cornhill Magazine,
À Manual of Surgical Treatment, by W. W. Room a memorial of Jane Austen, in the Smith & Elder on the 25th inst. It
Cheyne and F. F. Burghard, New Edition, Vol. It shape of a bronze bust and decorated deals with certain Mid-Victorian gentle-
.
fiction.
pedestal. The inscription sets forth that women who refused to look at any side
15 The Children of the New Forest, by Capt: novelist's brilliant sketches of the old gentility, and in whose household there
the city wishes to commemorate the of life that fell short of propriety and
15 Cerise, by Whyte Melville, 1/ net.
life and manners of Bath in ‘Northanger grew up a girl ignorant of the passions
Collins
15 Cynthia, by Leonard Merrick, 7d. bet.
Abbey and * Persuasion. ' There is of the outer world which were to over.
Collins already in the room a bust of Dickens, whelm her.
15 Jennifer Pontefracto, by Alice and Claude the pedestal being set off with bas-reliefs
Askew, 7d. net.
On Tuesday last Messrs. Maunsel & Co.
15 The Rommany Stone, by Sir Jas. H.
of Winkle's adventures at the Crescent opened their new premises at Oakley
Yoxall, Sixpenny Copyright Novels. Collins and elsewhere. Smollett and Fanny House, Bloomsbury Street. They aim at
Harum Scarum, by Esme Stuart, Sixpenny Burney may find places there later.
Copyright Novels.
expanding the scope of their book-produc-
16 Eugene Aram, by Lord Lytton, 4fd. net.
Collins
SIR COURTENAY İLBERT has been elected tion, hitherto confined to encouraging
16 Windsor Castle, by Harrison Ainsworth, a Vice-President of the London Library, authors of Irish nationality. The head
4jd. net.
Collins in place of the late Sir Frank Marzials.
office will still remain in Dublin. It is
15 The Fossicker, by Ernest Glanville, Copy-
right Novels, 31d. net.
to be hoped that they will succeed in
Collins MR. A. PERCEVAL GRAVES has been maintaining the high standard which has
16 The Dewpond, by Charles Marriott, 6!
Hurstiet Blackett elected President, and Dr. Sophie Bryant been the mark of their activities,
especially
18 Love gilds the Scene, and Women guide and Mr. T. W. Rolleston Vice-Presidents, in the modern Irish drama. Their lite-
the Plot, by Agnes and Egerton Castle, 6/ of the Irish Literary Society for the rary representative in London is to be
Smith & Elder
18 Dracula, by Bram Stoker, New Edition, year 1912–13.
Mr. Joseph Hore.
1/ net.
Rider
16. The Stooping Lady, and Fond Adventures,
MR. CECIL HARMSWORTH will preside
GIOVANNI PASCOLI, who has just passed
by Maurice Elewlett, New Editions, 2/ net each. at the twenty-second annual dinner of away, was in the first rank of living
Macmillan
17 Rogues in Arcady, by Sir Wm. Magnay, 6 the Readers' Pensions Committee, to be Italian poets. Like Carducci, whom he
Ward & Yock held at the Trocadero Restaurant next succeeded in his professorship at Bologna,
17 The Silver Medallion, by Percy J. Brebner, Saturday: Five Readers' Pensions have he was profoundly classical in his tastes,
61
18 The Governess, by Mrs. Alfred Hunt and already been established at a cost of and had twice won the Latin verse prize
Violet Hunt, with a Preface by Ford Madox over 2,5001. , and the dinner will in- at Amsterdam. Myricæ' and 'Poem-
Hueffer, 61
Chatto & Windus
24 Tower Hill Mystery, by A. Wilson-Barrett, augurate the sixth.
etti' contain most of the highly polished
6/
Ward & Lock
In addition to those whose names have minute descriptions of country life to
Blinds Down : a Chronic of Charminster,
by Horace Annesley Vachell, 6/ Smith & Elder already been announced, Countess rnim, which he principally owes his fame ;
25. The Mender, by Amy Le Feuvre, Leisure Lady Bell, Miss Marie Corelli, Baroness but the Giorno dei Morti,' inspired by
Hour Library, Bd.
von Hutten, Mrs. John Maxwell (Miss the tragic murder of his father, is his best-
General Literature.
Braddon), Mrs. Charles Perrin, and Mrs. known poem. His Hymns to Rome and
17 Cassell's New Dictionary of Cookery, Cornwallis West have promised to sup- Turin, with their translations into Latin
18 Fragments, collected by B. Allhusen and port Mr. Owen Seaman, who will preside hexameters, already mentioned in The
J. Fox Reeve, 3,6 det.
Longmans at the anniversary dinner of the Royal Atheneum, are more ambitious attempts ;
of the Laws of Heresy and Blasphemy, byvoeg! will propose the toast of ‘ Literature. '
25. Penalties upom. Opinions i or, Some Records Literary Fund on May 16th. Mr. Balfour but he will probably be remembered
rather for his earlier work.
patia Bradlaugh Bonner, Bd. net.
19
15
25
## p. 415 (#315) ############################################
No. 4407, APRIL 13, 1912
THE ATHENÆUM
415
are
THE
historical and horticultural, upon some of
the most delightful gardens in the world. CAPT. SCOTT IN THE ANTARCTIC.
SCIENCE
Gypsy Lore Society, Journal, Vol. IV. No. 5,
THE TERRA Nova, the relief ship to Capt.
and Vol. V. No. 3.
Liverpool, Gypsy Lore Society on April 1st, and brought news that Capt.
Scott's expedition, arrived at Akaroa (N. Z. )
NOTICES OF NEW BOOKS. Knight (A. E. ) and Step (E. ), HUTCHINSON's Scott has decided to remain another winter
POPULAR BOTANY : the Living Plant in the South. A full report has since been
(Notico in these column3 doos not proclude longer from Seed to Fruit, Part I. , 7d. net. publishod of the doings of the expedition,
roviow. )
This publication, which is to be completed which gives a complete account of its work
and the position of affairs on March 5th,
Bealby (J. T. ), How to MAKE AN ORCHARD in about eighteen parts, makes a good start.
IN BRITISH COLUMBIA, & Handbook for | It is well illustrated, and the results of modern
when the ship left the base at Cape Evans.
Beginners, 1/6 net. A. & C. Black | research, especially as revealed by the
In January, 1911, Capt. Scott proceeded
A serviceable manual for the novice, microscope, are exhibited in an interesting to lay down depots on the Great Barrier
omitting no indispensable information con- fashion. The editors might, we think, for his southern journey in the following
cerning cultivation.