David The Institution has now
completed
its issued.
Athenaeum - London - 1912a
Paris, Hachette
2 Tales of Mean Streets, by Arthur Morrison,
This little volume is concisely and luminously
Jakob (G. ), L'Illusion et la Désillusion dans le New Edition, 1/ net.
Methuen
written. Many, discouraged from the study
roman réaliste français, 3fr. 50. Paris, Jouve
2 Sharrow, by Baroness von Hutten, 6/
of philosophy at the outset by lack of precision
M. Jakob, in his interesting study, bases his
Hutchinson
and clarity in textbooks, will find here in
argument on Taine's theory of knowledge, and 2 Maurice : a Romance of a Welsh Coal Mine,
simple language a broad plan of the develop-
shows that reality is but a true hallucination by Joseph Keating, Bd.
Hutchinson
that is to say, what we term realism
ment of philosophy and the substance of the
in
2 Tarantella, by Edith Macvane, 6/
history of the great systems. In view of the
literature is for the most part reality presented
Hurst & Blackett
narrow limits of the book, M. Faguet is to be
through the medium of the disillusion of the 2 Saba Macdonald, by Rita, od.
congratulated on having covered a wide field
artist. The thesis is suggestive, and skilfully
Hurst & Blackett
handled.
in a suggestive manner.
3 A Son of the Immortals, by Louis Tracy, 6/
Mackenzie (w. ), Alle Fonte della Vita.
Truc (Gonzague), Monsieur de Nugbo, Philo-
Ward & Lock
Geneva, A. F. Formiggini
sophe, 3fr. 50.
Paris, Perrin
,10 The Woman who Tempted, by Gertrude
This book is too reminiscent of Anatole | Warden, 6/
Prolegomena to science and art, founded on
Ward & Lock
France's
a philosophy of nature. With six illustrations.
Histoire contemporaine' to please
The chapters consider such questions as
readers who know the original. M. de Nugbo
General Literature.
Biological Unity, Psychic and Teleological
claims to be a philosopher, but is never con- 1 Day Dreams of a Schoolmaster, by D'Arcy
Energy, the Moral Principle in Nature, and
vincing and often highly sententious. The
W. Thompson, in the Harrap Library, 2/8 net
the Omnipresence of Beauty.
writer has failed to make him either profound
Harrap
or original, though the style is good, and the
History and Biography.
1 Success Secrets, by 0. S. Marden, Cheap
book is in places amusing and naive.
Edition, 1/ net.
Fisher Unwin
Kalft (G. ), Geschiedenis der Nederlandsche
2 Macmillan's New Shilling Library : The
Letterkunde, Zevende Deel, 161, 50.
Renaissance, by Walter Pater, New Edition ;
Groningen, Wolters
The Story of the Guides, by Col. G. J. Young,
This is Vol. VII. of Prof. Kalft's' History of
husband, New Edition ; Eternal Hope, by Dean
the Literature of the Netherlands'; it includes
FORTHCOMING BOOKS.
Farrar, New Edition ; and Gardening for the
Book VII. ('The Literature of the Reign of
Ignorant, by Mrs. C. W. Earle and Miss Ethel
William I. '), and Book VIII. , that of modern APRIL
Theology.
Case, 1/ net each,
times, i. e. , from 1830 to the present day. The
4 Character and Religion, by the Rev. and
2 The Pocket Edition of the Works of
general plan of the work somewhat resembles
Robert Scott
Hon. Edward Lyttelton, 5/ net.
Charles and Mary Lamb : Vol. II. Elia and
Morley's English Literature. '
8 How a Modern Atheist Found God, by
the Last Essays of Elia, 5/
Methuen
Geography and Travel.
G. A. Ferguson.
Lindsey
Press
3 The Italians of To-day, by Richard Bagot,
8 The Church of To-morrow, by J. H.
2/6 net.
Halla ys (André), Touraine, Anjou, Maine, 5fr.
Mills & Boon
Paris, Perrin Crooker, D. D.
Lindsey Press
11 Cruikshank's Comic Almanack, Cheaper
Edition, 2 vols. , 5/ net each Chatto & Windus
Another delightful travel-book by M. Hallays,
Poetry and Drama.
equal in excellence to its predecessors. The
1 Mrs. Browning and her Poetry, by Kathleen
author does not limit himself to the beaten
E. Royds, 10d.
Harrap
path, but introduces us to many lesser-known
1 Scott and his Poetry, by A. E. Morgan, 10d.
NEXT MONTH'S MAGAZINES.
châteaux and towns. We note a fascinating
Harrap In The Scottish Historical Review Dr. Maitland
chapter on Solesmes.
2 Shakespeare (Tudor), The Comedy of
Thomson edits an unpublished Parliament roll
Philology.
Errors, edited by Prof. F. M. Padelford, 1/ net.
of 1344, containing a remarkable record of a
Kleine Texte für Vorlesungen und Uebungen,
Macmillan
trial for treason. Sir James Balfour Paul writes
herausgegeben von Hans Lietzmann.
History and Biography.
on the post-Reformation elder; Mr. A. 0. Curle
Bonn, Marcus & Weber 2 The New History: Essays illustrating the on surviving Northern superstition; and Dr.
We have received four more numbers of this Modern Historical Outlook, by Prof. James Etzel on Swedo-Scots families. Sir Á. Maxwell
excellent scries :-
Harvey Robinson, 6/6 net.
Macmillan continues his translation of the Lanercost Chro-
No. 83 presents ' Origenes, Eustathius von 11 My Memoirs, by Madame Steinheil, 10/6 net. nicle, and Dr. G. Neilson reviews Caithness
Antiochien, und Gregor von Nyssa über die
Eveleigh Nash'archæology.
## p. 366 (#280) ############################################
386
THE ATHENÆUM
No. 4405, MARCH 30, 1912
6
>
a
The Council have also established a PROF. L. G. KASTNER of the University
Professorship of the English Language, of Manchester is engaged upon an edition
Literary Gossip . in addition to the existing Chair of English of the “Poetical Works
Poetical Works of William
Language and Literature, and have ap- Drummond of Hawthornden,' which he
THE REPORT of the Director of the pointed to the new Professorship Mr. hopes may be published early next year
Department of Historical Research of F. W. Moorman, who has been Assistant by the University Press. One of the
the Carnegie Institution of Washington Professor of English Language and Litera- chief points of interest in Prof. Kastner's
for 1911 gives an interesting account of the ture in the University since 1904.
edition will be the rehabilitation of
progress of the descriptive lists of English
This month's issue of the Journal of he followed closely, both in omis-
Phillips, and the demonstration that
and other European archives in course of
preparation by various editors. It is the Royal Statistical Society contains, sions and additions, an early issue of the
now decided that Prof. C. M. Andrews's in addition to Mr. Sauerbeck's annual
Poems,' before that of 1616, sent out
* Guide to American materials in the article, two papers of great interest. One, privately by Drummond to a few intimate
Record Office shall be published in two by Mr. R. A. Macdonald, adduces privately by Drummond to a few intimate
friends. This edition, which appeared
volumes, and Vol. I. , comprising the earlier evidence to show that there is no essential without any date or place of publication,
State Papers, is in the press.
connexion between the accumulation of has been overlooked by former editors.
Vol. II. , dealing with departmental capital and the rate of interest, and that
the latter moves inversely as the rate of MR. MARMADUKE PICKTHALL's latest
papers, has been delayed by the alteration wages. Mr. T. T. Williams maintains novel, “Larkmeadow,' may be expected
of official references commented on in a
the thesis that the recent rise in com- in August. The scene is laid in a Suffolk
previous report. Besides this important
work, which ends with the year 1783, modity-prices has been associated with village, and the story will include some
the preparation of a further descriptive a rise in the rate of discount, which has derision of the limitations imposed on a
list of papers from 1783 to 1860 by other brought about the fall in Consols
. Mr. Parish Council.
Sauerbeck's article on ‘Prices in 1911'
experts is well advanced. At the same
MR. E. H. BLAKENEY, of the King's
time further Guides' to the American states that the index number for all School, Ely, will shortly issue his new
'
commodities last year was two points
materials in other European or American higher than in 1910, while articles of food volume of poems. The book has been
.
archives, which form part of the same
series, have appeared. We have more
were 10 per cent higher. The table of printed throughout by himself at his own
private press.
A limited number of
than once called attention to this great the rapidity of this upward movement, and of these only forty are for sale. The
quarterly movements of prices emphasizes
copies-sixty-five-have been struck off,
national work, which in point of organiza; for which the drought of last summer was
tion and historical method is unequalled
.
subscription price is five shillings; but
by that produced in the Archives des largely responsible
this will be raised after issue.
Missions of any other country.
MR. S. R. SCARGILL-BIRD, who recently
retired from the Secretaryship of the
COL. H. C. SURTEES AND MR. H. R.
We are requested by Dr. J. F. Jameson, Record Office after a service of over
LEIGHTON, who are bringing out “A
the Director of the above Depart- forty-five years, was, before he reached History of the Family of Surtees : its
ment, to ask if any private owners of MSS. that position, 'a familiar and popular Descents and Alliances,' will be pleased
dealing with debates in Parliament on figure in the public search rooms of the to receive any information, letters, &c. ,
American affairs before 1783 would favour Record Office as assistant and Super- likely to be of interest to the family,
him with a reference to them. For
intendent. During that time he compiled All communications should be addressed
some time past Dr. Jameson has been his Guide to the Public Records, which to them care of Mr. M. S. Dodds, pub-
engaged in collecting data for this subject, has now reached its third edition.
lisher, 61, Quayside, Newcastle - upon.
and he is coming to England next July
He is succeeded as Secretary by Mr. Tyne.
for the purpose of making further re-
searches. * Information addressed to him R. A. Roberts, who has been for the last
In his new story. The Common Touch,'
at the Carnegie Institution, Washington, Records and Secretary to the Historical & Elder about the middle of April
,
nine years an Assistant Keeper of the which will be published by Messrs. Smith
will be gratefully acknowledged.
&
Manuscripts Commission.
Mr. Austin Philips marks his belief in
THE ROYAL COMMISSION ON PUBLIC
PROF. GEORG BRANDES intends shortly hard-playing middle class. The action of
the sound instincts of the hard-working,
RECORDS is not likely to take any further
evidence before May, being now occupied to visit London for the purpose of giving the story centres in the post office of a
one or two lectures on Shakespeare.
with the preparation of Part I. of its
provincial town, where the heroine goes
Report, dealing with the Record MR. C. J. LONGMAN, at the recent as a clerk in search of “copy,” and finds
a
Office. A party of the Commissioners will annual meeting of the Booksellers’ Provi- a new outlook on life.
visit the Dutch archives at the beginning dent Institution, stated that during the
of next month under official guidance.
MESSRS. MACMILLAN & Co. will publish
past year nearly 1,4001. had been dis-
The Glasgow Herald comments on the tributed in relief, and that the income ) shortly, in their “ New Shilling Library,
longevity of members of the Edinburgh from investments now amounts to 1,2081. two books that have not before been
'
book - trade, noting that Mr.
David The Institution has now completed its issued. The first, entitled Gardening for
,is C.
Douglas (the publisher) is now 89, Mr. seventy-fifth year, the first meeting having Earle, author of that popular work
James Thin 88, and Mr. Andrew Elliot 82. taken place in February, 1837; and
*
Mr. Elliot is still alert and agile at 17, has 697 members, the largest number in Pot-pourri from a Surrey Garden, and
Mr. Elliot is still alert and agile at 17, its history. Great regret was expressed of David Livingstone,' by the Rev. C.
Miss Ethel Case. The second is a 'Life
Princes Street, whence, in 1817, first its history,
when Mr. Longman mentioned the retire-
issued Blackwood's Magazine. He has
been both bookseller and publisher. For ment, due to very serious ill-health, of Silvester Horne, M. P.
MR. EDWARD W. B. NICHOLSON, who
the past twenty years he has had in Mr. Awdry, of W. H. Smith & Son, who
progress a monumental work on Scottish has done so much as a trustee.
Fortun- died last week in his sixty - fourth
calotypes, with reprints from the original ately, he will be replaced by “one of year, had been since 1882 Librarian of
|
negatives of those by D. 0. Hill & the oldest and best friends of the Institu- the Bodleian, and previously Principal
Adamson of St. Andrews.
tion ”—Mr. Darton. Mr. Longman also Librarian and Superintendent of the
announced that arrangements had been London Institution. He was a man of
THE UNIVERSITY OF LEEDS have estab- made with the Stationers' Company to remarkable energy and versatility. A
lished a Professorship of Philosophy, and make their Hall the head-quarters of the keen and effective head of his great
have appointed to the Chair Mr. C. M. Institution, and that Mr. William Poulten, library, he found time for all sorts of
Gillespie, who has been Lecturer in the Secretary of the Publishers’ Associa- writing : Keltic researches, New Testa-
Philosophy in the Yorkshire College and tion, had agreed to become the Assistant ment and bibliographical studies, stories,
in the University since 1893.
Secretary.
poems, songs, and pamphlets.
6
>
## p. 367 (#281) ############################################
2
THE ATHENÆUM
4405, MARCH 30, 1912
367
csity
ction
Liam
- he
Tear
the
ner's
of
that
nis-
the
out
ate
cred
Eon,
cest
ted
olk
me
그d
we
8
em
een
of
eff
,
he
ut
2.
A
d
No. once saw that this check in his inocula- hand, become more warlike, and, advan-
SCIENCE
tions with old cultures would have an cing towards the bacilli, proceed to devour
important bearing on the prevention of them. The gradual destruction of the
disease. He began to make exact experi- bacilli can be seen to take place within
THE THEORY OF IMMUNITY.
ments as to the vaccinating effect of the bodies of the phagocytes.
these micro-organisms which had become The advocates of the humoral theory
DR. BURNET has written a book on innocuous. These researches led him to say that the phagocytes by themselves
.
Microbes and Toxins, containing the most the discovery of two great principles, cannot attack the bacilli unless the latter
recent knowledge on this subject. The namely, the attenuation of the virus, and are first made drowsy by the protective
volume has been prepared for the “ Biblio- the vaccinating property of attenuated substances. Metchnikoff does not deny
thèque de Philosophie Scientifique,” and micro-organisms ; for he also proved that, the importance of the protective sub-
Metchnikoff
, in the Introduction, points if a normal animal is vaccinated, first stances, but asserts that one of the chief
out the importance, at this stage in the with the innocuous virus, and subsequently of these substances (the complement) is
history of bacteriological inquiry, of with a poison which gradually increases enclosed in the phagocyte, and cannot
having a book which will set forth the in virulence, it will in due course become escape unless the cell-wall of the phagocyte
general principles on which our knowledge immune to a dose which would otherwise is damaged, thus allowing the complement
is based.
have proved fatal. These principles form to escape. He criticizes the experiment
Now it cannot be said that Dr. Burnet the foundation of our practice at the described above by saying that, in separat-
has succeeded in providing a clear exposi- present day.
ing the phagocyte cells from the blood,
tion of these principles. When
Pasteur, being a chemist, naturally the necessary manipulation probably
read the chapters on immunity, we gave a chemical explanation of the damages the cell-wall of the phagocyte,
feel that a great opportunity has been phenomenon of immunity. He thought and so allows some of the complement to
missed. It is a fact much to be deplored that the reason the bacillus of fowl-escape. His opponents, on the other
that the majority of scientific writers cholera failed to grow in the fowl vacci- hand, assert that the complement is
should be lacking in sense of style. nated against this disease was that the contained in the fluids of the blood, and
This defect is chiefly apparent amongst body of the fowl no longer contained the not in the phagocyte. We cannot enter
those who may be termed “specialists" : necessary foodstuffs for the development here into the details of this interesting
they appear to be so engrossed in the of the microbe.
controversy, but we remark in closing that
details of their experiments that they
the problem of immunity is still far
Later several observers noticed, in from being solved, but perceptibly nearer
fail to give the reader that continuity of
thought which is essential in fixing making, post-mortem examinations in
a solution than it was thirty years ago.
the attention, and the consequence is
cases of diphtheria, &c. , that the bacilli
that the reader's mind wanders, and he were present in the white corpuscles of
the blood, and the idea gained ground
becomes bored.
that these white cells conveyed the
In the first place, we are too conscious poison to distant parts of the body; but
OUR LIBRARY TABLE.
that the book is a translation. The
meaning in some places would, no doubt, these white cells were capable of digesting Conspicuous to the Naked Eye, for the Epoch
it was not until Metchnikoff proved that Catalogue of 9,842 Stars, or All Stars Very
be clearer in the original, and when we
the microbes (intra-cellular digestion), of 1900, by T. W. Backhouse (Sunderland,
compare it with the translation of and thus acted as protectors to the body Hills & Co. ), is a very carefully compiled
Metchnikoff's well-known work on 'Im- against disease, that the theory of phago for the purpose of the construction of a
catalogue of naked-eye stars, undertaken
munity' we are struck by the superiority cytosis took the field. This discovery star atlas suitable to the needs of meteor
of the latter.
proved that immunity is a function of observers. The catalogue is arranged in
Chemistry, under the guidance of cells, that is to say, a biological rather alphabetical order of constellations, and
Pasteur, invaded medicine, and began the than chemical phenomenon. The in order to attain uniformity throughout
revolution. When he set himself to battle between the phagocytes and the the northern and southern hemispheres it
study infectious diseases in their relation microbes can now be actually seen under
was decided to adopt the stellar magnitude
to micro-organisms, the idea of profiting the microscope.
6. 4 of the Harvard scale (which, as is usual
by their discovery and drawing from
nowadays, is here adopted as the standard
The next notable advance in our scale) as the lower limit of faintness which
them a weapon against infections soon knowledge was made by Roux who dis would ensure the inclusion of all objects
arose in his mind.
He studied Jenner's work on smallpox Behring discovered the antitoxin. Atten than the adopted limit are within the reach
covered the toxin of diphtheria while down to that limit. The author points out
that stars fully half a magnitude fainter
in the hope of finding some suggestions tion was now focussed on the fluid con-
which would put him in the right path, tents of the blood. An enormous amount
of keen eyesight, and regrets that material
and he induced his collaborators to seek of work has been done in this particular complete for both hemispheres, strictly
was not available for bringing the catalogue,
in their experiments some method of im- sphere, and substances which at present to the naked-eye limit. But as Ambronn's
munity for the animal organism against refuse to be analyzed have been isolated Sternverzeichniss, enthaltend alle Sterne
infective micro-organisms.
from the blood serum: they are col- bis zur 6. 5ten Grösse,' published a few years
It is a curious fact that chance seemed lectively termed the protective substances ago, contains only 7,796 stars, it will be
to help in the elucidation of this problem of the blood. Sir Almroth Wright and collating some 2,000 more objects, and in
seen that Mr. Backhouse has succeeded in
In the autumn of 1879 Pasteur and Prof. C. C. Douglas, in this country, this respect it must be conceded that he has
his collaborators returned from their have been the pioneers in this direction. achieved a really useful piece of work.
holidays, and began to resume their These protective substances, as is becoming It is, however, as a register of star mag-
experiments on fowl-cholera, when they daily more apparent, play a very important nitudes that this catalogue will be most
found to their great surprise that doses part in immunity. It can be demonstrated often consulted. The observed magnitudes
of the virus which had formerly killed the that if, for instance, typhoid bacilli and reduced to the standard) appear to have
been collated with care, and combined
fowls now had no effect upon them. phagocytes alone are placed under the with judgment, to form the adopted mag-
The virulent poison which had been microscope, the phagocytes do not attack nitudes, the catalogue furnishes
laid aside during the holiday had under the bacilli; but if to the specimen is to the observer of these lucid
gone some profound change. Pasteur at added some protective substance from a register to which high authority may
Microbes and Toxins. By Dr. Étienne the blood, the bacilli, which previously confidently be attached. The places of the
stars are given to tenths of a minute of
were very active, suddenly become less
Burnet, of the Pasteur Institute of Paris.
time in right ascension, and to minutes of
With a Preface by Élie Metchnikoff.
so, and the observer would say they
had become sleepy. A remarkable change for the epoch 1900 they are already out
of
arc in declination. As these places are
Translated from the French by Dr. Charles
Broquet and Dr. W. M. Scott. (Heine-
however, takes place in the attitude of date, and it is to be regretted that the
mann. )
the phagocytes, for they, on the other approximato values of the precessions have
a
and
stars
## p. 368 (#282) ############################################
368
THE ATHENÆUM
No. 4405, MARCH 30, 1912
not been given, as in this way the incon.
in the hydrogen employed. It appears to be an the excited B-ray is an entity, the direction of
venience might easily have been remedied exceedingly sensitive test for the presence of this which is nearly that of the y-ray exciting it.
by those using the catalogue for practical gasit la bubble of sulphuretted hydrogen is
(4)The chance of a B-ray making a y-ray is roughly
purposes. The following errata have been
and sulphur is deposited on the
glass walls: proportional to the atomic weight of the radiator,
noticed: P. xii, bottom line, for
“ 9858"
After this it is impossible to get rid of the glow provided the B-ray spends its range in the radiator.
read 9842; p. xv, line 24, for “ calula- by freezing.
tion” read calculation; p. xvii, line 25
Greenish-blue glows kindred to the above are
for “Oxeniensis read Oxoniensis ; p. XX,
GEOLOGICAL. —March 21. --Dr. Aubrey Strahan,
obtained if selenium or tellurium is introduced.
line 3 from bottom, for “Fondamental "
It is conjectured that sulphuretted hydrogen President, in the chair. —The following communi-
is decomposed by the discharge, that sulphur cations were read: 'On the Glacial Origin of
read Fundamental.
vapour emerges in a specially active state, and the Clay-with-Flints of Buckinghamshire, and
that it then unites with hydrogen, the blue glow
on a Former Course of the Thames,' by Dr.
accompanying this process.
R. L. Sherlock and Mr. A. H. Noble. The paper
Mr. ‘J. H. Poynting read a paper on the was founded on observations made during the
SOCIETIES.
Changes in the Dimensions of a Steel Wire when mapping of some 280 square miles on the 6-inch
BRITISH ACADEMY. —March 20. -The Master
Twisted, and on the Pressure of Distortional scale in Buckinghamshire, Berkshire, Hertford-
of Peterhouse, President, and subsequently Sir if the wire is previously straightened by heating
Waves in Steel. ' In this paper it was shown that shire, and Middlesex. The superficial deposits
are divided into clay-with-flints with the asso-
Arthur Evans, in the chair.
it under tension, the lengthening is, within errors
ciated gravelly drift, and the fluvioglacial gravels.
Mr. G. F. Hill read a paper on 'Some Pales-
of measurement, the same for all loads which There are, in addition, certain high-level gravels,
tinian Cults in the Græco-Roman Age. ' The could be applied, so that, as was supposed, the
older than any of these, and also the river-gravels
paper discussed some of the cults which are shown only function of the load in the earlier experi- and alluvium of the present streams, none of
by the local coinage and other evidence to have
ments is to straighten the wire. In all wires which deposits was dealt with in the paper. Evi-
prevailed in Palestine, especially in Samaritis and examined so far the lowering is symmetrical dence was given to show that the clay-with-flints
Judæa, in the Graeco-Roman age. Such are :
about a point a fraction of a turn, always in the and gravelly drift were formed by an ice-sheet
cults of purely Greek or Roman origin, sometimes counter-clockwise direction from the condition
which came from the north or north-west over
contaminated with local elements ; more definitely of no twist.
the Chiltern Hills. Only the clean upper layers
Syrian cults, such as that of Zeus Heliopolites ;
Messrs. H. S. Patterson, R. S. Cripps, and R. of ice surmounted the escarpment, and this
and the Philistine cults of Ascalon and Gaza.
Whytlaw-Gray communicated a paper on "The produced the clay-with-flints and gravelly drift
At Cæsarea and other cities the figure of a goddess Orthobaric Densities and Critical Constants of from the "head"” (Chalk and Eocene waste),
holding a human bust is to be interpreted as Xenon. '
which had been accumulating for ages. At that
Astarte (functioning as city. goddess) holding the Messrs. W. A. Harwood and J. E. Petavel time the Thames flowed, at the foot of the Eocene
bust of the Emperor. Nysa-Scythopolis and
sent a paper on Experimental Work on a New escarpment, from Bourne End through Beacons-
Raphia provide representations from the legend Standard of Light. The source of light consists field and Rickmansworth to Watford. The ice-
of the birth of Dionysus, episodes of which were
of a strip of platinum heated by an electric
sheet blocked the river-channel between Bourne
associated with these places. At Neapolis in
current. The thermopiles measure the radiation
End and Rickmansworth about the time of maxi-
Samaria there is a remarkable representation of passing through (a) à plate of black fluorspar, mum cold, and diverted the Thames southwards
the sacred mountain Gerizim, on which was the (b) a water-trough. The thermopiles are con-
at Bourne End. The river beyond Watford was
temple of Zeus Hypsistos : he is distinct from
nected in opposition. As the current through further blocked by the Eastern Drift, which has
Zeus Heliopolites, who was also worshipped at
Neapolis, and for whose consort the Neapolitans radiation increases more rapidly than the in- The section of the river between Rickmansworth
the strip is increased, the intensity of the luminous left boulder clay near Hatfield and at Finchley.
seem to have adopted a local modification of the tensity of the radiation of longer wave-length. and the Eastern Drift had its direction of drainage
Ephesian Artemis. The consort of Zeus Hyp- Therefore, for a given thickness of the absorbing reversed, and the water escaped at Rickmans.
sistos appears in a form resembling Hera. A
third goddess, standing on a lion, may be meant
nicdia and distance of the thermopiles, there worth by a new channel which became the Colne.
will be one definite temperature at which the On the melting of the ice, fluvioglacial gravels
for Atergatis. The cult of the Emisene mountain reading of a galvanometer in the thermopile
(plateau gravels of some writers) were left over
god Elagabal prevailed at Neapolis and Ælia
circuit will be zero. A long series of experiments a great area. These gravels are composed chiefly
Capitolina during the reign of Elagabalus. The showed that the light could be kept constant
of Eocene and Cretaceous materials derived from
Philistine cities seem to show no trace of Dagon.
But at Ascalon we find the marine Astarte as
withiv 0. 5 per cent when a constant temperature the gravelly drift, but also contain Bunter
was maintained by the above criterion. It was pebbles, which have been brought down the
city-goddess, accompanied by a dove; Derketo
intended to use the method to establish a second-
Thames. The Bunter pebbles are particularly
or Atergatis, with a crescent
on her head, holding ary standard of light which would not be subject abundant in a band between Bourne End and
a dove and standing on a Triton; and a deity,
to the periodic fluctuations of flame standards
Watford ; to the south only a few, presumably
probably male, whose name is given as Phanebalos
or the gradual decay on incandescent standards.
washed out of the band, are found. They are
(ineaning “ manifestation of Baal"): he is a war-
The investigation showed, bowever, that excep-
believed to show that the Thames in times of
deity, and his weapon is a harpé. Egyptian tional care and manipulative
skill were required to
flood returned to its former course. The floods
influence is seen in figures of Osiris and Isis, maintain the apparatus in good working order,
from the melting ice, added to the waters of the
which are, however, syrianized by association
and from a practical point of view this defect
Thames and Colne, produced, by denudation of
with lions. The coins of Gaza are in conformity probably outweighs the advantages gained.
the Eocene clays, the great flat through which
with the traditions of the connexion between Mr. İ. A. Crowther read a paper On the
the Thames now flows east of Maidenhead, and
Gaza and Minoan Crete-traditions which have
Distribution of the Scattered Röntgen Radiation.