Though
culties, he discusses James's character and either to whitewash his characters or to throw he was hardly an “intellectual,” his humour,
thought without becoming uncritical, or lapsing them into a sensational perspective.
culties, he discusses James's character and either to whitewash his characters or to throw he was hardly an “intellectual,” his humour,
thought without becoming uncritical, or lapsing them into a sensational perspective.
Athenaeum - London - 1912a
There
Garrard's, 1721-1911, Crown Jewellers and Gold-
is the liquid, melting strain, melancholy and
smiths during Six Reigns and in Three Centuries;
fugitive as a dying wind; the rampant, Cory-
with some Account of the Original Seat of their
bantic ditty, whose rhythm marches to the
Business in the Haymarket and their New
waving of pennons and the beating of drums ;
Home in Albemarle Street and Grafton Street,
and, lastly, the catalogue of jewels of exotic
5/ net.
unguents, such as ambergis,” and musical
Messrs. Garrard have issued an attractive
instruments, such as the sackbut. " The
little history of their long-established firm,
vital sap has long been squeezed out of these
enlivened by interesting digressions about old
harmonies, and they are as conventionalized
London, and adorned by plans and illustra-
as the barrel-organ tune.
tions. More of the old business houses might Bayley (Stanhope), Anima Fanciulla (The Maiden
well gather and print their records in the same
Soul), 1/ net.
handy shape.
The smooth, invertebrate idylls before us,
Journal of Roman Studies, Vol. I. Part I. , 1911, 15/
though free from bad taste, are none the less
The first number of this Journal has an significant of the insidious plausibility of such
array of fine scholars which promises well for productions. They exhale a faint, scented
the future of the Society for the Promotion of
mist of subdued ecstasy, which by its very
Roman Studies. It should be as valuable to
nature suffocates vitality, and even when
classical students its Hellenic compeer:
compared with the vague atmospheric splendour
We are glad to see Prof. A. von Domaszewski
Fine Art and Archæology.
Briggs (R. A. ), Pompeian Decorations, 25/ net.
A reproduction of the mural decorations at
Pompeii by the three-colour process, which is
less costly than lithography. The decorations
are frequently drawn to scale, and their ex•
quisite colouring is transferred with as much
accuracy as possible. The pencil drawings,
reproduced by the half-tone process, are less
perfect, but the coloured frieze traceries
are striking in shading and proportion. The
variety and originality of the designs are
eloquent of the imagination which worked upon
them.
Cox (J. Charles), Cornwall, 2/6 net.
Dr. Cox apologizes in his Preface for the
stringent condensation necessary from con-
siderations of space, and it is occasionally a
strain on the reader, as in such an expression as
“ saint subjects. ". The book a learned and
conscientious guide, which may be trusted
to give all details of importance, and embodies
the results of a ripe judgment in church archi-
tecture. One of the volumes on County
Churches.
Cox (Kenyon), The Classic Point of View :
Critical Study of Paintings, 6/
of Maeterlinck's art is as a chimera to the real
and Dr. Salomon Reinach as contributors,
thing. The volume is one of the Vigo Cabinet
besides English authorities like Dr. Warde
Series.
Fowler. There are seven original articles, as
Cocks (Lucy F. ), Daffodils and Lyrics, 2/6 net.
well as some important reviews. The print and
We have turned page after page of this
illustrations are worthy of the scheme, the
collection of verses in the hope of finding a poem
plates at the end being admirable.
-but without success.
Reid (John A. ), Building Construction and Archi-
Currey (C. ), Now and Then; or, a Present from
tectural Drawing, 4/ net.
the Past, 6d.
Mr. Reid has obtained his knowledge of
A paper booklet of rhymed couplets, with
architecture from sound practical experience,
illustrations, aiming at the facetious in pre-
and the diagrams he sends us are constructed
historic social life. The idea is not new, and is
not on the lines of academic formulæ, but
not well carried out.
from the point of view of erecting actual build- Furst (Herbert E. A. ), Songs of Town and Country.
ings. A small pamphlet is included among
There is more town than country in Mr.
the drawing sheets as an explanatory com-
Furst's poems. We respect him more for pure
mentary. The author is an alumnus of the efflorescence of temperament than for its
Glasgow School of Art.
expression in metrical form. He possesses
Seager (Richard B. ), Explorations in the Island
what may be designated the piebald spirit,
of Mochlos.
scanning the world as men have made it
The time is ripe, in the light of accumulated
through human, angelic, and demoniac eyes.
excavation, for a connected history of pre-
These ingredients he blends with considerable
Hellenic civilization, particularly, that of the
success. His rhythm displays uncertainty,
Minoan dynasty. Mr. Seager's investigations
and he indulges in grotesque experiment. , Mr.
in 1908 at Mochlos, off the coast of Crete,
Furst follows on the lines of the great pantheist
embodied in this volume, are a welcome addi-
Whitman and his disciple Edward Carpenter.
tion to our knowledge of the subject, and another Galsworthy (John), The Pigeon, a Fantasy in
incentive for the penning of a fascinating book.
Three Acts, 1/6 net.
His work makes no pretensions beyond cata-
We dealt with the dramatized version of this
loguing his explorations. It is issued by the play in last week's Athenæum. There are no
American School of Classical Studies at Athens. essential divergences between the acted and
Sibree (Rev. James), Our English Cathedrals :
printed texts.
their `Architectural Beauties and Character: Hudson (William Henry), Milton and his Poetry, 1/
istics and their Historical Associations Popularly Mr. Hudson has produced a readable account
Described, 2 vols. , 5/ net each.
of Milton's life, together with a selection from
Two volumes which can only be cha- his poems. The little book will be useful to
racterized as a collection of handbooks, each young students, but would have been even
on a cathedral. To the vast bulk of such lite- better if the author had refrained from bestow-
rature already in existence they add little ing injurious adjectives upon the Stuart kings.
or nothing. The author apparently tries to To call James I. " that foolish and contemptible
steer between the Scylla of the book which monarch merely in passing distracts the
goes into detailed elaboration about cathedrals, reader's attention from the matter in hand, and
and the Charybdis of the guide-book, which is needlessly offensive.
epitomizes salient features. He has only James I. of England, New Poems, from a Hitherto
ultimately succeeded in furnishing scraps of Unpublished Manuscript (Add. 24195) in the
information calculated to please those tra- British Museum, edited with Introduction and
vellers who scurry through places of anti- Notes by Allan F. Westcott, 6/6 net.
quarian and historical interest in the modern More than half of the fifty-seven poems and
style.
all the prose contained in the MS. referred to
Stearns (Frank Preston), The Midsummer of have not been hitherto published. They are
Italian Art, 6/ net.
here presented in their entirety, microscopically
This volume deals with the culminating edited and annotated. But the book is too
achievement of the Italian Renaissance and long for the value of James I. 's poetic pro-
the four great figureheads of the period-
duction. Many of the pages in the introduction
Michelangelo, Raphael, Leonardo da Vinci,
are irrelevant. The notes, though efficient,
and Correggio. There is an appendix on betray a similar lack of proportion. Such
Morelli, Rubens, and the Aphrodite of Melos.
superabundant scholarship is a check rather
Unfortunately, though the criticism shows than an incentive to study.
perspicuity and spirit, the reproductions are
mediocre. Nor is there a bibliography.
Mayne (Rutherford), The Drone, and Other Plays.
For notice see p. 172.
Stein (M. Aurel), Ruins of Desert Cathay : Per- National Federation of Class Teachers, edited
sonal Narrative of Explorations in Central
by W. B. Steer, 6d. net.
Asia and Westernmost China, 2 vols.
A small anthology written by members of
An intimate and absorbing record of Dr.
the National Federation of Class Teachers. It
Stein's archeological and geographical ex. displays a deal of aspiration and some genuine
plorations while travelling in Central Asia
feeling with it, but, unfortunately, the results
for the Indian Government between 1906 and
are in no wise superior to the average achieve-
1908. The valleys of the Indo-Afghan border; ment of minor verse.
the snow-capped peaks of the Hindukush; Osmaston (F. P. B. ), The Future of Poetry.
the broad Oxus ; Khotan and the great desert
Mr. Osmaston's dissertation contains some
to the ancient wall of China; the Kun-lun
clever, though not new reflections on the nature
range, south of Khotan, and the solitary
and functions of poetry. His thought is
plateaus of Tibet-of all these almost inacces-
decidedly immature, nor can the fact be hidden
sible regions and the remains of their civiliza-
by a suave juggling with great names, a bland
tions, the author gives a fascinating picture. assumption of authority, somewhat nebulous
For the ancient historian his researches will
if closely examined, and preciosity of phrase.
be invaluable. Among other things he dis- His thesis, ramifying through an intricate
covered the most western portion of the great variety of argument, does not appear to us to
wall of the Chinese Empire.
lead to any perceptible goal. But with some
net.
The book presents views definite in character,
and is very interesting and erudite, though
inclined to be harshly dogmatic concerning
modern painting. The reproductions are good,
but their selection seems somewhat indis-
criminate.
De Hooch (1629-c. 1677) and Vermeer (1632-
1675), The Masterpieces of, 6d. net.
Dr. Hofstede de Groot's 'Catalogue of Dutch
Painters 'has served as the model for this paper-
covered booklet. It contains sixty reproduc-
tions on a small scale of photographs from the
original paintings, and embodies the painters'
characteristic work. The publishers deserve
commendation for their enterprise in attempting
to cover the entire field of classic painting up
to 1800. They hope to be able to publish
twelve volumes yearly. This is No. 46 of
Gowans's Art Books.
Dickens, Characters from : a Portfolio of 20 Van-
dyck Gravures from the Drawings by F. G.
Lewin, with an Introduction by B. W. Matz,
3/6 net.
For notice see p. 151.
Egypt Exploration Fund, Thirty-First Memoir :
Pre-Dynastic Cemetery at El Mahasna, by
Edward R. Ayrton and W. L. 8. Loat.
The printed result of excavations begun in
November, 1908, upon the ancient site of
Abydos. The editors eschew controversial
questions, and confine themselves to a statement
of what their explorations unearthed. The
cemetery graves are representative of the whole
pre-dynastic period to the embryonic brick-
а
## p. 160 (#136) ############################################
160
THE ATHENÆ UM
No. 4398, FEB. 10, 1912
:
exceptions he is in the line of wise thinking. receiving another, differing in no essentials Moorhouse (E. Hallam), The Story of Lady
With less self-consciousness, he should write from its predecessors, is not, we fear, alleviated Hamilton, 2/6 net.
excellently.
by the author's laboured efforts after piquancy. The author has already written one book on
Shakespeare, Coriolanus, edited by Stuart P. Resolved to outdo the pageantry of other writers, Lady Hamilton. We cannot see the necessity
Sherman.
he heads his chapters, The Cloudy Dawn, for this one, which is of the brief, popular order,
The Tudor Edition. This neat little edition The Sultry Noon, The Angry Sunset,' and with coloured reproductions of some famous
has comments by American scholars. Prof. Night. '
pictures.
Sherman's work is sound, though we think Chancellor (E. Beresford), Annals of the Strand, Scotsman in Canada (The): Vol. 1. Eastern
his introduction rather stodgy in expression. 7/6 net.
Canada, including Nova Scotia, Prince Edward
The notes and glossary are to the point, but A painstaking and pleasant, but somewhat Island, New Brunswick, Quebec, and Ontario,
too brief, we think, here and there, to give verbose work. With such a subject, labour
sufficient aid. The adding of derivations would
by Wilfred Campbell ; and Vol. II. Western
and love are not enough. The method adopted
have fixed unfamiliar words in the memory.
Canada, including Manitoba, Saskatchewan,
takes the district piecemeal-streets, churches,
Winbolt (S. E. ), Spenser and his Poetry, 1/
Alberta, British Columbia, and Portions of
theatres, &c. , and describes them historically.
Mr. Winbolt's study of Spenser's life is better
old Rupert's Land and the Indian Territories,
Readers are, in consequence, in every chapter by George Bryce.
suited for senior than for junior classes, though carried from century to century, and not all
the selections from The Faery Queene
An able work dealing with the influence of
the amusing anecdotes related can prevent their Scottish life and character in the principal
might well be acceptable to very young readers. thinking of the Strand merely as the street cities of Canada. The immigration of the
A little more elucidation of Spenser's un- that runs from Temple Bar to Charing Cross, Scotch into the country played a large part in
sympathetic-not to say inhuman-attitude
instead of a pathway from the Middle Ages to
towards the natives of Ireland seems needed, if
moulding its religious, educational, and political
our own times.
a true view of his character is to be given.
conditions, and strongly affected the destinies
Chesterton (Cecil), The Story of Nell Gwyn, of the national life. The book lays much
Philosophy.
2/6 net.
stress on the prominence of the Ulster Scots-
Nell Gwyn's memory has certainly not been man. There are lists of the founders and
Boutroux (Émile), William James, 3/6
allowed to languish in obscurity. In contra-
pioneers of the settlements.
If all James's admirers were as discreet as distinction to the majority of other women Slattery Charles Lewis), Alexander Viets Gris-
M. Boutroux, pragmatism would make more of ill repute resuscitated by our latter-day wold Allen, 1941-1908, 7/6 net.
converts in England. The book is as clear and chroniclers, she at least had charm, and was not The biography of a celebrated religious
vigorous as its subject; and if, in our view, disagreeably venal. Mr. Chesterton, of whom teacher rather than theologian, who possessed
the author makes too light of certain diffi- we had expected better things, does not disdain as many secular as doctrinal attributes.
Though
culties, he discusses James's character and either to whitewash his characters or to throw he was hardly an “intellectual,” his humour,
thought without becoming uncritical, or lapsing them into a sensational perspective.
tolerance, magnetism, and forensic ability made
into panegyric. The translation is adequate, Dickens as Editor : being Letters written by him him an appropriate subject for a biography,
and is by Archibald and Barbara Henderson.
to William Henry Wills, his Sub-Editor, but scarcely, we think, of such length ag
Colville (W. J. ), Creative Thought : being Essays
selected and edited by R. C. Lehmann, 12/6 net.
the one before us. It is adequately, if prosaic-
in the Art of Self-Unfoldment, 3/6 net.
For notice see p. 151.
ally written, and apt to wander into barren and
Mr. Colville covers a wide range of nebulous
irrelevant minutiæ.
speculation. He venerates astrology; mental | Fletcher (C. R. L. ), The Making of Western
healing, the human aura, and polarity are his
Europe : Vol. I. The Dark Ages, 300-1000 A. D. , Stevenson (R. L. ), Records of a Family of Engi-
stock-in-trade; and he speaks of Longfellow
7/6 net.
neers, 6/
as “ Columbia's representative bard. "
As a popular historian Mr. Fletcher has The contents of this volume, now published
Cooke (Harold P. ), Maurice the Philosopher,
already gained a notoriety not altogether in the excellent and familiar buckram binding,
2/6 net.
enviable. His political prejudices too often will not be new to readers of the expensive
make his English history read like a party
editions of Stevenson.
The dialogue is well suited for philosophy
It begins with The
by its power of suggestion and incompatibility
pamphlet. In the present work he is out of the Surname of Stevenson,' a paper modified by
with dogmatism. But the example of Plato is
reach of temptation, and the result is a clear a few foot-notes to which no name is attached,
dangerous. Mr, Cooke has caught his manner
and trustworthy narrative of a period scantily but which are due, we believe, to Sir Sidney
only in the form of his sentences, and for his
treated by English writers.
Colvin. The ancestors are distinguished for
literary grace he substitutes preciosity of Great Roll of the Pipe for the Twenty-Ninth
their work on lighthouses and a dry and severe
phrase. The good, happiness, and love are Year of the Reign of King Henry II. , A. D. 1182-
piety, the papers which Stevenson worked on
1183, now First Printed from the Original in
his themes, treated with care, if without much
being often monuments of misdirected
the Custody of the Master of the Rolls under the
originality. Dr. F. C. S. Schiller contributes
literary energy. '
His delicate art made the
most
Direction of the Council of the Pipe Roll Society.
an introduction.
of unpromising material. Pp. 100
Kelly (M. ), Hegel's Charlatanism Exposed, 2/6 net. The present volume embodies the Pipe Roll
to 229 are occupied with the account by his
Major Kelly's thesis is to justify Schopenhauer for the twenty-ninth year of the reign of King
grandfather of operations at the Bell Rock
in calling Hegel a charlatan. He dislikes pro-
Henry II. , collated with the Chancellor's
We wonder why the Bibliographical Note'
fessors in general, as experts supporting estab- Roll for the same year. It is printed in extenso,
which in the Edinburgh Edition explains the
lished doctrines for material ends, and Prof. and there are some pages of introduction by
genesis of the volume has not been used here.
Isanoff of Cornell University in particular, as a Mr. J. H. Round, who exhibits his usual erudi- Trevelyan (Sir George Otto), George III. and
supporter of Hegel. There is more vehemence
tion.
Charles Fox, the Concluding Part of the Ame-
than profundity in his thought, and he makes History: a Quarterly Magazine for the Student rican Revolution, Vol. I. , 7/6 net.
for us no serious impression on Hegel, while and the Expert, No. 1, January, 1/ net.
The book is a completion of the author's
his abrupt style obscures the course of his argu-
An interesting first issue, with its three main Early History of Charles James Fox, pub-
ment.
subjects skilfully diversified. Mr. Kingsford's lished thirty-one years ago, also a continuation
article on 'John Stow and London Life in the of his ‘ History of the American Revolution. '
History and Biography.
Reign of Elizabeth' contains some discursive Sir George writes with leisurely care, and his
Angell (James Burrill), Reminiscences, 5/ net. gossip illuminating to a student of Elizabethan books are well worth waiting for, being excel-
A modest autobiography of a man whose
manners. Prof. Hearnshaw's The Place of
lent in style and mature in judgment.
importance has not radiated beyond the circle
History in Education' errs from excess of
of his own activities. Prof. Angell served an
caution and respect to precedent and tradition.
apprenticeship in civil engineering, and ful-
We fail to see why Prof. Muir should make so
Bibliography.
filled ambassadorial functions in China and
rigid a demarcation between history and geo-
Book-Prices Current, Vol. XXVI. Part
graphy in discussing the relations of the two.
I. ,
the Ottoman Empire. He was a member of the
25/6 annually.
International Commission formed to adjust Hunt (Mary Leland), Thomas Dekker : a Study,
the fishery differences between the United 5/6 net.
An excellent record, which by this time has
States and Canada in 1887, and became Presi-
established its position.
This American monograph deals somewhat
dent of Vermont and later of Michigan Uni- ponderously with one of the wittiest and most
Duff (E. Gordon), The English Provincial Printers,
versity. His career bas been actuated by lovable of figures in Elizabethan literature,
Stationers, and Bookbinders to 1557, 4/ net.
sanity and probity, but the more salient and The wealth of annotation, allusion, and textual
For notice see p. 169.
shining qualities of autobiography are not his. criticism tends to obscure the meaning of the Gray (George J. ), Index to the Contents of the
Archer (Frank), An Actor's Notebooks : being man both to his contemporaries and to us. Cole Manuscripts in the British Museum, 15/ net.
some Memories, Friendships, Criticisms, and We are told everything about Dekker's writings, Made from the transcript of G. A. Matthew
Experiences, 7/6 net.
except what, as a self-revelation, they actually of Cambridge, who drew up a copy of this list.
There is a great quantity of interesting mate-
It should be very useful, as the Mss. supply
rial in this book, although much of it is at Ketkar (Shridhar V. ), An Essay on Hinduism, valuable information upon the town, county,
second hand. In the course of a long career its Formation and Future : illustrating the and University of Cambridge. The D. N. B. "
Mr. Archer has come in contact with a multitude Laws of Social Evolution as reflected in the has an extensive notice of Cole, who was an
of leaders in the literary and dramatic worlds, History of the Formation of Hindu Community.
eager archæologist.
and, in disposing of his accumulated stores of A concise study of the development of Hindu Standard Books, Vol. III.
recollections, he generally manages to avoid society, written with mature knowledge and Wigan Public Libraries Quarterly Record, Oct. -
drifting into that fragmentary anecdotage so intimacy. In no spirit of cavil we suggest Dec. , 1911.
frequently indulged in by autobiographers. that the author has failed to correlate and
We have found the references to Joseph Knight apportion to their limitations of space the
and P. B. Marston of special interest.
theories and material he has accumulated.
Education.
Atlay (J. B. ), The Life of the Right Rev. Ernest Religion, the caste system, the secularization Graves (F. P. ), Great Educators of Three Cen-
Roland Wilberforce, First Bishop of Newcastle-
of politics, tradition, and a system of philo- turies, 5/ net.
on-Tyne, and afterwards Bishop of Chichester, sophic evolution wind in and through each Mr. Graves sketches in a clear and readable
10/6 net.
other like a tangled skein. The value and form the position of some great names in
For notice see p. 154. 5454
suggestiveness of the author's remarks lose education, from Bacon to Herbert Spencer. We
Bickley (Francis), The Story of Marie Antoinette,
their edge and pertinency in this confusion. do not quarrel with his choice in treating
2/6 net.
most fully of Rousseau, Pestalozzi, and Froebel,
interesting, particularly his remarks as to the but we think he makes too much of Milton's
of the unhappy Queen of France, guillotined cosmopolitan and unifying trend of civilization. influence without indicating the impractica-
in the heyday of her beauty, and smothered in The work forms the second volume of the bility of his gigantic curriculum. A useful
voluminous memoirs ever since. Our satiety at author's History of Caste in India.
list of books is appended to each chapter.
:
were.
The author writes a garrulous, florid narrative Interspeculations as to progress are extremely
## p. 161 (#137) ############################################
No. 4398, FEB. 10, 1912
161
THE ATHENÆUM
men.
Kerschensteiner (Dr. Georg), Education for James (George Wharton), The Wonders of the in some way the nature of the contention. . . .
Citizenship, translated by A. J. Pressland.
Colorado Desert (Southern California): its However great the difficulty of this procedure,
This is the first English translation of the Rivers and its Mountains, its Canyons and its it is certain that along this line alone will real
author's essay 'Staatsbürgerliche Erziehung Springs, its Life and its History, Pictured and progress be made. " Very interesting also are
der Deutschen Jugend,' and was made at his Described, 10/6 net.
the discussions and decisions upon the vexed
request, and has been supervised by him with This description of the great solitude which question whether the labour of women should
the translator.
stretches from the Mississippi to the Pacific be subject to other regulations than that of
University Correspondence College Calendar, Ocean and southward into the Mexican border-
1911-12.
land is a picturesque and instructive narrative.
Political Economy.
Includes tables, regulations, and examination We note à tendency to over-coloured rhetoric,
papers and their solutions. It is headed by the which proceeds, we imagine, from excess rather Brunker (E. G. ), Notes on the Fiscal Controversy,
Principal's report.
than dearth of emotion. Mr. James speaks 6d.
Watson (Foster), Religious Refugees and English with considerable scientific knowledge, and
The able Statistical Secretary to the Free
Education.
his book is a record of twenty-five years' Trade Union has handled his subject deftly.
Reprinted from the Proceedings of the wanderings. It is profusely illustrated, and He deals with the question from the economic,
Huguenot Society of London. This reprint contains four good maps.
historical, and controversial standpoint, deliver-
does not go beyond the revocation of the Edict Longford (Joseph H. ), Japan of the Japanese, 6/ ing his own case from manifold aspects, and
of Nantes in 1685. Though without preten- The story is told with pleasant discursiveness setting out to refute the alternative theory of
sions beyond the co-ordination of notes and and in a sympathetic spirit. But it is not Tariff Reform. The book is issued by the
materials, it is authoritative, and the docu- distinguished either in introspectiveness or
Free Trade Union.
mentary evidence has been scrupulously charm, and rapidly skims the surface of Lowenthal (Esther), The Ricardian Socialists,
collated. The author estimates that the the history, social and industrial conditions, the 75 cents.
Huguenot influence upon English education administration, monarchy, literature, and the Another of the Studies in History, Economics,
penetrated more deeply than is usually sur- position of women. There are thirty mediocre and Public Law edited by the Faculty of
mised.
illustrations.
Political Science of Columbia University. Of
Williams (A. M. ), Johann Friedrich Herbart : a Stock (E. Elliot), The Land of the Lords Marchers : the four pioneers of Socialism--Thompson,
Study in Pedagogics, 1/ net.
being a Record of Six Vagabond Days among Gray, Hodgskin, and Bray--included in this
A short summary of Herbart's philosophy the Peaks and Rivers of the West Country, 5/ net. short study, it is safe to assert that not one
and its relation to his views on the theory An historical and topographical record of a Socialist out of a thousand living has heard
and practice of education. It has been thought six days' jaunt among the vales, woods, rivers, the names of more than two. Their interest lies
good to issue this volume because his' General and castles of Monmouth, Brecknock, and almost entirely in the indebtedness to them of
Pedagogy,' allowed to remain on shelves for Hereford. The author succeeded in packing Marx, and, in the case of Thompson, in his
upward of fifty years in undeserved neglect, a wonderful mass and variety of information views on the position of women-views which
has since the propaganda of Dr. Rein in 1885 into a week's compass. An undue condensa- receive scarcely more than a passing reference
come into its kingdom. As a summary of his tion of fact, and some plausibility, are inevitable from the author.
psychology, metaphysics, and pedagogy this in the circumstances ; indeed, the descriptive
little volume serves its purpose adequately.
portions are preferable to the historical. The
Books for Schools and Students.
Garrard's, 1721-1911, Crown Jewellers and Gold-
is the liquid, melting strain, melancholy and
smiths during Six Reigns and in Three Centuries;
fugitive as a dying wind; the rampant, Cory-
with some Account of the Original Seat of their
bantic ditty, whose rhythm marches to the
Business in the Haymarket and their New
waving of pennons and the beating of drums ;
Home in Albemarle Street and Grafton Street,
and, lastly, the catalogue of jewels of exotic
5/ net.
unguents, such as ambergis,” and musical
Messrs. Garrard have issued an attractive
instruments, such as the sackbut. " The
little history of their long-established firm,
vital sap has long been squeezed out of these
enlivened by interesting digressions about old
harmonies, and they are as conventionalized
London, and adorned by plans and illustra-
as the barrel-organ tune.
tions. More of the old business houses might Bayley (Stanhope), Anima Fanciulla (The Maiden
well gather and print their records in the same
Soul), 1/ net.
handy shape.
The smooth, invertebrate idylls before us,
Journal of Roman Studies, Vol. I. Part I. , 1911, 15/
though free from bad taste, are none the less
The first number of this Journal has an significant of the insidious plausibility of such
array of fine scholars which promises well for productions. They exhale a faint, scented
the future of the Society for the Promotion of
mist of subdued ecstasy, which by its very
Roman Studies. It should be as valuable to
nature suffocates vitality, and even when
classical students its Hellenic compeer:
compared with the vague atmospheric splendour
We are glad to see Prof. A. von Domaszewski
Fine Art and Archæology.
Briggs (R. A. ), Pompeian Decorations, 25/ net.
A reproduction of the mural decorations at
Pompeii by the three-colour process, which is
less costly than lithography. The decorations
are frequently drawn to scale, and their ex•
quisite colouring is transferred with as much
accuracy as possible. The pencil drawings,
reproduced by the half-tone process, are less
perfect, but the coloured frieze traceries
are striking in shading and proportion. The
variety and originality of the designs are
eloquent of the imagination which worked upon
them.
Cox (J. Charles), Cornwall, 2/6 net.
Dr. Cox apologizes in his Preface for the
stringent condensation necessary from con-
siderations of space, and it is occasionally a
strain on the reader, as in such an expression as
“ saint subjects. ". The book a learned and
conscientious guide, which may be trusted
to give all details of importance, and embodies
the results of a ripe judgment in church archi-
tecture. One of the volumes on County
Churches.
Cox (Kenyon), The Classic Point of View :
Critical Study of Paintings, 6/
of Maeterlinck's art is as a chimera to the real
and Dr. Salomon Reinach as contributors,
thing. The volume is one of the Vigo Cabinet
besides English authorities like Dr. Warde
Series.
Fowler. There are seven original articles, as
Cocks (Lucy F. ), Daffodils and Lyrics, 2/6 net.
well as some important reviews. The print and
We have turned page after page of this
illustrations are worthy of the scheme, the
collection of verses in the hope of finding a poem
plates at the end being admirable.
-but without success.
Reid (John A. ), Building Construction and Archi-
Currey (C. ), Now and Then; or, a Present from
tectural Drawing, 4/ net.
the Past, 6d.
Mr. Reid has obtained his knowledge of
A paper booklet of rhymed couplets, with
architecture from sound practical experience,
illustrations, aiming at the facetious in pre-
and the diagrams he sends us are constructed
historic social life. The idea is not new, and is
not on the lines of academic formulæ, but
not well carried out.
from the point of view of erecting actual build- Furst (Herbert E. A. ), Songs of Town and Country.
ings. A small pamphlet is included among
There is more town than country in Mr.
the drawing sheets as an explanatory com-
Furst's poems. We respect him more for pure
mentary. The author is an alumnus of the efflorescence of temperament than for its
Glasgow School of Art.
expression in metrical form. He possesses
Seager (Richard B. ), Explorations in the Island
what may be designated the piebald spirit,
of Mochlos.
scanning the world as men have made it
The time is ripe, in the light of accumulated
through human, angelic, and demoniac eyes.
excavation, for a connected history of pre-
These ingredients he blends with considerable
Hellenic civilization, particularly, that of the
success. His rhythm displays uncertainty,
Minoan dynasty. Mr. Seager's investigations
and he indulges in grotesque experiment. , Mr.
in 1908 at Mochlos, off the coast of Crete,
Furst follows on the lines of the great pantheist
embodied in this volume, are a welcome addi-
Whitman and his disciple Edward Carpenter.
tion to our knowledge of the subject, and another Galsworthy (John), The Pigeon, a Fantasy in
incentive for the penning of a fascinating book.
Three Acts, 1/6 net.
His work makes no pretensions beyond cata-
We dealt with the dramatized version of this
loguing his explorations. It is issued by the play in last week's Athenæum. There are no
American School of Classical Studies at Athens. essential divergences between the acted and
Sibree (Rev. James), Our English Cathedrals :
printed texts.
their `Architectural Beauties and Character: Hudson (William Henry), Milton and his Poetry, 1/
istics and their Historical Associations Popularly Mr. Hudson has produced a readable account
Described, 2 vols. , 5/ net each.
of Milton's life, together with a selection from
Two volumes which can only be cha- his poems. The little book will be useful to
racterized as a collection of handbooks, each young students, but would have been even
on a cathedral. To the vast bulk of such lite- better if the author had refrained from bestow-
rature already in existence they add little ing injurious adjectives upon the Stuart kings.
or nothing. The author apparently tries to To call James I. " that foolish and contemptible
steer between the Scylla of the book which monarch merely in passing distracts the
goes into detailed elaboration about cathedrals, reader's attention from the matter in hand, and
and the Charybdis of the guide-book, which is needlessly offensive.
epitomizes salient features. He has only James I. of England, New Poems, from a Hitherto
ultimately succeeded in furnishing scraps of Unpublished Manuscript (Add. 24195) in the
information calculated to please those tra- British Museum, edited with Introduction and
vellers who scurry through places of anti- Notes by Allan F. Westcott, 6/6 net.
quarian and historical interest in the modern More than half of the fifty-seven poems and
style.
all the prose contained in the MS. referred to
Stearns (Frank Preston), The Midsummer of have not been hitherto published. They are
Italian Art, 6/ net.
here presented in their entirety, microscopically
This volume deals with the culminating edited and annotated. But the book is too
achievement of the Italian Renaissance and long for the value of James I. 's poetic pro-
the four great figureheads of the period-
duction. Many of the pages in the introduction
Michelangelo, Raphael, Leonardo da Vinci,
are irrelevant. The notes, though efficient,
and Correggio. There is an appendix on betray a similar lack of proportion. Such
Morelli, Rubens, and the Aphrodite of Melos.
superabundant scholarship is a check rather
Unfortunately, though the criticism shows than an incentive to study.
perspicuity and spirit, the reproductions are
mediocre. Nor is there a bibliography.
Mayne (Rutherford), The Drone, and Other Plays.
For notice see p. 172.
Stein (M. Aurel), Ruins of Desert Cathay : Per- National Federation of Class Teachers, edited
sonal Narrative of Explorations in Central
by W. B. Steer, 6d. net.
Asia and Westernmost China, 2 vols.
A small anthology written by members of
An intimate and absorbing record of Dr.
the National Federation of Class Teachers. It
Stein's archeological and geographical ex. displays a deal of aspiration and some genuine
plorations while travelling in Central Asia
feeling with it, but, unfortunately, the results
for the Indian Government between 1906 and
are in no wise superior to the average achieve-
1908. The valleys of the Indo-Afghan border; ment of minor verse.
the snow-capped peaks of the Hindukush; Osmaston (F. P. B. ), The Future of Poetry.
the broad Oxus ; Khotan and the great desert
Mr. Osmaston's dissertation contains some
to the ancient wall of China; the Kun-lun
clever, though not new reflections on the nature
range, south of Khotan, and the solitary
and functions of poetry. His thought is
plateaus of Tibet-of all these almost inacces-
decidedly immature, nor can the fact be hidden
sible regions and the remains of their civiliza-
by a suave juggling with great names, a bland
tions, the author gives a fascinating picture. assumption of authority, somewhat nebulous
For the ancient historian his researches will
if closely examined, and preciosity of phrase.
be invaluable. Among other things he dis- His thesis, ramifying through an intricate
covered the most western portion of the great variety of argument, does not appear to us to
wall of the Chinese Empire.
lead to any perceptible goal. But with some
net.
The book presents views definite in character,
and is very interesting and erudite, though
inclined to be harshly dogmatic concerning
modern painting. The reproductions are good,
but their selection seems somewhat indis-
criminate.
De Hooch (1629-c. 1677) and Vermeer (1632-
1675), The Masterpieces of, 6d. net.
Dr. Hofstede de Groot's 'Catalogue of Dutch
Painters 'has served as the model for this paper-
covered booklet. It contains sixty reproduc-
tions on a small scale of photographs from the
original paintings, and embodies the painters'
characteristic work. The publishers deserve
commendation for their enterprise in attempting
to cover the entire field of classic painting up
to 1800. They hope to be able to publish
twelve volumes yearly. This is No. 46 of
Gowans's Art Books.
Dickens, Characters from : a Portfolio of 20 Van-
dyck Gravures from the Drawings by F. G.
Lewin, with an Introduction by B. W. Matz,
3/6 net.
For notice see p. 151.
Egypt Exploration Fund, Thirty-First Memoir :
Pre-Dynastic Cemetery at El Mahasna, by
Edward R. Ayrton and W. L. 8. Loat.
The printed result of excavations begun in
November, 1908, upon the ancient site of
Abydos. The editors eschew controversial
questions, and confine themselves to a statement
of what their explorations unearthed. The
cemetery graves are representative of the whole
pre-dynastic period to the embryonic brick-
а
## p. 160 (#136) ############################################
160
THE ATHENÆ UM
No. 4398, FEB. 10, 1912
:
exceptions he is in the line of wise thinking. receiving another, differing in no essentials Moorhouse (E. Hallam), The Story of Lady
With less self-consciousness, he should write from its predecessors, is not, we fear, alleviated Hamilton, 2/6 net.
excellently.
by the author's laboured efforts after piquancy. The author has already written one book on
Shakespeare, Coriolanus, edited by Stuart P. Resolved to outdo the pageantry of other writers, Lady Hamilton. We cannot see the necessity
Sherman.
he heads his chapters, The Cloudy Dawn, for this one, which is of the brief, popular order,
The Tudor Edition. This neat little edition The Sultry Noon, The Angry Sunset,' and with coloured reproductions of some famous
has comments by American scholars. Prof. Night. '
pictures.
Sherman's work is sound, though we think Chancellor (E. Beresford), Annals of the Strand, Scotsman in Canada (The): Vol. 1. Eastern
his introduction rather stodgy in expression. 7/6 net.
Canada, including Nova Scotia, Prince Edward
The notes and glossary are to the point, but A painstaking and pleasant, but somewhat Island, New Brunswick, Quebec, and Ontario,
too brief, we think, here and there, to give verbose work. With such a subject, labour
sufficient aid. The adding of derivations would
by Wilfred Campbell ; and Vol. II. Western
and love are not enough. The method adopted
have fixed unfamiliar words in the memory.
Canada, including Manitoba, Saskatchewan,
takes the district piecemeal-streets, churches,
Winbolt (S. E. ), Spenser and his Poetry, 1/
Alberta, British Columbia, and Portions of
theatres, &c. , and describes them historically.
Mr. Winbolt's study of Spenser's life is better
old Rupert's Land and the Indian Territories,
Readers are, in consequence, in every chapter by George Bryce.
suited for senior than for junior classes, though carried from century to century, and not all
the selections from The Faery Queene
An able work dealing with the influence of
the amusing anecdotes related can prevent their Scottish life and character in the principal
might well be acceptable to very young readers. thinking of the Strand merely as the street cities of Canada. The immigration of the
A little more elucidation of Spenser's un- that runs from Temple Bar to Charing Cross, Scotch into the country played a large part in
sympathetic-not to say inhuman-attitude
instead of a pathway from the Middle Ages to
towards the natives of Ireland seems needed, if
moulding its religious, educational, and political
our own times.
a true view of his character is to be given.
conditions, and strongly affected the destinies
Chesterton (Cecil), The Story of Nell Gwyn, of the national life. The book lays much
Philosophy.
2/6 net.
stress on the prominence of the Ulster Scots-
Nell Gwyn's memory has certainly not been man. There are lists of the founders and
Boutroux (Émile), William James, 3/6
allowed to languish in obscurity. In contra-
pioneers of the settlements.
If all James's admirers were as discreet as distinction to the majority of other women Slattery Charles Lewis), Alexander Viets Gris-
M. Boutroux, pragmatism would make more of ill repute resuscitated by our latter-day wold Allen, 1941-1908, 7/6 net.
converts in England. The book is as clear and chroniclers, she at least had charm, and was not The biography of a celebrated religious
vigorous as its subject; and if, in our view, disagreeably venal. Mr. Chesterton, of whom teacher rather than theologian, who possessed
the author makes too light of certain diffi- we had expected better things, does not disdain as many secular as doctrinal attributes.
Though
culties, he discusses James's character and either to whitewash his characters or to throw he was hardly an “intellectual,” his humour,
thought without becoming uncritical, or lapsing them into a sensational perspective.
tolerance, magnetism, and forensic ability made
into panegyric. The translation is adequate, Dickens as Editor : being Letters written by him him an appropriate subject for a biography,
and is by Archibald and Barbara Henderson.
to William Henry Wills, his Sub-Editor, but scarcely, we think, of such length ag
Colville (W. J. ), Creative Thought : being Essays
selected and edited by R. C. Lehmann, 12/6 net.
the one before us. It is adequately, if prosaic-
in the Art of Self-Unfoldment, 3/6 net.
For notice see p. 151.
ally written, and apt to wander into barren and
Mr. Colville covers a wide range of nebulous
irrelevant minutiæ.
speculation. He venerates astrology; mental | Fletcher (C. R. L. ), The Making of Western
healing, the human aura, and polarity are his
Europe : Vol. I. The Dark Ages, 300-1000 A. D. , Stevenson (R. L. ), Records of a Family of Engi-
stock-in-trade; and he speaks of Longfellow
7/6 net.
neers, 6/
as “ Columbia's representative bard. "
As a popular historian Mr. Fletcher has The contents of this volume, now published
Cooke (Harold P. ), Maurice the Philosopher,
already gained a notoriety not altogether in the excellent and familiar buckram binding,
2/6 net.
enviable. His political prejudices too often will not be new to readers of the expensive
make his English history read like a party
editions of Stevenson.
The dialogue is well suited for philosophy
It begins with The
by its power of suggestion and incompatibility
pamphlet. In the present work he is out of the Surname of Stevenson,' a paper modified by
with dogmatism. But the example of Plato is
reach of temptation, and the result is a clear a few foot-notes to which no name is attached,
dangerous. Mr, Cooke has caught his manner
and trustworthy narrative of a period scantily but which are due, we believe, to Sir Sidney
only in the form of his sentences, and for his
treated by English writers.
Colvin. The ancestors are distinguished for
literary grace he substitutes preciosity of Great Roll of the Pipe for the Twenty-Ninth
their work on lighthouses and a dry and severe
phrase. The good, happiness, and love are Year of the Reign of King Henry II. , A. D. 1182-
piety, the papers which Stevenson worked on
1183, now First Printed from the Original in
his themes, treated with care, if without much
being often monuments of misdirected
the Custody of the Master of the Rolls under the
originality. Dr. F. C. S. Schiller contributes
literary energy. '
His delicate art made the
most
Direction of the Council of the Pipe Roll Society.
an introduction.
of unpromising material. Pp. 100
Kelly (M. ), Hegel's Charlatanism Exposed, 2/6 net. The present volume embodies the Pipe Roll
to 229 are occupied with the account by his
Major Kelly's thesis is to justify Schopenhauer for the twenty-ninth year of the reign of King
grandfather of operations at the Bell Rock
in calling Hegel a charlatan. He dislikes pro-
Henry II. , collated with the Chancellor's
We wonder why the Bibliographical Note'
fessors in general, as experts supporting estab- Roll for the same year. It is printed in extenso,
which in the Edinburgh Edition explains the
lished doctrines for material ends, and Prof. and there are some pages of introduction by
genesis of the volume has not been used here.
Isanoff of Cornell University in particular, as a Mr. J. H. Round, who exhibits his usual erudi- Trevelyan (Sir George Otto), George III. and
supporter of Hegel. There is more vehemence
tion.
Charles Fox, the Concluding Part of the Ame-
than profundity in his thought, and he makes History: a Quarterly Magazine for the Student rican Revolution, Vol. I. , 7/6 net.
for us no serious impression on Hegel, while and the Expert, No. 1, January, 1/ net.
The book is a completion of the author's
his abrupt style obscures the course of his argu-
An interesting first issue, with its three main Early History of Charles James Fox, pub-
ment.
subjects skilfully diversified. Mr. Kingsford's lished thirty-one years ago, also a continuation
article on 'John Stow and London Life in the of his ‘ History of the American Revolution. '
History and Biography.
Reign of Elizabeth' contains some discursive Sir George writes with leisurely care, and his
Angell (James Burrill), Reminiscences, 5/ net. gossip illuminating to a student of Elizabethan books are well worth waiting for, being excel-
A modest autobiography of a man whose
manners. Prof. Hearnshaw's The Place of
lent in style and mature in judgment.
importance has not radiated beyond the circle
History in Education' errs from excess of
of his own activities. Prof. Angell served an
caution and respect to precedent and tradition.
apprenticeship in civil engineering, and ful-
We fail to see why Prof. Muir should make so
Bibliography.
filled ambassadorial functions in China and
rigid a demarcation between history and geo-
Book-Prices Current, Vol. XXVI. Part
graphy in discussing the relations of the two.
I. ,
the Ottoman Empire. He was a member of the
25/6 annually.
International Commission formed to adjust Hunt (Mary Leland), Thomas Dekker : a Study,
the fishery differences between the United 5/6 net.
An excellent record, which by this time has
States and Canada in 1887, and became Presi-
established its position.
This American monograph deals somewhat
dent of Vermont and later of Michigan Uni- ponderously with one of the wittiest and most
Duff (E. Gordon), The English Provincial Printers,
versity. His career bas been actuated by lovable of figures in Elizabethan literature,
Stationers, and Bookbinders to 1557, 4/ net.
sanity and probity, but the more salient and The wealth of annotation, allusion, and textual
For notice see p. 169.
shining qualities of autobiography are not his. criticism tends to obscure the meaning of the Gray (George J. ), Index to the Contents of the
Archer (Frank), An Actor's Notebooks : being man both to his contemporaries and to us. Cole Manuscripts in the British Museum, 15/ net.
some Memories, Friendships, Criticisms, and We are told everything about Dekker's writings, Made from the transcript of G. A. Matthew
Experiences, 7/6 net.
except what, as a self-revelation, they actually of Cambridge, who drew up a copy of this list.
There is a great quantity of interesting mate-
It should be very useful, as the Mss. supply
rial in this book, although much of it is at Ketkar (Shridhar V. ), An Essay on Hinduism, valuable information upon the town, county,
second hand. In the course of a long career its Formation and Future : illustrating the and University of Cambridge. The D. N. B. "
Mr. Archer has come in contact with a multitude Laws of Social Evolution as reflected in the has an extensive notice of Cole, who was an
of leaders in the literary and dramatic worlds, History of the Formation of Hindu Community.
eager archæologist.
and, in disposing of his accumulated stores of A concise study of the development of Hindu Standard Books, Vol. III.
recollections, he generally manages to avoid society, written with mature knowledge and Wigan Public Libraries Quarterly Record, Oct. -
drifting into that fragmentary anecdotage so intimacy. In no spirit of cavil we suggest Dec. , 1911.
frequently indulged in by autobiographers. that the author has failed to correlate and
We have found the references to Joseph Knight apportion to their limitations of space the
and P. B. Marston of special interest.
theories and material he has accumulated.
Education.
Atlay (J. B. ), The Life of the Right Rev. Ernest Religion, the caste system, the secularization Graves (F. P. ), Great Educators of Three Cen-
Roland Wilberforce, First Bishop of Newcastle-
of politics, tradition, and a system of philo- turies, 5/ net.
on-Tyne, and afterwards Bishop of Chichester, sophic evolution wind in and through each Mr. Graves sketches in a clear and readable
10/6 net.
other like a tangled skein. The value and form the position of some great names in
For notice see p. 154. 5454
suggestiveness of the author's remarks lose education, from Bacon to Herbert Spencer. We
Bickley (Francis), The Story of Marie Antoinette,
their edge and pertinency in this confusion. do not quarrel with his choice in treating
2/6 net.
most fully of Rousseau, Pestalozzi, and Froebel,
interesting, particularly his remarks as to the but we think he makes too much of Milton's
of the unhappy Queen of France, guillotined cosmopolitan and unifying trend of civilization. influence without indicating the impractica-
in the heyday of her beauty, and smothered in The work forms the second volume of the bility of his gigantic curriculum. A useful
voluminous memoirs ever since. Our satiety at author's History of Caste in India.
list of books is appended to each chapter.
:
were.
The author writes a garrulous, florid narrative Interspeculations as to progress are extremely
## p. 161 (#137) ############################################
No. 4398, FEB. 10, 1912
161
THE ATHENÆUM
men.
Kerschensteiner (Dr. Georg), Education for James (George Wharton), The Wonders of the in some way the nature of the contention. . . .
Citizenship, translated by A. J. Pressland.
Colorado Desert (Southern California): its However great the difficulty of this procedure,
This is the first English translation of the Rivers and its Mountains, its Canyons and its it is certain that along this line alone will real
author's essay 'Staatsbürgerliche Erziehung Springs, its Life and its History, Pictured and progress be made. " Very interesting also are
der Deutschen Jugend,' and was made at his Described, 10/6 net.
the discussions and decisions upon the vexed
request, and has been supervised by him with This description of the great solitude which question whether the labour of women should
the translator.
stretches from the Mississippi to the Pacific be subject to other regulations than that of
University Correspondence College Calendar, Ocean and southward into the Mexican border-
1911-12.
land is a picturesque and instructive narrative.
Political Economy.
Includes tables, regulations, and examination We note à tendency to over-coloured rhetoric,
papers and their solutions. It is headed by the which proceeds, we imagine, from excess rather Brunker (E. G. ), Notes on the Fiscal Controversy,
Principal's report.
than dearth of emotion. Mr. James speaks 6d.
Watson (Foster), Religious Refugees and English with considerable scientific knowledge, and
The able Statistical Secretary to the Free
Education.
his book is a record of twenty-five years' Trade Union has handled his subject deftly.
Reprinted from the Proceedings of the wanderings. It is profusely illustrated, and He deals with the question from the economic,
Huguenot Society of London. This reprint contains four good maps.
historical, and controversial standpoint, deliver-
does not go beyond the revocation of the Edict Longford (Joseph H. ), Japan of the Japanese, 6/ ing his own case from manifold aspects, and
of Nantes in 1685. Though without preten- The story is told with pleasant discursiveness setting out to refute the alternative theory of
sions beyond the co-ordination of notes and and in a sympathetic spirit. But it is not Tariff Reform. The book is issued by the
materials, it is authoritative, and the docu- distinguished either in introspectiveness or
Free Trade Union.
mentary evidence has been scrupulously charm, and rapidly skims the surface of Lowenthal (Esther), The Ricardian Socialists,
collated. The author estimates that the the history, social and industrial conditions, the 75 cents.
Huguenot influence upon English education administration, monarchy, literature, and the Another of the Studies in History, Economics,
penetrated more deeply than is usually sur- position of women. There are thirty mediocre and Public Law edited by the Faculty of
mised.
illustrations.
Political Science of Columbia University. Of
Williams (A. M. ), Johann Friedrich Herbart : a Stock (E. Elliot), The Land of the Lords Marchers : the four pioneers of Socialism--Thompson,
Study in Pedagogics, 1/ net.
being a Record of Six Vagabond Days among Gray, Hodgskin, and Bray--included in this
A short summary of Herbart's philosophy the Peaks and Rivers of the West Country, 5/ net. short study, it is safe to assert that not one
and its relation to his views on the theory An historical and topographical record of a Socialist out of a thousand living has heard
and practice of education. It has been thought six days' jaunt among the vales, woods, rivers, the names of more than two. Their interest lies
good to issue this volume because his' General and castles of Monmouth, Brecknock, and almost entirely in the indebtedness to them of
Pedagogy,' allowed to remain on shelves for Hereford. The author succeeded in packing Marx, and, in the case of Thompson, in his
upward of fifty years in undeserved neglect, a wonderful mass and variety of information views on the position of women-views which
has since the propaganda of Dr. Rein in 1885 into a week's compass. An undue condensa- receive scarcely more than a passing reference
come into its kingdom. As a summary of his tion of fact, and some plausibility, are inevitable from the author.
psychology, metaphysics, and pedagogy this in the circumstances ; indeed, the descriptive
little volume serves its purpose adequately.
portions are preferable to the historical. The
Books for Schools and Students.