Compagni, and is accepted in our own day amongst
civilized
people.
Athenaeum - London - 1912a
Cranmer was certainly no poet,
to know better clamour for a Commission. the last statutes came into operation in but he had the merit of knowing that he
This is what they say :
1882 has been truly remarkable, where new had not that gift. The music in the Chapel
was by Tallis and Martin Luther, and was
"In the five years. . . . various proposals for studies are welcomed with ardour, and
Constitutional reform have been brought before endowed as liberally as possible out of the conducted by Dr. Mann. Mr. Bruce Joy's
the Senate of the University of Cambridge by the meagre resources of the University and the likeness of Cranmer was universally com-
Council of the Senate : but they have been without Colleges. This progress has been secured mended.
exception rejected by the Senate; and it is clear to
us that no further attempt of the kind is likely of events. To take a single example: in a
not by legislation, but in the natural course
I must strike a sad note in alluding to
to be successful. We, therefore, make our present college which had in 1882 two classical and
the death of the Master of Caius. Mr.
appeal for the appointment of a Commission. "
five mathematical lecturers and one in rallied, and passed away suddenly on
Roberts was taken ill at the Boat Races,
The names of those who signed for a theology, and eight of the fellows were
Commission supply food for thought. The occupied neither in teaching nor in the Sunday. Of him it may be said that the
better he was known, the more he was liked
list opens with twenty-three professors or work of research, instruction is now pro-
ex-professors. Of
of these no fewer
than eight vided in the subjects already mentioned, devotion to his college, which, in numbers,
and respected, and that he showed a lifelong
are not Cambridge men, and four of them and in history, anatomy, chemistry, modern learning, and general tone, thanks greatly
are comparatively recent importations. Of languages, mechanical science, &c. , and
the remaining sixty-nine, thirty-nine are
to him, now stands in the very forefront
every single fellow is engaged in active in Cambridge. His honest, strenuous life
members of two colleges Trinity and King's work as a teacher, University official, or
-and four colleges contributo only one
will long be remembered in the University,
research student. Yet this has been effected
name each. Six collegesClare, Pembroke, entirely from within, and in a society which
and especially in the College he served so
Queens', Jesus, Magdalene, and Sidney-
J.
has by no means a reputation for zeal for
well.
have held completely aloof, and these all reformation or progress.
i Of almost every
bear a good reputation for being wisely college as much, if not more, could be said
and cautiously administered. Trinity hoads with perfect truth,
8
a
see.
## p. 704 (#526) ############################################
6
on.
THE
AND
FOR THE
priests " ; the God of Israel, and also dots. The key - note of the book is struck
NOTICES OF NEW BOOKS. Christ, are the sun ; Moses, Aaron, and in the first four lines :-
Miriam are
celestials”; the kingdom
I have dreamed the dream of the unknown mens
INotice in those columns does not preclude longer of heaven is the “ celestial zodiac,? ? and so And stood on the sightless shore ;
review. )
We are invited, as the title suggests,
I have looked in the eyes of reality. . . .
And I am young no more.
Theology.
to adopt these values as the final truth
about the Bible.
There is some slight humour in the address
Drews (Arthur), THE WITNESSES TO THE
HISTORICITY OF JESUS, translated by Scripture Teaching in Secondary Schools : has escaped the attentions of a shark; and the
(in imitation of Gray) to a young lady who
Joseph McCabe, 6/ net.
Watts
PAPERS READ AT A CONFERENCE HELD author achieves a sort of triumph in his poem
Prof. Drews, in his Preface, explains that IN CAMBRIDGE 10–13 APRIL, 1912, To the Absolute,' where the appropriate
this volume is a new version, abbreviated edited by N. P. Wood, with a Preface by atmosphere of incomprehensibility is pro-
and amended, of the volume which formed
F. C. Burkitt, 1/6 net.
duced with complete success.
the second part of The Christ-Myth, a
Cambridge University Press
work which, with others written in the same
Bibliography.
sense, has, as is well known, aroused immense Three points are emphasized by the
excitement in Germany, and of which an
various well-known contributors of these
English translation was published by Mr. papers : that the Scriptures must be edited Bibliography of Works by officers, Non-
Commissioned Officers, and Men who
Fisher Unwin in 1910. The author issues for the young, that the results of historical
have ever Served in the Royal, Bengal,
this version, it appears, as a challenge to and textual criticism should be communicated
Madras, or Bombay Artillery, compiled
English theologians—to see whether they to pupils, and yet that spiritual teaching
and verified by Major John H. Leslie
can adduce better proof of the validity of should not be subordinated to literary
and Capt. D. Smith: Part IV. COLOMB-
the Christian faith than German theologians and historical culture. Most of the papers
DU BOULAY, 2]
Sheffield, Leng
of the so-called “Liberal ” school have, lack fervour and charm.
in his opinion, succeeded in adducing:
Bromley Public Library, SIXTEENTH REPORT
The line of argument in this book is thus not
Law.
OF THE COMMITTEE, 1911-12.
actually new. Readers of the former transla- Jenks (Edward), A SHORT HISTORY OF
The Library
tion, and readers also of Mr. J. M. Robertson's
ENGLISH LAW FROM EARLIEST Chelsea, Metropolitan Borough of, ANNUAL
books, will be prepared to find the Jewish
TIMES TO THE END OF THE YEAR 1911, REPORT OF THE COMMITTEE FOR PUBLIC
and Roman witnesses to the historical
10/6 net.
Methuen LIBRARIES
MUSEUMS
existence of our Lord swept out of court as
either worthless or purely fictitious ; to hear
This is an admirable summary of Eng.
YEAR ENDING 31ST MARCH.
Pite & Thynne, 278A, King's Road,
that Paul knows nothing of an historical lish law in one volume written in a clear
Chelsea, S. W.
Jesus—that, indeed, the name of Paul is and readable style. The article on the laws
very likely only a general title for a number affecting labour should be read by all who Nottingham Public Libraries and Natural
of letter-writers seeking thus to give better are giving more than a superficial attention History Museum Committee, ANNUAL
authority to a religious system that went
to the present labour unrest. Few people are REPORT, 1911-12.
beyond the original Christianity”; to learn,
aware that a Minimum Wage Act was passed
Nottingham, Town Clerk
finally, that Isaiah and Wisdom and Job in the year 1350, which was subsequently All these catalogues contain points of
furnished the elements out of which were confirmed and alterod several times, and interest for the student of literary matters
elaborated the Christian theory of salvation only broke down in the later part of the to-day.
and the figure of Christ, while behind them eighteenth century, having worked fairly
we are to see the profound and widespread satisfactorily up to that date. Legal students
history and Biograpby.
idea of a suffering god, with its astral or beginning their work would do well to read
other naturalistic significance.
this book before undertaking the standard Complete Peerage of England, Scotland,
We are not in this place concerned to lift works on the subject.
Ireland, Great Britain and the United
the glove thus thrown down; we will only
Kingdom, Extant, Extinct, or Dormant,
remark that none of those theologians here
Poetry.
by G. E. C. , New Edition, Revised
heartily despised ever expressed himself
and much Enlarged, edited by Vicary
with a more trenchant dogmatism than Prof. Alexander (Samuel John), THE INVERTED Gibbs : Vol. II. Bass--CANNING, 25/ net.
Drews ; none was ever more boisterously
TORCH, AND OTHER POEMS, $1. 50 net.
St. Catherine Press
scornful of an opponent, or more ready to
San Francisco, Robertson
This volume carries this important work
hypnotize the docile into acquiescence by American verse, full of that prismatic on as far as the Canning earldom. It
mere vehemence of assertion and calm quality which is the principal asset of Cali- displays more
reticence than its pre-
assumption of patronage. For the indocile fornian oratory. But we like the rhyme of decessor, which, whatever its high merits,
this polemical animosity tends to obscure “ facts" and " 1 in the ode to Mr. certainly did not err in that direction.
his argument. Moreover, the structure which Kipling.
The numerous appendixes given here contain
the author seeks to set up as the true, over
many lists, some of real importance. Among
against the traditional, Christianity hardly Lodge (George Cabot), POEMS AND DRAMAS, them is a valuable one of the Knights of the
warrants so much “cocksureness. 11 Built 2 vols. , $2. 50 net; and his LIFE, $1. 25 Garter, and another of the great officers of
up from data both slender and far apart, it net. New York, Houghton-Mifflin Co. State, both of which it is desirable to have
requires, merely to hold it together, a great
The late G. C. Lodge's poems and dramas in this accessible form. The ancient peerage of
amount of difficult piecing out by inference here collected are free from the floridity Berkeley is prefaced by a learned note on
and imagination ; while, in the end, a good and the provincialism which disfigure much baronies by tenure, commenting on the
deal of it remains vulnerable to the weapons, American verse ; except where the influence changes in peerage law; while the Scottish
not so much of scholarship or theology, as
of Swinburne is visible, they are marked by titles of Breadalbane, Borthwick, and Buc-
of plain common sense and knowledge of
an almost bald simplicity. Mr. Lodge, cleuch have interesting animadversions on
human nature.
though industrious and thoughtful, had difficult questions in their history. Another
Gwatkin (Henry Melvill), EARLY CHURCH nothing new to say and nothing melodious useful foot-note illustrates the change of
HISTORY TO A. D. 313, 2 vols. , 17/ net. to sing. His work is free from glaring faults, the style “Earl of” to “Earl so-and-so. " The
Macmillan but his merits are purely negative. There is unpleasing origins of several modern peerages
The present edition has undergone slight an Introduction (full of journalistic clichés) are commented on. It seems curious that
in this useful work there is no mention of
modifications in the light of recent research, from the pen of Mr. Roosevelt. It is enter-
entailing some addition to the bibliography; taining to find that eminent man-piston, Bothwell's Norwegian “ wife," or of " Mrs.
but otherwise the position of the writer who“ feels like a young bull-moose after Williams,” whom Pepys regarded (for a time)
remains as pronounced as it was nearly beating his enemies to a frazzle," quoting as certainly married to his friend Lord
three years ago. We criticized the book on
from an unexpected source “He lived Brouncker,
its first appearance (Athen. , Oct. 16, 1909, detached days. . . . Deaf was he to world's
p. 457) for its prejudice against the Trac- tongue. ” The annexed 'Life of the poet Lacy (Mary E. ), WITH DANTE IN MODERN
FLORENCE, 6/ net.
tarians,
John Murray
is sufficiently commonplace.
its rigid conservatism, and its
asperity.
Perhaps all of the contents of this excel-
Low (Benjamin R. C. ), THE SAILOR WHO HAS lent little book are to be found in other
Jarvis (George Millen), A TWENTIETH- SAILED, AND OTHER POEMS, 5/ net. English books, but scarcely in 9o nandy and
CENTURY INTERPRETATION
New York, John Lane Co. compact a form ; and its value is increased
BIBLE, $1. 50 net. Chicago, the Author
Mr. Low's verse is of the more cultured by twenty-eight well-chosen illustrations
The interpretation here offered is astral. magazine type, pretty, but vague, with the from photographs. It would have been
The Bible is the work of “
astronomical ! inexpressible indicated by serried rows of wiser if the writer had frankly stated in
wax
OF
THE
## p. 705 (#527) ############################################
No. 4417, JUNE 22, 1912
THE ATHENÆUM
705
the preface her indebtedness to some of
her English predecessors; but the book Geography and Travel.
Sports and pastimes.
shows originality in the skill with which a
slight sketch of the poet's life is interwoven
Cambridge County Geographies : DUMFRIES- St. Quintin (Col. T. A. ), CHANCES OF SPORTS
with local descriptions of Florence and SHIRE, by James King Hewison ; OF SORTS.
Blackwood
Ravenna. With Florence in particular the
PERTHSHIRE, by Peter MacNair ; and
"I'm a great believer in chances, and I've
author displays an intimate acquaintance ;
RENFREWSHIRE, by Frederick Mort,
had my sbare. Chances of high position, chances
and her efforts to disentangle the city of
1/6 each
Cambridge University Press of big fortunes, chances at big heads, chances at
Dante's time from the far-different Florence The humanistic view of geography is all the many varied games I've played. Some
of modern guide-books, by which it is now successfully adopted in those interesting little
I've grasped, some l've missed, and when the
chances came, whether it was hit or miss, I never
overlaid and almost concealed, are pre- books. Mr. MacNair's 'Perthshire' suffers
felt quite certain on each occasion whether it
eminently successful. After a brief introduc- from over-technical terminology.
was from being too confident and sanguine, or
tion on the origin and early history of the
not enough so. Never mind; after all, whether
city, she devotes two chapters to the Florence
Outfit and Equipment : FOR THE TRAVELLER, ill or good, it is the varied chances that create
Without
of Dante, and to that quarter of it in which EXPLORER, AND SPORTSMAN, edited by the excitements and pleasures of life.
them what is it? ”
he lived. Admirable as these pages are for
Eustace Reynolds-Ball, with Contribu-
their clearness and accuracy, their effect tions by Sir H. H. Johnston, Harry de Thus Col. St. Quintin in his Introduction.
would have been enhanced, for those who Windt, F. C. Selous, and others.
He further wisely lays down and obeys the
have seen Florence, by a plan of the modern
Reynolds-Ball's Guides rule that religion, politics, and the ladies
city, showing the position of the Cerchia This volume is evidently intended for
are not to be discussed. He thanks various
Antica, and of the wider circuit of walls inexperienced travellers in the first place, persons for aid, specially Mr. William Black-
erected in Dante's day by Arnolfo del though probably those with some experience wood-in whose magazine many of the
Cambio. The following chapters deal with are the most likely to profit by its use. For stories have appeared—“ for having given
the more important buildings then, and discrimination is required in order to decide me my head and allowed me to blunder over
still, standing, and with the great churches what articles mentioned may safely be the country in my own way without a curb. ”
--the Duomo, Santa Maria Novella, and omitted when one is making preparations for In doing so Mr. Blackwood showed the
Santa Croce which were all begun during a journey. Many matters are discussed, and clearest perception of what would attract
that remarkable period. There is a short advice for the most part sound, though in readers, for from start to finish there is
review of thirteenth-century art, as seen cases difficult to follow- is freely given. not a dull page. No pretence is made of fine
especially in the master and pupil, Cimabue Outfit and equipment for hot and cold writing, but there is a strong flavour of the
and Giotto, and of the personal relations of countries, how to preserve health and to deal language of various sports.
Dante with the latter painter. The last with sickness, the batteries for sportsmen The charm of the book consists less in the
chapter, which is entitled 'Florence in various countries, and even an angling author's power of description, though that
Repentant, recalls the successive efforts outfit, are all dealt with reasonably.
is considerable, than in his manner of taking
made by the Republic to atone for her
the reader into his confidence and revealing
outrageous treatment of her great citizen Pullen-Burry (B. ), FROM HALIFAX TO VAN- much of his own life. Its scope is varied.
and to recover his bones from their last
COUVER, 12/6 net.
Mills & Boon The author served twenty-six years in the
resting - place at Ravenna. The author in-
clines to the view, which has recently been to be Imperialist first of all
, then traveller, the Remount
Department, visiting Australia
The author of the present volume claims Hussars for six years, and was employed in
10th Hussars ; he also commanded the 8th
much disputed, that Dante studied both at and lastly lecturer. She is able, therefore, in the course of business. During these
Paris and Oxford; but the evidence she
adduces for the Oxford visit rests only on
to find other subjects than Woman's Suffrage
tradition, though supported by a vague
to discuss, though her observations have years he saw much hunting, racing, pig-
expression in a poem of Boccaccio. “For the naturally been directed largely from the sticking, polo, and shooting in many parts
embassy to Rome in 1301, which has also
woman's point of view. Unfortunately for each sport. The account of his travels in
of the world, and has adequately described
been contested, and which she is inclined
to the Dominion; these observations have and beyond the Himalaya is true to nature.
reject, she gives only the late authority of resulted in the opinion that Canadian In the list of illustrations (p. vii) one is
Leonardo Bruni
, though it is expressly women in the West, at any rate hare less mentioned at p. 144, but does not appear
mentioned by the contemporary
Dino prosperous than any others of their sex
there in the copy before us.
Compagni, and is accepted in our own day amongst civilized people.
by Prof. Villari. As a whole the book is
It is noticeable that her book increases in
Col. St. Quintin is confessedly no fisher-
singularly free from inaccuracies and un-
interest
with the turning of its pages. Perhaps hooked a tarpon off the
Mexican coast which,
man, yet he can tell an angler's tale. He
balanced statements ; but on p. 154 the its most arresting chapters are those dealing after the manner of these fish, leapt pro-
entry of Charles of Valois into Florence is with Winnipeg, the great centre of the wheat
placed in 1303 instead of 1301, and on p. 219 industry. In this city are situated the digiously, and accidentally fell into the
boat; after being belaboured by the Colonel
the exile of Dante is referred to February, biggest railway yards in the world ; these
1303, instead of January, 1302. The proofs are owned by_one corporation, and the and frightening the boy who managed the
have been somewhat carelessly corrected genesis of the Pacific Railway Company is punt, it leapt out again, but the hooks
held.
as regards proper names.
explained earlier in the volume. Here a
wheat expert gave his interviewer the infor- Shaking his head and tearing at the hook,
Reade (Aleyn Lyell),_JOHNSONIAN GLEAN- cultivated area to that which has never
mation that in Canada the proportion of he gave me a very similar feeling to what a mad,
keen horse does when, impatient of control, he
INGS : Part II. FRANCIS BARBER, THE
been broken up is as a cabbage patch to a
fights and tears at his bridle as he gallops along,
Doctor's NEGRO SERVANT, 6/
for we were paddling after and hanging on to that
thousand-acre farm. To demonstrate the big fish as hard as we could. '
Liverpool, the Author
opportunities presented to intending pur. After a long fight it was landed, and proved
Besides possessing greater unity of interest chasers, an instance is cited where a farm
than its predecessor, Mr. Reade's new volume in New Brunswick, with house and two barns, to be" 5 ft. 8 in. in length-as long as I am. ”
shows much improvement both in type and only four miles distant from a railway sta- The illustrations deserve praise ; indeed, in
paper, whilst the same high standard of tion, was offered for sale at the low figure of every respect author and publisher may be
careful research and dispassionate judgment 801. , twenty-five of its hundred acres having congratulated.
is maintained. All that seems likely to be been already cleared! In the matter of dis-
known about the negro, whom Johnson had advantages, the severity of Canadian winters
Education.
educated and made his residuary legatee, to women is not dismissed lightly but Freeman (K. J. ), SCHOOLS OF HELLAS : AN
is here collected; and some unpublished certain benefits attendant upon it are justly
ESSAY ON THE PRACTICE AND THEORY
letters to him from Boswell, asking for touched upon. More serious is the sparsity
OF ANCIENT GREEK EDUCATION FROM
Barber's assistance in his forthcoming bio- of accommodation for
workers,
600 TO 300 B. C. , edited by M. J. Rendall,
graphy, are printed, as well as a letter (given which seems to manifest itself throughout the
Second Edition, 5/ net. Macmillan
in facsimile) of the negro himself to Bishop great towns of the Dominion. No one contra-
Percy. A curious error of Dr. Hill's, trace- dicts it, and no one seems in a position to
We noticed this essay by a brilliant
able to a misprint in Croker, is corrected in remedy it.
young scholar too early lost on July 6th,
chap. vi. The author expresses himself as The unpopularity of emigrants from our
1907, and now we share the pleasure expressed
dissatisfied with the evidence that either own shores is a subject which has often been memoir of the author, in which he
by Mr. Rendall in a little addition to his
of the portraits he reproduces really re-
that
discussed. This inimical feeling seems to
presents Barber, though the frontispieco be gradually passing away as men and women
the book has already fought its way well
is certainly after Reynolds, who in all proba- of more solid worth are sent to replace the
into the third thousand of copies. ''
bility painted Johnson's servant among family rubbish which previously was often Livingstone College Year Book, 1912, 6d.
other black subjects.
tipped into the Colony.
Leyton, E. , the College
66
women
says
## p. 706 (#528) ############################################
706
THE ATHENÆUM
No. 4417, JUNE 22, 1912
SONAL
IN
AND
we
Teacher's Encyclopædia (The), Vols. VI. and Munro (J. Iverach), Essay I. : A RESEARCH and entirely practical, may be justly praised.
VII. , 8/6 each.
INTO THE ORIGIN OF THE THIRD PER- We regret, however, that Miss Althaus,
Caxton Publishing Co.
PRONOUN X1 EPICENE like other phoneticians of the moment,
It was on May 13th, 1911, that we re-
PENTATEUCH, AND ITS CONNEXION WITH teaches a somewhat slovenly and affected
viewed the first volume of “The Teacher's
SEMITIC INDO-EUROPEAN LAN- form of Southern English pronunciation. ,
Encyclopædia,' and we have now before us
GUAGES, a Contribution to Philological | Arnold's School Series : THE ALBION PHONIC
the last two volumes (vi. and vii. ) of this Science, 1/6 net.
Frowde
READERS, FIRST PRIMER, 3d. ; SECOND
admirable reference book. Vol. vii. contains Mr. Munro is making a bold attempt to
PRIMER, 4d. ; FIRST INFANT READER,
a general index, which is useful so far as revolutionize our ideas regarding the original
6d. ; SECOND INFANT READER, 6d. ;
it goes. Since, however, the plan of the forms of Semitic speech, and to establish the
and PREPARATORY READER, 8d.
whole work is not on alphabetical lines, theory of a common foundation for the latter
but according to broad headings and groups and the great Indo-European family of Bruyère (Jean de la), CARACTÈRES, PAGES
of subjects, it would have been wiser to give languages. As is indicated on the title- CHOISIES, Notes de Hardress O'Grady,
more space to the index and make it so page, the argument of the present essay Préface d'Augustin Filon; and Sainte-
comprehensive that there would be little hinges on the use of hw' (X117) in the Penta- Beuve (C. A. ), PROFILS ANGLAIS,
chance of missing the correct reference teuch for the pronoun of both the third Notes de Hardress O'Grady, 1/6. Dent
even on matters of detail. In vol. vi. the person singular masculine and feminine. There has long been wanting in this
articles on special schools are completed by The prevalent opinion on this point may here country a series of French classics for the
an article on the teaching of the blind and be stated in the words of Dr. Driver, who English reader which should, while avoiding
deaf. Then follows an adequate treatment says that “the view formerly held,” accord- the voluminousness of the library edition,
of the organization of education in various ing to which “the epicene 17 was an supply something more than the mere class-
countries, including England, Scotland, Ire- archaism in Hebrew, cannot. . . . be any room textbook. These two volumes give
land, France, Germany, America, Canada, longer maintained ; Hebrew must have comprehensively what is best in La Bruyère
and Australasia. Vol. vii. devotes some possessed the double form from the begin- and the criticism of Sainte-Beuve on English
200 pages to a useful history of educational | ning. " Our author, on the other hand, sets literature, and are further furnished with
thought from the time of the Greeks to the out to prove that we have here to deal with useful Introductions and notes, which do
present day. Here we have in reasonable an archaism of very old standing, and he not intrude on the text. They are pleasingly
compass a complete textbook of the subject, believes that the still earlier forms lying bound in cloth covers.
the work of Mr. James Drevor and Prof. behind the pronoun in question are hau Eliot (George), Silas MARNER, THE WEAVER
Alexander Darroch, but mainly of the latter. for the masculine, and hai for the feminine.
OF RAVELOE, edited, with Introduction
It is illustrated by fourteen full-page por. The basal hypothesis which underlies and Notes, by F. E. Bevan, 1!
traits of such leaders in education as Abelard, this result is that the original mode of express-
Cambridge University Press
Erasmus, Comenius, Rousseau, Kant, ing the active in verbal formation was by This charming story is a suitable addition
Herbart, and Spencer. This sketch of means of au placed between the two conso- to English Literature for Schools. The
educational history comes appropriately at nants in the biliteral stage of Semitic speech, editor's Introduction, meant more,
the close of the work, welding together as and that the passive was similarly expressed imagine, for teachers than for readers, gives
it does the many subjects discussed in the by the diphthong ai. It was at this biliteral | all that needs to be said about the book
previous volumes. It was a common Greek stage, Mr. Munro maintains, that the Indo- and its author. The notes, too, are capably
saying that you must see a man's end before European family of speech separated from done, though on the first page we meet
you called him happy; we have read the last the Semitic, “when pronominal forms were with Yahweh in & Bible reference,
of The Teacher's Encyclopædia,' and may themselves verbal nouns, and their order, which strikes us as a foolish piece of pedantry,
with confidence call it excellent.
with regard to the verbal noun required to and find the explanation that • Merry
make what we call a verb, was still fluid. "
England' is not much more than Alma
Philology.
Has our essayist proved his case? It is, Mater," which is hardly helpful without a
perhaps, not fair to pronounce a decisive knowledge of Latin. Vicinage" and a
Juvenal, Fourteen Satires of, translated into judgment before the appearance of the few more of George Eliot's learned para-
English by Alexander Leeper, New and other essays promised in continuation of phrases might have been explained.
Revised Edition, 5! Macmillan the theme. But one may, so far as the pre-
This rendering well deserves its place in the sent argument justifies an opinion, say that Goldsmith, THE DESERTED VILLAGE, edited,
with Introduction and Notes, by G. G.
familiar dark blue
series, being both spirited there is here, amidst much that is instructive,
Whiskard, 6d.
and idiomatic. First published in 1882 suggestive, and of some likelihood, much that
as the joint work of its author and Prof. is fanciful and that rests on mere assump-
Oxford, Clarendon Press
H. A. Strong, it was revised ten years later tions.
The editor, in his Introduction and notes,
We will refer to only two points.
by Dr. Leeper, and now again has been so It does not strike us that Mr. Munro has puts before the young reader all that needs
largely rewritten by him as to be virtually produced a sufficient amount of evidence explanation.
a new book. Comparing the present issue against the view that the vowel u was used Hood (G. F. ), PROBLEMS IN PRACTICAL
with that of 1882, which he has long used, as a sign of the passive in the original struc- CHEMISTRY FOR ADVANCED STUDENTS,
the reviewer finds an elaboration of style ture of Semitic languages. As an instance
5/ net.
Mills & Boon
and phrase which generally brings out the of fancifulness in the argument, his treatment
The problems collected in this volume
meaning better. Juno virguncula," once of the verb müth (to die) may be mentioned. require in the student a thorough knowledge
“a little wench,” is now “a bashful maid. ” “ The imperfect," he says, ' has the old of the elementary groundwork of chemistry,
But occasionally longer versions add nothing active form [yāmûth] because it expressed
as many of the exercises are of an advanced
to the rendering; Juvenal's points are
the struggle. The perfect [mêth) was used nature and of considerable difficulty. The
sharply made, and do not need any emphasiz. when all
was over, and therefore had the old author's directions are, however, fully and
ing. Why, for instance, in xiii. 172 add passive form. ”
lucidly given, and should be effective for
yet” after the though 22 clause? It is We think, however, that Mr. Munro has students preparing for higher examinations.
neither in the Latin nor needed in the done well to reopen the whole question.
English.
Studies like these are sure to promote the Jenks (Paul R. ), A MANUAL OF LATIN WORD
There are a few notes as to the text interests of true linguistic and ethnological FORMATION FOR SECONDARY SCHOOLS,
adopted, “where there might seem to be science, though the final result may not be 1/6
Harrap
room for doubt. ” More, we think, should quite what the zealous pioneer expected. Examples of derivatives are arranged in
have been done in this way, especially
lists to illustrate word-formation, as seen
Scbool-Books.
since Prof. Housman's drastic examination
in Cæsar, Cicero, and Virgil, the com-
of the claims of MS. Pithoeanus in 1905. Althaus (L. H. ), THE SOUNDS OF THE MOTHER piler's aim being to supply a three years'
The “mulio consul " of viii. 148, unknown TONGUE, A MANUAL OF SPEECH-TRAIN-
course for students of Latin.
in 1882, is now duly rendered, and deserved
FOR PREPARATORY AND LOWER Laurie (André), MÉMOIRES D'UN COLLÉGIEN,
to be recorded at the side of the text.
FORMS IN SECONDARY SCHOOLS, AND Authorized Edition, edited, with Exer-
Encouraged by the success of Mr. J. D. FOR VTH, VITH, OR VIITH STANDARDS
cises, Notes, and Vocabulary, by O. B.
Duff in dealing with Satire VI. , Dr. Leeper IN ELEMENTARY SCHOOLS, 2/ net; and Super, 1/6
Harrap
has now added a vigorous translation of it SOUND-DRILL AND READING EXERCISES
This interesting story of school life in
to this issue. On the other hand, the IN PHONETIC SCRIPT FROM THE ABOVE, France should prove a welcome textbook
critical notes, mainly as to corrupt passages,
6d.
Hodder & Stoughton for English students, as the French is of
which occupied some pages in the edition of Speech-training in the vernacular is un-
the easy type required of candidates for
1882, have disappeared, and we get instead doubtedly necessary for children in ele- the Junior Local examinations. Exercises,
others on four passages in which Prof. T. G. mentary schools entoring secondary schools, notes and vocabulary are given in the
Tucker plays a leading part.
and these publications, admirable in method appendix.
66
66
ING
## p. 707 (#529) ############################################
No. 4417, JUNE 22, 1912
THE ATHENÆUM
707
A
unseens
seem
BEING THE
COTT
AS
Macaulay, EssAY ON JOHN BUNYAN, 3d. Childo-Pemberton (Harriet L. ), THE SILENT Warwick (Anno), THE UNKNOWN WOMAN, 6/
paper, 4d. cloth.
VALLEY, AN EPISODE, 6/ Constable
Mills & Boon
Oxford, Clarendon Press The pages of this novel are abundantly There are here really two unknown
A slim booklet in the Oxford Plain Texts sprinkled with pieces of original poetry, women in the case. One, a pseudo-antiquo
which may well attract the adult as well as supposed to be sung or recited by those bust, becomes the centre of a neatly
the learner.
taking part in the action—a revival of an complicated intrigue; the other, to us less
Silya Latina, LATIN READING-BOOK,
antique fashion which we are not altogether interesting, is a femme incomprise valiantly
chosen and arranged by J. D. Duff, 2/
prepared to welcome. In other respects, making the most of a little unhappiness to
Cambridge University Press too, the atmosphere suffers from an excess the admiration of all beholders. The story
This book, the work of an accomplished of culture ; and the characters, like the presents & curious and lively picture of
teacher, contains a hundred and forty- story, which has a vague connexion with artistic circles in New York, and emphasizes
five extracts in the same number of pages,
the theory of reincarnation, lack definition. the pernicious influence of journalism as
followed by a few notes on each extract.
But the writing has a delicate and fantastic a factor in American social life.
Each passage is preceded by a short sum-
charm, especially in descriptive passages ;
and the refrain of at least one lyric recurs
General.
mary; and to aid the pupil in the verse
" the long vowels are marked. persistently to memory.
Annual Register : A REVIEW OF PUBLIC
No doubt the book will serve as an excellent Gerard (Dorothea), EXOTIC MARTHA, 6/
EVENTS AT HOME AND ABROAD FOR
introduction to Virgil and Cicero.
Stanley Paul
THE YEAR 1911, New Series, 18/
Swift, THE BATTLE OF THE BOOKS, extracted
“Exotic Martha " has all the hardiness of
Longmans
from Selections from Swift, edited by make a lively story. She arrives in Batavia
a healthy outdoor plant, and her adventures This time-honoured publication continues
Sir Henry Craik, 2/
to maintain its excellence as a work of
Oxford, Clarendon Press as a prospective bride, only to find the
reference. As usual, the chapters on domestic
A capable edition, with a Life of Swift. bridegroom-elect already married. Her sub- affairs
are chiefly Parliamentary ; but
We think the little book might have been sequent proceedings are unusual, but enter- social events, such as the railway strike
repaged. The text begins at p. 196, and the taining.
and even the stoppage of the Wells-Johnson
notes include references for explanations to Hewlett (Maurice), OPEN COUNTRY; and boxing match, are deftly woven into the
pages which do not exist here.
to know better clamour for a Commission. the last statutes came into operation in but he had the merit of knowing that he
This is what they say :
1882 has been truly remarkable, where new had not that gift. The music in the Chapel
was by Tallis and Martin Luther, and was
"In the five years. . . . various proposals for studies are welcomed with ardour, and
Constitutional reform have been brought before endowed as liberally as possible out of the conducted by Dr. Mann. Mr. Bruce Joy's
the Senate of the University of Cambridge by the meagre resources of the University and the likeness of Cranmer was universally com-
Council of the Senate : but they have been without Colleges. This progress has been secured mended.
exception rejected by the Senate; and it is clear to
us that no further attempt of the kind is likely of events. To take a single example: in a
not by legislation, but in the natural course
I must strike a sad note in alluding to
to be successful. We, therefore, make our present college which had in 1882 two classical and
the death of the Master of Caius. Mr.
appeal for the appointment of a Commission. "
five mathematical lecturers and one in rallied, and passed away suddenly on
Roberts was taken ill at the Boat Races,
The names of those who signed for a theology, and eight of the fellows were
Commission supply food for thought. The occupied neither in teaching nor in the Sunday. Of him it may be said that the
better he was known, the more he was liked
list opens with twenty-three professors or work of research, instruction is now pro-
ex-professors. Of
of these no fewer
than eight vided in the subjects already mentioned, devotion to his college, which, in numbers,
and respected, and that he showed a lifelong
are not Cambridge men, and four of them and in history, anatomy, chemistry, modern learning, and general tone, thanks greatly
are comparatively recent importations. Of languages, mechanical science, &c. , and
the remaining sixty-nine, thirty-nine are
to him, now stands in the very forefront
every single fellow is engaged in active in Cambridge. His honest, strenuous life
members of two colleges Trinity and King's work as a teacher, University official, or
-and four colleges contributo only one
will long be remembered in the University,
research student. Yet this has been effected
name each. Six collegesClare, Pembroke, entirely from within, and in a society which
and especially in the College he served so
Queens', Jesus, Magdalene, and Sidney-
J.
has by no means a reputation for zeal for
well.
have held completely aloof, and these all reformation or progress.
i Of almost every
bear a good reputation for being wisely college as much, if not more, could be said
and cautiously administered. Trinity hoads with perfect truth,
8
a
see.
## p. 704 (#526) ############################################
6
on.
THE
AND
FOR THE
priests " ; the God of Israel, and also dots. The key - note of the book is struck
NOTICES OF NEW BOOKS. Christ, are the sun ; Moses, Aaron, and in the first four lines :-
Miriam are
celestials”; the kingdom
I have dreamed the dream of the unknown mens
INotice in those columns does not preclude longer of heaven is the “ celestial zodiac,? ? and so And stood on the sightless shore ;
review. )
We are invited, as the title suggests,
I have looked in the eyes of reality. . . .
And I am young no more.
Theology.
to adopt these values as the final truth
about the Bible.
There is some slight humour in the address
Drews (Arthur), THE WITNESSES TO THE
HISTORICITY OF JESUS, translated by Scripture Teaching in Secondary Schools : has escaped the attentions of a shark; and the
(in imitation of Gray) to a young lady who
Joseph McCabe, 6/ net.
Watts
PAPERS READ AT A CONFERENCE HELD author achieves a sort of triumph in his poem
Prof. Drews, in his Preface, explains that IN CAMBRIDGE 10–13 APRIL, 1912, To the Absolute,' where the appropriate
this volume is a new version, abbreviated edited by N. P. Wood, with a Preface by atmosphere of incomprehensibility is pro-
and amended, of the volume which formed
F. C. Burkitt, 1/6 net.
duced with complete success.
the second part of The Christ-Myth, a
Cambridge University Press
work which, with others written in the same
Bibliography.
sense, has, as is well known, aroused immense Three points are emphasized by the
excitement in Germany, and of which an
various well-known contributors of these
English translation was published by Mr. papers : that the Scriptures must be edited Bibliography of Works by officers, Non-
Commissioned Officers, and Men who
Fisher Unwin in 1910. The author issues for the young, that the results of historical
have ever Served in the Royal, Bengal,
this version, it appears, as a challenge to and textual criticism should be communicated
Madras, or Bombay Artillery, compiled
English theologians—to see whether they to pupils, and yet that spiritual teaching
and verified by Major John H. Leslie
can adduce better proof of the validity of should not be subordinated to literary
and Capt. D. Smith: Part IV. COLOMB-
the Christian faith than German theologians and historical culture. Most of the papers
DU BOULAY, 2]
Sheffield, Leng
of the so-called “Liberal ” school have, lack fervour and charm.
in his opinion, succeeded in adducing:
Bromley Public Library, SIXTEENTH REPORT
The line of argument in this book is thus not
Law.
OF THE COMMITTEE, 1911-12.
actually new. Readers of the former transla- Jenks (Edward), A SHORT HISTORY OF
The Library
tion, and readers also of Mr. J. M. Robertson's
ENGLISH LAW FROM EARLIEST Chelsea, Metropolitan Borough of, ANNUAL
books, will be prepared to find the Jewish
TIMES TO THE END OF THE YEAR 1911, REPORT OF THE COMMITTEE FOR PUBLIC
and Roman witnesses to the historical
10/6 net.
Methuen LIBRARIES
MUSEUMS
existence of our Lord swept out of court as
either worthless or purely fictitious ; to hear
This is an admirable summary of Eng.
YEAR ENDING 31ST MARCH.
Pite & Thynne, 278A, King's Road,
that Paul knows nothing of an historical lish law in one volume written in a clear
Chelsea, S. W.
Jesus—that, indeed, the name of Paul is and readable style. The article on the laws
very likely only a general title for a number affecting labour should be read by all who Nottingham Public Libraries and Natural
of letter-writers seeking thus to give better are giving more than a superficial attention History Museum Committee, ANNUAL
authority to a religious system that went
to the present labour unrest. Few people are REPORT, 1911-12.
beyond the original Christianity”; to learn,
aware that a Minimum Wage Act was passed
Nottingham, Town Clerk
finally, that Isaiah and Wisdom and Job in the year 1350, which was subsequently All these catalogues contain points of
furnished the elements out of which were confirmed and alterod several times, and interest for the student of literary matters
elaborated the Christian theory of salvation only broke down in the later part of the to-day.
and the figure of Christ, while behind them eighteenth century, having worked fairly
we are to see the profound and widespread satisfactorily up to that date. Legal students
history and Biograpby.
idea of a suffering god, with its astral or beginning their work would do well to read
other naturalistic significance.
this book before undertaking the standard Complete Peerage of England, Scotland,
We are not in this place concerned to lift works on the subject.
Ireland, Great Britain and the United
the glove thus thrown down; we will only
Kingdom, Extant, Extinct, or Dormant,
remark that none of those theologians here
Poetry.
by G. E. C. , New Edition, Revised
heartily despised ever expressed himself
and much Enlarged, edited by Vicary
with a more trenchant dogmatism than Prof. Alexander (Samuel John), THE INVERTED Gibbs : Vol. II. Bass--CANNING, 25/ net.
Drews ; none was ever more boisterously
TORCH, AND OTHER POEMS, $1. 50 net.
St. Catherine Press
scornful of an opponent, or more ready to
San Francisco, Robertson
This volume carries this important work
hypnotize the docile into acquiescence by American verse, full of that prismatic on as far as the Canning earldom. It
mere vehemence of assertion and calm quality which is the principal asset of Cali- displays more
reticence than its pre-
assumption of patronage. For the indocile fornian oratory. But we like the rhyme of decessor, which, whatever its high merits,
this polemical animosity tends to obscure “ facts" and " 1 in the ode to Mr. certainly did not err in that direction.
his argument. Moreover, the structure which Kipling.
The numerous appendixes given here contain
the author seeks to set up as the true, over
many lists, some of real importance. Among
against the traditional, Christianity hardly Lodge (George Cabot), POEMS AND DRAMAS, them is a valuable one of the Knights of the
warrants so much “cocksureness. 11 Built 2 vols. , $2. 50 net; and his LIFE, $1. 25 Garter, and another of the great officers of
up from data both slender and far apart, it net. New York, Houghton-Mifflin Co. State, both of which it is desirable to have
requires, merely to hold it together, a great
The late G. C. Lodge's poems and dramas in this accessible form. The ancient peerage of
amount of difficult piecing out by inference here collected are free from the floridity Berkeley is prefaced by a learned note on
and imagination ; while, in the end, a good and the provincialism which disfigure much baronies by tenure, commenting on the
deal of it remains vulnerable to the weapons, American verse ; except where the influence changes in peerage law; while the Scottish
not so much of scholarship or theology, as
of Swinburne is visible, they are marked by titles of Breadalbane, Borthwick, and Buc-
of plain common sense and knowledge of
an almost bald simplicity. Mr. Lodge, cleuch have interesting animadversions on
human nature.
though industrious and thoughtful, had difficult questions in their history. Another
Gwatkin (Henry Melvill), EARLY CHURCH nothing new to say and nothing melodious useful foot-note illustrates the change of
HISTORY TO A. D. 313, 2 vols. , 17/ net. to sing. His work is free from glaring faults, the style “Earl of” to “Earl so-and-so. " The
Macmillan but his merits are purely negative. There is unpleasing origins of several modern peerages
The present edition has undergone slight an Introduction (full of journalistic clichés) are commented on. It seems curious that
in this useful work there is no mention of
modifications in the light of recent research, from the pen of Mr. Roosevelt. It is enter-
entailing some addition to the bibliography; taining to find that eminent man-piston, Bothwell's Norwegian “ wife," or of " Mrs.
but otherwise the position of the writer who“ feels like a young bull-moose after Williams,” whom Pepys regarded (for a time)
remains as pronounced as it was nearly beating his enemies to a frazzle," quoting as certainly married to his friend Lord
three years ago. We criticized the book on
from an unexpected source “He lived Brouncker,
its first appearance (Athen. , Oct. 16, 1909, detached days. . . . Deaf was he to world's
p. 457) for its prejudice against the Trac- tongue. ” The annexed 'Life of the poet Lacy (Mary E. ), WITH DANTE IN MODERN
FLORENCE, 6/ net.
tarians,
John Murray
is sufficiently commonplace.
its rigid conservatism, and its
asperity.
Perhaps all of the contents of this excel-
Low (Benjamin R. C. ), THE SAILOR WHO HAS lent little book are to be found in other
Jarvis (George Millen), A TWENTIETH- SAILED, AND OTHER POEMS, 5/ net. English books, but scarcely in 9o nandy and
CENTURY INTERPRETATION
New York, John Lane Co. compact a form ; and its value is increased
BIBLE, $1. 50 net. Chicago, the Author
Mr. Low's verse is of the more cultured by twenty-eight well-chosen illustrations
The interpretation here offered is astral. magazine type, pretty, but vague, with the from photographs. It would have been
The Bible is the work of “
astronomical ! inexpressible indicated by serried rows of wiser if the writer had frankly stated in
wax
OF
THE
## p. 705 (#527) ############################################
No. 4417, JUNE 22, 1912
THE ATHENÆUM
705
the preface her indebtedness to some of
her English predecessors; but the book Geography and Travel.
Sports and pastimes.
shows originality in the skill with which a
slight sketch of the poet's life is interwoven
Cambridge County Geographies : DUMFRIES- St. Quintin (Col. T. A. ), CHANCES OF SPORTS
with local descriptions of Florence and SHIRE, by James King Hewison ; OF SORTS.
Blackwood
Ravenna. With Florence in particular the
PERTHSHIRE, by Peter MacNair ; and
"I'm a great believer in chances, and I've
author displays an intimate acquaintance ;
RENFREWSHIRE, by Frederick Mort,
had my sbare. Chances of high position, chances
and her efforts to disentangle the city of
1/6 each
Cambridge University Press of big fortunes, chances at big heads, chances at
Dante's time from the far-different Florence The humanistic view of geography is all the many varied games I've played. Some
of modern guide-books, by which it is now successfully adopted in those interesting little
I've grasped, some l've missed, and when the
chances came, whether it was hit or miss, I never
overlaid and almost concealed, are pre- books. Mr. MacNair's 'Perthshire' suffers
felt quite certain on each occasion whether it
eminently successful. After a brief introduc- from over-technical terminology.
was from being too confident and sanguine, or
tion on the origin and early history of the
not enough so. Never mind; after all, whether
city, she devotes two chapters to the Florence
Outfit and Equipment : FOR THE TRAVELLER, ill or good, it is the varied chances that create
Without
of Dante, and to that quarter of it in which EXPLORER, AND SPORTSMAN, edited by the excitements and pleasures of life.
them what is it? ”
he lived. Admirable as these pages are for
Eustace Reynolds-Ball, with Contribu-
their clearness and accuracy, their effect tions by Sir H. H. Johnston, Harry de Thus Col. St. Quintin in his Introduction.
would have been enhanced, for those who Windt, F. C. Selous, and others.
He further wisely lays down and obeys the
have seen Florence, by a plan of the modern
Reynolds-Ball's Guides rule that religion, politics, and the ladies
city, showing the position of the Cerchia This volume is evidently intended for
are not to be discussed. He thanks various
Antica, and of the wider circuit of walls inexperienced travellers in the first place, persons for aid, specially Mr. William Black-
erected in Dante's day by Arnolfo del though probably those with some experience wood-in whose magazine many of the
Cambio. The following chapters deal with are the most likely to profit by its use. For stories have appeared—“ for having given
the more important buildings then, and discrimination is required in order to decide me my head and allowed me to blunder over
still, standing, and with the great churches what articles mentioned may safely be the country in my own way without a curb. ”
--the Duomo, Santa Maria Novella, and omitted when one is making preparations for In doing so Mr. Blackwood showed the
Santa Croce which were all begun during a journey. Many matters are discussed, and clearest perception of what would attract
that remarkable period. There is a short advice for the most part sound, though in readers, for from start to finish there is
review of thirteenth-century art, as seen cases difficult to follow- is freely given. not a dull page. No pretence is made of fine
especially in the master and pupil, Cimabue Outfit and equipment for hot and cold writing, but there is a strong flavour of the
and Giotto, and of the personal relations of countries, how to preserve health and to deal language of various sports.
Dante with the latter painter. The last with sickness, the batteries for sportsmen The charm of the book consists less in the
chapter, which is entitled 'Florence in various countries, and even an angling author's power of description, though that
Repentant, recalls the successive efforts outfit, are all dealt with reasonably.
is considerable, than in his manner of taking
made by the Republic to atone for her
the reader into his confidence and revealing
outrageous treatment of her great citizen Pullen-Burry (B. ), FROM HALIFAX TO VAN- much of his own life. Its scope is varied.
and to recover his bones from their last
COUVER, 12/6 net.
Mills & Boon The author served twenty-six years in the
resting - place at Ravenna. The author in-
clines to the view, which has recently been to be Imperialist first of all
, then traveller, the Remount
Department, visiting Australia
The author of the present volume claims Hussars for six years, and was employed in
10th Hussars ; he also commanded the 8th
much disputed, that Dante studied both at and lastly lecturer. She is able, therefore, in the course of business. During these
Paris and Oxford; but the evidence she
adduces for the Oxford visit rests only on
to find other subjects than Woman's Suffrage
tradition, though supported by a vague
to discuss, though her observations have years he saw much hunting, racing, pig-
expression in a poem of Boccaccio. “For the naturally been directed largely from the sticking, polo, and shooting in many parts
embassy to Rome in 1301, which has also
woman's point of view. Unfortunately for each sport. The account of his travels in
of the world, and has adequately described
been contested, and which she is inclined
to the Dominion; these observations have and beyond the Himalaya is true to nature.
reject, she gives only the late authority of resulted in the opinion that Canadian In the list of illustrations (p. vii) one is
Leonardo Bruni
, though it is expressly women in the West, at any rate hare less mentioned at p. 144, but does not appear
mentioned by the contemporary
Dino prosperous than any others of their sex
there in the copy before us.
Compagni, and is accepted in our own day amongst civilized people.
by Prof. Villari. As a whole the book is
It is noticeable that her book increases in
Col. St. Quintin is confessedly no fisher-
singularly free from inaccuracies and un-
interest
with the turning of its pages. Perhaps hooked a tarpon off the
Mexican coast which,
man, yet he can tell an angler's tale. He
balanced statements ; but on p. 154 the its most arresting chapters are those dealing after the manner of these fish, leapt pro-
entry of Charles of Valois into Florence is with Winnipeg, the great centre of the wheat
placed in 1303 instead of 1301, and on p. 219 industry. In this city are situated the digiously, and accidentally fell into the
boat; after being belaboured by the Colonel
the exile of Dante is referred to February, biggest railway yards in the world ; these
1303, instead of January, 1302. The proofs are owned by_one corporation, and the and frightening the boy who managed the
have been somewhat carelessly corrected genesis of the Pacific Railway Company is punt, it leapt out again, but the hooks
held.
as regards proper names.
explained earlier in the volume. Here a
wheat expert gave his interviewer the infor- Shaking his head and tearing at the hook,
Reade (Aleyn Lyell),_JOHNSONIAN GLEAN- cultivated area to that which has never
mation that in Canada the proportion of he gave me a very similar feeling to what a mad,
keen horse does when, impatient of control, he
INGS : Part II. FRANCIS BARBER, THE
been broken up is as a cabbage patch to a
fights and tears at his bridle as he gallops along,
Doctor's NEGRO SERVANT, 6/
for we were paddling after and hanging on to that
thousand-acre farm. To demonstrate the big fish as hard as we could. '
Liverpool, the Author
opportunities presented to intending pur. After a long fight it was landed, and proved
Besides possessing greater unity of interest chasers, an instance is cited where a farm
than its predecessor, Mr. Reade's new volume in New Brunswick, with house and two barns, to be" 5 ft. 8 in. in length-as long as I am. ”
shows much improvement both in type and only four miles distant from a railway sta- The illustrations deserve praise ; indeed, in
paper, whilst the same high standard of tion, was offered for sale at the low figure of every respect author and publisher may be
careful research and dispassionate judgment 801. , twenty-five of its hundred acres having congratulated.
is maintained. All that seems likely to be been already cleared! In the matter of dis-
known about the negro, whom Johnson had advantages, the severity of Canadian winters
Education.
educated and made his residuary legatee, to women is not dismissed lightly but Freeman (K. J. ), SCHOOLS OF HELLAS : AN
is here collected; and some unpublished certain benefits attendant upon it are justly
ESSAY ON THE PRACTICE AND THEORY
letters to him from Boswell, asking for touched upon. More serious is the sparsity
OF ANCIENT GREEK EDUCATION FROM
Barber's assistance in his forthcoming bio- of accommodation for
workers,
600 TO 300 B. C. , edited by M. J. Rendall,
graphy, are printed, as well as a letter (given which seems to manifest itself throughout the
Second Edition, 5/ net. Macmillan
in facsimile) of the negro himself to Bishop great towns of the Dominion. No one contra-
Percy. A curious error of Dr. Hill's, trace- dicts it, and no one seems in a position to
We noticed this essay by a brilliant
able to a misprint in Croker, is corrected in remedy it.
young scholar too early lost on July 6th,
chap. vi. The author expresses himself as The unpopularity of emigrants from our
1907, and now we share the pleasure expressed
dissatisfied with the evidence that either own shores is a subject which has often been memoir of the author, in which he
by Mr. Rendall in a little addition to his
of the portraits he reproduces really re-
that
discussed. This inimical feeling seems to
presents Barber, though the frontispieco be gradually passing away as men and women
the book has already fought its way well
is certainly after Reynolds, who in all proba- of more solid worth are sent to replace the
into the third thousand of copies. ''
bility painted Johnson's servant among family rubbish which previously was often Livingstone College Year Book, 1912, 6d.
other black subjects.
tipped into the Colony.
Leyton, E. , the College
66
women
says
## p. 706 (#528) ############################################
706
THE ATHENÆUM
No. 4417, JUNE 22, 1912
SONAL
IN
AND
we
Teacher's Encyclopædia (The), Vols. VI. and Munro (J. Iverach), Essay I. : A RESEARCH and entirely practical, may be justly praised.
VII. , 8/6 each.
INTO THE ORIGIN OF THE THIRD PER- We regret, however, that Miss Althaus,
Caxton Publishing Co.
PRONOUN X1 EPICENE like other phoneticians of the moment,
It was on May 13th, 1911, that we re-
PENTATEUCH, AND ITS CONNEXION WITH teaches a somewhat slovenly and affected
viewed the first volume of “The Teacher's
SEMITIC INDO-EUROPEAN LAN- form of Southern English pronunciation. ,
Encyclopædia,' and we have now before us
GUAGES, a Contribution to Philological | Arnold's School Series : THE ALBION PHONIC
the last two volumes (vi. and vii. ) of this Science, 1/6 net.
Frowde
READERS, FIRST PRIMER, 3d. ; SECOND
admirable reference book. Vol. vii. contains Mr. Munro is making a bold attempt to
PRIMER, 4d. ; FIRST INFANT READER,
a general index, which is useful so far as revolutionize our ideas regarding the original
6d. ; SECOND INFANT READER, 6d. ;
it goes. Since, however, the plan of the forms of Semitic speech, and to establish the
and PREPARATORY READER, 8d.
whole work is not on alphabetical lines, theory of a common foundation for the latter
but according to broad headings and groups and the great Indo-European family of Bruyère (Jean de la), CARACTÈRES, PAGES
of subjects, it would have been wiser to give languages. As is indicated on the title- CHOISIES, Notes de Hardress O'Grady,
more space to the index and make it so page, the argument of the present essay Préface d'Augustin Filon; and Sainte-
comprehensive that there would be little hinges on the use of hw' (X117) in the Penta- Beuve (C. A. ), PROFILS ANGLAIS,
chance of missing the correct reference teuch for the pronoun of both the third Notes de Hardress O'Grady, 1/6. Dent
even on matters of detail. In vol. vi. the person singular masculine and feminine. There has long been wanting in this
articles on special schools are completed by The prevalent opinion on this point may here country a series of French classics for the
an article on the teaching of the blind and be stated in the words of Dr. Driver, who English reader which should, while avoiding
deaf. Then follows an adequate treatment says that “the view formerly held,” accord- the voluminousness of the library edition,
of the organization of education in various ing to which “the epicene 17 was an supply something more than the mere class-
countries, including England, Scotland, Ire- archaism in Hebrew, cannot. . . . be any room textbook. These two volumes give
land, France, Germany, America, Canada, longer maintained ; Hebrew must have comprehensively what is best in La Bruyère
and Australasia. Vol. vii. devotes some possessed the double form from the begin- and the criticism of Sainte-Beuve on English
200 pages to a useful history of educational | ning. " Our author, on the other hand, sets literature, and are further furnished with
thought from the time of the Greeks to the out to prove that we have here to deal with useful Introductions and notes, which do
present day. Here we have in reasonable an archaism of very old standing, and he not intrude on the text. They are pleasingly
compass a complete textbook of the subject, believes that the still earlier forms lying bound in cloth covers.
the work of Mr. James Drevor and Prof. behind the pronoun in question are hau Eliot (George), Silas MARNER, THE WEAVER
Alexander Darroch, but mainly of the latter. for the masculine, and hai for the feminine.
OF RAVELOE, edited, with Introduction
It is illustrated by fourteen full-page por. The basal hypothesis which underlies and Notes, by F. E. Bevan, 1!
traits of such leaders in education as Abelard, this result is that the original mode of express-
Cambridge University Press
Erasmus, Comenius, Rousseau, Kant, ing the active in verbal formation was by This charming story is a suitable addition
Herbart, and Spencer. This sketch of means of au placed between the two conso- to English Literature for Schools. The
educational history comes appropriately at nants in the biliteral stage of Semitic speech, editor's Introduction, meant more,
the close of the work, welding together as and that the passive was similarly expressed imagine, for teachers than for readers, gives
it does the many subjects discussed in the by the diphthong ai. It was at this biliteral | all that needs to be said about the book
previous volumes. It was a common Greek stage, Mr. Munro maintains, that the Indo- and its author. The notes, too, are capably
saying that you must see a man's end before European family of speech separated from done, though on the first page we meet
you called him happy; we have read the last the Semitic, “when pronominal forms were with Yahweh in & Bible reference,
of The Teacher's Encyclopædia,' and may themselves verbal nouns, and their order, which strikes us as a foolish piece of pedantry,
with confidence call it excellent.
with regard to the verbal noun required to and find the explanation that • Merry
make what we call a verb, was still fluid. "
England' is not much more than Alma
Philology.
Has our essayist proved his case? It is, Mater," which is hardly helpful without a
perhaps, not fair to pronounce a decisive knowledge of Latin. Vicinage" and a
Juvenal, Fourteen Satires of, translated into judgment before the appearance of the few more of George Eliot's learned para-
English by Alexander Leeper, New and other essays promised in continuation of phrases might have been explained.
Revised Edition, 5! Macmillan the theme. But one may, so far as the pre-
This rendering well deserves its place in the sent argument justifies an opinion, say that Goldsmith, THE DESERTED VILLAGE, edited,
with Introduction and Notes, by G. G.
familiar dark blue
series, being both spirited there is here, amidst much that is instructive,
Whiskard, 6d.
and idiomatic. First published in 1882 suggestive, and of some likelihood, much that
as the joint work of its author and Prof. is fanciful and that rests on mere assump-
Oxford, Clarendon Press
H. A. Strong, it was revised ten years later tions.
The editor, in his Introduction and notes,
We will refer to only two points.
by Dr. Leeper, and now again has been so It does not strike us that Mr. Munro has puts before the young reader all that needs
largely rewritten by him as to be virtually produced a sufficient amount of evidence explanation.
a new book. Comparing the present issue against the view that the vowel u was used Hood (G. F. ), PROBLEMS IN PRACTICAL
with that of 1882, which he has long used, as a sign of the passive in the original struc- CHEMISTRY FOR ADVANCED STUDENTS,
the reviewer finds an elaboration of style ture of Semitic languages. As an instance
5/ net.
Mills & Boon
and phrase which generally brings out the of fancifulness in the argument, his treatment
The problems collected in this volume
meaning better. Juno virguncula," once of the verb müth (to die) may be mentioned. require in the student a thorough knowledge
“a little wench,” is now “a bashful maid. ” “ The imperfect," he says, ' has the old of the elementary groundwork of chemistry,
But occasionally longer versions add nothing active form [yāmûth] because it expressed
as many of the exercises are of an advanced
to the rendering; Juvenal's points are
the struggle. The perfect [mêth) was used nature and of considerable difficulty. The
sharply made, and do not need any emphasiz. when all
was over, and therefore had the old author's directions are, however, fully and
ing. Why, for instance, in xiii. 172 add passive form. ”
lucidly given, and should be effective for
yet” after the though 22 clause? It is We think, however, that Mr. Munro has students preparing for higher examinations.
neither in the Latin nor needed in the done well to reopen the whole question.
English.
Studies like these are sure to promote the Jenks (Paul R. ), A MANUAL OF LATIN WORD
There are a few notes as to the text interests of true linguistic and ethnological FORMATION FOR SECONDARY SCHOOLS,
adopted, “where there might seem to be science, though the final result may not be 1/6
Harrap
room for doubt. ” More, we think, should quite what the zealous pioneer expected. Examples of derivatives are arranged in
have been done in this way, especially
lists to illustrate word-formation, as seen
Scbool-Books.
since Prof. Housman's drastic examination
in Cæsar, Cicero, and Virgil, the com-
of the claims of MS. Pithoeanus in 1905. Althaus (L. H. ), THE SOUNDS OF THE MOTHER piler's aim being to supply a three years'
The “mulio consul " of viii. 148, unknown TONGUE, A MANUAL OF SPEECH-TRAIN-
course for students of Latin.
in 1882, is now duly rendered, and deserved
FOR PREPARATORY AND LOWER Laurie (André), MÉMOIRES D'UN COLLÉGIEN,
to be recorded at the side of the text.
FORMS IN SECONDARY SCHOOLS, AND Authorized Edition, edited, with Exer-
Encouraged by the success of Mr. J. D. FOR VTH, VITH, OR VIITH STANDARDS
cises, Notes, and Vocabulary, by O. B.
Duff in dealing with Satire VI. , Dr. Leeper IN ELEMENTARY SCHOOLS, 2/ net; and Super, 1/6
Harrap
has now added a vigorous translation of it SOUND-DRILL AND READING EXERCISES
This interesting story of school life in
to this issue. On the other hand, the IN PHONETIC SCRIPT FROM THE ABOVE, France should prove a welcome textbook
critical notes, mainly as to corrupt passages,
6d.
Hodder & Stoughton for English students, as the French is of
which occupied some pages in the edition of Speech-training in the vernacular is un-
the easy type required of candidates for
1882, have disappeared, and we get instead doubtedly necessary for children in ele- the Junior Local examinations. Exercises,
others on four passages in which Prof. T. G. mentary schools entoring secondary schools, notes and vocabulary are given in the
Tucker plays a leading part.
and these publications, admirable in method appendix.
66
66
ING
## p. 707 (#529) ############################################
No. 4417, JUNE 22, 1912
THE ATHENÆUM
707
A
unseens
seem
BEING THE
COTT
AS
Macaulay, EssAY ON JOHN BUNYAN, 3d. Childo-Pemberton (Harriet L. ), THE SILENT Warwick (Anno), THE UNKNOWN WOMAN, 6/
paper, 4d. cloth.
VALLEY, AN EPISODE, 6/ Constable
Mills & Boon
Oxford, Clarendon Press The pages of this novel are abundantly There are here really two unknown
A slim booklet in the Oxford Plain Texts sprinkled with pieces of original poetry, women in the case. One, a pseudo-antiquo
which may well attract the adult as well as supposed to be sung or recited by those bust, becomes the centre of a neatly
the learner.
taking part in the action—a revival of an complicated intrigue; the other, to us less
Silya Latina, LATIN READING-BOOK,
antique fashion which we are not altogether interesting, is a femme incomprise valiantly
chosen and arranged by J. D. Duff, 2/
prepared to welcome. In other respects, making the most of a little unhappiness to
Cambridge University Press too, the atmosphere suffers from an excess the admiration of all beholders. The story
This book, the work of an accomplished of culture ; and the characters, like the presents & curious and lively picture of
teacher, contains a hundred and forty- story, which has a vague connexion with artistic circles in New York, and emphasizes
five extracts in the same number of pages,
the theory of reincarnation, lack definition. the pernicious influence of journalism as
followed by a few notes on each extract.
But the writing has a delicate and fantastic a factor in American social life.
Each passage is preceded by a short sum-
charm, especially in descriptive passages ;
and the refrain of at least one lyric recurs
General.
mary; and to aid the pupil in the verse
" the long vowels are marked. persistently to memory.
Annual Register : A REVIEW OF PUBLIC
No doubt the book will serve as an excellent Gerard (Dorothea), EXOTIC MARTHA, 6/
EVENTS AT HOME AND ABROAD FOR
introduction to Virgil and Cicero.
Stanley Paul
THE YEAR 1911, New Series, 18/
Swift, THE BATTLE OF THE BOOKS, extracted
“Exotic Martha " has all the hardiness of
Longmans
from Selections from Swift, edited by make a lively story. She arrives in Batavia
a healthy outdoor plant, and her adventures This time-honoured publication continues
Sir Henry Craik, 2/
to maintain its excellence as a work of
Oxford, Clarendon Press as a prospective bride, only to find the
reference. As usual, the chapters on domestic
A capable edition, with a Life of Swift. bridegroom-elect already married. Her sub- affairs
are chiefly Parliamentary ; but
We think the little book might have been sequent proceedings are unusual, but enter- social events, such as the railway strike
repaged. The text begins at p. 196, and the taining.
and even the stoppage of the Wells-Johnson
notes include references for explanations to Hewlett (Maurice), OPEN COUNTRY; and boxing match, are deftly woven into the
pages which do not exist here.
