inquiry into the constitutional development of
The author discusses the cardinal and sub- English government since the accession of
sidiary problems affecting the balance of power
George III.
The author discusses the cardinal and sub- English government since the accession of
sidiary problems affecting the balance of power
George III.
Athenaeum - London - 1912a
Though his tone is
deemed essential to poetic realization. For
as it is, to the garish affectation of its modern
generally conciliatory, his predicament is so
when the cowboy tires of the din of uncouth setting.
obvious as to entrap him into a labyrinth of
rodomontade delivered in his peculiar dialect,
Rossetti (William M. ), The Works of Dante
hesitating and indecisive deductions. His reason-
he seems ready to become sentimentally
ing is too uneasy, and his phraseology too vague,
sophisticated, and to repine and languish with
Gabriel Rossetti, edited with Preface and Notes,
for us to extract substance from his discourse,
the most melting of our civilized lyricists.
9/ net.
We possess
except in the recommendations
a practically complete and
for more
We are not discounting, the ebullience of the
authoritative edition of Rossetti's poems,
ordered methods of church organization.
"Sir Galahads" of the plains, but their
Morgan (Rev. G. Campbell), Sunrise : Behold, He
capacity to make poetry out of it.
thanks to the care and assiduity of his brother.
This new edition has been revised and enlarged.
Cometh! an Introduction to a Study of the Dorant (Herbert), The Age, and Other Poems, Reservations in the printing of poems hitherto
Second Advent.
1/6 net.
unpublished have been deemed necessary,
A collection of three sermons dealing with Mr. Dorant bas fallen into the wrong age, for owing to the poet's fastidious dislike of unfold.
Advent. The author's theme -- that of Mrs.
his gleanings are exactly paralleled by those of ing to the world work which he considered
Besant in the summer of last year-is the second
the normal Augustan who moved in the select unrepresentative of his mature and finished
coming of the Messiah. He details and investi-
hierarchy of Pope's days. The trick of moral- labour. The pieces printed for the first time
gates the Scriptural evidence which furnishes
izing and personifying the abstract; the heroic either fragmentary or juvenilia. The
the groundwork of this speculation, and appeals couplet ; the balanced antithetical style ; the latter are frequently grotesque, and the merit
for a general preparedness to blunt the edge
elegance of phrasing, all are his, and all are of the former is unequal.
of the divine wrath. Dr. Morgan adopts an
Some are beautiful,
flattened and eviscerated.
polished cameos : others stray, fugitive,
arbitrary scale of division, which, though it
Dredan (John M. ), The Poems of John Cleveland,
phosphorescent gleams ;
simplifies the problem of human iniquity,
others clumsy and
entirely fails to recognize the diversities and
annotated and corrected for the First Time,
of no positive value. They are eminently
complexities of human nature itself. The
with Biographical and Historical Introductions,
worth perusal. The print of this edition is so
small as to be fatiguing to the eyes.
“ believing " are to inherit the kingdom ; the
8/6 net.
"rejecting” to be cast out. The " believing
American annotators, editors, compilers, and
Shakespeare, Complete Works, Vols. VII. -IX. ,
are the good ; the "rejecting the bad. Dr. thesis-makers are quaintly prone to resuscitat-
1/ net each.
Morgan is too dogmatic to appeal to many
ing our buried artists, poets, philosophers, and
In the World's Classics, Pocket Edition.
religious thinkers of to-day.
orators of little mark, and dressing them out in Shakespeare, The Tudor : The Tragedy of Mac-
Selwyn (Edward Carus), The Oracles in the New a voluminous panoply of notes, introductions, beth, edited by Arthur C. L. Brown; The
Testament, 10/6 net.
appendixes, and genealogical tables. This Merchant of Venice, edited by Harry Morgan
A new exegesis of the theme commonly known volume is typical of that industrious spirit. We Ayres.
as the “
Argument from Prophecy,” amplified are inundated with information concerning the A neat little edition with brief notes and
into other considerations of the connexion obscure Royalist satirist of the seventeenth glossary. The editors are American scholars.
between the Old and New Testaments. Dr. century, John Cleveland, biographically and Whittier (John Greenleaf), Selections from his
Selwyn treats his subject to exhaustive citation, æsthetically; Like Rochester, he frequently Poems, in 2 parts (combined), with an Introduc-
reinforcing it by what extraneous historical oversteps the borderland of taste, and, like tion by Harold Hodgkin, 1/ net.
material he can collect. He discusses the Cowley, he revels in euphuistic similes and
A reissue in the charming Muses' Library
scope, cause, and manner of points of identity comparisons. His superlative vocabulary for
from the Olive Books, with the introduction
in the light of the Messianic consciousness and the grossegt invective fills the reader with
determination to fulfil the law. "
wonder. He is, moreover, an adept at repro-
repeated. It would be an audacious under-
Trotter (Archdeacon E. B. ), The Royal Progress of
taking to print Whittier in his entirety, in a
ducing the philosophic phraseology of the time.
our Lord and its Significance : Critical and
cheap edition, for his inspiration is fitful. At
Practical Thoughts on Luke ix. 51-xviii. 14, 5/
Fox (Marion), The Lost Vocation.
his best he has a luminous transparency and
net.
Miss Fox strikes few notes on her lyre, and
unity of feeling which these selections faith-
This work seems to us to lack & consistent
strikes them gingerly. She treads delicately, and
fully display.
sequence of ideas, and is characterized by irrele-
seems fearful of the pitfalls of banality, tur- Wuppermann (Carlos), Quiet Places.
vance and timidity of thought. Archdeacon
gidity, and attitudinizing. It is perhaps this Mr. Wuppermann has a number of dramatic
Trotter toys with the higher criticism, and lacks
tendency to vacillation and self-distrust that subterfuges, which endow his poetry with a
originality. At best, it is a running com.
divests her verse of body. She glides on with plausible driving force. His tricks of abbre-
mentary and expansion of the dicta of our Lord
placable rhythm, leaving but a faint ephemeral viation, of suggestive pauses, of parenthesis,
within the limits prescribed.
impression on the mind. Even her superla- and vaulting buoyantly from one meaning
Law.
tives seem advanced in a deprecating, apolo- to another, are clever, though on close scrutiny
getic manner. Her strongest claim to consider-
Oppenheim (L. ), International Law: Vol. I.
they yield more chaff than grain. Browning,
Peace, 18/ net.
ation is an ethereal, occasionally wistful melan- of course, supplies some of Mr. Wuppermann's
choly.
capital, and be loves juggling with meta-
A second edition that has undergone close
revision. A number of fresh topics, such as
Fox (S. M. ), The Waters of Bitterness, 2/6 net.
physical conceits, plunging about among them
in naive delight. We do not take his hypnotic
wireless telegraphy on the open sea ; the Casa Materials for the Study of the English Drama
Blanca incident;
trances seriously, but we readily appreciate
the International Prize
Court; the Second Hague Convention and the
(excluding Shakespeare): a Selected List of
the cunning that has gone to their manufac-
Books in the Newberry Library.
ture and his evident and sincere pleasure in
Declaration of London, have been incorporated. McClymont (J. R. ), Metrical Romances and
them.
Though the new matter, including additions to
the text and bibliography, amounts to “ nearly
Ballads, 3/8 net.
Music.
a quarter of the former work,” the bulk of the
The author of these verses, distrustful of
London College of Music : _Annual Report upon
book, owing to discreet and economical arrange-
analyzing his own emotions and expressing his
the Local and Higher Examinations for the
ment, is not materially increased. The new
own spiritual experiences, relies on purely exotic
Year 1911; and Syllabus of Requirements for
portions fulfil the functions of comprehensive
sources to convey his meaning. His perceptions
the Local Examinations for Certificates in
statement, and are smoothly interwoven with lack the stamp or the authority
of a passionate
Practical and Theoretical Music, and for the
the old.
and individual expression. He sings with
Higher Examinations, 1912, and part of 1913.
Fine Art and Archeology.
fine abandon on his little greenhouse, without
Excavations at Cyrene, First Campaign, 1910-11 :
penetrating his self-made house of glass. His Proceedings of the Musical Association, Thirty-
Seventh Session (1910-11), 21/ net.
Preliminary Reports, by Richard Norton, M'Neal-Sweeney (Mildred), Men of No Land, and
vocabulary is not attractive.
The memorandum and annual report of the
Joseph C. Hoppin, Charles D. Curtis, and
Association. It is hardly as interesting as some
A. F. S. Sladden: Extract from the Bulletin
Other Poems, 4/6 net.
reports of former years, though Mr. Bernard
of the Archæological Institute of America, The writer belongs to that rare species which Shaw's brilliant paper on 'The Reminiscences
Quinquagenarian is included. Mr.
Imperial Arts League, Journal, January, ed.
of
uses terms and words as symbols of feeling. Her
metre is faulty; her expression uncertain, Norman O'Neill has embodied some suggestive
John Rylands Library, Manchester, Catalogue of
and vaguely maladroit. But the singleness of criticisms in • Music to Stage Plays. The
an Exhibition of Mediæval Manuscripts and
Jewelled Book Covers, 6d. net.
purpose and the effort at self-realization are Association is connected with the International
so clear as to enable us to feel the strong and Musical Society.
Vol. II.
## p. (#66) #################################################
66
No. 4395, JAN. 20, 1912
THE ATHENÆUM
ality. The book has no political pretensions,
for it simply reiterates the familiar causes
célèbres of Charles II. 's Court.
Stirling (Amelia Hutchison), James Hutchison
Stirling : his Life and Work, 10/6 net.
This biography should be much appreciated
by all who reverence the work and character of
the translator of Spinoa's Ethic' and the
author of The Secret of Hegel. ' The work
has been done with ability and insight, and
Stirling's connexion with the great men of his
day, especially Carlyle, adds to its interest.
Philosophy.
exposé of the means by which Mr. Morgan and
Adamson (Robert), A Short History of Logic,
his fellows have become, in the phrase of the
author, solid. "
edited by Prof. W. R. Sorley, 5/ net.
Johnson (William Savage), Thomas Carlyle : a
The greater part of this book is virtually a
Study of his Literary Apprenticeship, 1814-31,
reprint of Prof. Adamson's article on 'Logic
4/6 net.
in the ninth edition of The Encyclopædia
The title of this brief book led us to expect
Britannica. The remainder consists of four
an estimate of Carlyle's genius between the
articles on Category, Lotze, and Bradley's Logic.
years 1814 and 1831. It is only incidentally
King (Henry Churchill), The Moral and Religious
that we apprehend the limitations which Mr.
Challenge of our Times: the Guiding Principle Johnson has himself chosen. His appreciation
in Human Development: Reverence for Per- is confined to expounding Carlyle's religious
sonality, 6/6 net.
and philosophic outlook, as shown in certain
Mr. King has undertaken a task that practic-
books that he wrote from 1814 to 1831. Our
ally covers all human activities and their
impression of a discipleship is as vague as it
economic significance at the present time. As
would be in later years, when Carlyle's mental
a statement of various processes which civiliza-
initiative had learnt a sturdier self-reliance.
tion is labouring to bring to the birth, his work
Chapters on the times and on Carlyle's poetic
has value and actuality. But his eagerness theories are wedged in irrelevantly, while the
and ambition are such that he vaults into con-
development of his volcanic style is not dis-
clusions which have little relevance to his
cussed. If Mr. Johnson's manner is vacillating,
data, and are too meagre to meet the compre-
his matter is sound enough, and the majority of
hensive demand made upon them. He has
people who read literature, however cursorily,
hardly succeeded in dovetailing, his hetero- must be well aware of the conclusions that he
geneous material with the judiciousness it
evolves. The volume is issued by Yale Univer
requires. But the book has ideas, and excels
sity.
in the presentation of broad generalizations.
Johnstone (Hilda), A Hundred Years of History
Wordsworth (J. C. ), Short Essays in Constructive
from Record and Chronicle, 1216-1327, 5/ net.
Philosophy, 31
For notice see p. 64.
As Mr. Wordsworth justly and modestly
Kennard (Nina H. ), Lafcadio Hearn: his Life
remarks, it is almost impossible to write
and Work, 12/6 net.
“wholly original essays on metaphysics in
A new biography of the strange genius who,
our present plethora of speculation. Even
M. Bergson is dubbed a second Heraclitus.
forsaking the West for the East, and making
Japan his home, yet all the time looked back
The sole original theory of the author is con-
to the Anglo-Saxon world for that literary fame
tained in the last chapter, and is tentatively
which, since his death, has abundantly been
advanced. He maintains the reality of time
his. The book contains a number of unpub-
against both its defenders and adherents. The
lished letters from Hearn to his half-sister,
other theses deal principally with the monist
Mrs. Atkinson.
and atomical theories of the universe. The
Mahan (Capt. A. T. ), Naval Strategy compared and
writer ranges himself on the side of the philoso-
contrasted with the Principles and Practice of
phers who credit the movement of material
elements towards unity-the “ free develop-
Military Operations on Land, 16/ net.
Lectures delivered at U. S. Naval War College,
ment” of the Being from unity to plurality,
Newport, R. I. , between 1887 and 1911.
and again from plurality towards unity. Mr.
May (Sir Thomas Erskine), The Constitutional
Wordsworth scrupulously avoids committal to
doctrinaire or didactic conclusions.
History of England since the Accession of George
the Third, edited and continued to 1911 by
Francis Holland, Vols. 1. and II. , 15/ net;
History and Biography.
Vol. III. , by Francis Holland, 12/6 net.
Barclay (Sir Thomas), The Turco-Italian War and
The fourth edition of Sir Erskine May's
its Problems, 5/ net.
inquiry into the constitutional development of
The author discusses the cardinal and sub- English government since the accession of
sidiary problems affecting the balance of power
George III. , from the orthodox Whig position.
in Europe, the possibilities of adjustment, and the
Up to 1860 only revision has been necessary, but
extent of interrelated interests. He also, in view
a third and bulky volume now carries the work
of peace in the near future, estimates on what down to the passing of the Parliament Act in
terms an agreement could be reached. He
1911. For the last fifty years the influence
sketches the history of the war up to the present
and prerogative of the Crown have been almost
time, and pronounces on the illegality of the
stationary, and this supplementary volume
Italian position. More than half of the book is
treats exclusively the progressive advance of
taken up with appendixes.
Parliamentary institutions, party vicissitudes,
Carnegy (Mildred), A Queen's Knight, 7/6 net.
the relation of the State to religion, local
This is one of the numerous biographies
government, civil and military service reforms,
written not so much for the student as the
the self-governing colonies, and the recent con-
circulating library. It presents the career of
stitutional crisis. The distinction of the former
Axel de Fersen, the Swedish nobleman whose
volumes is well maintained, nor can any devia-
chivalrous devotion to Marie Antoinette
tion from the point of view we are wont to
involved him in the events of 1789–93. An
associate with Sir Erskine May be detected.
appreciation of the real importance of the Ryan (Daniel J:), The Civil War Literature of
French Revolution would be of no advantage to
Geography and Travel.
Frazer (J. Nelson), In Foreign Lands: Sketches
of Travel in Three Continents, 7/6 net.
The author is a member of the Indian Educa.
tional Service who has travelled in Asia, Africa,
and the Pacific. In view of the wealth of
literature dealing with india, the first part of
the book seems a. trifle superfluous, but it is
well written, as is the somewhat superficial
'Glimpse of Africa. More interesting are Mr.
Frazer's impressions of Fiji and the effect of
European civilization on its inhabitants.
Gillpatrick (Wallace), Wanderings in Mexico :
Ohio : a Bibliography, with Explanatory and
such a work, and it shows none. Readers who
Historical Notes.
like an easy style and a sentimental love.
A bibliography of the literature of and
interest will be well satisfied.
concerning Ohio during the Civil War, whether
Dunraven (Earl of), The Legacy of Past Years :
books, pamphlets, or published addresses.
a Study of Irish History, Bd. net.
Short critical and explanatory précis of the
New Edition.
writers and their work are supplied. The collector
Espitalier (Albert), Napoleon and King Murat :
has adopted the alphabetical system, and in
à Biography compiled from Hitherto Unknown
symmetry and order his volume of references
and Unpublished Documents, translated by
leaves nothing to be desired, while there is a
J. Lewis May.
complete index.
M. Espitalier obtains much of his documentary Scottish Historical Review, January, 2/6 net.
evidence from such sources as the Archivio
The January number contains some erudite
di Stato at Naples, the Società Napolitana di
and original research, largely upon early
history.
Storia Patria, the Austrian archives, and the
The article on The Old Schools and Universi-
British Record Office. Particular attention is
ties' of Scotland throws up in bold relief their
devoted to Murat's two treaties with Austria,
development and historical continuity. Mr.
which explain much of his conduct in 1814.
A. W. Johnston contributes some suggestive
An appendix, index, and genealogical table
matter on the twelfth-century mythological lays
give substance to the investigation.
of the man of Orkney in collaboration with Ice-
Expedition on the Sacramento and San Joaquin
landers. Dr. Brandl's subversive article on
Rivers in 1817: Diary of Fray Narciso Duran,
The Vision of the Cross of Christ,' which
edited by C. E. Chapman.
attempts to shift the authorship from Cynewulf
One of the publications of the Academy of
to an anonymous Northumbrian of the eighth
Pacific Coast History:
century, is built upon somewhat slender
Hovey (Carl), The Life Story of J. Pierpont
foundations. There are a large number of
Morgan.
interesting reviews.
If it is of any interest to the public to know Sergeant (Philip W. ), My Lady Castlemaine :
how millions are earned, or how they are spent, being a Life of Barbara Villiers, Countess of
such things may be found within the covers of Castlemaine, afterwards Duchess of Cleveland,
this laudatory record. “Mr. Morgan controls 16/ net.
virtually the bulk of the banking resources in A biography pieced together from con-
the country,” says Mr. Hovey, who considers temporary documents and diarists such as
his bero a great patriot. " The author is, Pepys, Evelyn, Cominges, and Grammont.
however, far from discreet in his incense-burn- The whole is worked and amplified into a
ing, and the book may be regarded as a useful consistent narrative, but lacks charm or origin-
the Spirited Chronicle of Adventure in Mexican
Highways and Byways, 7/6 net.
The author is an American journalist who
has travelled widely in Mexico rather than seen
deeply into its life and history. He is more
concerned with his chance adventures on the
road and his casual conversations with strangers
than with the antiquities and economic possi-
bilities which give Mexico its place in the world.
The work in fact, though readable, is of no
particular value.
Hulton (Dr. S. K. ), Among the Eskimos of
Labrador, 16/ net.
A book containing a good deal of interesting
matter, which we propose to notice more fully
in a later issue.
Indian Tribes of the Upper Mississippi Valley
and Region of the Great Lakes, as described by
Nicolas Perrot, French Commandant in the
North-west; Bacqueville de la Potherie, French
Royal Commissioner to Canada ; Morrell
Marston, American Army Officer; and Thomas
Forsyth, U. S. Agent at Fort Armstrong ;
translated, edited, annotated, and with Biblio-
graphy and Index by Emma Helen Blair,
2 vols. , $10 net.
The value of this comprehensive work lies
in its presentation of trustworthy first-hand
material upon aboriginal religion, folk-lore,
organization, social relations, industries, cus-
toms, and observances. The eloquence of
Nicolas Perrot in particular, and the brilliance
of the translation, make the narrative as
absorbing for the interest of its material as for
its treatment. It is written with scrupulous
fairness and tolerance, and as an ethnological
study should be invaluable. An exhaus-
tive analytical index is appended at the end of
the second volume.
Jackson (A. V. Williams), From Constantinople
to the Home of Omar Khayyám: Travels in
Transcaucasia and Northern Persia for Historic
and Literary Research, 15/ net.
Prof. Jackson has his authorities, from Hero-
dotus to Lord Curzon, always in his mind, yet
his narrative is easy and vivid, and he presents
conclusions which a scholar can accept, in a
form which will not repel the ordinary reader.
The illustrations also are excellent. He is less
successful where he tries to give his work a
literary flavour. We could dispense with
quotations, ranging from Isaiah to Aldrich and
Kipling, at the head of every chapter; and the
original compositions in verse, which the
author occasionally throws off, are sincere, but
hardly worth the permanency of print. Though
it be proper
at Omar's tomb" to join
in quaffing
the sparkling cup in his name, and to turn
down the empty glass, what are we to say of
the regret " that some of Omar's admirers in
the Occident do not provide a suitable inscrip-
tion on the spot" ?
Young (Filson), Christopher Columbus and the
New World of his Discovery, with a Note on
the Navigation of Columbus's First Voyage by
the Earl of Dunraven, 7/6 net.
Third Edition.
Sports and Pastimes.
Holder (Charles Frederick), Life in the Open :
Sport with Rod, Gun, Horse, and Hound in
Southern California, 7/6 net.
Mr. Holder, who has written a biography of
Darwin and much instructive matter about
## p. (#67) #################################################
No. 4395, JAN. 20, 1912
67
THE ATHEN ÆUM
99
and “
fishing, now publishes a large volume on Southern
School-Books.
California, which he depicts as the paradise of
Fiction
sportsmen. He deprecates the conception of Pring (! . N. ), Laboratory Exercises in Physical Adams (Evelyn), Tales of Seven Islands, 61
sport as a desperate killing, a plethoric bag Chemistry, 4/ net.
A volume of short stories, reprinted from
or creel," and interweaves almost as much For notice see p. 71.
Good Words and various Australian magazines.
naturalism and botany into the fabric of his
The author uses her knowledge of life in Aus-
narrative as there is sport. His story is told
Science.
tralia and the islands of the Pacific with con-
with a wealth of picturesque detail, and is
happily embroidered
siderable skill, but, despite the local colour,
with many engaging
Armytage (H. ), Darwin and the Bible, 6/ net.
touches. He writes of the country with deep
The author, before making this belated
these mild romances are on the whole not very
successful.
feeling, and supplies many spirited pictures of
attack upon Darwin, read the Origin of Species?
Californian life and scenery.
Towards the
dipped into the ‘Descent of Man. ' Balfour (Ethel), In Time's Storerooms, 6/
close of the book he drifts, almost unconsciously,
The result is not calculated to inflict severe This story suffers from the very defects
back to his old love-angling.
damage upon the Linnean Society. Nor which appear as virtues to a large section of
does the section devoted to the praise of the the novel-reading public-over-emphasis and
Education.
Bible, intermingled as it is with trivialities, exaggeration. The girl who on her twentieth
seem to us likely to make many persons re- birthday is to be told an important secret, the
Thoughts on Education, chosen from the Writings consider their opinions upon either religious or discovery then that her beloved guardian is
of Matthew Arnold by Leonard Huxley, 5/net. biological subjects. The whole book is, in fact, not her father, her obedient acquiescence in the
For review see p. 62.
out of date.
wish of her dead mother that she should offer
Butler (H. J. ), Motor Bodies and Chassis : a Text-
to live with her real parent, his eccentric ways
Sociology.
book dealing with the Complete Car, for the
and the dour sister who plots unscrupulously
Forrest (J. Dorsey), The Development of Western Use of Owners, Students, and others, 8/ net.
on behalf of her dissipated son—these and the
Civilization : a Study in Ethical, Economic,
A textbook of more immediate value to the private lunatic asylum from which the heroine
and Political Evolution, 8/ net.
carriage builder than the engineer, since it is barely escapes belong to the stock-in-trade of
The author carries his investigation of the
the body-work, rather than the chassis of the the popular romancer. We could wish the
social phenomena which influenced the forma-
motor-car, with which Mr. Butler deals. It is
author's talent better employed.
tion of Western civilization into an analysis
natural that the mechanism of a car should
Barclay (Marguerite and Armiger), The Activities
of the development of evolution and its relation
receive closer study than its less important of Lavie Jutt, 6/
to ethical, philosophic, economic, and historical
component parts, but treatment of the various This book is typically American, and has a
values. The scope of his subject is too large
styles of bodies has certainly been inadequate. fine disregard for probabilities and in most
to admit of minute examination into social
The author surveys and defines the varieties
cases possibilities. The first chapter is appro-
forces. His work is therefore prone to incon.
of bodies hitherto invented, and devotes chap- priately named 'Lavie Starts In,' and the
clusiveness and generalization.
ters to body dimensions, designing, drawing, story may be recommended to any one who
Hobhouse (L. T. ), Social Evolution and Political
decorating, illuminating, and other accessories. can appreciate American slang. The authors'
Theory, 6/6 net.
He deals separately with ignition, the cooling
ignorance (real or feigned) of what cannot be
Prof. Éobhouse is never dull, and in this
of the cylinders, and lubrication. The figure done in England is abysmal.
book, which is virtually the text of a course
drawings are clear, in spite of their intricacy.
of lectures delivered last year at Columbia
Eugenics Review, January, 1/ net.
Bazin (René), The Children of Alsace, 6!
A translation of 'Les Oberlés,' in which
University, there are few chapters which should Frith (Julius), Alternating-Current Design, 5/ net. M. Bazin draws a vivid picture of the influence
fail to arouse vivid interest. The book is by
A book the contents of which aim at sug- of a man's love for his native land over all
no means to be regarded as an instrument gesting ideas rather than imparting information other interests. The rendering, on the whole,
merely for the spreading of the author's well- already elaborately dealt with in Mr. Cramp's is well done and pleasant to read, and there is a
known political views, and may be confidently 'Continuous-Current Machine Design,' to which short Preface by Dr. A. S. Rappoport.
recommended to any person desirous of finding this treatise is intended to be a companion.
a scientific basis for his political beliefs.
The book is well furnished with calculations Bower (H. M. ), The Temple of Demos, 6/
Social Conditions in Provincial Towns, First
and diagrams.
This book satirizes under an allegorical
Series : Portsmouth, Worcester, Cambridge, Fry (Agnes), Stars and Constellations : a Little
transparency the political institutions of the
Liverpool, Edinburgh, Oxford, and Leeds, Guide to the Sky.
day. The dreamer of the dream-one amongst
edited by Mrs. Bernard Bosanquet, 1/ net.
This book claims to provide hints for observers
many pilgrims, Log-Rollers, Axe-Grinders,
Seven towns are treated by seven writers in of the heavens with the naked eye. Memory is
White Caps, Black Caps, and a certain Dame
under 100 pages, many of which are devoted assisted by rhymes such as have recently engaged
Eugenes-joins a caravan accompanying an
to details more fitting to guide-books. The the attention of Notes and Queries, a method
envoy from Plutopolis to the Royal Court of
important fact that there is a difference of two generally regarded as obsolete.
Demos. On the journey the author avails
years between the age of leaving school and
himself of every opportunity for a tilt at the
entering the Navy, which lamentably affects
Hutchinson (Woods), We and Our Children.
party system, but there is no indication that the
Portsmouth lads, is, like other matters, put
A series of essays on the care of the coming independent politician is less obnoxious to him,
in so uninteresting a fashion that it will not
generation, especially go far as its home por hint as to how the development of altruism
attract the attention it deserves. C. V.
life is concerned. The elementary teaching in the individual which he urges is to be either
Butler on “Oxford,' and Clara Dorothea Rack-
in such chapters as that on 'The Sweet Tooth fostered or directed.
ham on 'Cambridge,' are more interesting than
or 'Our Ivory Keepers of the Gate? reiterates
the other writers.
truths which every wise mother endeavours to
Cook (W. Victor), Anton of the Alps, 6/
put into practice. The author is an optimist
The intricacies and vicissitudes of this tale
Philology.
who views even the falling birth-rate, modern
of secret societies are not even made probable
fiction, and the American mother through
by the most opportune deaths, accidents, and
Akerlund (Alfred), The History of the Definite rose-coloured glasses.
discoveries. However, the plots and counter-
Tenses in English, 2/6 net.
Lee (Frederic S. ), Scientific Features of Modern
plots are ingeniously worked out, and the story
An investigation into the periphrastic forms
has plenty of buoyancy.
Medicine, 6/6 net.
of the active tenses and their development from Some of the Columbia University Lectures.
the Old English. The author adopts as his
Eyles (Alfred W. ), The Topmost Rung.
The chief interest of this story lies in a
premise the hypothesis that the present parti- Psychical Research Society, Proceedings, Decem-
ciple construction is the same as that occurring
ber, 1911, 1/ net.
murder mystery. As is usual in this type of
in Old English-morphologically, if not his-
Consists of official lists and Index to Vol. XXV. thing, several innocent persons are suspected.
torically. This disposes of the alternative Thorpe (Sir Edward), A Dictionary of Applied
There are two trials, but the real culprit dies
a natural death. Overwhelmed, no doubt, by
theory of the verbal noun. The author intends Chemistry : Vol. I. A-Che, Řevised and
to formulate in a later essay an opinion of
the prevailing complexity of affairs, the book-
Enlarged Edition, 45/ net.
deemed essential to poetic realization. For
as it is, to the garish affectation of its modern
generally conciliatory, his predicament is so
when the cowboy tires of the din of uncouth setting.
obvious as to entrap him into a labyrinth of
rodomontade delivered in his peculiar dialect,
Rossetti (William M. ), The Works of Dante
hesitating and indecisive deductions. His reason-
he seems ready to become sentimentally
ing is too uneasy, and his phraseology too vague,
sophisticated, and to repine and languish with
Gabriel Rossetti, edited with Preface and Notes,
for us to extract substance from his discourse,
the most melting of our civilized lyricists.
9/ net.
We possess
except in the recommendations
a practically complete and
for more
We are not discounting, the ebullience of the
authoritative edition of Rossetti's poems,
ordered methods of church organization.
"Sir Galahads" of the plains, but their
Morgan (Rev. G. Campbell), Sunrise : Behold, He
capacity to make poetry out of it.
thanks to the care and assiduity of his brother.
This new edition has been revised and enlarged.
Cometh! an Introduction to a Study of the Dorant (Herbert), The Age, and Other Poems, Reservations in the printing of poems hitherto
Second Advent.
1/6 net.
unpublished have been deemed necessary,
A collection of three sermons dealing with Mr. Dorant bas fallen into the wrong age, for owing to the poet's fastidious dislike of unfold.
Advent. The author's theme -- that of Mrs.
his gleanings are exactly paralleled by those of ing to the world work which he considered
Besant in the summer of last year-is the second
the normal Augustan who moved in the select unrepresentative of his mature and finished
coming of the Messiah. He details and investi-
hierarchy of Pope's days. The trick of moral- labour. The pieces printed for the first time
gates the Scriptural evidence which furnishes
izing and personifying the abstract; the heroic either fragmentary or juvenilia. The
the groundwork of this speculation, and appeals couplet ; the balanced antithetical style ; the latter are frequently grotesque, and the merit
for a general preparedness to blunt the edge
elegance of phrasing, all are his, and all are of the former is unequal.
of the divine wrath. Dr. Morgan adopts an
Some are beautiful,
flattened and eviscerated.
polished cameos : others stray, fugitive,
arbitrary scale of division, which, though it
Dredan (John M. ), The Poems of John Cleveland,
phosphorescent gleams ;
simplifies the problem of human iniquity,
others clumsy and
entirely fails to recognize the diversities and
annotated and corrected for the First Time,
of no positive value. They are eminently
complexities of human nature itself. The
with Biographical and Historical Introductions,
worth perusal. The print of this edition is so
small as to be fatiguing to the eyes.
“ believing " are to inherit the kingdom ; the
8/6 net.
"rejecting” to be cast out. The " believing
American annotators, editors, compilers, and
Shakespeare, Complete Works, Vols. VII. -IX. ,
are the good ; the "rejecting the bad. Dr. thesis-makers are quaintly prone to resuscitat-
1/ net each.
Morgan is too dogmatic to appeal to many
ing our buried artists, poets, philosophers, and
In the World's Classics, Pocket Edition.
religious thinkers of to-day.
orators of little mark, and dressing them out in Shakespeare, The Tudor : The Tragedy of Mac-
Selwyn (Edward Carus), The Oracles in the New a voluminous panoply of notes, introductions, beth, edited by Arthur C. L. Brown; The
Testament, 10/6 net.
appendixes, and genealogical tables. This Merchant of Venice, edited by Harry Morgan
A new exegesis of the theme commonly known volume is typical of that industrious spirit. We Ayres.
as the “
Argument from Prophecy,” amplified are inundated with information concerning the A neat little edition with brief notes and
into other considerations of the connexion obscure Royalist satirist of the seventeenth glossary. The editors are American scholars.
between the Old and New Testaments. Dr. century, John Cleveland, biographically and Whittier (John Greenleaf), Selections from his
Selwyn treats his subject to exhaustive citation, æsthetically; Like Rochester, he frequently Poems, in 2 parts (combined), with an Introduc-
reinforcing it by what extraneous historical oversteps the borderland of taste, and, like tion by Harold Hodgkin, 1/ net.
material he can collect. He discusses the Cowley, he revels in euphuistic similes and
A reissue in the charming Muses' Library
scope, cause, and manner of points of identity comparisons. His superlative vocabulary for
from the Olive Books, with the introduction
in the light of the Messianic consciousness and the grossegt invective fills the reader with
determination to fulfil the law. "
wonder. He is, moreover, an adept at repro-
repeated. It would be an audacious under-
Trotter (Archdeacon E. B. ), The Royal Progress of
taking to print Whittier in his entirety, in a
ducing the philosophic phraseology of the time.
our Lord and its Significance : Critical and
cheap edition, for his inspiration is fitful. At
Practical Thoughts on Luke ix. 51-xviii. 14, 5/
Fox (Marion), The Lost Vocation.
his best he has a luminous transparency and
net.
Miss Fox strikes few notes on her lyre, and
unity of feeling which these selections faith-
This work seems to us to lack & consistent
strikes them gingerly. She treads delicately, and
fully display.
sequence of ideas, and is characterized by irrele-
seems fearful of the pitfalls of banality, tur- Wuppermann (Carlos), Quiet Places.
vance and timidity of thought. Archdeacon
gidity, and attitudinizing. It is perhaps this Mr. Wuppermann has a number of dramatic
Trotter toys with the higher criticism, and lacks
tendency to vacillation and self-distrust that subterfuges, which endow his poetry with a
originality. At best, it is a running com.
divests her verse of body. She glides on with plausible driving force. His tricks of abbre-
mentary and expansion of the dicta of our Lord
placable rhythm, leaving but a faint ephemeral viation, of suggestive pauses, of parenthesis,
within the limits prescribed.
impression on the mind. Even her superla- and vaulting buoyantly from one meaning
Law.
tives seem advanced in a deprecating, apolo- to another, are clever, though on close scrutiny
getic manner. Her strongest claim to consider-
Oppenheim (L. ), International Law: Vol. I.
they yield more chaff than grain. Browning,
Peace, 18/ net.
ation is an ethereal, occasionally wistful melan- of course, supplies some of Mr. Wuppermann's
choly.
capital, and be loves juggling with meta-
A second edition that has undergone close
revision. A number of fresh topics, such as
Fox (S. M. ), The Waters of Bitterness, 2/6 net.
physical conceits, plunging about among them
in naive delight. We do not take his hypnotic
wireless telegraphy on the open sea ; the Casa Materials for the Study of the English Drama
Blanca incident;
trances seriously, but we readily appreciate
the International Prize
Court; the Second Hague Convention and the
(excluding Shakespeare): a Selected List of
the cunning that has gone to their manufac-
Books in the Newberry Library.
ture and his evident and sincere pleasure in
Declaration of London, have been incorporated. McClymont (J. R. ), Metrical Romances and
them.
Though the new matter, including additions to
the text and bibliography, amounts to “ nearly
Ballads, 3/8 net.
Music.
a quarter of the former work,” the bulk of the
The author of these verses, distrustful of
London College of Music : _Annual Report upon
book, owing to discreet and economical arrange-
analyzing his own emotions and expressing his
the Local and Higher Examinations for the
ment, is not materially increased. The new
own spiritual experiences, relies on purely exotic
Year 1911; and Syllabus of Requirements for
portions fulfil the functions of comprehensive
sources to convey his meaning. His perceptions
the Local Examinations for Certificates in
statement, and are smoothly interwoven with lack the stamp or the authority
of a passionate
Practical and Theoretical Music, and for the
the old.
and individual expression. He sings with
Higher Examinations, 1912, and part of 1913.
Fine Art and Archeology.
fine abandon on his little greenhouse, without
Excavations at Cyrene, First Campaign, 1910-11 :
penetrating his self-made house of glass. His Proceedings of the Musical Association, Thirty-
Seventh Session (1910-11), 21/ net.
Preliminary Reports, by Richard Norton, M'Neal-Sweeney (Mildred), Men of No Land, and
vocabulary is not attractive.
The memorandum and annual report of the
Joseph C. Hoppin, Charles D. Curtis, and
Association. It is hardly as interesting as some
A. F. S. Sladden: Extract from the Bulletin
Other Poems, 4/6 net.
reports of former years, though Mr. Bernard
of the Archæological Institute of America, The writer belongs to that rare species which Shaw's brilliant paper on 'The Reminiscences
Quinquagenarian is included. Mr.
Imperial Arts League, Journal, January, ed.
of
uses terms and words as symbols of feeling. Her
metre is faulty; her expression uncertain, Norman O'Neill has embodied some suggestive
John Rylands Library, Manchester, Catalogue of
and vaguely maladroit. But the singleness of criticisms in • Music to Stage Plays. The
an Exhibition of Mediæval Manuscripts and
Jewelled Book Covers, 6d. net.
purpose and the effort at self-realization are Association is connected with the International
so clear as to enable us to feel the strong and Musical Society.
Vol. II.
## p. (#66) #################################################
66
No. 4395, JAN. 20, 1912
THE ATHENÆUM
ality. The book has no political pretensions,
for it simply reiterates the familiar causes
célèbres of Charles II. 's Court.
Stirling (Amelia Hutchison), James Hutchison
Stirling : his Life and Work, 10/6 net.
This biography should be much appreciated
by all who reverence the work and character of
the translator of Spinoa's Ethic' and the
author of The Secret of Hegel. ' The work
has been done with ability and insight, and
Stirling's connexion with the great men of his
day, especially Carlyle, adds to its interest.
Philosophy.
exposé of the means by which Mr. Morgan and
Adamson (Robert), A Short History of Logic,
his fellows have become, in the phrase of the
author, solid. "
edited by Prof. W. R. Sorley, 5/ net.
Johnson (William Savage), Thomas Carlyle : a
The greater part of this book is virtually a
Study of his Literary Apprenticeship, 1814-31,
reprint of Prof. Adamson's article on 'Logic
4/6 net.
in the ninth edition of The Encyclopædia
The title of this brief book led us to expect
Britannica. The remainder consists of four
an estimate of Carlyle's genius between the
articles on Category, Lotze, and Bradley's Logic.
years 1814 and 1831. It is only incidentally
King (Henry Churchill), The Moral and Religious
that we apprehend the limitations which Mr.
Challenge of our Times: the Guiding Principle Johnson has himself chosen. His appreciation
in Human Development: Reverence for Per- is confined to expounding Carlyle's religious
sonality, 6/6 net.
and philosophic outlook, as shown in certain
Mr. King has undertaken a task that practic-
books that he wrote from 1814 to 1831. Our
ally covers all human activities and their
impression of a discipleship is as vague as it
economic significance at the present time. As
would be in later years, when Carlyle's mental
a statement of various processes which civiliza-
initiative had learnt a sturdier self-reliance.
tion is labouring to bring to the birth, his work
Chapters on the times and on Carlyle's poetic
has value and actuality. But his eagerness theories are wedged in irrelevantly, while the
and ambition are such that he vaults into con-
development of his volcanic style is not dis-
clusions which have little relevance to his
cussed. If Mr. Johnson's manner is vacillating,
data, and are too meagre to meet the compre-
his matter is sound enough, and the majority of
hensive demand made upon them. He has
people who read literature, however cursorily,
hardly succeeded in dovetailing, his hetero- must be well aware of the conclusions that he
geneous material with the judiciousness it
evolves. The volume is issued by Yale Univer
requires. But the book has ideas, and excels
sity.
in the presentation of broad generalizations.
Johnstone (Hilda), A Hundred Years of History
Wordsworth (J. C. ), Short Essays in Constructive
from Record and Chronicle, 1216-1327, 5/ net.
Philosophy, 31
For notice see p. 64.
As Mr. Wordsworth justly and modestly
Kennard (Nina H. ), Lafcadio Hearn: his Life
remarks, it is almost impossible to write
and Work, 12/6 net.
“wholly original essays on metaphysics in
A new biography of the strange genius who,
our present plethora of speculation. Even
M. Bergson is dubbed a second Heraclitus.
forsaking the West for the East, and making
Japan his home, yet all the time looked back
The sole original theory of the author is con-
to the Anglo-Saxon world for that literary fame
tained in the last chapter, and is tentatively
which, since his death, has abundantly been
advanced. He maintains the reality of time
his. The book contains a number of unpub-
against both its defenders and adherents. The
lished letters from Hearn to his half-sister,
other theses deal principally with the monist
Mrs. Atkinson.
and atomical theories of the universe. The
Mahan (Capt. A. T. ), Naval Strategy compared and
writer ranges himself on the side of the philoso-
contrasted with the Principles and Practice of
phers who credit the movement of material
elements towards unity-the “ free develop-
Military Operations on Land, 16/ net.
Lectures delivered at U. S. Naval War College,
ment” of the Being from unity to plurality,
Newport, R. I. , between 1887 and 1911.
and again from plurality towards unity. Mr.
May (Sir Thomas Erskine), The Constitutional
Wordsworth scrupulously avoids committal to
doctrinaire or didactic conclusions.
History of England since the Accession of George
the Third, edited and continued to 1911 by
Francis Holland, Vols. 1. and II. , 15/ net;
History and Biography.
Vol. III. , by Francis Holland, 12/6 net.
Barclay (Sir Thomas), The Turco-Italian War and
The fourth edition of Sir Erskine May's
its Problems, 5/ net.
inquiry into the constitutional development of
The author discusses the cardinal and sub- English government since the accession of
sidiary problems affecting the balance of power
George III. , from the orthodox Whig position.
in Europe, the possibilities of adjustment, and the
Up to 1860 only revision has been necessary, but
extent of interrelated interests. He also, in view
a third and bulky volume now carries the work
of peace in the near future, estimates on what down to the passing of the Parliament Act in
terms an agreement could be reached. He
1911. For the last fifty years the influence
sketches the history of the war up to the present
and prerogative of the Crown have been almost
time, and pronounces on the illegality of the
stationary, and this supplementary volume
Italian position. More than half of the book is
treats exclusively the progressive advance of
taken up with appendixes.
Parliamentary institutions, party vicissitudes,
Carnegy (Mildred), A Queen's Knight, 7/6 net.
the relation of the State to religion, local
This is one of the numerous biographies
government, civil and military service reforms,
written not so much for the student as the
the self-governing colonies, and the recent con-
circulating library. It presents the career of
stitutional crisis. The distinction of the former
Axel de Fersen, the Swedish nobleman whose
volumes is well maintained, nor can any devia-
chivalrous devotion to Marie Antoinette
tion from the point of view we are wont to
involved him in the events of 1789–93. An
associate with Sir Erskine May be detected.
appreciation of the real importance of the Ryan (Daniel J:), The Civil War Literature of
French Revolution would be of no advantage to
Geography and Travel.
Frazer (J. Nelson), In Foreign Lands: Sketches
of Travel in Three Continents, 7/6 net.
The author is a member of the Indian Educa.
tional Service who has travelled in Asia, Africa,
and the Pacific. In view of the wealth of
literature dealing with india, the first part of
the book seems a. trifle superfluous, but it is
well written, as is the somewhat superficial
'Glimpse of Africa. More interesting are Mr.
Frazer's impressions of Fiji and the effect of
European civilization on its inhabitants.
Gillpatrick (Wallace), Wanderings in Mexico :
Ohio : a Bibliography, with Explanatory and
such a work, and it shows none. Readers who
Historical Notes.
like an easy style and a sentimental love.
A bibliography of the literature of and
interest will be well satisfied.
concerning Ohio during the Civil War, whether
Dunraven (Earl of), The Legacy of Past Years :
books, pamphlets, or published addresses.
a Study of Irish History, Bd. net.
Short critical and explanatory précis of the
New Edition.
writers and their work are supplied. The collector
Espitalier (Albert), Napoleon and King Murat :
has adopted the alphabetical system, and in
à Biography compiled from Hitherto Unknown
symmetry and order his volume of references
and Unpublished Documents, translated by
leaves nothing to be desired, while there is a
J. Lewis May.
complete index.
M. Espitalier obtains much of his documentary Scottish Historical Review, January, 2/6 net.
evidence from such sources as the Archivio
The January number contains some erudite
di Stato at Naples, the Società Napolitana di
and original research, largely upon early
history.
Storia Patria, the Austrian archives, and the
The article on The Old Schools and Universi-
British Record Office. Particular attention is
ties' of Scotland throws up in bold relief their
devoted to Murat's two treaties with Austria,
development and historical continuity. Mr.
which explain much of his conduct in 1814.
A. W. Johnston contributes some suggestive
An appendix, index, and genealogical table
matter on the twelfth-century mythological lays
give substance to the investigation.
of the man of Orkney in collaboration with Ice-
Expedition on the Sacramento and San Joaquin
landers. Dr. Brandl's subversive article on
Rivers in 1817: Diary of Fray Narciso Duran,
The Vision of the Cross of Christ,' which
edited by C. E. Chapman.
attempts to shift the authorship from Cynewulf
One of the publications of the Academy of
to an anonymous Northumbrian of the eighth
Pacific Coast History:
century, is built upon somewhat slender
Hovey (Carl), The Life Story of J. Pierpont
foundations. There are a large number of
Morgan.
interesting reviews.
If it is of any interest to the public to know Sergeant (Philip W. ), My Lady Castlemaine :
how millions are earned, or how they are spent, being a Life of Barbara Villiers, Countess of
such things may be found within the covers of Castlemaine, afterwards Duchess of Cleveland,
this laudatory record. “Mr. Morgan controls 16/ net.
virtually the bulk of the banking resources in A biography pieced together from con-
the country,” says Mr. Hovey, who considers temporary documents and diarists such as
his bero a great patriot. " The author is, Pepys, Evelyn, Cominges, and Grammont.
however, far from discreet in his incense-burn- The whole is worked and amplified into a
ing, and the book may be regarded as a useful consistent narrative, but lacks charm or origin-
the Spirited Chronicle of Adventure in Mexican
Highways and Byways, 7/6 net.
The author is an American journalist who
has travelled widely in Mexico rather than seen
deeply into its life and history. He is more
concerned with his chance adventures on the
road and his casual conversations with strangers
than with the antiquities and economic possi-
bilities which give Mexico its place in the world.
The work in fact, though readable, is of no
particular value.
Hulton (Dr. S. K. ), Among the Eskimos of
Labrador, 16/ net.
A book containing a good deal of interesting
matter, which we propose to notice more fully
in a later issue.
Indian Tribes of the Upper Mississippi Valley
and Region of the Great Lakes, as described by
Nicolas Perrot, French Commandant in the
North-west; Bacqueville de la Potherie, French
Royal Commissioner to Canada ; Morrell
Marston, American Army Officer; and Thomas
Forsyth, U. S. Agent at Fort Armstrong ;
translated, edited, annotated, and with Biblio-
graphy and Index by Emma Helen Blair,
2 vols. , $10 net.
The value of this comprehensive work lies
in its presentation of trustworthy first-hand
material upon aboriginal religion, folk-lore,
organization, social relations, industries, cus-
toms, and observances. The eloquence of
Nicolas Perrot in particular, and the brilliance
of the translation, make the narrative as
absorbing for the interest of its material as for
its treatment. It is written with scrupulous
fairness and tolerance, and as an ethnological
study should be invaluable. An exhaus-
tive analytical index is appended at the end of
the second volume.
Jackson (A. V. Williams), From Constantinople
to the Home of Omar Khayyám: Travels in
Transcaucasia and Northern Persia for Historic
and Literary Research, 15/ net.
Prof. Jackson has his authorities, from Hero-
dotus to Lord Curzon, always in his mind, yet
his narrative is easy and vivid, and he presents
conclusions which a scholar can accept, in a
form which will not repel the ordinary reader.
The illustrations also are excellent. He is less
successful where he tries to give his work a
literary flavour. We could dispense with
quotations, ranging from Isaiah to Aldrich and
Kipling, at the head of every chapter; and the
original compositions in verse, which the
author occasionally throws off, are sincere, but
hardly worth the permanency of print. Though
it be proper
at Omar's tomb" to join
in quaffing
the sparkling cup in his name, and to turn
down the empty glass, what are we to say of
the regret " that some of Omar's admirers in
the Occident do not provide a suitable inscrip-
tion on the spot" ?
Young (Filson), Christopher Columbus and the
New World of his Discovery, with a Note on
the Navigation of Columbus's First Voyage by
the Earl of Dunraven, 7/6 net.
Third Edition.
Sports and Pastimes.
Holder (Charles Frederick), Life in the Open :
Sport with Rod, Gun, Horse, and Hound in
Southern California, 7/6 net.
Mr. Holder, who has written a biography of
Darwin and much instructive matter about
## p. (#67) #################################################
No. 4395, JAN. 20, 1912
67
THE ATHEN ÆUM
99
and “
fishing, now publishes a large volume on Southern
School-Books.
California, which he depicts as the paradise of
Fiction
sportsmen. He deprecates the conception of Pring (! . N. ), Laboratory Exercises in Physical Adams (Evelyn), Tales of Seven Islands, 61
sport as a desperate killing, a plethoric bag Chemistry, 4/ net.
A volume of short stories, reprinted from
or creel," and interweaves almost as much For notice see p. 71.
Good Words and various Australian magazines.
naturalism and botany into the fabric of his
The author uses her knowledge of life in Aus-
narrative as there is sport. His story is told
Science.
tralia and the islands of the Pacific with con-
with a wealth of picturesque detail, and is
happily embroidered
siderable skill, but, despite the local colour,
with many engaging
Armytage (H. ), Darwin and the Bible, 6/ net.
touches. He writes of the country with deep
The author, before making this belated
these mild romances are on the whole not very
successful.
feeling, and supplies many spirited pictures of
attack upon Darwin, read the Origin of Species?
Californian life and scenery.
Towards the
dipped into the ‘Descent of Man. ' Balfour (Ethel), In Time's Storerooms, 6/
close of the book he drifts, almost unconsciously,
The result is not calculated to inflict severe This story suffers from the very defects
back to his old love-angling.
damage upon the Linnean Society. Nor which appear as virtues to a large section of
does the section devoted to the praise of the the novel-reading public-over-emphasis and
Education.
Bible, intermingled as it is with trivialities, exaggeration. The girl who on her twentieth
seem to us likely to make many persons re- birthday is to be told an important secret, the
Thoughts on Education, chosen from the Writings consider their opinions upon either religious or discovery then that her beloved guardian is
of Matthew Arnold by Leonard Huxley, 5/net. biological subjects. The whole book is, in fact, not her father, her obedient acquiescence in the
For review see p. 62.
out of date.
wish of her dead mother that she should offer
Butler (H. J. ), Motor Bodies and Chassis : a Text-
to live with her real parent, his eccentric ways
Sociology.
book dealing with the Complete Car, for the
and the dour sister who plots unscrupulously
Forrest (J. Dorsey), The Development of Western Use of Owners, Students, and others, 8/ net.
on behalf of her dissipated son—these and the
Civilization : a Study in Ethical, Economic,
A textbook of more immediate value to the private lunatic asylum from which the heroine
and Political Evolution, 8/ net.
carriage builder than the engineer, since it is barely escapes belong to the stock-in-trade of
The author carries his investigation of the
the body-work, rather than the chassis of the the popular romancer. We could wish the
social phenomena which influenced the forma-
motor-car, with which Mr. Butler deals. It is
author's talent better employed.
tion of Western civilization into an analysis
natural that the mechanism of a car should
Barclay (Marguerite and Armiger), The Activities
of the development of evolution and its relation
receive closer study than its less important of Lavie Jutt, 6/
to ethical, philosophic, economic, and historical
component parts, but treatment of the various This book is typically American, and has a
values. The scope of his subject is too large
styles of bodies has certainly been inadequate. fine disregard for probabilities and in most
to admit of minute examination into social
The author surveys and defines the varieties
cases possibilities. The first chapter is appro-
forces. His work is therefore prone to incon.
of bodies hitherto invented, and devotes chap- priately named 'Lavie Starts In,' and the
clusiveness and generalization.
ters to body dimensions, designing, drawing, story may be recommended to any one who
Hobhouse (L. T. ), Social Evolution and Political
decorating, illuminating, and other accessories. can appreciate American slang. The authors'
Theory, 6/6 net.
He deals separately with ignition, the cooling
ignorance (real or feigned) of what cannot be
Prof. Éobhouse is never dull, and in this
of the cylinders, and lubrication. The figure done in England is abysmal.
book, which is virtually the text of a course
drawings are clear, in spite of their intricacy.
of lectures delivered last year at Columbia
Eugenics Review, January, 1/ net.
Bazin (René), The Children of Alsace, 6!
A translation of 'Les Oberlés,' in which
University, there are few chapters which should Frith (Julius), Alternating-Current Design, 5/ net. M. Bazin draws a vivid picture of the influence
fail to arouse vivid interest. The book is by
A book the contents of which aim at sug- of a man's love for his native land over all
no means to be regarded as an instrument gesting ideas rather than imparting information other interests. The rendering, on the whole,
merely for the spreading of the author's well- already elaborately dealt with in Mr. Cramp's is well done and pleasant to read, and there is a
known political views, and may be confidently 'Continuous-Current Machine Design,' to which short Preface by Dr. A. S. Rappoport.
recommended to any person desirous of finding this treatise is intended to be a companion.
a scientific basis for his political beliefs.
The book is well furnished with calculations Bower (H. M. ), The Temple of Demos, 6/
Social Conditions in Provincial Towns, First
and diagrams.
This book satirizes under an allegorical
Series : Portsmouth, Worcester, Cambridge, Fry (Agnes), Stars and Constellations : a Little
transparency the political institutions of the
Liverpool, Edinburgh, Oxford, and Leeds, Guide to the Sky.
day. The dreamer of the dream-one amongst
edited by Mrs. Bernard Bosanquet, 1/ net.
This book claims to provide hints for observers
many pilgrims, Log-Rollers, Axe-Grinders,
Seven towns are treated by seven writers in of the heavens with the naked eye. Memory is
White Caps, Black Caps, and a certain Dame
under 100 pages, many of which are devoted assisted by rhymes such as have recently engaged
Eugenes-joins a caravan accompanying an
to details more fitting to guide-books. The the attention of Notes and Queries, a method
envoy from Plutopolis to the Royal Court of
important fact that there is a difference of two generally regarded as obsolete.
Demos. On the journey the author avails
years between the age of leaving school and
himself of every opportunity for a tilt at the
entering the Navy, which lamentably affects
Hutchinson (Woods), We and Our Children.
party system, but there is no indication that the
Portsmouth lads, is, like other matters, put
A series of essays on the care of the coming independent politician is less obnoxious to him,
in so uninteresting a fashion that it will not
generation, especially go far as its home por hint as to how the development of altruism
attract the attention it deserves. C. V.
life is concerned. The elementary teaching in the individual which he urges is to be either
Butler on “Oxford,' and Clara Dorothea Rack-
in such chapters as that on 'The Sweet Tooth fostered or directed.
ham on 'Cambridge,' are more interesting than
or 'Our Ivory Keepers of the Gate? reiterates
the other writers.
truths which every wise mother endeavours to
Cook (W. Victor), Anton of the Alps, 6/
put into practice. The author is an optimist
The intricacies and vicissitudes of this tale
Philology.
who views even the falling birth-rate, modern
of secret societies are not even made probable
fiction, and the American mother through
by the most opportune deaths, accidents, and
Akerlund (Alfred), The History of the Definite rose-coloured glasses.
discoveries. However, the plots and counter-
Tenses in English, 2/6 net.
Lee (Frederic S. ), Scientific Features of Modern
plots are ingeniously worked out, and the story
An investigation into the periphrastic forms
has plenty of buoyancy.
Medicine, 6/6 net.
of the active tenses and their development from Some of the Columbia University Lectures.
the Old English. The author adopts as his
Eyles (Alfred W. ), The Topmost Rung.
The chief interest of this story lies in a
premise the hypothesis that the present parti- Psychical Research Society, Proceedings, Decem-
ciple construction is the same as that occurring
ber, 1911, 1/ net.
murder mystery. As is usual in this type of
in Old English-morphologically, if not his-
Consists of official lists and Index to Vol. XXV. thing, several innocent persons are suspected.
torically. This disposes of the alternative Thorpe (Sir Edward), A Dictionary of Applied
There are two trials, but the real culprit dies
a natural death. Overwhelmed, no doubt, by
theory of the verbal noun. The author intends Chemistry : Vol. I. A-Che, Řevised and
to formulate in a later essay an opinion of
the prevailing complexity of affairs, the book-
Enlarged Edition, 45/ net.