hand, the short pieces are
commonplace
and
(Notice in these columns does not proclude longer
Sherratt & Hughes garish.
(Notice in these columns does not proclude longer
Sherratt & Hughes garish.
Athenaeum - London - 1912a
Wheatley thinks spasmodic utterance could, however, be
abroad are totally unknown. Part of our it well to correct some misconceptions discovered in many a living original, and
superiority is due to the public spirit of a
or exaggerations founded on spite. He duly exaggerated for humorous purposes.
long succession of wealthy book-collectors regards it as improbable that Dryden
Mr. Barwick does not attempt to deal
who have freely laid
open their libraries lived with the bookseller Herringham with the latter years of the century, and
to students. A typical example of these
as a drudge, though he may have visited such typical magazines as The Idler,
was Mr. Alfred H. Huth, whose munificent him as a friend; and he repudiates the
bequest to the nation of fifty of his finest suggestion that Dryden's marriage with strong wave of literary interest. We
books, chosen at will, has just been com- the daughter of an earl was a mésalliance have other magazines now, the typical
memorated by a descriptive catalogue for her. The poet, like Tennyson and specimens being all of the same order :
drawn up with every refinement of modern Herrick, came of a good county family, popular, sensational, and negligent of the
skill by such authorities as Mr. Pollard, and was a person of some mark before
best literary work. Mr. W. Ď. Howells
Mr. Herbert, Mr. Campbell Dodgson, and he became celebrated as a writer.
was able, apparently, to discover a few
Mr. Esdaile, under the superintendence of * The Schotts of Strassburg and their years ago fifty magazines in the United
Dr Kenyon. We have already spoken Press,' by Mr. S. H. Scott, and Mr. States which could be described as of the
of the money value of incunabula in Robert Steele's well-illustrated Notes on literary or æsthetic kind. New York
general. What is to be thought of the English Books Printed Abroad, 1525-48, boasted some forty-five of them devoted
value of half a hundred volumes picked should help materially in clearing up the to belles-lettres," and seems to be as much
by experts from one of the most famous confusions of the period concerning the above London in its appreciation of decent
libraries of England ? The largest and early printers. Mr. Steele's discovery literature in this form as it is below it in
finest copy known of the first book that the ‘Dialogue of the Father and the lits indifference to murder.
years back.
6
## p. 434 (#326) ############################################
434
THE ATHENÆUM
No. 4408, APRIL 20, 1912
years older
Mr. Barwick has only touched his sub- present age much time is likely to be spent tions, and essays by various writers upon
ject lightly, but it deserves a thorough on them. All that is worth reprinting has different aspects of the relations between
historian. For the magazine is the" book” been made available for modern study, the school and society, together with
of the casual reader, and a better index and it would have been an advantage annotations and expositions. It is not
of public taste than the newspaper or the from the reader's point of view to have a possible, in the space of a review, to give
books which deluded authors sometimes record of such editions, e. g. , that of any adequate notion of the wealth of
write to please themselves, or to satisfy Golding's 'Ovid' brought out under Dr. matter packed into its twelve chapters,
a feeling for art which the public regards Rouse's supervision a few years since. all of which will repay careful reading. It
as a stupid and wilful indifference to
is interesting to find experiments in self-
commercial success.
government by boys at school which
At the end of the volume is a reprint
recall Arnold's methods at Rugby turning
of some brief notes by the late J. F. Payne AMERICA AND EDUCATION.
out very successfully; some American
on ‘English Herbals, which shows once
investigator might do well to examine
more the blushless appropriation of foreign AMERICA is as busy as England in review- these results side by side with those
learning by English writers. Lyte's ing and recasting educational theories concerning college alumni reported by
* Herball 'came from the Flemish through and methods. Among the interesting the Carnegie Foundation. On the whole,
the French, and Gerarde's was founded on investigations recorded in the Report of the experiments and changes described
another man's translation from the Latin a meeting of the Society of College Teachers have clearly tended to give, in an
of Dodoens. Gerarde added, indeed, some of Education held at St. Louis in the end advantageous way, new life and new scope
matter of his own, but he suppressed of February, one into the relation of to school teaching. It should be remem-
the name of Dodoens, and spoke of the mental development to physical growth bered, however, that there may be a
translation as only known to him by and physical defects, and one into methods danger in too much widening of school
hearsay! In speaking of the title of of reading, are especially valuable. From teaching, and that the great business of
Parkinson's book with its well-known Latin carefully kept records concerning 200 school life is, after all, to put into every
pun (Park-in-sun), Dr. Payne forgot to children it appears that tall children are child's hands the tools of learning :
put the first part of it in the genitive, practically" from one to four or even five language, spoken, read, and written, and
Paradisi in Sole. ”
than their shorter coevals, the laws of number. Without the pos-
The List of English Editions and and therefore “ should be treated physio- session of these tools, no civic virtues,
logically as older children than their age no knowledge of natural history or folk-
Translations of Greek and Latin Classics in years would indicate. ” As to reading lore, no athletic prowess, no expertness
printed before -641,' by Henrietta R.
Palmer, with an Introduction by Mr.
we find the following interesting con- even in all the processes of a skilled trade,
clusion :-
Scholderer, is a good example of the ex-
will save an adult living in the civilized
world from being like a person defective
cellent monographs issued by the Biblio- " The incipient articulation, which most
graphical Society. It is, we gather, of readers carry on as a part of their silent in sight or hearing.
American origin, but has been improved reading habits, and which has been developed
In his book about ‘Farm Boys and
by friends in London, Oxford, and Cam- by the methods of exclusive emphasis on
Girls' --which, incidentally, is also about
oral reading in the schools, keeps most
bridge.
persons far below the silent-reading speed | farm men and women-Prof. McKeever
Mr. Scholderer gives a good general which it is possible for them to attain by says many sensible, useful, and suggestive
survey of the subject in his Introduction, improved methods. ”
things. Especially good is the chapter
pointing out some gaps in the List which The Carnegie Foundation's Report in- in which fathers are urged to share a
now appear surprising. The Greek dra- cludes an analysis of the widely differing knowledge of their business affairs and
matists are very sparsely represented, and standards of qualification by which men an actual interest in them with their sons.
there is actually no edition or translation are admitted to the legal profession :-
About boys Prof. McKeever is right
of Æschylus. The inculcation of morality “The miscarriage of justice, the law's throughout, because he thinks of them as
rather than scholarship was the evident delays, the cost of litigation, public disragard individual human beings. About girls
aim of many of the workers. Sir Thomas of law, and disrespect for the judiciary, all he is less satisfactory because he
Hawkins includes only moral odes of proceed in no small degree from this multi- thinks of them not as individuals, but
Horace in his rendering, except 'Donec plication of ill-trained lawyers. ”
creatures complementary to other
gratus eram tibi,' as being commended Distinctly discouraging is that part of individuals—a view which derogates from
by Scaliger, an ode which Raleigh actually the Report which discusses The Influence the dignity of wifehood and motherhood.
made into a dialogue between God and of Organized Alumni on American Col- He realizes to the full the crushing con-
the Soul ! “ Improving” authors like leges. ' Evidently the organized alumni ditions in which
Plutarch and Seneca are strong favourites, are more concerned with their college's country wives die, worn out early in life,
and Aristotle is commended as a safe success in athletic events (even some-
and so undue a proportion of the survivors
guard against scheming schismatics and times by dishonourable means) than with become insane ; yet he deprecates the
religious sophisters. Many of our admired its intellectual progress-a fact which entry of women into outside occupations
classics, such as Plato, were less known indicates that some American colleges in which they have a prospect of living to
in the latter half of the sixteenth century are suffering in an exaggerated form from
a sane old age and of enjoying that
than a book of moral maxims like the the same disease as English institutions.
financial independence which is becoming
' Zodiacus Vitæ' of Marcellus Palin-
as dear to them as to men. What he
Prof. Irving King's" Source Book," as he fails to see is that marriage is not possible
genius, done into English by Barnabe calls it, is a collection of reports, observa- for all and that only when women are
Googe. This relentlessly instructive work
provided the phrase "Rome was not The School Review Monographs
- No. II. generally able to live comfortably and
built in a day”; instructions to be good, Papers presented for Discussion at a Meeting creditably outside marriage will society
at any rate, if you cannot be clever; of the Society of College Teachers of Educa be compelled so to modify its conditions
warnings that most people shut the fold
tion. (University of Chicago Press; Lon as to make them acceptable to many
when the flock is lost; and a host of similar
don, Cambridge University Press. ) independent minded and
capable
commonplaces.
Sixth Annual Report of the Carnegie Founda-
Moreover, only when such
Homer and Ovid fare better than Virgil,
tion for the Advancement of Teaching, 1911. women find married life in rural districts
(New York, 576, Fifth Avenue. )
who appeared in some ridiculous disguises. Social Aspects of Education :
acceptable will any satisfactory form of
The best work in verse throughout is,
a Book of social intercourse be likely to take root
Sources and Original Discussions with there.
as might be expected, paraphrase rather Annotated Bibliographies. By Irving King.
than translation. A good many bare (New York, the Macmillan Company. )
mentions of books now unknown provide Farm Boys and Girls. By William A.
duzzles to be solved, but we doubt if in the McKeever. (Same publishers. )
as
women.
-
1
## p. 435 (#327) ############################################
No. 4408, APRIL 20, 1912
435
THE ATHENÆUM
a
Mr.
Scots invade England, and were defeated Although Widsith' has little poetic
HOME RULE.
outside London by the Romans ”; and merit, its value as a document is very
THE flood of Home Rule literature is his first chapter opens cheerfully with great. In the interpretation and criticism
upon us, and the quality of it varies. The "The Irish Question began with the of the statements of Roman writers
Unionist Irish Essays Committee, which Christian era. ” He tells us much of the respecting Germanic ethnography, and
has prepared “The Case against Home Earl of Essex, Tyrconnel, and Wolfe
Earl of Essex, Tyrconnel, and Wolfe of heroic legend as recorded in Beowulf'
Rule,' has certainly done its work very Tone; but the little he has to
Tone; but the little he has to say about and in German and Scandinavian poetry
thoroughly. Not only is the list of con- the Home Rule question to-day is squeezed and saga, its evidence is indispensable,
tributors imposing, but the method into a few pages, and even in these he while at the same time its obscure allu-
also of dealing with the subject is divagates from his particular branch of sions can only be understood by compari-
comprehensive. The paper - covered the subject. The most interesting novelty son with these fuller sources of information.
volume is avowedly a partisan affair ; but is one not of idea, but of expression.
in spite of these limitations its tone as a
On p. 87 he refers to Gladstone's The poem, apart from obvious interpola-
whole is quiet and judicious, and the policy as "a type of policy that never, tions, can hardly be later than the begin-
essays are marked by much industrious in history, failed to have any but one ning of the eighth century, and some of its
compilation and reasoned argument, and ending. "
traditions go back to times far earlier
a comparative lack of wild statement It is refreshing to turn to the volume than the settlement of the Angles in
Britain.
and heat. Mr. Bonar Law's contribu- by Mr. S. G. Hobson, an avowed Home
It may be described as
tion is a short Preface, in which he in- Ruler. He succeeds in putting the case somewhat inartistic attempt to provide a
dicates that to his mind the Ulster objec- with a freshness which is remarkable narrative framework for certain mnemonic
tion is the greatest obstacle to Home at this stage of the controversy, and his lists of names of peoples and of their
Rule-a statement which has special desire to face the truth leads him occa-
rulers most famous in heroic song, which
interest in view of recent rumours. Mr. sionally to say things that will be probably formed part of the regular
Balfour's contribution is also brief, and unpalatable to many Nationalists. Though education of a minstrel. The fiction is of
Sir Edward Carson's is little more than an not blind to the sentimental issue, he the simpleşt: a minstrel of ancient days,
introductory résumê of succeeding chapters, is chiefly interested in the economic named Widsid, “ the Far-travelled” (the
which range in subject from The question, and his chapters on finance, name actually existed, but is obviously
Religious Difficulty' to 'Private Bill the waste of Irish administration, chosen on account of its meaning), is sup- .
Legislation. ' Especially interesting are an agriculture, and the changes needed posed to recount his travels. As about
admirable article on · Éducation by Mr. for the development of Irish resources, every fourth word is a proper name, there
Godfrey Locker - Lampson; Mr. L. S. are most stimulating, vivid, and sugges- is not much room for story, but now and
Amery's article on the 'Colonial Analogy'; tive.
Hobson holds the view,
of
and Mr. George Wyndham's little treatise shared by many Irishmen to-day, that by an epithet expressing his traditional
on ‘The Completion of Land Purchase,' in the passage of Home Rule will mean
character, or by an allusion to some
which the author of the 1903 Act re- an immediate diminution of clerical in incident in his career. Tradition has no
iterates with Mr. Law's authority the fluence over local and national politics. sense of chronology, and the kings before
Unionist pledge that, should the party He also argues that the new régime will whom Widsith sang, and who bestowed
return to office, the land policy of 1903
see a fresh cleavage of parties in Ireland,
on him rich gifts, belong historically to
will be resumed. By contrast with the a cleavage not religious, but economic three different centuries. The strings of
restraint observed elsewhere, there is a He has a lively and personal style, and proper names are introduced abruptly,
deplorable feverishness about Earl Percy's his work may be commended to all who with little attempt to weave them into
essay on The Military Disadvantages of desire to consider a thoughtful presenta- the texture of the story. The author was
Home Rule. A good deal of his tion of the Home Rule case as it bears a skilled versifier, but the traces of higher
matter is only faintly, if at all, rele- on the great realities that underlie all poetic qualities that may be found in his
vant to the subject allotted to him, and politics.
work are probably due to echoes of the
he has seized the opportunity to spread Mr. de F. Pennefather's pamphlet is older songs from which he derived his
the view that war with Germany cannot concise and well - arranged.
He takes wide knowledge of heroic tradition. Wid.
long, be avoided, to urge compulsory 25 “ Delusions” entertained by Home sith 'has for us moderns an interest like
service, and to inform us that Home Rulers, and subjoins the “ Facts which, that of a fragmentary catalogue of a lost
Rule will mean civil war,
accompanied in his opinion, should shatter them. Now library; we see from it how abundant
by atrocities which will be remembered and then he is somewhat vague, as when and various were the treasures of Old
for centuries. ” This is, to our thinking, he observes that “ To Hell with England” English epic poetry, of which, by the
almost solitary
prophecy of an unnecessarily specific is one of the mottoes of the Irish Nation- merest accident,
kind.
alists.
example survives in ‘ Beowulf. '
Sir Thomas Fraser's volume on The
Mr. Chambers's edition of · Widsith'-
Military Danger ’ is scarcely, more illu- Widsith : a Study in Old English Heroic for this is what the volume really is,
minating than Lord Percy's chapter. Legend. By R. W. Chambers. (Cam- the prolegomena and the text makes this
The author, in fact, occupies by far the
greater portion of his space with an his-
bridge University Press. )
description seem inappropriate-is a re-
torical survey which goes back to the THE Old English poem Widsith' con- markably thorough and serviceable piece
earliest times. The first words in his sists of only 143 lines, and the volume of work. There is no other single book,
Chronology are " 363. Picts and Irish which Mr. Chambers has devoted to its even in German, which contains so com-
illustration contains nearly double that plete a summary of what has been done
Against Home Rule : the Case for the Union. number of pages. He cannot, however, by scholars, from the days of Cony beare
By Arthur J. Balfour, J. Austen Chamber. be fairly charged with either irrelevance and Kemble to the present time, for the
lain, and others. Edited by S. Rosen- or diffuseness. Those who are acquainted elucidation of the poem. Although Mr.
baum. With Introduction by Sir Edo with the enormous mass of comment and Chambers’s general point of view differs
ward Carson, and Preface by A. Bonar controversy to which this brief text has considerably from that indicated in this
Law. (Warne & Co. )
The Military Danger of Home Rule for Ire not have been made much shorter, if it most of his conclusions on questions of
given rise will admit that the book could article, we find ourselves able to accept
land. By Major-General Sir Thomas
Fraser. (John Murray. )
was to include not only a reasoned expo- detail. That these are seldom novel is
Irish Home Rule: the Last Phase.
sition of the author's own conclusions, but no ground for reproach; the reasoning
By
S. G. Hobson. (Stephen Swift & Co. )
also an adequate discussion of the con- by which they are supported is often new
The Fundamental Delusions of Home Rule. flicting theories of eminent scholars with and ingenious. The textual conjectures
By de F. Pennefather, (Love & Malcom: regard to the manifold problems which are justified, and the translation and
son. )
the poem presents.
bibliography are satisfactory.
an
## p. 436 (#328) ############################################
436
THE A THENÆUM
No. 4408, APRIL 20, 1912
FOR
In &
McLachlan (Herbert), St. LUKE, EVANGELIST pictorial faculty is prolific, and the pageantry
NOTICES OF NEW BOOKS.
AND HISTORIAN, with an Introduction of his lines quite readable. On the other
by Prof. A. S. Peake, 2/6 net.
hand, the short pieces are commonplace and
(Notice in these columns does not proclude longer
Sherratt & Hughes garish.
review. )
This is a set of disconnected essays upon Fragments, collected by Beatrice Allhusen
Tbeology.
different aspects of the writings and cha-
and Iris Fox Reeve, 3/6 net.
Crooker (Joseph Henry), THE CHURCH OF
racter of St. Luke'Luke the Humourist,'
TO-MORROW, 2/6 net.
Longmans
Luke and his Friends, and so on, together
Lindsey Press
“ The Church of to-morrow
This anthology reveals much ingenuity in
is not,
with sundry closer studies on the text, such avoiding the trodden path and in dragging
as 'The Voice from Heaven' and 'Pericope into its net all manner of stray oddments.
apparently, a radical transfiguration of the
Church of to-day. The author runs lightly Adulteræ, the author in the latter being in Its method is a kind of vagrancy, and
over the face of social and religious conditions favour oft Lucan authorship. The essays reminds us of the parable of the wedding-
are all interesting, being abundantly illus- guest. Consequently, though many half,
and does not ignore facts, but is unable to
offer any convincing solution of stiff pro-
trated both from modern and ancient works, forgotten flowers of speech are rendered
blems. His book seems largely a reaffirma- and in no case tedious or dry.
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Palmer | charm.
the bulwark of the social structure. We have
A decidedly interesting book, which might Greene (George A. ), SONGS OF THE OPEN
seen this old-fashioned standpoint, in the have gained in charity had the author been AIR.
Elkin Mathews
light of modern evolution and questioning, less convinced of the essential sufficiency Mr. Greene's verses are intelligent and
argued with greater ability by more trench- of the Catholic faith as he understands it. thoughtful; he is a good craftsman, and
ant and combative pens.
Any change, however, might have produced keeps at a steady level of achievement.
Hermann (E. ), EUCKEN AND BERGSON : other failings, such as a want of clearness in But his expression is too derivative and
THEIR SIGNIFICANCE
CHRISTIAN criticizing Christian Science and many conventional, shaped too roundly to current
THOUGHT, 2/6 net. Clarke & Co. other creeds and pseudo-creeds.
moods. It lacks distinction, individuality, ,
This is a worthy product of the latest St. Teresa of Jesus, THE INTERIOR CASTLE,
and force.
movement in religious thought.
OR THE MANSIONS.
Baker Knight (A. E. ), PHILISTIA AND A SOUL: A
vigorous style, which is free, like that of
Several new facts are brought to light WANDER-BOOK, 6/ net. Macmillan
his masters, from technical jargon, Mr.
This is no poem, but a tract in Browning-
Hermann here sets forth the core of the in this new edition of the autograph of
It is also a dialogue, with
teaching of Eucken and of Bergson. In St. Teresa, translated by the Benedictines esque verse.
* wander-
the case of Eucken he has many and definite of Stanbrook, and the rendering itself has little characterization, and
utterances concerning Christianity to go
book," but that is no excuse for wanderings
undergone revision and condensation.
so intricate and so long.
upon; in the case of Bergson we still await Wells (L. S. ), THE TRUE GREATNESS OF
such, yet we cannot but think that Mr. PAUL THE APOSTLE: A STORY AND A Newman (John Henry, Cardinal), VERSES ON
Hermann's view of what is already implied MORAL, 1/ net. Knaresborough, Parr VARIOUS OCCASIONS (including "The
in Bergson's will be largely corroborated. Sir Thomas Acland, in a few words of
Dream of Gerontius ’), 2/ net.
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Longmans
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This agreeable pocket edition is very
Mr. Hermann's presentation of Christianity, Harnack” ; while Mr. Wells, in his own handy, though in large and readable type,
in regard to fundamental matters, is stimu- Apology, half accuses himself of rashness,
and includes a sufficient index.
lating and full of insight.
and pleads inexperience. There is a note Safroni-Middleton (A. ), THE CASTLE BY THE
Little Treasure of Leaflets : Vol. V. WITH of rashness—by no means to be altogether
SEA, AND OTHER POEMS, 2/6
PRAYERS AT MASS, ORDINARY OF THE deprecated—in these pages, scattered all
Walter Scott
MASS, PRAYERS BEFORE
over as they are with italics and capitals,
The author is evidently sincere in his love
COMMUNION, &c. , 1/
Dublin, Gill and yet larger capitals, and thick-set with of a life of adventure in the open air and his
marginal headings. The Life of Paul,' sentimental regret for the friends of his
Lyttelton (Rev. Edward), CHARACTER AND which forms Part I. , is better than Part II. , youth, nor is the gift of humour entirely
RELIGION, 5/ net.
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Pau). ' The writer's absent from his work.
This book belongs to the Library of enthusiasm for the great apostle gives spectable, but not of a high quality.
His verse is re-
Historic Theology. The fundamental ques- vividness to his narrative, which follows
tion with which it deals is that of the possi- St. Luke's authority, in accordance with
bility of training character by means of the opinion of more recent critics.
Philosophy.
moral principles alone. The discussion re-
Khedkar (R. V. ), A HAND BOOK OF THE
volves round humility-taken in the senses
Law.
VEDANT PHILOSOPHY AND RELIGION,
of self-surrender and self-forgetfulness-
3/6
Kolhapur, Mission Press
chosen as being not only the most distinc- Vincent (the late Col. Sir Howard), THE
tively Christian of the virtues, but likewise
POLICE CODE AND GENERAL MANUAL principles underlying the Vedic philosophy
An exegesis of the esoteric and cardinal
that which, even by the non-Christian world, OF THE CRIMINAL LAW, 2/6 net.
and religion. To the student of religion
is found the most attractive and compelling.
Butterworth
How did this virtue suddenly rise into exist-
The fifteenth edition of this standard Parts of the symbolism and hierarchical
it cannot fail to be instructive and suggestive.
ence and into general recognition ? What authority on the criminal law, has been terminology are difficult to grasp in their
is its true relevance ? The answers pro- revised by the Commissioner of Police of
proper significance.
The
non-dualistic
posed are arrived at largely by means of the metropolis, and contains an Introduction
dialogue, sustained against different inter- by Mr. Charles Mathews, the Director of system of the Vedanta is one of the most
complex and at the same time idealistic
locutors by a professed egoist-or supporter Public Prosecutions.
of Oriental religions. The book is one of
of the principle of self-assertion. The
poetry.
dialogue itself is on neither side very con-
the Shri Shankaracharya Series.
vincing, partly because it is restricted within Allhusen (Beatrice), APRIL MOODS, 2/6 net. history and Biograpby.
a compass. Thus the egoist
A. L. Humphreys
never alludes to the special modern forms Miss Allhusen writes in a breathless,
Caithness and Sutherland Records, April, 2/
of egoistic theory, such as the doctrines of rhetorical style. She is liable to extrava-
Viking Club, King's College, London
other hand, does the expounder of "Chris- gances of feeling, and lives in a charmed Chancellor (E. Beresford), THE ANNALS OF
transpontine world of her own, more akin FLEET STREET, ITS TRADITIONS AND
tianity say anything of the action of humility to a March blizzard than the gentle and
in the external world, as connected by recent changeful temper of April.
ASSOCIATIONS, 7/6 net. Chapman & Hall
Too much This is a book well stocked with literary
writers with gaiety, for instance, or artistic gesturing and dramatic device spoil her and archæological lore, and recalling many
activity, or love of poverty: Another fre- verse, and its ebullience is boundless. associations. The author's style is fluent,
quent defect is heaviness of style. Never-
but somewhat wordy.
theless, this is a book that ought to count. Bridges (Charles), VERSE VOLUNTARIES, 3/6
It is full of practical spiritual insight, and,
Simpkin & Marshall Crutchley (Commander W. Caius), MY LIFE
as a whole, never swerves from its centre ; We think that Mr. Bridges, who displays
AT SEA, 7/6
Chapman & Hall
while it contains isolated thoughts of great a certain versatility, owes no mean debt to The author is a master mariner of wide
wisdom and depth. The best parts struck Keats and Browning. Indeed, his opulence and varied experience, and his reminiscences
us as the chapter entitled ' A Year After' of phrase and the leisurely gait of his narra- of a long and successful career at sea are
and the excursus on 'Prayer,?
tive poems are not a little agreeable. His of exceptional interest, as they extend
AND
AFTER
SO
narrow
net.
## p. 437 (#329) ############################################
No. 4408, APRIL 20, 1912
THE ATHENÆUM
437
a
IN
rancour.
over a considerable portion of the period of and persecuted woman, diabolically mal-
transition from the small wooden sailing treated. Whether or no this can be sub-
Sociology.
vessel to the gigantic steam-propelled and stantiated, we can conceive no positive need
steel-constructed product of modern naval for resuscitating a macabre and sordid
Cross (Ira B. ), THE ESSENTIALS OF SOCIALISM.
New York, Macmillan Co.
engineering. Capt. Crutchley draws a scandal, best healed by a kindly oblivion.
realistic picture of the conditions of life in Moreover, the book obviously aims at re-
We are sorry that we cannot find in this
the mercantile marine in the early sixties, viving the sensation of which a greedy pross
small book anything but a welter of ill-
and there is much of special import to the made the most.
assimilated statements.
nautical reader. He has, too, enlivened his
Holmes (T. ), PsYCHOLOGY AND CRIME.
pages with a host of breezy and amusing Geograpby and Travel.
Dent
anocdotes, and the chapters dealing with his
Out of his twenty-five years of experi-
experiences on the South African service Beautiful Ireland : CONNAUGHT and Mun- ence, the Secretary of the Howard Associa-
are noteworthy. A short Preface is con-
STER, by Stephen Gwynn. - Beautiful tion has written a valuable little book.
tributed by Earl Brassey, and there are England: YORK, by George Benson ; Differing in many ways from the scientific
twelve good illustrations.
CHESTER, by Charles Edwardes. 2/ net school, he holds that psychology has far
Dawson (C. B. ), THE MIRROR OF OXFORD.
each.
Blackie less to do with crime than physical conditions,
Sands To Mr. Gwynn belongs an almost passionate that the criminal usually needs a better
There would have been little or no justi- love for the districts he describes a love body rather than a better mind, and that
fication for this book, had it been written which radiates through every page of his
criminal type,” in any definite sense of
from the normal point of view of the his- two new books, and is especially noticeable the term, does not exist. Common sense
torian of Oxford. On those lines it is in the stories and legends he repeats. The
seems to agree with him here, as with his
practically impossible to squeeze frosh tragedy of Finn and Grània, the history of plea for a inore intelligent treatment of the
matter out of the subject. But it is written Daniel O'Connell, the story of St. Brendan's feeble-minded and the epileptic. His obser-
avowedly for a Roman Catholic audience pilgrimage into the west-all these, as told vations on the attitude of the prisoner to the
and shifts the perspective, if it does not by Mr. Gwynn, are not merely good reading, prison also deserve attention.
radically alter or add to it. The illustrations but also breathe the very spirit of Ireland. Jephson (A. W. ), MUNICIPAL WORK FROM A
are good.
His two books will do what few guide-books CHRISTIAN STANDPOINT, 1/6 net.
English People Overseas : Vol. IV. BRITAIN country they depict.
can-awaken a strong desire to see the
Mowbray
The illustrations by The subject is treated under four
THE TROPICS, 1527-1910, by A. Mr. Alexander Williams are uniformly heads-Public Health,
Wyatt Tilby, 6/ net.
Constable excellent.
* Public Works,
• Public Services,' and ' Finance and Rating. '
We find the author of this historical
Mr. Benson's book on York has more the One of the Christian Social Union Hand-
treatise more discriminating, suggestive, character of a guide-book than Mr. Gwynn's. books.
and informative when he is able to forgo He gives a good deal of attention to the craft Pepler (Douglas), THE CARE COMMITTEE,
his Imperial bias. His chapter on Victorian guilds, but says nothing to show wherein
Britain is largely irrelevant, and is saturated they differ from those of other cities. We
THE CHILD, AND THE PARENT, 2/6 net.
with the vague idealism of the Imperialists, regret we have not the space to repeat the
Constable
At times he displays considerable political pleasing medieval story of Brother Jucundus, sisting of notes contributed by two voluntary
The Appendix to this little work, con-
Otherwise, his book is readable.
whose weakness for strong drink all but
There is a
placed him amongst the saints.
workers on Children's Care Committees, is
Fletcher (J. S. ), MEMORIES OF A SPECTATOR,
admirable ; but the value of the book
7/6 net.
EVELEIGH NASH strange contrast between this and Mr.
Seebohm Rowntree's book on York as it
itself is largely reduced by its tendency to
The author does not appear to have been confronts the social reformer. It is difficult regard the interests of the parent rather
one of those spectators who most
than those of the child. Now the purpose
to believe that they deal with the same
of the game, and his book is largely a chro-
for which Care Committees exist is that no
city.
niclo of small beer calling for no comment.
child attending school shall, owing to
The most interesting part of it describes his about Chester and its environs which is
Mr. Charles Edwardes has written a book privation, disease, or neglect, grow up to be
early life in Yorkshire.
å burden to itself and the community. It
worth reading for its own sake, although it is might rationally be argued that success
Funston (Frederick), MEMORIES OF Two distinctly the most guide-bookish of the in this purpose would be cheaply bought,
WARS : CUBAN AND PHILIPPINE EXPERI- four. Mr. Ernest Haslehust has success-
even at the cost of demoralizing entirely
ENCES, 12/6 net.
Constable fully illustrated the works on York and
every
slack
parent now in existence.
Chester.
An account of the Philippine war, which
In reality, there is reason to believe that
describes in detail the marches, sieges, and Blakeborough (J. Fairfax), LITE IN A YORK-
such parents are most likely to improve
operations of the American army, in which
when their burdens are a little lifted. But
SHIRE VILLAGE (with Special Reference
the writer was an officer. The narrative is
to the Evolution, Customs, Folk-lore,
when the question arises, as it sometimes
made more piquant by the adventurous
must, whether the parent's moral discipline
and Legends of Carlton-in-Cloveland,
vicissitudes of the writer throughout the this Village being taken as a type), 6/6 trend of modern thought replies decisively in
campaigns. The atmosphere of constant Stockton-on-Tees, Yorkshire Publishing Press favour of the child. Many Charity Organiza-
is to be sacrificed or the child's health, the
fighting grows, however, tedious and depress-
This chronicle of village life in a county tion Committees, however, would set the
ing, and a certain callousness and indiffer-
where the sense of community is perhaps reform of the parent first, and Mr. Pepler
somewhat disagreeable. The style is sharp is full of interesting side-lights upon the thinks it useless to prosecute neglectful
somewhat
disagreeable. The style is sharp stronger than in any other part of England seems disposed to agree with them. He
and well adapted to the story.
conditions and continuity of its existence. It parents, because the child is no better off
London County Council Survey of London : is well illustrated and vivified by Mr. Blake- afterwards. He does not suggest that the
Vol. III. št. Giles-in-the-Fields : Part I. borough's keen interest in the varied field of community ought to save the child—at
Lincoln's Inn Fields.
folk-lore.
abroad are totally unknown. Part of our it well to correct some misconceptions discovered in many a living original, and
superiority is due to the public spirit of a
or exaggerations founded on spite. He duly exaggerated for humorous purposes.
long succession of wealthy book-collectors regards it as improbable that Dryden
Mr. Barwick does not attempt to deal
who have freely laid
open their libraries lived with the bookseller Herringham with the latter years of the century, and
to students. A typical example of these
as a drudge, though he may have visited such typical magazines as The Idler,
was Mr. Alfred H. Huth, whose munificent him as a friend; and he repudiates the
bequest to the nation of fifty of his finest suggestion that Dryden's marriage with strong wave of literary interest. We
books, chosen at will, has just been com- the daughter of an earl was a mésalliance have other magazines now, the typical
memorated by a descriptive catalogue for her. The poet, like Tennyson and specimens being all of the same order :
drawn up with every refinement of modern Herrick, came of a good county family, popular, sensational, and negligent of the
skill by such authorities as Mr. Pollard, and was a person of some mark before
best literary work. Mr. W. Ď. Howells
Mr. Herbert, Mr. Campbell Dodgson, and he became celebrated as a writer.
was able, apparently, to discover a few
Mr. Esdaile, under the superintendence of * The Schotts of Strassburg and their years ago fifty magazines in the United
Dr Kenyon. We have already spoken Press,' by Mr. S. H. Scott, and Mr. States which could be described as of the
of the money value of incunabula in Robert Steele's well-illustrated Notes on literary or æsthetic kind. New York
general. What is to be thought of the English Books Printed Abroad, 1525-48, boasted some forty-five of them devoted
value of half a hundred volumes picked should help materially in clearing up the to belles-lettres," and seems to be as much
by experts from one of the most famous confusions of the period concerning the above London in its appreciation of decent
libraries of England ? The largest and early printers. Mr. Steele's discovery literature in this form as it is below it in
finest copy known of the first book that the ‘Dialogue of the Father and the lits indifference to murder.
years back.
6
## p. 434 (#326) ############################################
434
THE ATHENÆUM
No. 4408, APRIL 20, 1912
years older
Mr. Barwick has only touched his sub- present age much time is likely to be spent tions, and essays by various writers upon
ject lightly, but it deserves a thorough on them. All that is worth reprinting has different aspects of the relations between
historian. For the magazine is the" book” been made available for modern study, the school and society, together with
of the casual reader, and a better index and it would have been an advantage annotations and expositions. It is not
of public taste than the newspaper or the from the reader's point of view to have a possible, in the space of a review, to give
books which deluded authors sometimes record of such editions, e. g. , that of any adequate notion of the wealth of
write to please themselves, or to satisfy Golding's 'Ovid' brought out under Dr. matter packed into its twelve chapters,
a feeling for art which the public regards Rouse's supervision a few years since. all of which will repay careful reading. It
as a stupid and wilful indifference to
is interesting to find experiments in self-
commercial success.
government by boys at school which
At the end of the volume is a reprint
recall Arnold's methods at Rugby turning
of some brief notes by the late J. F. Payne AMERICA AND EDUCATION.
out very successfully; some American
on ‘English Herbals, which shows once
investigator might do well to examine
more the blushless appropriation of foreign AMERICA is as busy as England in review- these results side by side with those
learning by English writers. Lyte's ing and recasting educational theories concerning college alumni reported by
* Herball 'came from the Flemish through and methods. Among the interesting the Carnegie Foundation. On the whole,
the French, and Gerarde's was founded on investigations recorded in the Report of the experiments and changes described
another man's translation from the Latin a meeting of the Society of College Teachers have clearly tended to give, in an
of Dodoens. Gerarde added, indeed, some of Education held at St. Louis in the end advantageous way, new life and new scope
matter of his own, but he suppressed of February, one into the relation of to school teaching. It should be remem-
the name of Dodoens, and spoke of the mental development to physical growth bered, however, that there may be a
translation as only known to him by and physical defects, and one into methods danger in too much widening of school
hearsay! In speaking of the title of of reading, are especially valuable. From teaching, and that the great business of
Parkinson's book with its well-known Latin carefully kept records concerning 200 school life is, after all, to put into every
pun (Park-in-sun), Dr. Payne forgot to children it appears that tall children are child's hands the tools of learning :
put the first part of it in the genitive, practically" from one to four or even five language, spoken, read, and written, and
Paradisi in Sole. ”
than their shorter coevals, the laws of number. Without the pos-
The List of English Editions and and therefore “ should be treated physio- session of these tools, no civic virtues,
logically as older children than their age no knowledge of natural history or folk-
Translations of Greek and Latin Classics in years would indicate. ” As to reading lore, no athletic prowess, no expertness
printed before -641,' by Henrietta R.
Palmer, with an Introduction by Mr.
we find the following interesting con- even in all the processes of a skilled trade,
clusion :-
Scholderer, is a good example of the ex-
will save an adult living in the civilized
world from being like a person defective
cellent monographs issued by the Biblio- " The incipient articulation, which most
graphical Society. It is, we gather, of readers carry on as a part of their silent in sight or hearing.
American origin, but has been improved reading habits, and which has been developed
In his book about ‘Farm Boys and
by friends in London, Oxford, and Cam- by the methods of exclusive emphasis on
Girls' --which, incidentally, is also about
oral reading in the schools, keeps most
bridge.
persons far below the silent-reading speed | farm men and women-Prof. McKeever
Mr. Scholderer gives a good general which it is possible for them to attain by says many sensible, useful, and suggestive
survey of the subject in his Introduction, improved methods. ”
things. Especially good is the chapter
pointing out some gaps in the List which The Carnegie Foundation's Report in- in which fathers are urged to share a
now appear surprising. The Greek dra- cludes an analysis of the widely differing knowledge of their business affairs and
matists are very sparsely represented, and standards of qualification by which men an actual interest in them with their sons.
there is actually no edition or translation are admitted to the legal profession :-
About boys Prof. McKeever is right
of Æschylus. The inculcation of morality “The miscarriage of justice, the law's throughout, because he thinks of them as
rather than scholarship was the evident delays, the cost of litigation, public disragard individual human beings. About girls
aim of many of the workers. Sir Thomas of law, and disrespect for the judiciary, all he is less satisfactory because he
Hawkins includes only moral odes of proceed in no small degree from this multi- thinks of them not as individuals, but
Horace in his rendering, except 'Donec plication of ill-trained lawyers. ”
creatures complementary to other
gratus eram tibi,' as being commended Distinctly discouraging is that part of individuals—a view which derogates from
by Scaliger, an ode which Raleigh actually the Report which discusses The Influence the dignity of wifehood and motherhood.
made into a dialogue between God and of Organized Alumni on American Col- He realizes to the full the crushing con-
the Soul ! “ Improving” authors like leges. ' Evidently the organized alumni ditions in which
Plutarch and Seneca are strong favourites, are more concerned with their college's country wives die, worn out early in life,
and Aristotle is commended as a safe success in athletic events (even some-
and so undue a proportion of the survivors
guard against scheming schismatics and times by dishonourable means) than with become insane ; yet he deprecates the
religious sophisters. Many of our admired its intellectual progress-a fact which entry of women into outside occupations
classics, such as Plato, were less known indicates that some American colleges in which they have a prospect of living to
in the latter half of the sixteenth century are suffering in an exaggerated form from
a sane old age and of enjoying that
than a book of moral maxims like the the same disease as English institutions.
financial independence which is becoming
' Zodiacus Vitæ' of Marcellus Palin-
as dear to them as to men. What he
Prof. Irving King's" Source Book," as he fails to see is that marriage is not possible
genius, done into English by Barnabe calls it, is a collection of reports, observa- for all and that only when women are
Googe. This relentlessly instructive work
provided the phrase "Rome was not The School Review Monographs
- No. II. generally able to live comfortably and
built in a day”; instructions to be good, Papers presented for Discussion at a Meeting creditably outside marriage will society
at any rate, if you cannot be clever; of the Society of College Teachers of Educa be compelled so to modify its conditions
warnings that most people shut the fold
tion. (University of Chicago Press; Lon as to make them acceptable to many
when the flock is lost; and a host of similar
don, Cambridge University Press. ) independent minded and
capable
commonplaces.
Sixth Annual Report of the Carnegie Founda-
Moreover, only when such
Homer and Ovid fare better than Virgil,
tion for the Advancement of Teaching, 1911. women find married life in rural districts
(New York, 576, Fifth Avenue. )
who appeared in some ridiculous disguises. Social Aspects of Education :
acceptable will any satisfactory form of
The best work in verse throughout is,
a Book of social intercourse be likely to take root
Sources and Original Discussions with there.
as might be expected, paraphrase rather Annotated Bibliographies. By Irving King.
than translation. A good many bare (New York, the Macmillan Company. )
mentions of books now unknown provide Farm Boys and Girls. By William A.
duzzles to be solved, but we doubt if in the McKeever. (Same publishers. )
as
women.
-
1
## p. 435 (#327) ############################################
No. 4408, APRIL 20, 1912
435
THE ATHENÆUM
a
Mr.
Scots invade England, and were defeated Although Widsith' has little poetic
HOME RULE.
outside London by the Romans ”; and merit, its value as a document is very
THE flood of Home Rule literature is his first chapter opens cheerfully with great. In the interpretation and criticism
upon us, and the quality of it varies. The "The Irish Question began with the of the statements of Roman writers
Unionist Irish Essays Committee, which Christian era. ” He tells us much of the respecting Germanic ethnography, and
has prepared “The Case against Home Earl of Essex, Tyrconnel, and Wolfe
Earl of Essex, Tyrconnel, and Wolfe of heroic legend as recorded in Beowulf'
Rule,' has certainly done its work very Tone; but the little he has to
Tone; but the little he has to say about and in German and Scandinavian poetry
thoroughly. Not only is the list of con- the Home Rule question to-day is squeezed and saga, its evidence is indispensable,
tributors imposing, but the method into a few pages, and even in these he while at the same time its obscure allu-
also of dealing with the subject is divagates from his particular branch of sions can only be understood by compari-
comprehensive. The paper - covered the subject. The most interesting novelty son with these fuller sources of information.
volume is avowedly a partisan affair ; but is one not of idea, but of expression.
in spite of these limitations its tone as a
On p. 87 he refers to Gladstone's The poem, apart from obvious interpola-
whole is quiet and judicious, and the policy as "a type of policy that never, tions, can hardly be later than the begin-
essays are marked by much industrious in history, failed to have any but one ning of the eighth century, and some of its
compilation and reasoned argument, and ending. "
traditions go back to times far earlier
a comparative lack of wild statement It is refreshing to turn to the volume than the settlement of the Angles in
Britain.
and heat. Mr. Bonar Law's contribu- by Mr. S. G. Hobson, an avowed Home
It may be described as
tion is a short Preface, in which he in- Ruler. He succeeds in putting the case somewhat inartistic attempt to provide a
dicates that to his mind the Ulster objec- with a freshness which is remarkable narrative framework for certain mnemonic
tion is the greatest obstacle to Home at this stage of the controversy, and his lists of names of peoples and of their
Rule-a statement which has special desire to face the truth leads him occa-
rulers most famous in heroic song, which
interest in view of recent rumours. Mr. sionally to say things that will be probably formed part of the regular
Balfour's contribution is also brief, and unpalatable to many Nationalists. Though education of a minstrel. The fiction is of
Sir Edward Carson's is little more than an not blind to the sentimental issue, he the simpleşt: a minstrel of ancient days,
introductory résumê of succeeding chapters, is chiefly interested in the economic named Widsid, “ the Far-travelled” (the
which range in subject from The question, and his chapters on finance, name actually existed, but is obviously
Religious Difficulty' to 'Private Bill the waste of Irish administration, chosen on account of its meaning), is sup- .
Legislation. ' Especially interesting are an agriculture, and the changes needed posed to recount his travels. As about
admirable article on · Éducation by Mr. for the development of Irish resources, every fourth word is a proper name, there
Godfrey Locker - Lampson; Mr. L. S. are most stimulating, vivid, and sugges- is not much room for story, but now and
Amery's article on the 'Colonial Analogy'; tive.
Hobson holds the view,
of
and Mr. George Wyndham's little treatise shared by many Irishmen to-day, that by an epithet expressing his traditional
on ‘The Completion of Land Purchase,' in the passage of Home Rule will mean
character, or by an allusion to some
which the author of the 1903 Act re- an immediate diminution of clerical in incident in his career. Tradition has no
iterates with Mr. Law's authority the fluence over local and national politics. sense of chronology, and the kings before
Unionist pledge that, should the party He also argues that the new régime will whom Widsith sang, and who bestowed
return to office, the land policy of 1903
see a fresh cleavage of parties in Ireland,
on him rich gifts, belong historically to
will be resumed. By contrast with the a cleavage not religious, but economic three different centuries. The strings of
restraint observed elsewhere, there is a He has a lively and personal style, and proper names are introduced abruptly,
deplorable feverishness about Earl Percy's his work may be commended to all who with little attempt to weave them into
essay on The Military Disadvantages of desire to consider a thoughtful presenta- the texture of the story. The author was
Home Rule. A good deal of his tion of the Home Rule case as it bears a skilled versifier, but the traces of higher
matter is only faintly, if at all, rele- on the great realities that underlie all poetic qualities that may be found in his
vant to the subject allotted to him, and politics.
work are probably due to echoes of the
he has seized the opportunity to spread Mr. de F. Pennefather's pamphlet is older songs from which he derived his
the view that war with Germany cannot concise and well - arranged.
He takes wide knowledge of heroic tradition. Wid.
long, be avoided, to urge compulsory 25 “ Delusions” entertained by Home sith 'has for us moderns an interest like
service, and to inform us that Home Rulers, and subjoins the “ Facts which, that of a fragmentary catalogue of a lost
Rule will mean civil war,
accompanied in his opinion, should shatter them. Now library; we see from it how abundant
by atrocities which will be remembered and then he is somewhat vague, as when and various were the treasures of Old
for centuries. ” This is, to our thinking, he observes that “ To Hell with England” English epic poetry, of which, by the
almost solitary
prophecy of an unnecessarily specific is one of the mottoes of the Irish Nation- merest accident,
kind.
alists.
example survives in ‘ Beowulf. '
Sir Thomas Fraser's volume on The
Mr. Chambers's edition of · Widsith'-
Military Danger ’ is scarcely, more illu- Widsith : a Study in Old English Heroic for this is what the volume really is,
minating than Lord Percy's chapter. Legend. By R. W. Chambers. (Cam- the prolegomena and the text makes this
The author, in fact, occupies by far the
greater portion of his space with an his-
bridge University Press. )
description seem inappropriate-is a re-
torical survey which goes back to the THE Old English poem Widsith' con- markably thorough and serviceable piece
earliest times. The first words in his sists of only 143 lines, and the volume of work. There is no other single book,
Chronology are " 363. Picts and Irish which Mr. Chambers has devoted to its even in German, which contains so com-
illustration contains nearly double that plete a summary of what has been done
Against Home Rule : the Case for the Union. number of pages. He cannot, however, by scholars, from the days of Cony beare
By Arthur J. Balfour, J. Austen Chamber. be fairly charged with either irrelevance and Kemble to the present time, for the
lain, and others. Edited by S. Rosen- or diffuseness. Those who are acquainted elucidation of the poem. Although Mr.
baum. With Introduction by Sir Edo with the enormous mass of comment and Chambers’s general point of view differs
ward Carson, and Preface by A. Bonar controversy to which this brief text has considerably from that indicated in this
Law. (Warne & Co. )
The Military Danger of Home Rule for Ire not have been made much shorter, if it most of his conclusions on questions of
given rise will admit that the book could article, we find ourselves able to accept
land. By Major-General Sir Thomas
Fraser. (John Murray. )
was to include not only a reasoned expo- detail. That these are seldom novel is
Irish Home Rule: the Last Phase.
sition of the author's own conclusions, but no ground for reproach; the reasoning
By
S. G. Hobson. (Stephen Swift & Co. )
also an adequate discussion of the con- by which they are supported is often new
The Fundamental Delusions of Home Rule. flicting theories of eminent scholars with and ingenious. The textual conjectures
By de F. Pennefather, (Love & Malcom: regard to the manifold problems which are justified, and the translation and
son. )
the poem presents.
bibliography are satisfactory.
an
## p. 436 (#328) ############################################
436
THE A THENÆUM
No. 4408, APRIL 20, 1912
FOR
In &
McLachlan (Herbert), St. LUKE, EVANGELIST pictorial faculty is prolific, and the pageantry
NOTICES OF NEW BOOKS.
AND HISTORIAN, with an Introduction of his lines quite readable. On the other
by Prof. A. S. Peake, 2/6 net.
hand, the short pieces are commonplace and
(Notice in these columns does not proclude longer
Sherratt & Hughes garish.
review. )
This is a set of disconnected essays upon Fragments, collected by Beatrice Allhusen
Tbeology.
different aspects of the writings and cha-
and Iris Fox Reeve, 3/6 net.
Crooker (Joseph Henry), THE CHURCH OF
racter of St. Luke'Luke the Humourist,'
TO-MORROW, 2/6 net.
Longmans
Luke and his Friends, and so on, together
Lindsey Press
“ The Church of to-morrow
This anthology reveals much ingenuity in
is not,
with sundry closer studies on the text, such avoiding the trodden path and in dragging
as 'The Voice from Heaven' and 'Pericope into its net all manner of stray oddments.
apparently, a radical transfiguration of the
Church of to-day. The author runs lightly Adulteræ, the author in the latter being in Its method is a kind of vagrancy, and
over the face of social and religious conditions favour oft Lucan authorship. The essays reminds us of the parable of the wedding-
are all interesting, being abundantly illus- guest. Consequently, though many half,
and does not ignore facts, but is unable to
offer any convincing solution of stiff pro-
trated both from modern and ancient works, forgotten flowers of speech are rendered
blems. His book seems largely a reaffirma- and in no case tedious or dry.
accessible, there is much chaff garnered with
tion of the position of the Victorian Noel (Conrad), BYWAYS OF BELIEF, 5/ net.
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Palmer | charm.
the bulwark of the social structure. We have
A decidedly interesting book, which might Greene (George A. ), SONGS OF THE OPEN
seen this old-fashioned standpoint, in the have gained in charity had the author been AIR.
Elkin Mathews
light of modern evolution and questioning, less convinced of the essential sufficiency Mr. Greene's verses are intelligent and
argued with greater ability by more trench- of the Catholic faith as he understands it. thoughtful; he is a good craftsman, and
ant and combative pens.
Any change, however, might have produced keeps at a steady level of achievement.
Hermann (E. ), EUCKEN AND BERGSON : other failings, such as a want of clearness in But his expression is too derivative and
THEIR SIGNIFICANCE
CHRISTIAN criticizing Christian Science and many conventional, shaped too roundly to current
THOUGHT, 2/6 net. Clarke & Co. other creeds and pseudo-creeds.
moods. It lacks distinction, individuality, ,
This is a worthy product of the latest St. Teresa of Jesus, THE INTERIOR CASTLE,
and force.
movement in religious thought.
OR THE MANSIONS.
Baker Knight (A. E. ), PHILISTIA AND A SOUL: A
vigorous style, which is free, like that of
Several new facts are brought to light WANDER-BOOK, 6/ net. Macmillan
his masters, from technical jargon, Mr.
This is no poem, but a tract in Browning-
Hermann here sets forth the core of the in this new edition of the autograph of
It is also a dialogue, with
teaching of Eucken and of Bergson. In St. Teresa, translated by the Benedictines esque verse.
* wander-
the case of Eucken he has many and definite of Stanbrook, and the rendering itself has little characterization, and
utterances concerning Christianity to go
book," but that is no excuse for wanderings
undergone revision and condensation.
so intricate and so long.
upon; in the case of Bergson we still await Wells (L. S. ), THE TRUE GREATNESS OF
such, yet we cannot but think that Mr. PAUL THE APOSTLE: A STORY AND A Newman (John Henry, Cardinal), VERSES ON
Hermann's view of what is already implied MORAL, 1/ net. Knaresborough, Parr VARIOUS OCCASIONS (including "The
in Bergson's will be largely corroborated. Sir Thomas Acland, in a few words of
Dream of Gerontius ’), 2/ net.
Although he is apparently unable to subscribe preface, tells us that the standpoint of
Longmans
to all the articles of the Christian creed, Mr. Wells is “that of Prof. Ramsay and
This agreeable pocket edition is very
Mr. Hermann's presentation of Christianity, Harnack” ; while Mr. Wells, in his own handy, though in large and readable type,
in regard to fundamental matters, is stimu- Apology, half accuses himself of rashness,
and includes a sufficient index.
lating and full of insight.
and pleads inexperience. There is a note Safroni-Middleton (A. ), THE CASTLE BY THE
Little Treasure of Leaflets : Vol. V. WITH of rashness—by no means to be altogether
SEA, AND OTHER POEMS, 2/6
PRAYERS AT MASS, ORDINARY OF THE deprecated—in these pages, scattered all
Walter Scott
MASS, PRAYERS BEFORE
over as they are with italics and capitals,
The author is evidently sincere in his love
COMMUNION, &c. , 1/
Dublin, Gill and yet larger capitals, and thick-set with of a life of adventure in the open air and his
marginal headings. The Life of Paul,' sentimental regret for the friends of his
Lyttelton (Rev. Edward), CHARACTER AND which forms Part I. , is better than Part II. , youth, nor is the gift of humour entirely
RELIGION, 5/ net.
Robert Scott the Teaching of
Pau). ' The writer's absent from his work.
This book belongs to the Library of enthusiasm for the great apostle gives spectable, but not of a high quality.
His verse is re-
Historic Theology. The fundamental ques- vividness to his narrative, which follows
tion with which it deals is that of the possi- St. Luke's authority, in accordance with
bility of training character by means of the opinion of more recent critics.
Philosophy.
moral principles alone. The discussion re-
Khedkar (R. V. ), A HAND BOOK OF THE
volves round humility-taken in the senses
Law.
VEDANT PHILOSOPHY AND RELIGION,
of self-surrender and self-forgetfulness-
3/6
Kolhapur, Mission Press
chosen as being not only the most distinc- Vincent (the late Col. Sir Howard), THE
tively Christian of the virtues, but likewise
POLICE CODE AND GENERAL MANUAL principles underlying the Vedic philosophy
An exegesis of the esoteric and cardinal
that which, even by the non-Christian world, OF THE CRIMINAL LAW, 2/6 net.
and religion. To the student of religion
is found the most attractive and compelling.
Butterworth
How did this virtue suddenly rise into exist-
The fifteenth edition of this standard Parts of the symbolism and hierarchical
it cannot fail to be instructive and suggestive.
ence and into general recognition ? What authority on the criminal law, has been terminology are difficult to grasp in their
is its true relevance ? The answers pro- revised by the Commissioner of Police of
proper significance.
The
non-dualistic
posed are arrived at largely by means of the metropolis, and contains an Introduction
dialogue, sustained against different inter- by Mr. Charles Mathews, the Director of system of the Vedanta is one of the most
complex and at the same time idealistic
locutors by a professed egoist-or supporter Public Prosecutions.
of Oriental religions. The book is one of
of the principle of self-assertion. The
poetry.
dialogue itself is on neither side very con-
the Shri Shankaracharya Series.
vincing, partly because it is restricted within Allhusen (Beatrice), APRIL MOODS, 2/6 net. history and Biograpby.
a compass. Thus the egoist
A. L. Humphreys
never alludes to the special modern forms Miss Allhusen writes in a breathless,
Caithness and Sutherland Records, April, 2/
of egoistic theory, such as the doctrines of rhetorical style. She is liable to extrava-
Viking Club, King's College, London
other hand, does the expounder of "Chris- gances of feeling, and lives in a charmed Chancellor (E. Beresford), THE ANNALS OF
transpontine world of her own, more akin FLEET STREET, ITS TRADITIONS AND
tianity say anything of the action of humility to a March blizzard than the gentle and
in the external world, as connected by recent changeful temper of April.
ASSOCIATIONS, 7/6 net. Chapman & Hall
Too much This is a book well stocked with literary
writers with gaiety, for instance, or artistic gesturing and dramatic device spoil her and archæological lore, and recalling many
activity, or love of poverty: Another fre- verse, and its ebullience is boundless. associations. The author's style is fluent,
quent defect is heaviness of style. Never-
but somewhat wordy.
theless, this is a book that ought to count. Bridges (Charles), VERSE VOLUNTARIES, 3/6
It is full of practical spiritual insight, and,
Simpkin & Marshall Crutchley (Commander W. Caius), MY LIFE
as a whole, never swerves from its centre ; We think that Mr. Bridges, who displays
AT SEA, 7/6
Chapman & Hall
while it contains isolated thoughts of great a certain versatility, owes no mean debt to The author is a master mariner of wide
wisdom and depth. The best parts struck Keats and Browning. Indeed, his opulence and varied experience, and his reminiscences
us as the chapter entitled ' A Year After' of phrase and the leisurely gait of his narra- of a long and successful career at sea are
and the excursus on 'Prayer,?
tive poems are not a little agreeable. His of exceptional interest, as they extend
AND
AFTER
SO
narrow
net.
## p. 437 (#329) ############################################
No. 4408, APRIL 20, 1912
THE ATHENÆUM
437
a
IN
rancour.
over a considerable portion of the period of and persecuted woman, diabolically mal-
transition from the small wooden sailing treated. Whether or no this can be sub-
Sociology.
vessel to the gigantic steam-propelled and stantiated, we can conceive no positive need
steel-constructed product of modern naval for resuscitating a macabre and sordid
Cross (Ira B. ), THE ESSENTIALS OF SOCIALISM.
New York, Macmillan Co.
engineering. Capt. Crutchley draws a scandal, best healed by a kindly oblivion.
realistic picture of the conditions of life in Moreover, the book obviously aims at re-
We are sorry that we cannot find in this
the mercantile marine in the early sixties, viving the sensation of which a greedy pross
small book anything but a welter of ill-
and there is much of special import to the made the most.
assimilated statements.
nautical reader. He has, too, enlivened his
Holmes (T. ), PsYCHOLOGY AND CRIME.
pages with a host of breezy and amusing Geograpby and Travel.
Dent
anocdotes, and the chapters dealing with his
Out of his twenty-five years of experi-
experiences on the South African service Beautiful Ireland : CONNAUGHT and Mun- ence, the Secretary of the Howard Associa-
are noteworthy. A short Preface is con-
STER, by Stephen Gwynn. - Beautiful tion has written a valuable little book.
tributed by Earl Brassey, and there are England: YORK, by George Benson ; Differing in many ways from the scientific
twelve good illustrations.
CHESTER, by Charles Edwardes. 2/ net school, he holds that psychology has far
Dawson (C. B. ), THE MIRROR OF OXFORD.
each.
Blackie less to do with crime than physical conditions,
Sands To Mr. Gwynn belongs an almost passionate that the criminal usually needs a better
There would have been little or no justi- love for the districts he describes a love body rather than a better mind, and that
fication for this book, had it been written which radiates through every page of his
criminal type,” in any definite sense of
from the normal point of view of the his- two new books, and is especially noticeable the term, does not exist. Common sense
torian of Oxford. On those lines it is in the stories and legends he repeats. The
seems to agree with him here, as with his
practically impossible to squeeze frosh tragedy of Finn and Grània, the history of plea for a inore intelligent treatment of the
matter out of the subject. But it is written Daniel O'Connell, the story of St. Brendan's feeble-minded and the epileptic. His obser-
avowedly for a Roman Catholic audience pilgrimage into the west-all these, as told vations on the attitude of the prisoner to the
and shifts the perspective, if it does not by Mr. Gwynn, are not merely good reading, prison also deserve attention.
radically alter or add to it. The illustrations but also breathe the very spirit of Ireland. Jephson (A. W. ), MUNICIPAL WORK FROM A
are good.
His two books will do what few guide-books CHRISTIAN STANDPOINT, 1/6 net.
English People Overseas : Vol. IV. BRITAIN country they depict.
can-awaken a strong desire to see the
Mowbray
The illustrations by The subject is treated under four
THE TROPICS, 1527-1910, by A. Mr. Alexander Williams are uniformly heads-Public Health,
Wyatt Tilby, 6/ net.
Constable excellent.
* Public Works,
• Public Services,' and ' Finance and Rating. '
We find the author of this historical
Mr. Benson's book on York has more the One of the Christian Social Union Hand-
treatise more discriminating, suggestive, character of a guide-book than Mr. Gwynn's. books.
and informative when he is able to forgo He gives a good deal of attention to the craft Pepler (Douglas), THE CARE COMMITTEE,
his Imperial bias. His chapter on Victorian guilds, but says nothing to show wherein
Britain is largely irrelevant, and is saturated they differ from those of other cities. We
THE CHILD, AND THE PARENT, 2/6 net.
with the vague idealism of the Imperialists, regret we have not the space to repeat the
Constable
At times he displays considerable political pleasing medieval story of Brother Jucundus, sisting of notes contributed by two voluntary
The Appendix to this little work, con-
Otherwise, his book is readable.
whose weakness for strong drink all but
There is a
placed him amongst the saints.
workers on Children's Care Committees, is
Fletcher (J. S. ), MEMORIES OF A SPECTATOR,
admirable ; but the value of the book
7/6 net.
EVELEIGH NASH strange contrast between this and Mr.
Seebohm Rowntree's book on York as it
itself is largely reduced by its tendency to
The author does not appear to have been confronts the social reformer. It is difficult regard the interests of the parent rather
one of those spectators who most
than those of the child. Now the purpose
to believe that they deal with the same
of the game, and his book is largely a chro-
for which Care Committees exist is that no
city.
niclo of small beer calling for no comment.
child attending school shall, owing to
The most interesting part of it describes his about Chester and its environs which is
Mr. Charles Edwardes has written a book privation, disease, or neglect, grow up to be
early life in Yorkshire.
å burden to itself and the community. It
worth reading for its own sake, although it is might rationally be argued that success
Funston (Frederick), MEMORIES OF Two distinctly the most guide-bookish of the in this purpose would be cheaply bought,
WARS : CUBAN AND PHILIPPINE EXPERI- four. Mr. Ernest Haslehust has success-
even at the cost of demoralizing entirely
ENCES, 12/6 net.
Constable fully illustrated the works on York and
every
slack
parent now in existence.
Chester.
An account of the Philippine war, which
In reality, there is reason to believe that
describes in detail the marches, sieges, and Blakeborough (J. Fairfax), LITE IN A YORK-
such parents are most likely to improve
operations of the American army, in which
when their burdens are a little lifted. But
SHIRE VILLAGE (with Special Reference
the writer was an officer. The narrative is
to the Evolution, Customs, Folk-lore,
when the question arises, as it sometimes
made more piquant by the adventurous
must, whether the parent's moral discipline
and Legends of Carlton-in-Cloveland,
vicissitudes of the writer throughout the this Village being taken as a type), 6/6 trend of modern thought replies decisively in
campaigns. The atmosphere of constant Stockton-on-Tees, Yorkshire Publishing Press favour of the child. Many Charity Organiza-
is to be sacrificed or the child's health, the
fighting grows, however, tedious and depress-
This chronicle of village life in a county tion Committees, however, would set the
ing, and a certain callousness and indiffer-
where the sense of community is perhaps reform of the parent first, and Mr. Pepler
somewhat disagreeable. The style is sharp is full of interesting side-lights upon the thinks it useless to prosecute neglectful
somewhat
disagreeable. The style is sharp stronger than in any other part of England seems disposed to agree with them. He
and well adapted to the story.
conditions and continuity of its existence. It parents, because the child is no better off
London County Council Survey of London : is well illustrated and vivified by Mr. Blake- afterwards. He does not suggest that the
Vol. III. št. Giles-in-the-Fields : Part I. borough's keen interest in the varied field of community ought to save the child—at
Lincoln's Inn Fields.
folk-lore.
