The writing of Miss Willcocks is like her minister to the
pleasure
of a sensitive reader.
Athenaeum - London - 1912a
succeeded in creating a readable book.
The
enjoyment, we still regard the author as con-
Americanisms, too-of which the most frequent
pictures of the contemporary Court life are
siderably above the ordinary undergraduate
humorist.
is “ right there"- sound odd to English ears
vivid and full of movement. There is, how-
He has a light touch, and his
when supposed to be uttered at a tragic moment. ever, a tendency to falsetto writing which
well-turned verse gives point and pith to his
The play is strong in characterization and in spoils an otherwise harmonious book.
pleasant fancies.
the broad outline of the conception; weak
Jewett (Sarah Orne), Letters of, edited by Annie
Fox (Agnes), Verses, 2/6 net. Elkin Mathews in the details of the plot-for instance, in
Fields, 6/ net.
Constable
These verses remind us of refined provincial the twice-repeated “ listening. ' Of the end,
A charming personality is revealed in these
concerts, where the conventional mechanism since it has not been brought to completion,
letters. They describe, with much good-
goes through its ordered round, and passable little can fairly be said, beyond an expression of
natured and humoursome criticism, people,
melodies are sung and played. Poignancy and regret that it should thus have been thrown scenery, and books. On the whole, Miss
reality seem beyond the author.
aside. However, while much is left crude,
Jewett's tastes indicate simplicity. Amongst
Gibson (Wilfrid Wilson), Womenkind : a Play in there is nothing vague or indefinite, and it the persons she corresponded with are Mrs.
One Act, 6d. net.
Nutt may be said in praise of Mrs. Evarts's work Meynell and Mrs. Humpbry Ward. She held
It is a bold thing to write a play of modern that she has preserved well the distinctness of
Tennyson in great admiration, and is enthu-
life in blank verse ; and Mr. Gibson bas not the original.
siastic after a visit to him. There are three
succeeded in making the talk of his North-
Welsh Lyrics of the Nineteenth Century, selected portrait illustrations.
Country peasants lifelike. Perhaps, however, and translated by Edmund P. Jones : First Magrunder (F. A. ), Recent Administration in
the fault lies less in the verse itself than Series, Second Edition, 1/
David Nutt Virginia.
in the tendency to repetition in which
This new edition has been undertaken at the
The aim of this treatise is to summarize and
English playwrights have unfortunately copied request of the authorities of the Central Welsh place in perspective the development of ad-
Maeterlinck. The most striking quality of this
Board. There are no alterations, except in ministrative functions in Virginia. It covers a
little play is its recognition of that new solid- bibliographical matter. The translations do period of forty-three years, and offers a com-
arity among women which coming centuries not impress us, but then the originals are of no prehensive picture of the tendency towards
transcendent quality.
centralization, Its exactitude
will recognize as a marked feature of this, but
in detailed
which many contemporaries still fail to perceive.
masses of facts and evidence makes it more of a
Hastings (Basil Macdonald), The New Sin :
Philosophy.
report than a criticism. It is one of the Johns
Hopkins University Studies in Historical and
Play in Three Acts, 1/ net. Sidgwick & Jackson Carpenter (Edward), The Drama of Love and Political Science.
A play which will not bear moving from the Death : a Study of Human Evolution and
footlights to the printed page, where a more
Matthews (John Hobson), The Vaughans of
Transfiguration.
George Allen
Courtfield, 2/6 net.
Sands
logical sequence of thought and action is For notice seę p. 274.
expected.
A pleasantly written little book about the
Horne (Herman Harrell), Free Will and Human family of Cardinal Vaughan. The Vaughans
Kellett (E. E. ), Carmina Ephemera, or Trivial Responsibility, a Philosophical Argument, 6/6 of Courtfield (Monmouthshire) are an old-
Numbers, New Edition, 1/ net.
net.
New York, Macmillan Co. established Catholic family, and their history
Cambridge, Bowes & Bowes A simple exposition of the problem of neces- throws interesting side-lights on the Catholic
Mr. Kellett's academic jeux d'esprit are sity and free will. The author hardly indicates persecutions under Charles I. and Cromwell.
undeniably clever, but their trim style and sufficiently the unfairness of the dilemma Merwin (Henry Childs), The Life of Bret Harte,
neatness of expression are not sufficiently above between a will which wills nothing and a will with some Account of the California Pioneers,
the ordinary academic level to give his work which goes through a process which is not 10/6 net.
Chatto & Windus
permanent interest. The Horatian odes please willing ; but he weighs the rival arguments The writer can claim no personal acquaintance
us best.
with care and judgment before proceeding to with the subject of this biography, but has been
a
## p. 282 (#220) ############################################
282
THE ATHENÆUM
No. 4402, March 9, 1912
on
able to draw freely on the published remi- alien influences it was moulded by, and its capabilities, we do not deny. An objectionable
niscences of those who were more fortunate. evolution into its present form. There is a feature in the book is the incessant use of italics
His own contribution consists in the main substantial index, but we find no bibliography for the sake of emphasis. It is a reprint from
of a literary and moral appraisement, while a and only indirect methods of sifting docu- The St. Paul Medical Journal.
survey of Pioneer characteristics and conditions mentary evidence.
Longstaff (George B. ), Butterfly-Hunting in
fills half the book.
Many Lands : Notes of a Field Naturalist,
School-Books.
Muir (Sir William), The Life of Mohammad from
21/ net.
Longmans
Original Sources, Revised Edition_by T. H. War-Pictures from Clarendon : being Selections Since 1903 Dr. Longstaff has carried on his
Weir, 10/6 net.
Edinburgh, John Grant from the History of the Great Rebellion and entomological work in every continent, and
The alterations deemed necessary from the Civil Wars in England by Edward, Earl of during that time has added over 12,000 speci-
third edition are inconsiderable. The intro- Clarendon, edited and arranged by Robert mens of all orders of insects to the tope
ductory, chapters on 'The Early History of Jameson Mackenzie, 2/6 net.
Collection in the Oxford University Museum.
Arabia' and on The Sources for the Bio-
Oxford, Clarendon Press In the valuable work now before us he has put
graphy of Mohammad,' omitted from the second A definite and by no means difficult task into readable form the technical diaries of those
and third editions, have been wisely re- has been neatly and satisfactorily accomplished. years, which he had fortunately both the time
introduced. The revision solely concerns mat- We think that less bellicose selections would and the inclination to keep, and in which he
ters of detail. This fascinating and learned have illustrated both Clarendon and his times recorded the specimens taken from day to day.
history still holds its own, though it was more intimately and significantly, but his war. And, what is of far wider interest, he has set
written more than forty years ago.
pictures are graphic and vigorous.
forth the results of his observations, made
Sewell (Robert), Indian Chronography: an Exten-
with certain bionomic questions in view, in
sion of the Indian Calendar,' with Working
Science.
notes on Scent, Mimicry, and suchlike phe-
Examples, 31/8 net.
George Allen
nomena.
The book is embellished with many
Mr. Sewell is an authority on Indian history,
Barrett-Hamilton (Gerald E. H. ), A History of
plates, and at the end are appended trans-
antiquities, and astronomy, and the volume
British Mammals, Part X. , 2/6 net.
ſations of papers by Fritz Müller, on the
before us, a monument of research and tireless
Gurney & Jackson
production and emission of scents by butterflies
industry, should extend his reputation for solid
Part X. continues the study of rodents
and moths.
scholarship. It is intended to be more or less
by investigating anatomy, characteristics, dis-
Saint Bartholomew's Hospital Reports, Vol.
Indian Calendar,'
tribution, and habits.
supplementary to the
We find the accounts
XLVII. , 1911.
Smith & Elder
which appeared fifteen years ago. It is designed
very readable, based upon actual observation,
to elucidate what needed unravelling in that
and not overloaded with scientific phraseology.
Embodies all the year's functions and
book, also to supply further assistance to those
The author is engaged on 'Studies in Bird-
activities of the Hospital, including medical
engaged in chronological calculations and in
Migration,' and personal scrutiny of pheno-
and surgical reports, catalogues of specimens
attempting to verify the authenticity of ancient
mena here, too, promises to be the guiding
added to the museum, analyses of various
diseases, with the latest discoveries concerning
documents.
principle of research.
British Red Cross Society: First-Aid Manual,
them, several obituary notices, and lists of
subscribers.
Geography and Travel.
No. 1, by James Cantlie, 1/ net. Cassell
Sclater (William Lutley), A History of the Birds
This excellent little book is primarily intended
Popham (R. Brooks), Hither and Thither, 6/
of Colorado, 21/ net.
Witherby
for those intending to take up work under the
Ham Smith
Cooke's book, the only complete one
War Office scheme for the Organization of
In these reminiscences of foreign travel
Voluntary Aid. It is well illustrated, and the
Colorado birds, being out of print, the author
we have a series of interesting, though some-
has thought it well to write a large and properly
what haphazard sketches of life in various
explanations are lucid.
Coming of Petroleum (The), 2/6 net.
catalogued description of the ornithological
out-of-the-way corners of the globe. The
author shows considerable facility of expres-
Curtis & Gardner
species in that country. It is an elaborate
For notice see p. 286.
book, very neatly and intelligently arranged,
sion, and the book should provide light reading
with the salient characteristics of each family
of a diverting nature. The anecdotes range
D'Alfonso (N. R. ), Speculative Prychology and
and genus put into proper order.
from the amusing to the gruesome. The
the Unity of Races.
Rome, Loescher
descriptions of a Chinese execution, and the
This paper was read at the first Universal
Juvenile Literature.
Congress of Races, held in London last July.
burning of a negro at the stake, are more
The Professor radiates from a definition of Graves (Clarissa Janie), The Children of the
realistic than pleasant.
psychology into a denial of the validity of Farm, Bd.
Reeve (Henry F. ), The Gambia, 10/6 net.
Horace Marshall
international exclusiveness and an affirmation This booklet differs 'in no essentials of form or
Smith & Elder
A valuable and comprehensive study of a
of the organic and functional unity of all men. matter from the familiar productions of juvenile
literature.
He shows that the complex mechanism of
comparatively little - known colony. The
author gives the history, and geographical,
psychical activities passes through innumer-
able gradations in the animal kingdom, and
Fiction.
geological, and ethnographical conditions of
detects the operations of the same laws on the Channon (E. M. ), Stoneladies, 6/ Hutchinson
Gambia from the earliest times down to the
higher human activities. Within this unity, The author has the rare gift of conveying a
present day. His chief object is “ the awaken-
the organic functions themselves undergo an great deal in few words. The characteriza.
ing of our Government and Nation to the
“ immense variety of localizations. " So the tion of the miserly cousin to whose care the two
strategical value of the possession of a great
harbour and waterway on the North-West
multifarious energies of social life represent girls are unwittingly entrusted is convincingly
African coast. " He is an ardent Imperialist,
psychological functions and "
converge in man revealed. There are some amusingly uncon-
as one. Race antagonisms are, he concludes,
and inclined sometimes to be a little bombastic ;
ventional situations, and the originality and
otherwise, his writing is clear and interesting.
the product of training and tradition. This freshness of the greater part of the book make
interesting essay is practically a scientific it the more disappointing that the author
The numerous and well-printed illustrations
application of pantheism.
enhance the value of the book ; there are some
should have succumbed so entirely to conven-
tion in the concluding pages,
excellent maps, and the index and general Fergusson's Percentage Unit of Angular Measure-
ment, with Logarithms; also a Description of his
production deserve commendation.
Everett-Green (E. ), Duckworth's Diamonds, 6/
Percentage Theodolite and Percentage Compass,
Stanley Paul
Anthropology.
by John Coleman Fergusson, 63/ net.
We should have had more respect for the
Longmans wisdom of the custodian of the diamonds had
Bombay Anthropological Society, Journal, Vol.
The author claims that his book is a simpli- he used a little discretionary power in regard
IX. No. 2, with Silver Jubilee Memorial
fication of plane trigonometry for the use of to his trust, and, on his arrival in England,
Number.
Bombay, British India Press
surveyors, navigating officers, civil and military driven with his treasure straight to the Safe
London, Luzac
engineers, universities, and colleges. He holds Deposit Offices. However, in that case the
Political Economy.
that his theory of " Percentage Unit” provides first chapter would also have been the last,
an easy method of discovering the ratio of an and we should have missed the story of an
China : Social and Economic Conditions.
inclined line to its base. There are exhaustive exciting chase, a romantic love, and many
Philadelphia, American Academy of Political tabulated lists of logarithms. That “the thrilling incidents connected therewith, which
and Social Science birth of geometry was simultaneous with the are set forth with vigour and skill.
A series of essays by various writers of creation of man
appears to us a quaint Fendall (Percy), Lady Ermyntrude and the
authority, particularly useful at the present conception.
Plumber, 6/
Stephen Swift
time in view of the difficulty of getting trust- Holmes (Bayard), The Friends of the Insane, A satirical forecast of the future, including
worthy information concerning China. We The Soul of Medical Education, and Other Great Compulsory Work Act in 1920.
note with special interest the opinion that a Essays.
The story itself concerns a ducal family. The
republic is unlikely to furnish the strong Cincinnati, The Lancet-Clinic Publishing Co. duke gets a job as royal dustman ; the duchess
government which the country needs.
These essays
are corrected reprints from takes a plumber as a paying guest ; their son
Moore (Henry Ludwell), Laws of Wages : the pages of the American publication The sells newspapers in the street, and becomes a
Essay in Statistical Economics.
Lancet-Clinic. Some brief additions have been Socialist ; and the daughter sells theatre pro-
New York, Macmillan Co. nade to them in the interests of completeness grammes, and finally marries the plumber.
A skilful analysis of the problems of wages and clearness.
While not devoid of humour, the book loses
in the light of economic facts rather than Knott (John), The Last Illness of Lord Byron : interest by reason of its obvious absurdity.
abstract theory, leading to the conclusion that a Study in the Borderland of Genius and Mad- Harding (Newman), The Eternal Struggle, 6/
at the present time wages are principally deter- ness, of Cosmical Inspiration and Pathological
John Long
mined within each labour group by specific Psychology, 2/6
A tale of the English colony in Massa-
productivity, and only secondarily by the
St. Paul, Minn. , Volkszeitung Printing Co. chusetts in the seventeenth century, whose
standard of life. The author makes use of the
Byron has suffered as much
from his eulogiste peace is broken by a visit of the King's
latest statistical methods,
as his detractors, and when Dr. Knott jauntily commissioners in search of two regicides.
declares that he can detect infinitely more The sayings and doings of the Puritans are
Philology.
sublime philosophy in Byron than in all Words- somewhat tedious, and the heroine's practice of
Sen (Dinesh Chandra), History of Bengali Lan- worth and the other Lakers," he is simply sacrificing herself and every one else on the
guage and Literature : a Series of Lectures doing Byron an injustice by claiming too much. altar of sisterly love becomes irritating before
delivered as Reader to the Calcutta University. He attempts to enforce his appreciation by the end is reached.
Calcutta, the University an excursus into physiology, anatomy, and Harland (Henry), The Cardinal's Snuff-Box, 7d.
A monumental and comprehensive work, psychology, together with a long description of net.
Nelson
tracing the development of the Bengali lan- Byron's death. That Byron possessed “heredi- New edition. For notice see Athen. , May
guage, the modifications it passed through, the tary moral weakness " and supreme artistic 19, 1900, p. 618.
19
an
## p. 283 (#221) ############################################
No. 4402, MARCH 9, 1912
283
THE ATHENÆUM
Hewlett (Maurice), Brazenhead the Great, 3/6 think, the best result of that period when the which sends us to the authors whose names are
Smith & Elder problems of social relationships had attracted scattered through his pages with a lavish band.
A reissue of one of Mr. Hewlett's less-known him.
Nor do abrupt transitions and the use of
romances. It is somewhat diffuse, and excel-
Willcocks (M. P. ), Wings of Desire, 6/ Lane
such words as “ directivity” and “worthful ”
lent in segments rather than as a whole.
The writing of Miss Willcocks is like her minister to the pleasure of a sensitive reader.
Hewson (Charles), Scarlet and Blue, 6/
title : it has an air of profundity and of extreme
Peacemaker (The), February.
Eveleigh Nash
precision, but is really inexact amid much
British Council Office
A capital novel, dealing with fox hunting,
superfluity of definition. ' Her material—but for
This journal is earnest and vigorous, and has
stag hunting, otter hunting, and beagling.
some irrelevancies—is good, her conceptions
a number of influential names behind it to give
The author is evidently a keen sportsman,
of character and of human relations clear and
it_standing. There are excellent articles on
and has caught the open-air atmosphere. His
fine ; and her technical defects cannot entirely
The Bond of Science' and The Press and
confrères will recognize the figures familiar in
spoil her power of presentation.
International Relations. '
every hunting field from the time of Jorrocks
to the present day, the cheerful greetings and
Willy (Colette), The Vagrant, 6/ Eveleigh Nash
Pease (Margaret), True Patriotism, and Other
the gossip; but those who do not hunt Written in the first person, the book consti-
Lessons on Peace and Internationalism, 1/ net.
will probably find the record of an endless
tutes less of a romance than a chronological
Pilgrim Press
round of meets and finds and kills more than record of the heroine's emotions. The descrip-
For notice see p. 273.
a little monotonous.
tions of music-hall life are realistic, but the Rationalist Press Association, Thirteenth Annual
Igglesden (Charles), Clouds, 6/ John Long
author's style is at times almost brutally Report, 1911.
The story of an ill-assorted marriage. A cynical, and we fear that the 300 pages of The annual summary and memorandum of
somewhat morbid introspection
and
young man marries a girl for her beauty and
self- the functions, propaganda, subscriptions, publi-
quickly repents. The characters strike us as revelation will produce a depressing effect on cations, and programme of the Association,
artificial, and so do most of the incidents.
the average English reader. The book is which defines its intellectual standpoint in the
The hero's only apparent vice is that he occa-
translated from the French by Charlotte syllabus as, the mental attitude which un-
sionally damns the villain. His wife is con-
Remry Kidd.
reservedly accepts the supremacy of reason,
veniently drowned, and he is left free to marry
and aims at establishing a system of philosophy
the girl with whom he has fallen in love. The
General Literature.
and ethics verifiable by experience and inde-
style of the book is defective.
A B C, March, 6d.
pendent of all arbitrary assumptions or au-
Kaye (Michael), The Honour of Bayard, 6/
The A B C is the most lucid and intelligible
thority. ”
Greening of railway guides, and indispensable in all well. Royal Society of Literature, The Academic Com-
We bave here a romantic drama of warfare regulated households. The March edition has mittee : Commemorative Addresses
on Sir
and intrigne in the early part of the sixteenth been enlarged, and reset in new type.
Alfred Comyn Lyall, by G. W. Prothero ; and
century. The scene is laid in an Italian town, Book of the Cambridge Review, 1879-97, 14 net.
on Edward Henry Pember, by W. J. Court-
which, when the story opens, is besieged by
Cambridge, Bowes & Bowes hope, 1/ net.
Frowde
Spanish forces, while the action centres round
A reprint, in paper covers, of a collection of
Iwo funeral orations on two distinguished
an attempt to induce the heroine to commit
prose and verse from The Cambridge Review,
members of the Society. They pay a worthy
an act of treachery in order to ransom her first published in 1898, and noticed by us on
and dignified tribute to scholarship.
husband, who is a prisoner in the enemy's December 24th of that year. The volume is Smith (William Hawley), All the Children of All
hands. A somewhat ingenious plot is marred entertaining in its variety, though, perhaps, over-
by ultra-sensationalism.
the People, 6/6 net.
loaded with serious matter. The preface gives
'Long's Sixpenny Net Novels : A Cabinet Secret,
New York, Macmillan Co.
a list of the editors of the Review, several of
by Guy Boothby; and The Greater Power, by
An inquiry into American educational
whom, from the first, Prof. E. V. Arnold, to
Harold Bindloss.
conditions, in which the fertile wisdom and
Long
the last mentioned, Dr. Figgis, have attained
keen observation of the author will be of
Lynch (Lawrence L. ), A Blind Lead, 6/
distinction.
Ward & Lock Commercial Handbook of Canada and Boards of
considerable utility in unravelling a confused
and obtusely treated topic.
A melodramatic story, the plot of which Trade Register, 1912, 5/
depends on the extraordinary likeness between
Toronto, Heaton's Agency
Weston (Agnes), My Life among the Blue-Jackets,
two sisters. The author seems more excited
3/6
Nisbet
London, Simpkin & Marshall
over the mystery than the average reader is
The eighth issue of a useful and trustworthy
To those who are interested in philanthropic
likely to be, and his punctuation is peculiar. handbook epitomizing the administrative, social,
endeavour the present volume will present
Russell (Countess), An Excellent Mystery, 6/ and industrial activities of Canada. Its prin:
much of interest. Miss Weston's work and
Stephen Swift
cipal contents are concerned with custom
achievements are too well known to need
The story of a singularly unsophisticated laws and regulations, local developments,
comment, and her book, which is in effect an
young lady, who, influenced by inadequate
agriculture, immigration, and general informa-
autobiography, provides an insight into her
motives and lack of worldly experience, seeks tion.
remarkable capacity for organization and in-
relief from an uncongenial home in marriage | Croft (Henry Page), The Path of Empire, 2/6 net.
domitable energy.
with a man for whom she has no real affection.
John Murray Weyl (Walter E. ), The New Democracy.
Domestic infelicity and desertion follow, and
A vigorous plea for an Imperial policy
New York, Macmillan Co.
the heroine ultimately obtains her freedom
based upon Imperial Preference and an Imperial An essay on certain political and economic
through the Divorce Court, being left with the
Council. The book is generally concise and to tendencies in the United States.
prospect of a happier union. The earlier
the point, in spite of occasional admonitions
portions of the book are weak and sentimental,
that " the time is late and the sands are running
and many of the characters are artificial, but
Pamphlets.
out,". . which do not materially assist us. It
the tale improves somewhat as it proceeds. should be useful to Unionist politicians. It has Blagg (Helen) and Wilson (Charlotte), Women
Tweedale (Violet), Austin's Career, 6/
an Introduction by Joseph Chamberlain.
and Prisons, 2d.
John Long
A career that is marred by an entanglement
Foreign Office List and Diplomatic and Consular
Fabian Society, Women's Group
Year-Book for 1912, 1076
For notice see p. 278.
in its early stages, and ultimately ruined by
the honourable fulfilment of the obligations
Harrison & Sons Hannah (J. J. ), The Lighter Side of a Great
incurred, is a subject which lends itself to
Gambier-Parry (Major), Murphy": a Message Churchman's Character: being Reminiscences
to Dog Lovers, 376 net.
Smith & Elder of the late Dean of St. Paul's, the Very Rev.
moralizing. While the author's reflections on
ruined careers and the worldliness of Society
There is something intimate and personal in Robert Gregory, by his Nephew, 3d. S. P. C. K.
are cynical and up to date, if not remarkably
the relationship between dogs and men, and This small memoir is rather trivial, dealing
original, the story is brightly written, and
he who puts it all down in black and white with personal details and characteristics of the
the descriptions of scenery and Bohemian life
a risk of vulgarizing the association. Dean, and can awaken little responsive interest
are good.
Murphy was clearly a delightful dog, but
except among his intimates.
Watson (Alexandra), “ Denham's," or A Web of
more so to his master than to the rest of
Haynes (E. S. P. ), Modern Morality and Modern
Life, 0)
Smith & Elder
the world. To people who do not understand
Toleration, 3d.
Watts & Co.
This is a pretty tale of a boy's disappoint-
their own dogs the volume may do good. It
An able and trenchant pamphlet, which
ments and hopes born of an artistic tempera-
has a scientific and historical as well as a
concerns itself with the substitution of a new
ment-in fact, a book which would have
sentimental side.
and adaptable system of ethics for the creed
reflected credit on many publishing houses, but
Grane (William Leighton), The Passing of War :
outworn
for its want of a raison d'être.
a Study in Things that make for Peace, 7/8 net.
of the accepted theistic morality.
The writer declares with vehemence that the
Macmillan
Weale (Putnam), The Revolt, 6/ Methuen For notice see p. 273.
question of moral sanctions is in need of vital
This book exhibits the art of luring the
transformation, in view of the failure of Chris-
Heath (Francis George), Tree Lore, with a Table
attention as distinct from maintaining excite-
tianity, as interpreted by the orthodox, to
of Indigenous British Trees and Shrubs,
ment by piling incident on incident. An
identify itself with the irresistible forces of
3/6 net.
C. H. Kelly
elusive influence-perhaps an echo of hope
modern progress.
A series of short, gossipy sections on trees
under noisy portents of disaster-draws one
and allied subjects which contain some interest-
Petavel (Capt. J. W. ), Careers and Work for All,
on to the shattering close. Amazing crudities
ing information. The author's style tends to
a Great Lesson from Little Switzerland, ld.
of construction occur, but even these cannot
the verbose, and he is not strong when he
Pioneer Educational Colony, Essex
obliterate the distinction which leaves us moved
leaves his special subject. His views as to
When Capt. Petavel finds muddle and in-
by essentials, while indifferent to details. The
derivations of words are surprising, as is his
effectiveness in our industrial civilization, we
author's polemics are discreetly veiled, but
neglect of Tennyson's descriptions of trees.
are not disposed to disagree with him. He
he is not, we imagine, unconscious of the fact
We are glad to find an index, which includes
then flies off at a tangent into some confused
that his picture of the love of a man for the
such items Dreamy tinkle of flowing
and unsteady thinking, in which he advocates
wife of his brother is an indirect contribution
stream. "
a system of educational colonies on the model
to the controversy concerning civil marriage.
Lindsay (James), Literary Essays, 3/8 net.
of those established by the Witzwil colonists
Wells (H. G. ), In the Days of the Comet; and
Blackwood
in Switzerland. He maps out a vague scheme
Tono-Bungay, 3/8 each.
Macmillan We have taken Dr. Lindsay's latest essays with
of emigration, of which we doubt the prac-
It shows a good sense of literary values to the utmost seriousness, but they please us no
ticability. Numbers of people recognize social
reissue these two novels together. The first more than their predecessors. The author chooses
ills ; but few have coherent remedies.
is bighly typical of Mr. Wells's adventurous interesting subjects, but he makes them dull ; Reader's Index, the Bi-Monthly Magazine of the
and quasi-scientific period, while it has a savour he is often useful, as when he writes of Goethe's Croydon Public Libraries, March and April:
of sociology. The second is, many people philosophy; but his criticism is not of the kind Charles Dickens, id.
runs
as
## p. 284 (#222) ############################################
284
No. 4402, MARCH 9, 1912
THE ATHENÆUM
MARCH
FORTHCOMING BOOKS.
FOREIGN.
Early Cave-Men, the Age of Combat, 1/3 net ;
MARCH
Theology.
III. The Later Cave-Men, the Age of tho
12 The Character and Call of the Church of Chase, 1/3 net; Suggestions to Teachers, 1/6
Poetry and Drama.
England : a Charge delivered at his Second net.
Harrap
Visitation of the Diocese of Canterbury, in 25 Latin Word Formation for Secondary
Hugo (Victor), La Légende des Siècles, 3 vols. ,
lir. 25 net each.
February, 1912, by Randall Thomas David- Schools, by Paul R. Jenks, 1/6 Harrap
Nelson
son, Archbishop of Canterbury, 2/6 net,
Another addition to the excellent and cheap 3/6 net.
Macmillan
Science.
reissue of V. Hugo's works, which we have 12 Eight Aysgarth School Sermons, by the
12 The Theory and Design of Reinforced
noticed from time to time.
Right Rev. C. H. Boutflower, Bishop of
Concrete, by Oscar Faber and P. G. Bowie,
South Tokyo, Second Edition, 2/6
12/6 net.
Edward Arnold
Macmillan
15 An Introduction to the Lie Theory of One-
History and Biography.
13 The Enclosed Nun, New Edition, 2/6_net,
Parameter Groups, with Applications to the
Dupont (Étienne), Le Mont St. Michel inconnu,
1/ net.
Mills & Boon
Solution of Differential Equations, by A.
5fr.
Cohen, with Answers, 5/ net.
13 St. Clare and her Order : a Story of Seven
Harrap
Paris, Perrin
M. Dupont here adds another volume to his
Centuries, by the Author of The Enclosed
Juvenile Litevature.
Nun,' 7/6 net.
Mills & Boon
studies on Mont St. Michel. Lovers of the
15 The Children's Library : The Penta-
13 The Parting of the Roads : Studies in the
place curious as to its civil, military, and Development of Judaism and Early Chris-
merone ; or, the Story of Stories, by Giam-
religious history will find in this book an tianity, by Members of Jesus College, Cam-
battista Basile, translated by John Edward
admirable topographical work, half archæo- bridge, with an Introduction by Dean Inge,
Taylor, New Edition, revised and edited by
logical and half artistic. It contains a dozen edited by Dr. F. J. Foakes Jackson, 10/8
Helen Zimmern ; The Magic Oak Tree, and
studies, mostly dealing with the Middle Ages. net.
Edward Arnold
Other Fairy Stories, by Knatchbull Hugessen,
and includes an excellent choice of illustrations?
1/ net each.
Fisher Unwin
15 The Supper of the Lord, by the Bishop of
Gould (Robert - Freke), Histoire abrégée de la
Durham, New Impression, 1/6 net, 1/ net,
Fiction.
Franc-Maçonnerie, traduite de l’Anglais par
6d. net.
R. T. S. 11 The Adventures of a Modest Man, by
Louis Lartigue.
Brussels, Lebègue
17 A Flower for Each Day in the Year,
Robert W. Chambers, 6! Appleton
11
culled from Many Writers as a Bouquet for
For notice see p. 278.
The Conflict, by David Graham Phillips, 6/
Our Lady, by Mary Talbot, 2/ net. Sands
Appleton
Merki (Charles), La Marquise de Verneuil et la
18 Thoughts for Daily Living, by Robert 11 The Bothers of Married Life, by S. H.
Mort d'Henri IV.
Paris, Plon-Nourrit
Collyer.
Lindsey Press Sadler, 2/ net.
John Ouseley
The subject of this book, better known as
25 St. Paul's Epistle to the Romans, Vol. II. 12 The Unholy Estate, by Douglas Sladen, 6/
(Chaps. VI. -XI. ),
Henriette d'Entragues, was indeed a remark-
by the Rev. W. H.
enjoyment, we still regard the author as con-
Americanisms, too-of which the most frequent
pictures of the contemporary Court life are
siderably above the ordinary undergraduate
humorist.
is “ right there"- sound odd to English ears
vivid and full of movement. There is, how-
He has a light touch, and his
when supposed to be uttered at a tragic moment. ever, a tendency to falsetto writing which
well-turned verse gives point and pith to his
The play is strong in characterization and in spoils an otherwise harmonious book.
pleasant fancies.
the broad outline of the conception; weak
Jewett (Sarah Orne), Letters of, edited by Annie
Fox (Agnes), Verses, 2/6 net. Elkin Mathews in the details of the plot-for instance, in
Fields, 6/ net.
Constable
These verses remind us of refined provincial the twice-repeated “ listening. ' Of the end,
A charming personality is revealed in these
concerts, where the conventional mechanism since it has not been brought to completion,
letters. They describe, with much good-
goes through its ordered round, and passable little can fairly be said, beyond an expression of
natured and humoursome criticism, people,
melodies are sung and played. Poignancy and regret that it should thus have been thrown scenery, and books. On the whole, Miss
reality seem beyond the author.
aside. However, while much is left crude,
Jewett's tastes indicate simplicity. Amongst
Gibson (Wilfrid Wilson), Womenkind : a Play in there is nothing vague or indefinite, and it the persons she corresponded with are Mrs.
One Act, 6d. net.
Nutt may be said in praise of Mrs. Evarts's work Meynell and Mrs. Humpbry Ward. She held
It is a bold thing to write a play of modern that she has preserved well the distinctness of
Tennyson in great admiration, and is enthu-
life in blank verse ; and Mr. Gibson bas not the original.
siastic after a visit to him. There are three
succeeded in making the talk of his North-
Welsh Lyrics of the Nineteenth Century, selected portrait illustrations.
Country peasants lifelike. Perhaps, however, and translated by Edmund P. Jones : First Magrunder (F. A. ), Recent Administration in
the fault lies less in the verse itself than Series, Second Edition, 1/
David Nutt Virginia.
in the tendency to repetition in which
This new edition has been undertaken at the
The aim of this treatise is to summarize and
English playwrights have unfortunately copied request of the authorities of the Central Welsh place in perspective the development of ad-
Maeterlinck. The most striking quality of this
Board. There are no alterations, except in ministrative functions in Virginia. It covers a
little play is its recognition of that new solid- bibliographical matter. The translations do period of forty-three years, and offers a com-
arity among women which coming centuries not impress us, but then the originals are of no prehensive picture of the tendency towards
transcendent quality.
centralization, Its exactitude
will recognize as a marked feature of this, but
in detailed
which many contemporaries still fail to perceive.
masses of facts and evidence makes it more of a
Hastings (Basil Macdonald), The New Sin :
Philosophy.
report than a criticism. It is one of the Johns
Hopkins University Studies in Historical and
Play in Three Acts, 1/ net. Sidgwick & Jackson Carpenter (Edward), The Drama of Love and Political Science.
A play which will not bear moving from the Death : a Study of Human Evolution and
footlights to the printed page, where a more
Matthews (John Hobson), The Vaughans of
Transfiguration.
George Allen
Courtfield, 2/6 net.
Sands
logical sequence of thought and action is For notice seę p. 274.
expected.
A pleasantly written little book about the
Horne (Herman Harrell), Free Will and Human family of Cardinal Vaughan. The Vaughans
Kellett (E. E. ), Carmina Ephemera, or Trivial Responsibility, a Philosophical Argument, 6/6 of Courtfield (Monmouthshire) are an old-
Numbers, New Edition, 1/ net.
net.
New York, Macmillan Co. established Catholic family, and their history
Cambridge, Bowes & Bowes A simple exposition of the problem of neces- throws interesting side-lights on the Catholic
Mr. Kellett's academic jeux d'esprit are sity and free will. The author hardly indicates persecutions under Charles I. and Cromwell.
undeniably clever, but their trim style and sufficiently the unfairness of the dilemma Merwin (Henry Childs), The Life of Bret Harte,
neatness of expression are not sufficiently above between a will which wills nothing and a will with some Account of the California Pioneers,
the ordinary academic level to give his work which goes through a process which is not 10/6 net.
Chatto & Windus
permanent interest. The Horatian odes please willing ; but he weighs the rival arguments The writer can claim no personal acquaintance
us best.
with care and judgment before proceeding to with the subject of this biography, but has been
a
## p. 282 (#220) ############################################
282
THE ATHENÆUM
No. 4402, March 9, 1912
on
able to draw freely on the published remi- alien influences it was moulded by, and its capabilities, we do not deny. An objectionable
niscences of those who were more fortunate. evolution into its present form. There is a feature in the book is the incessant use of italics
His own contribution consists in the main substantial index, but we find no bibliography for the sake of emphasis. It is a reprint from
of a literary and moral appraisement, while a and only indirect methods of sifting docu- The St. Paul Medical Journal.
survey of Pioneer characteristics and conditions mentary evidence.
Longstaff (George B. ), Butterfly-Hunting in
fills half the book.
Many Lands : Notes of a Field Naturalist,
School-Books.
Muir (Sir William), The Life of Mohammad from
21/ net.
Longmans
Original Sources, Revised Edition_by T. H. War-Pictures from Clarendon : being Selections Since 1903 Dr. Longstaff has carried on his
Weir, 10/6 net.
Edinburgh, John Grant from the History of the Great Rebellion and entomological work in every continent, and
The alterations deemed necessary from the Civil Wars in England by Edward, Earl of during that time has added over 12,000 speci-
third edition are inconsiderable. The intro- Clarendon, edited and arranged by Robert mens of all orders of insects to the tope
ductory, chapters on 'The Early History of Jameson Mackenzie, 2/6 net.
Collection in the Oxford University Museum.
Arabia' and on The Sources for the Bio-
Oxford, Clarendon Press In the valuable work now before us he has put
graphy of Mohammad,' omitted from the second A definite and by no means difficult task into readable form the technical diaries of those
and third editions, have been wisely re- has been neatly and satisfactorily accomplished. years, which he had fortunately both the time
introduced. The revision solely concerns mat- We think that less bellicose selections would and the inclination to keep, and in which he
ters of detail. This fascinating and learned have illustrated both Clarendon and his times recorded the specimens taken from day to day.
history still holds its own, though it was more intimately and significantly, but his war. And, what is of far wider interest, he has set
written more than forty years ago.
pictures are graphic and vigorous.
forth the results of his observations, made
Sewell (Robert), Indian Chronography: an Exten-
with certain bionomic questions in view, in
sion of the Indian Calendar,' with Working
Science.
notes on Scent, Mimicry, and suchlike phe-
Examples, 31/8 net.
George Allen
nomena.
The book is embellished with many
Mr. Sewell is an authority on Indian history,
Barrett-Hamilton (Gerald E. H. ), A History of
plates, and at the end are appended trans-
antiquities, and astronomy, and the volume
British Mammals, Part X. , 2/6 net.
ſations of papers by Fritz Müller, on the
before us, a monument of research and tireless
Gurney & Jackson
production and emission of scents by butterflies
industry, should extend his reputation for solid
Part X. continues the study of rodents
and moths.
scholarship. It is intended to be more or less
by investigating anatomy, characteristics, dis-
Saint Bartholomew's Hospital Reports, Vol.
Indian Calendar,'
tribution, and habits.
supplementary to the
We find the accounts
XLVII. , 1911.
Smith & Elder
which appeared fifteen years ago. It is designed
very readable, based upon actual observation,
to elucidate what needed unravelling in that
and not overloaded with scientific phraseology.
Embodies all the year's functions and
book, also to supply further assistance to those
The author is engaged on 'Studies in Bird-
activities of the Hospital, including medical
engaged in chronological calculations and in
Migration,' and personal scrutiny of pheno-
and surgical reports, catalogues of specimens
attempting to verify the authenticity of ancient
mena here, too, promises to be the guiding
added to the museum, analyses of various
diseases, with the latest discoveries concerning
documents.
principle of research.
British Red Cross Society: First-Aid Manual,
them, several obituary notices, and lists of
subscribers.
Geography and Travel.
No. 1, by James Cantlie, 1/ net. Cassell
Sclater (William Lutley), A History of the Birds
This excellent little book is primarily intended
Popham (R. Brooks), Hither and Thither, 6/
of Colorado, 21/ net.
Witherby
for those intending to take up work under the
Ham Smith
Cooke's book, the only complete one
War Office scheme for the Organization of
In these reminiscences of foreign travel
Voluntary Aid. It is well illustrated, and the
Colorado birds, being out of print, the author
we have a series of interesting, though some-
has thought it well to write a large and properly
what haphazard sketches of life in various
explanations are lucid.
Coming of Petroleum (The), 2/6 net.
catalogued description of the ornithological
out-of-the-way corners of the globe. The
author shows considerable facility of expres-
Curtis & Gardner
species in that country. It is an elaborate
For notice see p. 286.
book, very neatly and intelligently arranged,
sion, and the book should provide light reading
with the salient characteristics of each family
of a diverting nature. The anecdotes range
D'Alfonso (N. R. ), Speculative Prychology and
and genus put into proper order.
from the amusing to the gruesome. The
the Unity of Races.
Rome, Loescher
descriptions of a Chinese execution, and the
This paper was read at the first Universal
Juvenile Literature.
Congress of Races, held in London last July.
burning of a negro at the stake, are more
The Professor radiates from a definition of Graves (Clarissa Janie), The Children of the
realistic than pleasant.
psychology into a denial of the validity of Farm, Bd.
Reeve (Henry F. ), The Gambia, 10/6 net.
Horace Marshall
international exclusiveness and an affirmation This booklet differs 'in no essentials of form or
Smith & Elder
A valuable and comprehensive study of a
of the organic and functional unity of all men. matter from the familiar productions of juvenile
literature.
He shows that the complex mechanism of
comparatively little - known colony. The
author gives the history, and geographical,
psychical activities passes through innumer-
able gradations in the animal kingdom, and
Fiction.
geological, and ethnographical conditions of
detects the operations of the same laws on the Channon (E. M. ), Stoneladies, 6/ Hutchinson
Gambia from the earliest times down to the
higher human activities. Within this unity, The author has the rare gift of conveying a
present day. His chief object is “ the awaken-
the organic functions themselves undergo an great deal in few words. The characteriza.
ing of our Government and Nation to the
“ immense variety of localizations. " So the tion of the miserly cousin to whose care the two
strategical value of the possession of a great
harbour and waterway on the North-West
multifarious energies of social life represent girls are unwittingly entrusted is convincingly
African coast. " He is an ardent Imperialist,
psychological functions and "
converge in man revealed. There are some amusingly uncon-
as one. Race antagonisms are, he concludes,
and inclined sometimes to be a little bombastic ;
ventional situations, and the originality and
otherwise, his writing is clear and interesting.
the product of training and tradition. This freshness of the greater part of the book make
interesting essay is practically a scientific it the more disappointing that the author
The numerous and well-printed illustrations
application of pantheism.
enhance the value of the book ; there are some
should have succumbed so entirely to conven-
tion in the concluding pages,
excellent maps, and the index and general Fergusson's Percentage Unit of Angular Measure-
ment, with Logarithms; also a Description of his
production deserve commendation.
Everett-Green (E. ), Duckworth's Diamonds, 6/
Percentage Theodolite and Percentage Compass,
Stanley Paul
Anthropology.
by John Coleman Fergusson, 63/ net.
We should have had more respect for the
Longmans wisdom of the custodian of the diamonds had
Bombay Anthropological Society, Journal, Vol.
The author claims that his book is a simpli- he used a little discretionary power in regard
IX. No. 2, with Silver Jubilee Memorial
fication of plane trigonometry for the use of to his trust, and, on his arrival in England,
Number.
Bombay, British India Press
surveyors, navigating officers, civil and military driven with his treasure straight to the Safe
London, Luzac
engineers, universities, and colleges. He holds Deposit Offices. However, in that case the
Political Economy.
that his theory of " Percentage Unit” provides first chapter would also have been the last,
an easy method of discovering the ratio of an and we should have missed the story of an
China : Social and Economic Conditions.
inclined line to its base. There are exhaustive exciting chase, a romantic love, and many
Philadelphia, American Academy of Political tabulated lists of logarithms. That “the thrilling incidents connected therewith, which
and Social Science birth of geometry was simultaneous with the are set forth with vigour and skill.
A series of essays by various writers of creation of man
appears to us a quaint Fendall (Percy), Lady Ermyntrude and the
authority, particularly useful at the present conception.
Plumber, 6/
Stephen Swift
time in view of the difficulty of getting trust- Holmes (Bayard), The Friends of the Insane, A satirical forecast of the future, including
worthy information concerning China. We The Soul of Medical Education, and Other Great Compulsory Work Act in 1920.
note with special interest the opinion that a Essays.
The story itself concerns a ducal family. The
republic is unlikely to furnish the strong Cincinnati, The Lancet-Clinic Publishing Co. duke gets a job as royal dustman ; the duchess
government which the country needs.
These essays
are corrected reprints from takes a plumber as a paying guest ; their son
Moore (Henry Ludwell), Laws of Wages : the pages of the American publication The sells newspapers in the street, and becomes a
Essay in Statistical Economics.
Lancet-Clinic. Some brief additions have been Socialist ; and the daughter sells theatre pro-
New York, Macmillan Co. nade to them in the interests of completeness grammes, and finally marries the plumber.
A skilful analysis of the problems of wages and clearness.
While not devoid of humour, the book loses
in the light of economic facts rather than Knott (John), The Last Illness of Lord Byron : interest by reason of its obvious absurdity.
abstract theory, leading to the conclusion that a Study in the Borderland of Genius and Mad- Harding (Newman), The Eternal Struggle, 6/
at the present time wages are principally deter- ness, of Cosmical Inspiration and Pathological
John Long
mined within each labour group by specific Psychology, 2/6
A tale of the English colony in Massa-
productivity, and only secondarily by the
St. Paul, Minn. , Volkszeitung Printing Co. chusetts in the seventeenth century, whose
standard of life. The author makes use of the
Byron has suffered as much
from his eulogiste peace is broken by a visit of the King's
latest statistical methods,
as his detractors, and when Dr. Knott jauntily commissioners in search of two regicides.
declares that he can detect infinitely more The sayings and doings of the Puritans are
Philology.
sublime philosophy in Byron than in all Words- somewhat tedious, and the heroine's practice of
Sen (Dinesh Chandra), History of Bengali Lan- worth and the other Lakers," he is simply sacrificing herself and every one else on the
guage and Literature : a Series of Lectures doing Byron an injustice by claiming too much. altar of sisterly love becomes irritating before
delivered as Reader to the Calcutta University. He attempts to enforce his appreciation by the end is reached.
Calcutta, the University an excursus into physiology, anatomy, and Harland (Henry), The Cardinal's Snuff-Box, 7d.
A monumental and comprehensive work, psychology, together with a long description of net.
Nelson
tracing the development of the Bengali lan- Byron's death. That Byron possessed “heredi- New edition. For notice see Athen. , May
guage, the modifications it passed through, the tary moral weakness " and supreme artistic 19, 1900, p. 618.
19
an
## p. 283 (#221) ############################################
No. 4402, MARCH 9, 1912
283
THE ATHENÆUM
Hewlett (Maurice), Brazenhead the Great, 3/6 think, the best result of that period when the which sends us to the authors whose names are
Smith & Elder problems of social relationships had attracted scattered through his pages with a lavish band.
A reissue of one of Mr. Hewlett's less-known him.
Nor do abrupt transitions and the use of
romances. It is somewhat diffuse, and excel-
Willcocks (M. P. ), Wings of Desire, 6/ Lane
such words as “ directivity” and “worthful ”
lent in segments rather than as a whole.
The writing of Miss Willcocks is like her minister to the pleasure of a sensitive reader.
Hewson (Charles), Scarlet and Blue, 6/
title : it has an air of profundity and of extreme
Peacemaker (The), February.
Eveleigh Nash
precision, but is really inexact amid much
British Council Office
A capital novel, dealing with fox hunting,
superfluity of definition. ' Her material—but for
This journal is earnest and vigorous, and has
stag hunting, otter hunting, and beagling.
some irrelevancies—is good, her conceptions
a number of influential names behind it to give
The author is evidently a keen sportsman,
of character and of human relations clear and
it_standing. There are excellent articles on
and has caught the open-air atmosphere. His
fine ; and her technical defects cannot entirely
The Bond of Science' and The Press and
confrères will recognize the figures familiar in
spoil her power of presentation.
International Relations. '
every hunting field from the time of Jorrocks
to the present day, the cheerful greetings and
Willy (Colette), The Vagrant, 6/ Eveleigh Nash
Pease (Margaret), True Patriotism, and Other
the gossip; but those who do not hunt Written in the first person, the book consti-
Lessons on Peace and Internationalism, 1/ net.
will probably find the record of an endless
tutes less of a romance than a chronological
Pilgrim Press
round of meets and finds and kills more than record of the heroine's emotions. The descrip-
For notice see p. 273.
a little monotonous.
tions of music-hall life are realistic, but the Rationalist Press Association, Thirteenth Annual
Igglesden (Charles), Clouds, 6/ John Long
author's style is at times almost brutally Report, 1911.
The story of an ill-assorted marriage. A cynical, and we fear that the 300 pages of The annual summary and memorandum of
somewhat morbid introspection
and
young man marries a girl for her beauty and
self- the functions, propaganda, subscriptions, publi-
quickly repents. The characters strike us as revelation will produce a depressing effect on cations, and programme of the Association,
artificial, and so do most of the incidents.
the average English reader. The book is which defines its intellectual standpoint in the
The hero's only apparent vice is that he occa-
translated from the French by Charlotte syllabus as, the mental attitude which un-
sionally damns the villain. His wife is con-
Remry Kidd.
reservedly accepts the supremacy of reason,
veniently drowned, and he is left free to marry
and aims at establishing a system of philosophy
the girl with whom he has fallen in love. The
General Literature.
and ethics verifiable by experience and inde-
style of the book is defective.
A B C, March, 6d.
pendent of all arbitrary assumptions or au-
Kaye (Michael), The Honour of Bayard, 6/
The A B C is the most lucid and intelligible
thority. ”
Greening of railway guides, and indispensable in all well. Royal Society of Literature, The Academic Com-
We bave here a romantic drama of warfare regulated households. The March edition has mittee : Commemorative Addresses
on Sir
and intrigne in the early part of the sixteenth been enlarged, and reset in new type.
Alfred Comyn Lyall, by G. W. Prothero ; and
century. The scene is laid in an Italian town, Book of the Cambridge Review, 1879-97, 14 net.
on Edward Henry Pember, by W. J. Court-
which, when the story opens, is besieged by
Cambridge, Bowes & Bowes hope, 1/ net.
Frowde
Spanish forces, while the action centres round
A reprint, in paper covers, of a collection of
Iwo funeral orations on two distinguished
an attempt to induce the heroine to commit
prose and verse from The Cambridge Review,
members of the Society. They pay a worthy
an act of treachery in order to ransom her first published in 1898, and noticed by us on
and dignified tribute to scholarship.
husband, who is a prisoner in the enemy's December 24th of that year. The volume is Smith (William Hawley), All the Children of All
hands. A somewhat ingenious plot is marred entertaining in its variety, though, perhaps, over-
by ultra-sensationalism.
the People, 6/6 net.
loaded with serious matter. The preface gives
'Long's Sixpenny Net Novels : A Cabinet Secret,
New York, Macmillan Co.
a list of the editors of the Review, several of
by Guy Boothby; and The Greater Power, by
An inquiry into American educational
whom, from the first, Prof. E. V. Arnold, to
Harold Bindloss.
conditions, in which the fertile wisdom and
Long
the last mentioned, Dr. Figgis, have attained
keen observation of the author will be of
Lynch (Lawrence L. ), A Blind Lead, 6/
distinction.
Ward & Lock Commercial Handbook of Canada and Boards of
considerable utility in unravelling a confused
and obtusely treated topic.
A melodramatic story, the plot of which Trade Register, 1912, 5/
depends on the extraordinary likeness between
Toronto, Heaton's Agency
Weston (Agnes), My Life among the Blue-Jackets,
two sisters. The author seems more excited
3/6
Nisbet
London, Simpkin & Marshall
over the mystery than the average reader is
The eighth issue of a useful and trustworthy
To those who are interested in philanthropic
likely to be, and his punctuation is peculiar. handbook epitomizing the administrative, social,
endeavour the present volume will present
Russell (Countess), An Excellent Mystery, 6/ and industrial activities of Canada. Its prin:
much of interest. Miss Weston's work and
Stephen Swift
cipal contents are concerned with custom
achievements are too well known to need
The story of a singularly unsophisticated laws and regulations, local developments,
comment, and her book, which is in effect an
young lady, who, influenced by inadequate
agriculture, immigration, and general informa-
autobiography, provides an insight into her
motives and lack of worldly experience, seeks tion.
remarkable capacity for organization and in-
relief from an uncongenial home in marriage | Croft (Henry Page), The Path of Empire, 2/6 net.
domitable energy.
with a man for whom she has no real affection.
John Murray Weyl (Walter E. ), The New Democracy.
Domestic infelicity and desertion follow, and
A vigorous plea for an Imperial policy
New York, Macmillan Co.
the heroine ultimately obtains her freedom
based upon Imperial Preference and an Imperial An essay on certain political and economic
through the Divorce Court, being left with the
Council. The book is generally concise and to tendencies in the United States.
prospect of a happier union. The earlier
the point, in spite of occasional admonitions
portions of the book are weak and sentimental,
that " the time is late and the sands are running
and many of the characters are artificial, but
Pamphlets.
out,". . which do not materially assist us. It
the tale improves somewhat as it proceeds. should be useful to Unionist politicians. It has Blagg (Helen) and Wilson (Charlotte), Women
Tweedale (Violet), Austin's Career, 6/
an Introduction by Joseph Chamberlain.
and Prisons, 2d.
John Long
A career that is marred by an entanglement
Foreign Office List and Diplomatic and Consular
Fabian Society, Women's Group
Year-Book for 1912, 1076
For notice see p. 278.
in its early stages, and ultimately ruined by
the honourable fulfilment of the obligations
Harrison & Sons Hannah (J. J. ), The Lighter Side of a Great
incurred, is a subject which lends itself to
Gambier-Parry (Major), Murphy": a Message Churchman's Character: being Reminiscences
to Dog Lovers, 376 net.
Smith & Elder of the late Dean of St. Paul's, the Very Rev.
moralizing. While the author's reflections on
ruined careers and the worldliness of Society
There is something intimate and personal in Robert Gregory, by his Nephew, 3d. S. P. C. K.
are cynical and up to date, if not remarkably
the relationship between dogs and men, and This small memoir is rather trivial, dealing
original, the story is brightly written, and
he who puts it all down in black and white with personal details and characteristics of the
the descriptions of scenery and Bohemian life
a risk of vulgarizing the association. Dean, and can awaken little responsive interest
are good.
Murphy was clearly a delightful dog, but
except among his intimates.
Watson (Alexandra), “ Denham's," or A Web of
more so to his master than to the rest of
Haynes (E. S. P. ), Modern Morality and Modern
Life, 0)
Smith & Elder
the world. To people who do not understand
Toleration, 3d.
Watts & Co.
This is a pretty tale of a boy's disappoint-
their own dogs the volume may do good. It
An able and trenchant pamphlet, which
ments and hopes born of an artistic tempera-
has a scientific and historical as well as a
concerns itself with the substitution of a new
ment-in fact, a book which would have
sentimental side.
and adaptable system of ethics for the creed
reflected credit on many publishing houses, but
Grane (William Leighton), The Passing of War :
outworn
for its want of a raison d'être.
a Study in Things that make for Peace, 7/8 net.
of the accepted theistic morality.
The writer declares with vehemence that the
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This book exhibits the art of luring the
transformation, in view of the failure of Chris-
Heath (Francis George), Tree Lore, with a Table
attention as distinct from maintaining excite-
tianity, as interpreted by the orthodox, to
of Indigenous British Trees and Shrubs,
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identify itself with the irresistible forces of
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elusive influence-perhaps an echo of hope
modern progress.
A series of short, gossipy sections on trees
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Petavel (Capt. J. W. ), Careers and Work for All,
on to the shattering close. Amazing crudities
ing information. The author's style tends to
a Great Lesson from Little Switzerland, ld.
of construction occur, but even these cannot
the verbose, and he is not strong when he
Pioneer Educational Colony, Essex
obliterate the distinction which leaves us moved
leaves his special subject. His views as to
When Capt. Petavel finds muddle and in-
by essentials, while indifferent to details. The
derivations of words are surprising, as is his
effectiveness in our industrial civilization, we
author's polemics are discreetly veiled, but
neglect of Tennyson's descriptions of trees.
are not disposed to disagree with him. He
he is not, we imagine, unconscious of the fact
We are glad to find an index, which includes
then flies off at a tangent into some confused
that his picture of the love of a man for the
such items Dreamy tinkle of flowing
and unsteady thinking, in which he advocates
wife of his brother is an indirect contribution
stream. "
a system of educational colonies on the model
to the controversy concerning civil marriage.
Lindsay (James), Literary Essays, 3/8 net.
of those established by the Witzwil colonists
Wells (H. G. ), In the Days of the Comet; and
Blackwood
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Tono-Bungay, 3/8 each.
Macmillan We have taken Dr. Lindsay's latest essays with
of emigration, of which we doubt the prac-
It shows a good sense of literary values to the utmost seriousness, but they please us no
ticability. Numbers of people recognize social
reissue these two novels together. The first more than their predecessors. The author chooses
ills ; but few have coherent remedies.
is bighly typical of Mr. Wells's adventurous interesting subjects, but he makes them dull ; Reader's Index, the Bi-Monthly Magazine of the
and quasi-scientific period, while it has a savour he is often useful, as when he writes of Goethe's Croydon Public Libraries, March and April:
of sociology. The second is, many people philosophy; but his criticism is not of the kind Charles Dickens, id.
runs
as
## p. 284 (#222) ############################################
284
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Visitation of the Diocese of Canterbury, in 25 Latin Word Formation for Secondary
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