Stepniak traces and partly by the
emancipation
of the
the successive changes that have taken serfs.
the successive changes that have taken serfs.
Warner - World's Best Literature - v26 to v30 - Tur to Zor and Index
He
thinks the education of the present day
is too much restricted to book-learning,
taking quite too much for granted the
authority of whatever ideas and opinions
obtain the authenticity of print. Adults,
even more than the young, he thinks,
should be not only trained to observe
and impress exact images of objects on
the memory, but to use their fingers in
analyzing and drawing, and above all,
in dissecting beasts, birds, and fishes, so
as to understand their wonderful struct-
and mechanism. Few naturalists
have united exact knowledge and minute
observation with so agreeable a faculty
of description as has Mr. Buckland.
Master; The, by . . Zangwill. (1895. )
This story is the biography of an
artist; and in it the reader is led to an
artist's London, and wanders through an
artist's world. From early boyhood the
ruling passion of Matthew Strang's life
is a love of art and a desire to paint
pictures. A poor boy, struggling against
poverty and misfortune, he ever keeps
this goal in view. Overwhelmed by
want and suffering, he marries a young
woman his intellectual inferior, but pos-
sessed of a small competency by which
he is enabled to pursue his beloved vo-
cation. He becomes a great artist; and
the distance widens between him and
his commonplace wife, who has no ap-
preciation of his work or ideals. Mat-
thew Strang is courted by distinguished
people, and breathes an atmosphere that
intensifies the contrast with his own
home, which he rarely visits. He is
thrown into the society of Eleanor Wynd-
wood, beautiful and accomplished
She is his ideal, and he falls
in love with her. He feels that in-
spired by her companionship he could
achieve the highest success. Eleanor
returns his love; and Strang is on the
point of forgetting all but his passion
for her, when he is suddenly awakened
to the realization that his highest duty
lies in the renunciation of his desires.
He goes back to his nagging, prosaic
wife, and irritating household, having
bid farewell to his love and art. But
the latter is not to be taken leave of;
for, away from the whirl of society and
in the solitude of his out-of-town studio,
he toils to accomplish his best work.
Here “the master » at last produces his
greatest pictures; here he becomes not
only master of his art, but “master of
his own soul. ” Throughout the book
the point of view is profoundly poetic,
and the character of the master is
developed with truly masterly skill: as
are also the portraits of Billy, the art-
ist's deformed brother; the sharp-tongued
Rosina, his wife and his foster-sister,
steadfast Ruth Hailey, whose gentle in-
fluence and self-effacing love are con-
trasted with the more selfish affection of
the impressionable and impulsive Eleanor.
The book is filled with clever epigram-
matic phrases, and abounds in humor.
ure
by Charles Gibbon.
(1873. ) The scene of this clever
story is laid in Scotland, at a place not
Robin Gray
## p. 319 (#355) ############################################
SYNOPSES OF NOTED BOOKS
319
upon L
far from Ayr. Opportunity is thus
given for a very good sketch of Scotch
life and character. The book derives
its name from one of the central fig-
ures, Robin Gray, a farmer, who mar-
ries the daughter of a fisherman. She,
Jeanie Lindsay, was engaged to one
James Falcon, supposed to have been
lost at sea. Falcon returns; and through
jealous blindness Robin Gray is led to
believe that his wife is about to run
away with Falcon, with whom he quar-
rels. On the same night a murder is
committed, and suspicion falls
Gray. Through the devotion of his
wife, Gray is cleared, and the mur-
derer brought to justice. Most of the
mischief is caused by Nicol M'Whap-
ple, whose iniquities assume huge pro-
portions as the story proceeds. He is
the Laird of Clashgirn, and is found
to have unlawfully come into posses-
sion of the estate, which in fact be-
longs to Falcon, whose real name is
Sutherland. M’Whapple endeavors in
several different ways to get Falcon
killed, and the quarrel between Falcon
and Gray is caused by M'Whapple's
intrigues. When at last his villainy is
exposed, he conveniently dies, and saves
the reader from the pain of a trial and
execution. In the end, Robin Gray
and his wife are reconciled: and Fal-
con, or Sutherland, who has become
Laird of Clashgirn, goes away for a six-
years' voyage; from which he returns
reconciled to the loss of his love, and
finds another love.
questions of responsibilities which arise,
deaf to moral obligations and the rights
of others, coquetting with the affections
of the girl Phemie Sims, with whose
family he resides at Etowah Cove, play-
ing a daily farce to the eyes of the sim-
ple mountaineers, his existence implies
a double meaning in the title, - juggler
of morals, juggler of emotions, juggler of
self-respect and manhood. The study of
character made in this book is fresh and
honest, and the story is interesting.
Lor
ove Me Little, Love Me Long, was
published in 1857.
In this story,
Charles Reade turned away from his
wonted exposition of social abuses to
write a love story, pure and simple. It
is a pleasant study of upper middle-class
English life. Lucy Fountain, a young
heiress, has two guardians - her uncle
Mr. Fountain, and Mr. Bazalgette the
husband of her mother's half-sister; and
she divides the year between their two
homes. She is pretty, charming, and
useful; and both Uncle Fountain and
Aunt Bazalgette want to establish her
close at hand by choosing a husband
for her. But Lucy is indifferent both to
Mr. Hardy, the banker selected by her
aunt, and Mr. Talboys, the man of an-
cient lineage who is favored by her
uncle. She falls in love with David
Dodd, a manly young sailor in the
merchant service, who loves her, but
who recognizes her social superiority,
while he is forced to admit that his
Lucy is freakish,- now kind, now cold.
To escape importunity at home, she
runs away and stays with her old nurse,
where David discovers and wins her.
They have a few blissful weeks together
before David Sails on the Rajah, of
which through Lucy's influence he has
been made captain. The story is sim-
ple, but full of homely incident, clever
dialogue, shrewd character-drawing, and
overflowing humor.
With its sequel,
(Very Hard Cash, it is considered
among
the best of Reade's novels,
Lucy herself is the type of
oftenest drawn by Reade, - pretty, emo-
tional, noble at heart, but given to co-
quettish deceits and uncertain moods,
until steadied by love.
Marjorie Daw, by Thomas Bailey Ald-
rich. The well-known story of Mar-
jorie Daw is developed through the cor-
respondence of two young men, named
respectively John Flemming and Edward
>
Juggler, The, by Charles Egbert Crad-
. The story departs in some
degree from the traditions of Miss Mur-
free, though her scenes are still laid in
the Tennessee mountains. Her hero,
Lucien Royce, is not only an amateur
athlete of renown, but he can do tricks
of legerdemain, and he possesses other
fascinating accomplishments. Being in-
trusted by his firm with a large sum of
money, and losing it in a shipwreck, he
dares not return to his home in the
city, fearing that his story will not be
believed. He is reported dead; and
fleeing to the Cumberland Mountains,
weakly accepts the
fate has
offered. His reputed death causes many
complications. A valuable property is
held on life tenure,— his being the life
chosen, a compliment to athletic
reputation. Shilly-shallying with the
woman
excuse
## p. 320 (#356) ############################################
320
SYNOPSES OF NOTED BOOKS
Delaney. The latter seeks to relieve
the tedium of his friend's sick-room by
a description of his neighbor, Marjorie
Daw. He paints her charms in glow-
ing colors, and enlarges upon her at-
tractions, the wealth of her father, and
the delightful colonial mansion in which
she dwells. Flemming, who is com-
pletely fascinated with his friend's de-
scription, falls in love with the maiden,
and presses Delaney for more and more
particulars, which he generously fur-
nishes, until he has convinced Flem-
ming that Marjorie has been led to
reciprocate his feelings. The critical
moment at last arrives when Flemming,
having sufficiently recovered, telegraphs
that he intends to press his suit in per-
son. His friend, now realizing how seri-
ous the affair has become, endeavors
frantically to prevent Flemming from
carrying out his purpose; but finding
his efforts unavailing, he departs hastily
from town, leaving a note of explana-
tion behind him. Flemming arrives, re-
ceives Delaney's note, and encounters
the surprise of his life. This short
story was first published in 1873, and
is a very characteristic piece of Mr.
Aldrich's clever workmanship.
Italian Journeys, by W. D. Howells,
is the record of leisurely excursions
up and down the land,- to Padua, Fer-
rara, Genoa, Pompeii, Naples, Rome,
and many other towns of picturesque
buildings and melodious names, from
Capri to Trieste. Mr. Howells knows
his Italy so well, that though he writes
as a foreigner, he is in perfect sympathy
with his subject. He knows the inn-
keepers, guides, and railway men to be
dead to truth and honesty, but he likes
them; and he knows that Tasso's prison
never held Tasso, and that the history
of most of the historic places is purely
legendary, but he delights to believe in
them all. He sees in the broken col.
umns and fragmentary walls of Pompeii
all the splendor of the first century, that
time of gorgeous wealth; and in an old
house at Arquá, he has a vision of
Petrarch writing at his curious carved
table. In crumbling Herculaneum his
spirit is touched to wistful sympathy by
a garden of wild flowers: Here — where
so long ago the flowers had bloomed,
and perished in the terrible blossoming
of the mountain that sent up its awful
fires in the awful similitude of Nature's
harmless and lovely forms, and show-
ered its destroying petals all abroad -
was it not tragic to find again the soft
tints, the graceful shapes, the sweet
perfumes, of the earth's immortal life?
Of them that planted and tended and
plucked and bore in their bosoms and
twined in their hair these fragile child-
ren of the summer, what witness in the
world ? Only the crouching skeletons un-
der the tables - Alas and alas! ” His
love of the beautiful is tempered by a
keen sense of humor; and the combina-
tion makes his volume a delightful
record, with the sunshine of Italy shut
between its covers.
Foregone Conclusion, A, by W. D.
Howells, (1875,) one of his earlier
and simpler novels, relates the love story
of Florida Vervain, a young girl sojourn-
ing in Venice with her mother, an
amiable, weak-headed woman, of the type
so frequently drawn by the author. The
daughter is beloved by the l’nited States
consul, a Mr. Ferris, and by Don Ippo-
polito, a priest. The latter is a strongly
drawn, interesting study. He is a man
whom circumstances rather than inclina-
tion led into the priesthood. From the
hour of his ordination he finds the holy
office an obstacle to his normal develop-
ment. He has the genius of the in-
ventor; has spent years in perfecting
impossible models. Florida Vervain be-
comes his pupil in Italian. Her young
enthusiasm leads her to believe that if
Don Ippolito were only in America his
inventions would receive fruitful recogni-
'tion. She proposes that he accompany
her and her mother to Providence. He,
in the first joy of the prospect, declares
his love for her. She is horror-stricken
because he is a priest ); and her re-
fusal of him eventually brings about his
death. These events open the eyes of
Ferris, whose jealousy of the poor priest
had led him into a sullen attitude to-
wards the woman he loved.
The novel, despite a happy ending,
is overshadowed by the tragic central
figure of Don Ippolito. The priest and
the girl are remarkably vivid, well-drawn
characters. There is just enough of the
background of Venice to give color to
the story.
Almayer's Folly, by Joseph Conrad, is
a novel of Eastern life, whose scene
is laid on a little-known river of Borneo,
and whose personages are fierce Malays,
a
## p. 321 (#357) ############################################
SYNOPSES OF NOTED BOOKS
32 1
$
cunning Arabs, stolid Dutch traders, Percival himself, in the same event, will
slaves, half-breeds, pirates, and white receive the whole of Laura's fortune.
renegades. Almayer, the son of a Dutch Laura had pledged her dead father to
official in Java, has been adopted in a marry Sir Percival, but she has no love
sort of way by one Captain Lingard, a for him. Marian Halcombe goes with
disreputable English adventurer, who per- her to Blackwater Park. There, in the
suades him to marry a Malay girl, whom form of a diary, she carries on the nar-
also he has adopted, the sole survivor rative where Walter Hartright discon-
of a crew of Malay pirates sent by Lin- tinued it. A plot is hatched by Count
gard to their last account. The story is
Fosco, who is
strong villain, and by
crowded with adventure, and the charac- Sir Percival, who is a weak one, to get
ters stand out, living creatures, against a Laura out of the way and obtain her
gorgeous tropical background. But its money, by taking advantage of the re-
merit lies in its careful rendering of
semblance between her and Anne Cath-
race traits, and in its study of that dry- erick, who at the time is very ill. By
rot of character, indecision, irresolution, a series of devices Laura is brought to
procrastination. It is quite plain that the London, and put into an asylum as
sins Mr. Conrad imputes to his frustrate Anne Catherick; while the dying Anne
ghosts) are the unlit lamp and the un- Catherick is called Lady Glyde, and
girt loin. )
after her death buried as Lady Glyde.
These events are told by the various
Woman in White, The, an early and actors in the drama. By the efforts of
notable novel by Wilkie Collins, Marian, who does not believe that her
was published in 1873. Like his other sister is dead, she is rescued from the
works of fiction, it is remarkable for the asylum. Walter Hartright, seeking to
admirable manner in which its intricate expose Sir Percival's villainy, discovers
plot is worked out. The narrative is that he is sharing a secret with Anne
told by the different characters of the Catherick's mother; that Anne knew the
story in succession. The first narrator secret, and had therefore been confined
is Walter Hartright, a drawing-master, in an asylum by the pair: the secret
who has been employed by Mr. Fred- being that Sir Percival had no right
erick Fairlie of Limmeridge House, in to his title, having been born out of
Cumberland, England, to teach drawing wedlock. Before Hartright can expose
to his nieces, Laura Fairlie and her this fraud, Sir Percival himself is
half-sister Marian Halcombe. Laura burned to death, while tampering with
bears strange resemblance to
the register of the church for his own
woman who had accosted him
interest. In the general clearing-up of
lonely road near London, - a
affairs, it
becomes
known that the
clothed entirely in white; who, he after- Woman in White was the half-sister of
wards discovers, is an Anne Catherick, Laura, being the natural child of her
supposed to be half-witted, and, when father Philip Fairlie.
he met her, just escaped from an asy- The story ends with the happy mar-
lum. In her childhood Anne had been riage of Laura to Hartright, and with
befriended by Laura's mother, Mrs. the restoration of her property.
Fairlie, because of her resemblance to
Laura, and by her had been dressed in
Armadale, by Wilkie Collins 1866. The
white, which Anne had worn ever since
, The
in memory of her benefactress. Hart- Magdalen, and other of its author's later
right discovers also that there is some novels, is a gauntlet of defiance to the
mystery in the girl's having been placed critics who had asserted that all the in-
in an asylum by her own mother, with- terest of his stories lay in the suspension
out sufficient justification of the act. of knowledge as to the dénouement. The
Walter Hartright falls in love with machinery is in full view, yet in spite of
Laura Fairlie; but she is betrothed to this disclosure, the reader's attention is
Sir Percival Glyde of Blackwater Park, held until he knows whether the villain or
Hampshire. Sir Percival has a close her victims will come out victorious. This
friend, Count Fosco, whose wife, a rela- villain is one Lydia Gwilt, who, as a girl
tive of Laura's, will receive ten thousand of twelve, has forged a letter to deceive
pounds on her death. The marriage a father into letting his daughter throw
settlements are drawn up so that Sir herself away. Hateful and hideous as is
a
a
on
a
woman
XXX-21
## p. 322 (#358) ############################################
322
SYNOPSES OF NOTED BOOKS
her character, Lydia is so drawn as to to impress Sir Guy, and contents herself
exact a certain pity from the reader, by with a Mr. Boer, appropriately named.
reason of her lonely childhood and her Two of Lilian's cousins, Arthur Chesney
strong qualities. The few minor charac- (a vain suitor for her hand), and Taffy
ters of the book, though distinct enough, Musgrave (a young British red-coat whom
do not detain the reader, eager to know everybody likes), add no little interest to
the fate of poor Ozias, the hero, who is the group, who are of a marrying mind
a lovable fellow. Among the few minor generally. Wholesome, pretty, not too
characters in this novel are Mrs. Older- serious, the story maintains its interest to
shaw, Mr. Felix Bashwood, and Mr. Ped- the last without introducing any startling
gift the lawyer.
episodes. It paints a pleasant picture of
English country life, with sufficient fidel-
Barba
rbara's History, by Amelia Bland- ity to detail and an agreeable variety of
ford Edwards, appeared in 1864. It light and shadow.
is the romance of a pretty girl, clever and
capable, who, passing through some vex-
Samuel Brohl and Company, a novel,
ations and serious troubles, settles down by Victor Cherbuliez. (1879. ) One
to an unclouded future. Barbara Church- of the most entertaining productions of
ill is the youngest daughter of a selfish a writer who excels in delicate comedy,
widower, who neglects his children. When and has given readers an agreeable
ten years old, she visits her rich country change from the typical French novel »;
aunt, Mrs. Sandyshaft, with whom she is though it has little substance or thought.
far happier than in her London home. The action occurs during the year 1875,
Here she meets Hugh Farquhar, owner in Switzerland and France. Samuel
of the neighboring estate of Broomhill; Brohl, a youth of lowest origin, is bought
a man of twenty-seven, who has sowed by Princess Gulof, who educates him,
wild oats in many lands and reaped an and then makes him nominally her sec-
abundant harvest of troubles. He makes retary. He tires of her jealous tyranny
a great pet of Barbara, who loves him
and runs away, assuming the name and
devotedly. The story thenceforth is of history of Count Larinski. Antoinette
their marriage, her jealousy in regard to Moriaz, an heiress of romantic notions,
an Italian girl whom her husband has who undervalues the love of honest Ca.
protected, and an explanation and recon- mille Langis because there is no mys-
ciliation. It is well told, the characteri- tery about him, supposing Samuel to
zation is good, and Barbara is made an be the Polish hero he impersonates,
extremely attractive little heroine.
thinks she has found the man she wants
at last.
Madame de Lorcy, her god-
mother and Camille's aunt, suspects
ford (“The Duchess”), needs « Count Larinski” of being an advent-
elaborate plot to make it interesting. Its urer; and is finally helped to prove it
slender thread of story traces the willful by the Princess, Samuel's former mis-
though winsome actions of Lilian Ches- tress, who recounts to Antoinette how
ney. An orphaned heiress - piquant, airy, she bought him of his father for a brace-
changeful, lovable - she lives, after the let, which bracelet Samuel has given
death of her parents, with Lady Chet- the girl as a betrothal gift. Disillusion-
woode. Sir Guy Chetwoode, her rather ized, she breaks with Samuel, saying
young guardian; Cyril, his brother, and pathetically, “The man I loved was he
Florence Beauchamp, his cousin, complete whose history you related to me” (i, e. ,
the household. Sir Guy, staid, earnest, Count Larinski). Camille visits Samuel
and manly, alternately quarrels with and to get back Antoinette's letters and
pays sincere court to his ward, winning gifts, contemptuously refuses a challenge,
her after she has led him a weary chase, and buys the keepsakes for 25,000 francs.
the details of which form the chief charm The bargain concluded, Samuel theatri-
of the story.
Cyril, twenty-six, pleasant cally thrusts the bank-notes into a candle
but headstrong, finds his love in a fair flame, and repeats his challenge. In the
young widow, Mrs. Arlington, about resulting duel, Camille is left for dead
whose character an unfortunate haze of by Samuel, that picturesque scamp flee-
doubt has been cast — to be dissipated, ing to America. Camille recovers, and
however, in the end. The ambitious Flor- eventually his devotion to Antoinette
ence, as vapid as she is designing, fails meets its due reward.
»
Airy Fairy, Lilian, by Mrs. Hunger-
no
## p. 323 (#359) ############################################
SYNOPSES OF NOTED BOOKS
323
Alla
ure.
(
llan Quatermain, by H. Rider Hag- this little work, of one of their num-
gard, rehearses the adventures of the ber, desultory and inartistic as it is,
old hunter and traveler who tells the story,
will be invaluable to the future histo-
and whose name gives the title to the rian. It will at least show the desperate
book. He is accompanied from England earnestness and self-sacrificing spirit
on an African expedition by Sir Henry of some of Russia's noblest sons and
Curtis — huge, fair, and brave — and Cap- daughters. For English readers, the
tain Good, a retired seaman. They take work has the disadvantage of spelling
with them Umslopogaas, a trusty and gi- Russian names in an unfamiliar (that
gantic Zulu, who has served before under is, in the Italian) manner. It was writ-
Quatermain. At a mission station the ten in 1881; and the year after was
party leads an expedition to rescue the published in England, with a preface by
daughter of the missionary, Flossie Mac- Pavel Lavrof.
kenzie, who had been captured by hostile
blacks. The interest of the book is found
Vera Vorontsoff, by Sonya Kovalev.
in the swift movement of the narrative, sky. Sonya Kovalevsky, whose fa-
and the excitement of incessant advent- father was a general at the head of the
Russian artillery, adopted the Nihilistic
procedure of making a fictitious mar-
Underground Russia, by Stepniak. riage, for the purpose of securing her
The former editor of Zemlia i Volia intellectual freedom. She became one of
(Land and Liberty), who for many years the most famous mathematicians of Eu-
hid his identity under the pseudonym rope, won the Bordin prize, and was for
of Stepniak (freely translated «Son
ten years professor of mathematics in
of the Steppe »), wrote in Italian a Stockholm University. Her marvelous
series of sketches of the revolutionary achievements in science did not prevent
and Nihilistic movement in which he her from suffering on the womanly side
had taken such an important part. The of her complex nature. Undoubtedly
introduction gives a succinct history of something of her own life history is to
the individualistic propaganda which re- be read between the lines of her novel,
sulted in Russia in a certain measure (Vera Vorontsoff, which she is said to
of freedom for women, and which, at have written in Swedish. It relates sim-
the expense of much suffering and ply but effectively the story of the
many young lives sacrificed, spread a youngest daughter of a Russian count,
leaven of liberalism through the vast ruined partly by his own extravagances
empire of the Tsars.
Stepniak traces and partly by the emancipation of the
the successive changes that have taken serfs. The girl grows up with little train-
place in the attack on Autocracy before ing until Stepan Mikhailovich Vasiltsef, a
and since 1871. He defends even the professor from the Polytechnic Institute
Terrorism that leveled its weapons of Petersburg, removed from his posi-
against the lives of the highest in tion on account of seditious utterances,
power. He who had himself been del- comes to reside on his little neighboring
egated to (remove) certain of the estate and teaches her. They end by
enemies of liberty, could
help
falling in love; but Vasiltsef, who in-
arguing in favor of assassination as a clines to take the side of the peasants in
political resource. Under the sub-title their differences with their former mas-
of Revolutionary Profiles,' he draws ters, is (interned » at Viatka, and dies
pen-portraits of some of his acquaint- there of consumption. Vera sacrifices
ances among the Nihilists: Stepanovich, herself by marrying a poor Jewish con-
Dmitri Clemens, Valerian Ossinsky, spirator, condemned to twenty years' im-
Prince Krapotkin, Dmitri Lisogub, Jessy prisonment, and thereby commuting his
Helfman, Viera Sassulitch, and Sophia punishment to exile to Siberia, where
Perovskaya. The last half of the vol- she joins him. The character of Vera
ume describes various attempts at as- is carefully drawn in the genuine Rus-
sassination, and of escape from prisons sian method; she is the type of the self-
or Siberia. As a description of the prop- sacrificing maiden of gentle birth, of
aganda and methods of the revolution- which the annals of Nihilism are full.
ists in attempting to free their country There are a few pretty descriptions, as
from governmentai tyranny, and as a for instance, that of the app of the
statement of their aims and purpose, spring on the steppes; but the force of
not
## p. 324 (#360) ############################################
324
SYNOPSES OF NOTED BOOKS
the story lies in its pictures of life at
the time of the liberation of the serfs.
It has been twice translated into Eng-
lish. The author died in 1891, at the
age of forty-one.
pan.
-a
two
Tent Life in Siberia, by George Ken-
(1870. ) The author of this
book of exploration and adventure was
employed, in 1865–67, by the Western
Union Telegraph Company, in its auda-
cious scheme of building an overland line
to Europe by way of Alaska, Bering's
Strait, and Siberia, futile project,
soon forgotten in the success of the At-
lantic Cable. He tells the story of the
undertaking from the side of the em-
ployees, -- a story known to few even of
the original projectors. It is record of
obstacles well-nigh insuperable met and
overcome with astonishing patience and
courage; of nearly six thousand miles of
unbroken wilderness explored in
years, from Vancouver's Island to Be-
ring's Straits, and from Bering's Straits
to the Chinese frontier; of camping in
the wildest mountain fastnesses of Kam-
tchatka, in the gloomy forests of Alaska
and British Columbia, and on the deso-
late plains of Northeastern Siberia; of
the rugged mountain passes of Northern
Asia traversed by hardy 'men mounted
on reindeer; of the great rivers of the
north navigated in skin canoes; of tents
pitched on northern plains in tempera-
tures of 50 and 60 degrees below zero.
Though the enterprise failed in its
special aim, it succeeded in contributing
our knowledge of hitherto
traveled and unknown region. Its sur-
veys and explorations are invaluable.
The life and customs of the natives are
minutely described; while the traveler's
sense of the vastness, the desolation,
and the appalling emptiness of this
northern world of snow and ice conveys
a chill almost of death to the sympa-
thetic reader. The book is written in
the simple, business-like style that, when
used by men of action to tell what they
have done, adds a great charm of real-
ity to the tale.
French and German Socialism in
Modern Times, by Richard T. Ely,
associate professor of political economy
in Johns Hopkins University. (1883. )
The author says: My aim is to give a
perfectly fair, impartial presentation of
modern communism and socialism in
their two strongholds, France and Ger-
many. I believe that in so doing I am
rendering a service to the friends of law
and order. » He further says:
« It is
supposed that advocates of these systems
are poor, worthless fellows, who adopt
the arts of a demagogue for the promo-
tion in some way of their own interests,
perhaps in order to gain a livelihood
by agitating laborers and preying upon
them. It is thought that they are moved
by envy of the wealthier classes, and,
themselves unwilling to work, long for
the products of diligence and ability.
This is certainly a false and
unjust view. The leading communists
and socialists from the time of Plato up
to the present have been, for the most
part, men of character, wealth, talent,
and high social standing. ” The work
begins with an examination of the ac-
cusations brought against our present
social order. It acknowledges the exist-
ence of wrongs and abuses, and it con-
veys the warning that the time is not
far distant when, in this country, we
shall be confronted with social problems
of the most appalling and urgent nature.
It is a laboring class,” the author says,
«without hope of improvement for them-
selves or their children, which will first
test our institutions. Without express-
ing any personal view as to how threat-
ening evils may best be avoided, and
holding that only a fool would pretend
to picture the ultimate organization of
society, he describes the principal French
and German plans of reform that have
been proposed. These include the sys-
tems of Babæuf, Cabet, Saint-Simon,
Fourier, Louis Blanc, Proudhon, French
socialism since Proudhon, Rodbertus,
Karl Marx, the International Associa-
tion, Lassalle, the Social Democracy,
Socialism of the Chair (i. e. , the social-
ism held by professors, among whom he
includes John Stuart Mill), and Christ-
ian Socialism. While endeavoring to do
justice to Karl Marx, he thinks Lassalle
the most interesting figure of the Social
Democracy; speaks of the more or less
socialistic nature of some of Bismarck's
projects and measures; and rejoices that
socialists and men of all shades of opin-
ion are more and more turning to Christ-
ianity for help in the solution of social
problems. The book is fair, uncontro-
versial, and full of information concern-
ing the many different schools of French
and German socialism.
to
a
un-
## p. 325 (#361) ############################################
SYNOPSES OF NOTED BOOKS
325
(1864. ) A work of great research and
admirable exposition of interesting facts;
showing how human action, such as the
clearing away of forests, the drainage of
land, the creation of systems of irriga-
tion, etc. , very greatly modifies the con-
ditions belonging to the surface of the
earth. Not only are the matters treated
of great practical importance, but the
pictures of conditions and changes in
different lands, and over the many vari-
eties of the earth's surface, are very
entertaining. The work became at once
a standard with international recogni-
a considerably enlarged Italian
edition was issued at Florence in 1870;
and a second American edition, with
further changes, appeared in 1874. In
this final form the title was altered to
(The Earth Modified by Human
Action. ) The earlier title was peculiarly
appropriate; as it is not the earth only
which the modifications by the hand of
man reach, but the course of nature,
climate for example, in connection with
the earth, or vegetation wholly created
by human action. In every way the
book is a most suggestive one.
tion;
Methods of Social Reform, by William
Stanley Jevons. (1883. ) This vol-
ume appeared, with a preface by the
author's wife, after his too early death
in 1882, the papers composing it having
already been published in the Contem-
porary Review.
Professor Jevons takes
the view that the possible methods of
social reform are well-nigh infinite in
number and diversity, becoming more
numerous as society grows more com-
plex, and that the recognized methods at
any given time are to be used not dis-
junctively but collectively. In this vol-
ume, he considers Amusements, Public
Libraries, Museums, «Cram » (in its uni-
versity sense), Trades Societies, Indus-
trial Partnerships, Married Women in
Factories, Cruelty to Animals, Experi-
mental Legislation, and the Drink Traf-
fic, Systems of Conveyance of Docu-
ments, other than the Post-Office under
government control, the Post-Office Tele-
graphs and their Financial Results, Postal
Notes, Money Orders and Bank Checks,
a State Parcel Post, the Railways and
the State. His Inaugural Address before
the Manchester Statistical Society, his
opening address as president of section
C of the British Association, and a paper
on the United Kingdom Alliance, econ-
omic science and statistics, are also
given. Libraries he regards as one of
the best and quickest paying investments
in which the public money can be used,
attributing the recent advance in British
library economics and extension largely
to American example. The paper on
(Cram) takes the view that while the
method of university examinations is not
perfect, it is the most effective known
for enforcing severe and definite mental
training, and of selecting for high posi-
tion the successful competitors; while any
system of preparation for the examina-
tions that leads to success is a good
system. He favors co-operation and pro-
fit-sharing, but opposes government own-
ership of the railways. In all his work,
Professor Jevons has shown that his
practical and exact mind is always in-
formed by a spiritual and ethical influ-
ence that gives his conclusions a special
weight on their moral side; and this
work, written with great clearness and at-
tractiveness, is no exception to the rule.
as
,
Day. The history of Sandford and
Merton has afforded entertainment and
instruction to many generations of boys
since its first publication about 1780.
Portraying the social ideas of the Eng-
lish of more than a hundred years ago,
it can hardly be regarded, in the present
day, as exerting a wholesome influence,-
in fact, it is chiefly remarkable for its
tone of unutterable priggishness.
Master Tommy Merton in this story is
the son (aged six) of a wealthy gen-
tleman who dwells chiefly in the island
of Jamaica. Tommy's short life has
been spent in luxury, with the result
that he has become an unmitigated nui-
sance. Harry Sandford, on the contrary,
though the son of a poor farmer, was
even at an early age replete with every
virtue; and when the two boys are
placed under the instruction of a Mr.
Barlow, an exceptionally wise and good
clergyman, he is continually used as an
example to the reprehensible Tommy.
Morals are tediously drawn from every
incident of their daily lives, and from
the stories which they read in their
lesson books. (The Gentleman and
the asket-Maker); Androcles and the
Lion); History of a Surprising Cure
Man
an and Nature; or, PHYSICAL GE-
Iodi ED BY HUMAN
ACTION. By George Perkins Marsh.
OGRAPHY
AS
## p. 326 (#362) ############################################
326
SYNOPSES OF NOTED BOOKS
of the Gout,' and other stories of a like description of manly sports: like his ex-
nature, form the food on which these citing accounts of the cricket match
young intellects are nourished.
and the boat-race in his famous (Tom
Not the least remarkable feature of Brown) stories, and The Scouring of
the book is the polished language used the White Horse. )
by these children of six years of age;
Alic
and this juvenile can now only be re-
lice in Wonderland, and Through
the Looking-Glass, by Lewis Carroll
garded as an excellent example of the
(Charles L. Dodgson). Alice's ADVENT-
literature with which our grandfathers
URES IN WONDERLAND. — Alice, a bright
and great-grandfathers were regaled in
their youth.
well-behaved little girl, quite normal in
Thomas Day is said to have been
every way, is the heroine of this fantas-
tic tale, the great charm of which con-
a man of an eccentric turn of mind,
and to have educated two foundling
sists in the perfect plausibility of all its
girls with the idea of marrying one
impossibilities. By following an extraor-
dinary rabbit down into a rabbit hole,
of them. The marriage did not take
she finds herself in a land where unreal
place, and he gave them each a por-
things seem real. But however absurd
tion and married them to tradesmen ;
the doings of the inhabitants of Wonder-
he himself marrying a Miss Milnes in
land, she is never surprised at them.
1778, when he was thirty years of age.
Her mistakes at first barely save her
He died eleven years later, through a
fall from his horse which he was trying
from drowning in her own tears; but
afterwards she meets many queer ani-
to break in upon a system of his own.
mal friends besides a crusty old Duchess,
a mad Hatter, a sleepy Dormouse, and a
The Scouring of the White Horse,
March Hare with whom she has strange
by Thomas Hughes. The colossal
image of a white horse, hewn upon the
experiences, and finally they take her to
chalk cliff of a Berkshire hill, is a last-
play croquet with the Queen of Hearts.
During a trial by jury at the court of
ing monument of the battle of Ash-
down. It was constructed in the year
the Queen, Alice becomes excited and
871, by King Alfred the Great, marking
calls every one there nothing but a pack
of cards.
the site of the turning -point of the bat-
As they rise into the air and
tle, and is the pride of the county.
come flying down upon her, she awakes
and finds herself beside her sister on a bank
The “pastime) of the scouring of the
white horse was inaugurated in 1736,
where she had fallen asleep. THROUGH
and has been held at intervals of from
THE LOOKING-Glass. —The next time Alice
ten to twenty years ever since. The
dreams, she steps through the looking-
whole countryside makes of it the grand
glass; in this land the people are all
holiday of Berkshire. The farmers for
chessmen, and the country is divided up
miles around, with pick and shovel, re-
like a chessboard, with little brooks and
move the accumulations of soil from the
hedges marking the squares. She travels
image, so that it stands out in bold re-
extensively as she moves in the game,
lief, clear and distinct as when first
and is crowned queen at the end. This
dream also comes
completed.
to a climax by the
After this is accomplished, the two
violence of her resentment against so
succeeding days are devoted to athletic
much nonsense, and she wakes suddenly.
sports, - horse and foot races, climbing
Besides kings, knights, pawns, and the
the greased pole, wrestling matches,
other pieces of the game, there are more
and backsword play. The hill is cov-
eccentric animals and people who have
ered with booths of showmen and pub- Queen and the fiery-tempered Red Queen
something to say. The careless White
licans, and rich and poor alike join in
the festivities of the occasion.
are very amusing, and Tweedledum and
Tweedledee are responsible for the song
The particular “pastime” recounted
in this book occurred in 1857; and the
of The Walrus and the Carpenter);
experiences of a
where, to quote the Duchess, one has to
prosperous Berkshire
(take care of the sense, and the sounds
farmer and his guest, a former school-
will take care of themselves. »
mate, lend a personal flavor and interest
to the story.
When
hen Valmond Came to Pontiac,
The book is made for boys, and no
a novel, by Gilbert Parker pub-
writer excels Mr. Hughes in the vivid lished in 1895, has for its motive the
»
## p. 327 (#363) ############################################
SYNOPSES OF NOTED BOOKS
327
en-
a
а
a
little army:
Napoleonic glamour which
which still
Barriers Burned Away, by Edward
chants simple folk on the outlying Payson Roe, after appearing as
borders of the French nation. Into the serial story in the New York Evangelist,
little French-Canadian village of Pon- was published in book form in 1872. Of
tiac comes Valmond, mysterious
a cheap edition, issued ten years later,
stranger, bearing about him the at- 87,500 copies were sold. It was the au-
mosphere of a great, dead world. In thor's first novel, and its great popularity
form and manner he recalls Napoleon. led him to adopt story-writing as a pro-
Though but a youth of some twenty fession. The plot of this book is very
summers, he seems the heir of magnifi- simple. Dennis Fleet finds the support
cent memories. Little by little he steals of his mother and the younger children
into the hearts of the simple villagers. devolving upon him, after the death of
Little by little ‘he wins them to the his father. Seeking work in Chicago, he
belief that he is the son of Napoleon. finds it impossible to secure a position
Even Sergeant Lagroin, a veteran of the suited to his social rank and education.
Old Guard, coming to challenge his After many hard experiences, he is hired
pretensions, is won to him by his man- to shovel snow in front of a fine-arts shop
ner of authority, and his utterance of where he afterward becomes a porter.
watchwords thought to be buried forever
Though he cheerfully performs the hum-
within the dead lips of the great Gen- blest duties, his superiority to them is
eral. The Sergeant's complete surrender evident. His employer, Mr. Ludolph, a
to this strange young Napoleon estab-
rich and money-loving German, finds him
lishes his claim with the village-folk. valuable enough to be made a salesman.
Valmond has dreams of reconquering Mr. Ludolph is a widower, having an only
France. He forms his adherents into a
daughter, Christine, with whom Dennis
The movement attracting falls in love. She treats him contempt-
the attention of the government, soldiers uously at first, but soon discovers his
are sent to demand the surrender of
trained talent for music and knowledge
Valmond and Lagroin. The latter dies
of art. He rises above the slights he
under the fire of their rifles, refusing receives, and makes the impression of a
to the last to wake from his beautiful
nobleman in disguise. Then follow an
dream.
estrangement and a reconciliation. The
«Valmond stood over his body, and
most noteworthy feature of the novel is
drew a pistol.
the striking description of the Chicago
(Surrender, Monsieur! ) said the of-
fire.
ficer, (or we fire! )
(
Never! A Napoleon knows how to Alone, by Mrs. Mary Virginia Terhune
die! ) came the ringing reply, and he (who is better known by her pen-
raised his pistol at the officer.
name, Marian Harland”), was her first
(Fire! ) came the sharp command. novel, and appeared in 1854, when she
"Vive Napoléon! cried the doomed was twenty-four. The scene is laid in
man, and fell, mortally wounded. ” Richmond, Virginia, where Ida Ross, an
Valmond also, refusing to surrender, orphan of fifteen, goes to live with her
is shot. Dying, he confesses that he guardian Mr. Read, and his daughter
was the child of Italian peasants, reared Josephine, a girl of her own age. With
as a page in the house of Prince Lucien the Reads, who are cold, worldly, and
Bonaparte. After his death, however, it reserved, the impulsive and affectionate
is discovered that he was really what Ida is extremely unhappy. Fortunately
he made pretense of being, the son of her life is changed by friendship with a
Napoleon, born at St. Helena.
schoolmate, Carry Carleton. In the well-
bred and kindly households of the Carle-
A"
mber Gods, The, a novel in minia- tons and their relatives, Ida finds friends
ture, by Harriet Prescott Spofford, and lovers. When the girls enter society,
was published in 1863. It is remarkable Josephine becomes jealous of Ida's greater
neither for plot nor for character-draw- attractiveness, chiefly because a certain
ing, but for a magnificent depth and rich- Mr. Lacy falls in love with her. Mis-
ness of color, like a painting by Titian. understandings ensue. Ida gives up her
An amber amulet or rosary, possessing | lover, and returns to the home of her
mysterious influences, gives the title to childhood to devote her life to philan-
thropy. But the misunderstandings are
the story.
## p. 328 (#364) ############################################
328
SYNOPSES OF NOTED BOOKS
name
explained, and the well-disciplined recluse American, The, by Henry James, was
is married to Mr. Lacy. The book had published in 1877. It was the novel-
a very great vogue, and made a reputa- ist's third book of fiction, a volume of short
tion for the author. It is simple in plot, tales and a novel preceding it. The cen-
contains a transcript of every-day life, tral character, Christopher Newman, is
and is deeply religious in tone, but be- a typical product of the United States:
longs to a fashion in fiction which no cool, self-confident, and able, impressing,
longer prevails.
by the force and directness of his nature,
Arm
rmorel of Lyonesse, by Walter Be. all who come in contact with him. Hav-
sant, published in 1884. The scene is ing made his fortune, he is traveling in
the Scilly (or Lyonesse) Isles (twenty-five i Europe for pleasure. He falls in love
miles south of England). Alone on one
with a Parisian lady of noble birth, who
of these (Samson) lives an old woman of
is half English, - Madame de Cintré, a
nearly a hundred, Ursula Rosevean, with
widow; and she comes to care for him
her great-great-great-granddaughter Ar-
enough to disregard the mésalliance, even
morel and the Tryeth family of four. To
to engage herself to him. The obstacles
them come Dick Stephenson and Roland
in the way of their marriage give rise to
Lee, the latter an artist saved from ship- many dramatic incidents.
wreck by Armorel. Roland finds a strong
attraction in Armorel, and remains at the Alton
Iton Locke, by Charles Kingsley, was
islands three weeks. He returns to Lon-
published in 1850, when the author
don, where, later, Armorel is instrumental
was thirty-one. It was his first novel,
and like Yeast, which closely followed
in extricating him from a network of
evil in which he has become involved
it, showed Kingsley's broad humanitarian-
through one false step. The intricacy of
ism, unconventionality, interest in and
sympathy for the wrongs of the English
the plot is worthy of Wilkie Collins.
working classes. It made a great stir,
Sandra Belloni, by George Meredith. . and did much in England to turn the
This musical novel was first pub- thoughts of the upper ranks to their re-
lished in 1864, under the
of sponsibility for the lower. Its hero is a
(Emilia in England. ) The Greek Peri- poet-tailor of a mystic turn - Alton Locke,
cles, ever in search of hidden musical Tailor and Poet, is the full title; he feels
genius, finds it in the voice of Emilia deep in his soul the horrors of the sweat-
Sandra Belloni, while visiting Mr. Pole. ing system and other abuses which grind
Pole has squandered the money held the poor, and devotes himself to their
in trust for Mrs. Chump, a vulgar but amelioration. I am,” he says of him-
kind-hearted widow, and is therefore self, “a Cockney among Cockneys”; he
forced, with his children, to submit to is sketched from his boyhood in a mean,
her attentions. Wilfred Pole, his son, suburban quarter of the city, through his
loves Emilia, but means to marry Lady struggle for education and maintenance,
Charlotte. Discovering this, Emilia which brings him into contact with the
wanders away, loses her voice, and is case of the toiling city masses, to his
rescued from starvation by Merthyr leadership of their cause, his advocacy
Powys, who has long loved her. He of Chartism, and final failure to realize
goes to fight for Italy. The Poles are his dreams. The purity, ideality, and
brought to the verge of ruin by Pericles. altruism of Locke and his friends Cross-
Emilia's voice returns. Pericles saves thwaite, MacKaye, Lady Ellerton, and
the Poles, on her signing an agreement Eleanor, make them inspiring prophets of
to study in Italy for three years and the war of the Emancipation of Labor.
sing in public. Wilfred hears her sing, The story is full of vigorous, earnest, ela
casts off Lady Charlotte who favors the quent preaching, and would now be called
Austrians, and throws himself at Emil- "problem fiction of the frankest sort;
ia's feet. She now realizes his incon- and it is also often dramatic and thrill-
stancy and Merthyr's nobility, writes to ing
the latter that she loves him, and will
be his wife at the end of the three years
Ase
ge of Reason, The, by Thomas Paine,
for which she is pledged.
The story
was first published in a complete
contains all of Meredith's marked man-
edition on October 25th, 1795.
nerisms; but also flashes with wit, and is the First Part appeared, but no copy
full of life and vivacity.
bearing that date can be found.
thinks the education of the present day
is too much restricted to book-learning,
taking quite too much for granted the
authority of whatever ideas and opinions
obtain the authenticity of print. Adults,
even more than the young, he thinks,
should be not only trained to observe
and impress exact images of objects on
the memory, but to use their fingers in
analyzing and drawing, and above all,
in dissecting beasts, birds, and fishes, so
as to understand their wonderful struct-
and mechanism. Few naturalists
have united exact knowledge and minute
observation with so agreeable a faculty
of description as has Mr. Buckland.
Master; The, by . . Zangwill. (1895. )
This story is the biography of an
artist; and in it the reader is led to an
artist's London, and wanders through an
artist's world. From early boyhood the
ruling passion of Matthew Strang's life
is a love of art and a desire to paint
pictures. A poor boy, struggling against
poverty and misfortune, he ever keeps
this goal in view. Overwhelmed by
want and suffering, he marries a young
woman his intellectual inferior, but pos-
sessed of a small competency by which
he is enabled to pursue his beloved vo-
cation. He becomes a great artist; and
the distance widens between him and
his commonplace wife, who has no ap-
preciation of his work or ideals. Mat-
thew Strang is courted by distinguished
people, and breathes an atmosphere that
intensifies the contrast with his own
home, which he rarely visits. He is
thrown into the society of Eleanor Wynd-
wood, beautiful and accomplished
She is his ideal, and he falls
in love with her. He feels that in-
spired by her companionship he could
achieve the highest success. Eleanor
returns his love; and Strang is on the
point of forgetting all but his passion
for her, when he is suddenly awakened
to the realization that his highest duty
lies in the renunciation of his desires.
He goes back to his nagging, prosaic
wife, and irritating household, having
bid farewell to his love and art. But
the latter is not to be taken leave of;
for, away from the whirl of society and
in the solitude of his out-of-town studio,
he toils to accomplish his best work.
Here “the master » at last produces his
greatest pictures; here he becomes not
only master of his art, but “master of
his own soul. ” Throughout the book
the point of view is profoundly poetic,
and the character of the master is
developed with truly masterly skill: as
are also the portraits of Billy, the art-
ist's deformed brother; the sharp-tongued
Rosina, his wife and his foster-sister,
steadfast Ruth Hailey, whose gentle in-
fluence and self-effacing love are con-
trasted with the more selfish affection of
the impressionable and impulsive Eleanor.
The book is filled with clever epigram-
matic phrases, and abounds in humor.
ure
by Charles Gibbon.
(1873. ) The scene of this clever
story is laid in Scotland, at a place not
Robin Gray
## p. 319 (#355) ############################################
SYNOPSES OF NOTED BOOKS
319
upon L
far from Ayr. Opportunity is thus
given for a very good sketch of Scotch
life and character. The book derives
its name from one of the central fig-
ures, Robin Gray, a farmer, who mar-
ries the daughter of a fisherman. She,
Jeanie Lindsay, was engaged to one
James Falcon, supposed to have been
lost at sea. Falcon returns; and through
jealous blindness Robin Gray is led to
believe that his wife is about to run
away with Falcon, with whom he quar-
rels. On the same night a murder is
committed, and suspicion falls
Gray. Through the devotion of his
wife, Gray is cleared, and the mur-
derer brought to justice. Most of the
mischief is caused by Nicol M'Whap-
ple, whose iniquities assume huge pro-
portions as the story proceeds. He is
the Laird of Clashgirn, and is found
to have unlawfully come into posses-
sion of the estate, which in fact be-
longs to Falcon, whose real name is
Sutherland. M’Whapple endeavors in
several different ways to get Falcon
killed, and the quarrel between Falcon
and Gray is caused by M'Whapple's
intrigues. When at last his villainy is
exposed, he conveniently dies, and saves
the reader from the pain of a trial and
execution. In the end, Robin Gray
and his wife are reconciled: and Fal-
con, or Sutherland, who has become
Laird of Clashgirn, goes away for a six-
years' voyage; from which he returns
reconciled to the loss of his love, and
finds another love.
questions of responsibilities which arise,
deaf to moral obligations and the rights
of others, coquetting with the affections
of the girl Phemie Sims, with whose
family he resides at Etowah Cove, play-
ing a daily farce to the eyes of the sim-
ple mountaineers, his existence implies
a double meaning in the title, - juggler
of morals, juggler of emotions, juggler of
self-respect and manhood. The study of
character made in this book is fresh and
honest, and the story is interesting.
Lor
ove Me Little, Love Me Long, was
published in 1857.
In this story,
Charles Reade turned away from his
wonted exposition of social abuses to
write a love story, pure and simple. It
is a pleasant study of upper middle-class
English life. Lucy Fountain, a young
heiress, has two guardians - her uncle
Mr. Fountain, and Mr. Bazalgette the
husband of her mother's half-sister; and
she divides the year between their two
homes. She is pretty, charming, and
useful; and both Uncle Fountain and
Aunt Bazalgette want to establish her
close at hand by choosing a husband
for her. But Lucy is indifferent both to
Mr. Hardy, the banker selected by her
aunt, and Mr. Talboys, the man of an-
cient lineage who is favored by her
uncle. She falls in love with David
Dodd, a manly young sailor in the
merchant service, who loves her, but
who recognizes her social superiority,
while he is forced to admit that his
Lucy is freakish,- now kind, now cold.
To escape importunity at home, she
runs away and stays with her old nurse,
where David discovers and wins her.
They have a few blissful weeks together
before David Sails on the Rajah, of
which through Lucy's influence he has
been made captain. The story is sim-
ple, but full of homely incident, clever
dialogue, shrewd character-drawing, and
overflowing humor.
With its sequel,
(Very Hard Cash, it is considered
among
the best of Reade's novels,
Lucy herself is the type of
oftenest drawn by Reade, - pretty, emo-
tional, noble at heart, but given to co-
quettish deceits and uncertain moods,
until steadied by love.
Marjorie Daw, by Thomas Bailey Ald-
rich. The well-known story of Mar-
jorie Daw is developed through the cor-
respondence of two young men, named
respectively John Flemming and Edward
>
Juggler, The, by Charles Egbert Crad-
. The story departs in some
degree from the traditions of Miss Mur-
free, though her scenes are still laid in
the Tennessee mountains. Her hero,
Lucien Royce, is not only an amateur
athlete of renown, but he can do tricks
of legerdemain, and he possesses other
fascinating accomplishments. Being in-
trusted by his firm with a large sum of
money, and losing it in a shipwreck, he
dares not return to his home in the
city, fearing that his story will not be
believed. He is reported dead; and
fleeing to the Cumberland Mountains,
weakly accepts the
fate has
offered. His reputed death causes many
complications. A valuable property is
held on life tenure,— his being the life
chosen, a compliment to athletic
reputation. Shilly-shallying with the
woman
excuse
## p. 320 (#356) ############################################
320
SYNOPSES OF NOTED BOOKS
Delaney. The latter seeks to relieve
the tedium of his friend's sick-room by
a description of his neighbor, Marjorie
Daw. He paints her charms in glow-
ing colors, and enlarges upon her at-
tractions, the wealth of her father, and
the delightful colonial mansion in which
she dwells. Flemming, who is com-
pletely fascinated with his friend's de-
scription, falls in love with the maiden,
and presses Delaney for more and more
particulars, which he generously fur-
nishes, until he has convinced Flem-
ming that Marjorie has been led to
reciprocate his feelings. The critical
moment at last arrives when Flemming,
having sufficiently recovered, telegraphs
that he intends to press his suit in per-
son. His friend, now realizing how seri-
ous the affair has become, endeavors
frantically to prevent Flemming from
carrying out his purpose; but finding
his efforts unavailing, he departs hastily
from town, leaving a note of explana-
tion behind him. Flemming arrives, re-
ceives Delaney's note, and encounters
the surprise of his life. This short
story was first published in 1873, and
is a very characteristic piece of Mr.
Aldrich's clever workmanship.
Italian Journeys, by W. D. Howells,
is the record of leisurely excursions
up and down the land,- to Padua, Fer-
rara, Genoa, Pompeii, Naples, Rome,
and many other towns of picturesque
buildings and melodious names, from
Capri to Trieste. Mr. Howells knows
his Italy so well, that though he writes
as a foreigner, he is in perfect sympathy
with his subject. He knows the inn-
keepers, guides, and railway men to be
dead to truth and honesty, but he likes
them; and he knows that Tasso's prison
never held Tasso, and that the history
of most of the historic places is purely
legendary, but he delights to believe in
them all. He sees in the broken col.
umns and fragmentary walls of Pompeii
all the splendor of the first century, that
time of gorgeous wealth; and in an old
house at Arquá, he has a vision of
Petrarch writing at his curious carved
table. In crumbling Herculaneum his
spirit is touched to wistful sympathy by
a garden of wild flowers: Here — where
so long ago the flowers had bloomed,
and perished in the terrible blossoming
of the mountain that sent up its awful
fires in the awful similitude of Nature's
harmless and lovely forms, and show-
ered its destroying petals all abroad -
was it not tragic to find again the soft
tints, the graceful shapes, the sweet
perfumes, of the earth's immortal life?
Of them that planted and tended and
plucked and bore in their bosoms and
twined in their hair these fragile child-
ren of the summer, what witness in the
world ? Only the crouching skeletons un-
der the tables - Alas and alas! ” His
love of the beautiful is tempered by a
keen sense of humor; and the combina-
tion makes his volume a delightful
record, with the sunshine of Italy shut
between its covers.
Foregone Conclusion, A, by W. D.
Howells, (1875,) one of his earlier
and simpler novels, relates the love story
of Florida Vervain, a young girl sojourn-
ing in Venice with her mother, an
amiable, weak-headed woman, of the type
so frequently drawn by the author. The
daughter is beloved by the l’nited States
consul, a Mr. Ferris, and by Don Ippo-
polito, a priest. The latter is a strongly
drawn, interesting study. He is a man
whom circumstances rather than inclina-
tion led into the priesthood. From the
hour of his ordination he finds the holy
office an obstacle to his normal develop-
ment. He has the genius of the in-
ventor; has spent years in perfecting
impossible models. Florida Vervain be-
comes his pupil in Italian. Her young
enthusiasm leads her to believe that if
Don Ippolito were only in America his
inventions would receive fruitful recogni-
'tion. She proposes that he accompany
her and her mother to Providence. He,
in the first joy of the prospect, declares
his love for her. She is horror-stricken
because he is a priest ); and her re-
fusal of him eventually brings about his
death. These events open the eyes of
Ferris, whose jealousy of the poor priest
had led him into a sullen attitude to-
wards the woman he loved.
The novel, despite a happy ending,
is overshadowed by the tragic central
figure of Don Ippolito. The priest and
the girl are remarkably vivid, well-drawn
characters. There is just enough of the
background of Venice to give color to
the story.
Almayer's Folly, by Joseph Conrad, is
a novel of Eastern life, whose scene
is laid on a little-known river of Borneo,
and whose personages are fierce Malays,
a
## p. 321 (#357) ############################################
SYNOPSES OF NOTED BOOKS
32 1
$
cunning Arabs, stolid Dutch traders, Percival himself, in the same event, will
slaves, half-breeds, pirates, and white receive the whole of Laura's fortune.
renegades. Almayer, the son of a Dutch Laura had pledged her dead father to
official in Java, has been adopted in a marry Sir Percival, but she has no love
sort of way by one Captain Lingard, a for him. Marian Halcombe goes with
disreputable English adventurer, who per- her to Blackwater Park. There, in the
suades him to marry a Malay girl, whom form of a diary, she carries on the nar-
also he has adopted, the sole survivor rative where Walter Hartright discon-
of a crew of Malay pirates sent by Lin- tinued it. A plot is hatched by Count
gard to their last account. The story is
Fosco, who is
strong villain, and by
crowded with adventure, and the charac- Sir Percival, who is a weak one, to get
ters stand out, living creatures, against a Laura out of the way and obtain her
gorgeous tropical background. But its money, by taking advantage of the re-
merit lies in its careful rendering of
semblance between her and Anne Cath-
race traits, and in its study of that dry- erick, who at the time is very ill. By
rot of character, indecision, irresolution, a series of devices Laura is brought to
procrastination. It is quite plain that the London, and put into an asylum as
sins Mr. Conrad imputes to his frustrate Anne Catherick; while the dying Anne
ghosts) are the unlit lamp and the un- Catherick is called Lady Glyde, and
girt loin. )
after her death buried as Lady Glyde.
These events are told by the various
Woman in White, The, an early and actors in the drama. By the efforts of
notable novel by Wilkie Collins, Marian, who does not believe that her
was published in 1873. Like his other sister is dead, she is rescued from the
works of fiction, it is remarkable for the asylum. Walter Hartright, seeking to
admirable manner in which its intricate expose Sir Percival's villainy, discovers
plot is worked out. The narrative is that he is sharing a secret with Anne
told by the different characters of the Catherick's mother; that Anne knew the
story in succession. The first narrator secret, and had therefore been confined
is Walter Hartright, a drawing-master, in an asylum by the pair: the secret
who has been employed by Mr. Fred- being that Sir Percival had no right
erick Fairlie of Limmeridge House, in to his title, having been born out of
Cumberland, England, to teach drawing wedlock. Before Hartright can expose
to his nieces, Laura Fairlie and her this fraud, Sir Percival himself is
half-sister Marian Halcombe. Laura burned to death, while tampering with
bears strange resemblance to
the register of the church for his own
woman who had accosted him
interest. In the general clearing-up of
lonely road near London, - a
affairs, it
becomes
known that the
clothed entirely in white; who, he after- Woman in White was the half-sister of
wards discovers, is an Anne Catherick, Laura, being the natural child of her
supposed to be half-witted, and, when father Philip Fairlie.
he met her, just escaped from an asy- The story ends with the happy mar-
lum. In her childhood Anne had been riage of Laura to Hartright, and with
befriended by Laura's mother, Mrs. the restoration of her property.
Fairlie, because of her resemblance to
Laura, and by her had been dressed in
Armadale, by Wilkie Collins 1866. The
white, which Anne had worn ever since
, The
in memory of her benefactress. Hart- Magdalen, and other of its author's later
right discovers also that there is some novels, is a gauntlet of defiance to the
mystery in the girl's having been placed critics who had asserted that all the in-
in an asylum by her own mother, with- terest of his stories lay in the suspension
out sufficient justification of the act. of knowledge as to the dénouement. The
Walter Hartright falls in love with machinery is in full view, yet in spite of
Laura Fairlie; but she is betrothed to this disclosure, the reader's attention is
Sir Percival Glyde of Blackwater Park, held until he knows whether the villain or
Hampshire. Sir Percival has a close her victims will come out victorious. This
friend, Count Fosco, whose wife, a rela- villain is one Lydia Gwilt, who, as a girl
tive of Laura's, will receive ten thousand of twelve, has forged a letter to deceive
pounds on her death. The marriage a father into letting his daughter throw
settlements are drawn up so that Sir herself away. Hateful and hideous as is
a
a
on
a
woman
XXX-21
## p. 322 (#358) ############################################
322
SYNOPSES OF NOTED BOOKS
her character, Lydia is so drawn as to to impress Sir Guy, and contents herself
exact a certain pity from the reader, by with a Mr. Boer, appropriately named.
reason of her lonely childhood and her Two of Lilian's cousins, Arthur Chesney
strong qualities. The few minor charac- (a vain suitor for her hand), and Taffy
ters of the book, though distinct enough, Musgrave (a young British red-coat whom
do not detain the reader, eager to know everybody likes), add no little interest to
the fate of poor Ozias, the hero, who is the group, who are of a marrying mind
a lovable fellow. Among the few minor generally. Wholesome, pretty, not too
characters in this novel are Mrs. Older- serious, the story maintains its interest to
shaw, Mr. Felix Bashwood, and Mr. Ped- the last without introducing any startling
gift the lawyer.
episodes. It paints a pleasant picture of
English country life, with sufficient fidel-
Barba
rbara's History, by Amelia Bland- ity to detail and an agreeable variety of
ford Edwards, appeared in 1864. It light and shadow.
is the romance of a pretty girl, clever and
capable, who, passing through some vex-
Samuel Brohl and Company, a novel,
ations and serious troubles, settles down by Victor Cherbuliez. (1879. ) One
to an unclouded future. Barbara Church- of the most entertaining productions of
ill is the youngest daughter of a selfish a writer who excels in delicate comedy,
widower, who neglects his children. When and has given readers an agreeable
ten years old, she visits her rich country change from the typical French novel »;
aunt, Mrs. Sandyshaft, with whom she is though it has little substance or thought.
far happier than in her London home. The action occurs during the year 1875,
Here she meets Hugh Farquhar, owner in Switzerland and France. Samuel
of the neighboring estate of Broomhill; Brohl, a youth of lowest origin, is bought
a man of twenty-seven, who has sowed by Princess Gulof, who educates him,
wild oats in many lands and reaped an and then makes him nominally her sec-
abundant harvest of troubles. He makes retary. He tires of her jealous tyranny
a great pet of Barbara, who loves him
and runs away, assuming the name and
devotedly. The story thenceforth is of history of Count Larinski. Antoinette
their marriage, her jealousy in regard to Moriaz, an heiress of romantic notions,
an Italian girl whom her husband has who undervalues the love of honest Ca.
protected, and an explanation and recon- mille Langis because there is no mys-
ciliation. It is well told, the characteri- tery about him, supposing Samuel to
zation is good, and Barbara is made an be the Polish hero he impersonates,
extremely attractive little heroine.
thinks she has found the man she wants
at last.
Madame de Lorcy, her god-
mother and Camille's aunt, suspects
ford (“The Duchess”), needs « Count Larinski” of being an advent-
elaborate plot to make it interesting. Its urer; and is finally helped to prove it
slender thread of story traces the willful by the Princess, Samuel's former mis-
though winsome actions of Lilian Ches- tress, who recounts to Antoinette how
ney. An orphaned heiress - piquant, airy, she bought him of his father for a brace-
changeful, lovable - she lives, after the let, which bracelet Samuel has given
death of her parents, with Lady Chet- the girl as a betrothal gift. Disillusion-
woode. Sir Guy Chetwoode, her rather ized, she breaks with Samuel, saying
young guardian; Cyril, his brother, and pathetically, “The man I loved was he
Florence Beauchamp, his cousin, complete whose history you related to me” (i, e. ,
the household. Sir Guy, staid, earnest, Count Larinski). Camille visits Samuel
and manly, alternately quarrels with and to get back Antoinette's letters and
pays sincere court to his ward, winning gifts, contemptuously refuses a challenge,
her after she has led him a weary chase, and buys the keepsakes for 25,000 francs.
the details of which form the chief charm The bargain concluded, Samuel theatri-
of the story.
Cyril, twenty-six, pleasant cally thrusts the bank-notes into a candle
but headstrong, finds his love in a fair flame, and repeats his challenge. In the
young widow, Mrs. Arlington, about resulting duel, Camille is left for dead
whose character an unfortunate haze of by Samuel, that picturesque scamp flee-
doubt has been cast — to be dissipated, ing to America. Camille recovers, and
however, in the end. The ambitious Flor- eventually his devotion to Antoinette
ence, as vapid as she is designing, fails meets its due reward.
»
Airy Fairy, Lilian, by Mrs. Hunger-
no
## p. 323 (#359) ############################################
SYNOPSES OF NOTED BOOKS
323
Alla
ure.
(
llan Quatermain, by H. Rider Hag- this little work, of one of their num-
gard, rehearses the adventures of the ber, desultory and inartistic as it is,
old hunter and traveler who tells the story,
will be invaluable to the future histo-
and whose name gives the title to the rian. It will at least show the desperate
book. He is accompanied from England earnestness and self-sacrificing spirit
on an African expedition by Sir Henry of some of Russia's noblest sons and
Curtis — huge, fair, and brave — and Cap- daughters. For English readers, the
tain Good, a retired seaman. They take work has the disadvantage of spelling
with them Umslopogaas, a trusty and gi- Russian names in an unfamiliar (that
gantic Zulu, who has served before under is, in the Italian) manner. It was writ-
Quatermain. At a mission station the ten in 1881; and the year after was
party leads an expedition to rescue the published in England, with a preface by
daughter of the missionary, Flossie Mac- Pavel Lavrof.
kenzie, who had been captured by hostile
blacks. The interest of the book is found
Vera Vorontsoff, by Sonya Kovalev.
in the swift movement of the narrative, sky. Sonya Kovalevsky, whose fa-
and the excitement of incessant advent- father was a general at the head of the
Russian artillery, adopted the Nihilistic
procedure of making a fictitious mar-
Underground Russia, by Stepniak. riage, for the purpose of securing her
The former editor of Zemlia i Volia intellectual freedom. She became one of
(Land and Liberty), who for many years the most famous mathematicians of Eu-
hid his identity under the pseudonym rope, won the Bordin prize, and was for
of Stepniak (freely translated «Son
ten years professor of mathematics in
of the Steppe »), wrote in Italian a Stockholm University. Her marvelous
series of sketches of the revolutionary achievements in science did not prevent
and Nihilistic movement in which he her from suffering on the womanly side
had taken such an important part. The of her complex nature. Undoubtedly
introduction gives a succinct history of something of her own life history is to
the individualistic propaganda which re- be read between the lines of her novel,
sulted in Russia in a certain measure (Vera Vorontsoff, which she is said to
of freedom for women, and which, at have written in Swedish. It relates sim-
the expense of much suffering and ply but effectively the story of the
many young lives sacrificed, spread a youngest daughter of a Russian count,
leaven of liberalism through the vast ruined partly by his own extravagances
empire of the Tsars.
Stepniak traces and partly by the emancipation of the
the successive changes that have taken serfs. The girl grows up with little train-
place in the attack on Autocracy before ing until Stepan Mikhailovich Vasiltsef, a
and since 1871. He defends even the professor from the Polytechnic Institute
Terrorism that leveled its weapons of Petersburg, removed from his posi-
against the lives of the highest in tion on account of seditious utterances,
power. He who had himself been del- comes to reside on his little neighboring
egated to (remove) certain of the estate and teaches her. They end by
enemies of liberty, could
help
falling in love; but Vasiltsef, who in-
arguing in favor of assassination as a clines to take the side of the peasants in
political resource. Under the sub-title their differences with their former mas-
of Revolutionary Profiles,' he draws ters, is (interned » at Viatka, and dies
pen-portraits of some of his acquaint- there of consumption. Vera sacrifices
ances among the Nihilists: Stepanovich, herself by marrying a poor Jewish con-
Dmitri Clemens, Valerian Ossinsky, spirator, condemned to twenty years' im-
Prince Krapotkin, Dmitri Lisogub, Jessy prisonment, and thereby commuting his
Helfman, Viera Sassulitch, and Sophia punishment to exile to Siberia, where
Perovskaya. The last half of the vol- she joins him. The character of Vera
ume describes various attempts at as- is carefully drawn in the genuine Rus-
sassination, and of escape from prisons sian method; she is the type of the self-
or Siberia. As a description of the prop- sacrificing maiden of gentle birth, of
aganda and methods of the revolution- which the annals of Nihilism are full.
ists in attempting to free their country There are a few pretty descriptions, as
from governmentai tyranny, and as a for instance, that of the app of the
statement of their aims and purpose, spring on the steppes; but the force of
not
## p. 324 (#360) ############################################
324
SYNOPSES OF NOTED BOOKS
the story lies in its pictures of life at
the time of the liberation of the serfs.
It has been twice translated into Eng-
lish. The author died in 1891, at the
age of forty-one.
pan.
-a
two
Tent Life in Siberia, by George Ken-
(1870. ) The author of this
book of exploration and adventure was
employed, in 1865–67, by the Western
Union Telegraph Company, in its auda-
cious scheme of building an overland line
to Europe by way of Alaska, Bering's
Strait, and Siberia, futile project,
soon forgotten in the success of the At-
lantic Cable. He tells the story of the
undertaking from the side of the em-
ployees, -- a story known to few even of
the original projectors. It is record of
obstacles well-nigh insuperable met and
overcome with astonishing patience and
courage; of nearly six thousand miles of
unbroken wilderness explored in
years, from Vancouver's Island to Be-
ring's Straits, and from Bering's Straits
to the Chinese frontier; of camping in
the wildest mountain fastnesses of Kam-
tchatka, in the gloomy forests of Alaska
and British Columbia, and on the deso-
late plains of Northeastern Siberia; of
the rugged mountain passes of Northern
Asia traversed by hardy 'men mounted
on reindeer; of the great rivers of the
north navigated in skin canoes; of tents
pitched on northern plains in tempera-
tures of 50 and 60 degrees below zero.
Though the enterprise failed in its
special aim, it succeeded in contributing
our knowledge of hitherto
traveled and unknown region. Its sur-
veys and explorations are invaluable.
The life and customs of the natives are
minutely described; while the traveler's
sense of the vastness, the desolation,
and the appalling emptiness of this
northern world of snow and ice conveys
a chill almost of death to the sympa-
thetic reader. The book is written in
the simple, business-like style that, when
used by men of action to tell what they
have done, adds a great charm of real-
ity to the tale.
French and German Socialism in
Modern Times, by Richard T. Ely,
associate professor of political economy
in Johns Hopkins University. (1883. )
The author says: My aim is to give a
perfectly fair, impartial presentation of
modern communism and socialism in
their two strongholds, France and Ger-
many. I believe that in so doing I am
rendering a service to the friends of law
and order. » He further says:
« It is
supposed that advocates of these systems
are poor, worthless fellows, who adopt
the arts of a demagogue for the promo-
tion in some way of their own interests,
perhaps in order to gain a livelihood
by agitating laborers and preying upon
them. It is thought that they are moved
by envy of the wealthier classes, and,
themselves unwilling to work, long for
the products of diligence and ability.
This is certainly a false and
unjust view. The leading communists
and socialists from the time of Plato up
to the present have been, for the most
part, men of character, wealth, talent,
and high social standing. ” The work
begins with an examination of the ac-
cusations brought against our present
social order. It acknowledges the exist-
ence of wrongs and abuses, and it con-
veys the warning that the time is not
far distant when, in this country, we
shall be confronted with social problems
of the most appalling and urgent nature.
It is a laboring class,” the author says,
«without hope of improvement for them-
selves or their children, which will first
test our institutions. Without express-
ing any personal view as to how threat-
ening evils may best be avoided, and
holding that only a fool would pretend
to picture the ultimate organization of
society, he describes the principal French
and German plans of reform that have
been proposed. These include the sys-
tems of Babæuf, Cabet, Saint-Simon,
Fourier, Louis Blanc, Proudhon, French
socialism since Proudhon, Rodbertus,
Karl Marx, the International Associa-
tion, Lassalle, the Social Democracy,
Socialism of the Chair (i. e. , the social-
ism held by professors, among whom he
includes John Stuart Mill), and Christ-
ian Socialism. While endeavoring to do
justice to Karl Marx, he thinks Lassalle
the most interesting figure of the Social
Democracy; speaks of the more or less
socialistic nature of some of Bismarck's
projects and measures; and rejoices that
socialists and men of all shades of opin-
ion are more and more turning to Christ-
ianity for help in the solution of social
problems. The book is fair, uncontro-
versial, and full of information concern-
ing the many different schools of French
and German socialism.
to
a
un-
## p. 325 (#361) ############################################
SYNOPSES OF NOTED BOOKS
325
(1864. ) A work of great research and
admirable exposition of interesting facts;
showing how human action, such as the
clearing away of forests, the drainage of
land, the creation of systems of irriga-
tion, etc. , very greatly modifies the con-
ditions belonging to the surface of the
earth. Not only are the matters treated
of great practical importance, but the
pictures of conditions and changes in
different lands, and over the many vari-
eties of the earth's surface, are very
entertaining. The work became at once
a standard with international recogni-
a considerably enlarged Italian
edition was issued at Florence in 1870;
and a second American edition, with
further changes, appeared in 1874. In
this final form the title was altered to
(The Earth Modified by Human
Action. ) The earlier title was peculiarly
appropriate; as it is not the earth only
which the modifications by the hand of
man reach, but the course of nature,
climate for example, in connection with
the earth, or vegetation wholly created
by human action. In every way the
book is a most suggestive one.
tion;
Methods of Social Reform, by William
Stanley Jevons. (1883. ) This vol-
ume appeared, with a preface by the
author's wife, after his too early death
in 1882, the papers composing it having
already been published in the Contem-
porary Review.
Professor Jevons takes
the view that the possible methods of
social reform are well-nigh infinite in
number and diversity, becoming more
numerous as society grows more com-
plex, and that the recognized methods at
any given time are to be used not dis-
junctively but collectively. In this vol-
ume, he considers Amusements, Public
Libraries, Museums, «Cram » (in its uni-
versity sense), Trades Societies, Indus-
trial Partnerships, Married Women in
Factories, Cruelty to Animals, Experi-
mental Legislation, and the Drink Traf-
fic, Systems of Conveyance of Docu-
ments, other than the Post-Office under
government control, the Post-Office Tele-
graphs and their Financial Results, Postal
Notes, Money Orders and Bank Checks,
a State Parcel Post, the Railways and
the State. His Inaugural Address before
the Manchester Statistical Society, his
opening address as president of section
C of the British Association, and a paper
on the United Kingdom Alliance, econ-
omic science and statistics, are also
given. Libraries he regards as one of
the best and quickest paying investments
in which the public money can be used,
attributing the recent advance in British
library economics and extension largely
to American example. The paper on
(Cram) takes the view that while the
method of university examinations is not
perfect, it is the most effective known
for enforcing severe and definite mental
training, and of selecting for high posi-
tion the successful competitors; while any
system of preparation for the examina-
tions that leads to success is a good
system. He favors co-operation and pro-
fit-sharing, but opposes government own-
ership of the railways. In all his work,
Professor Jevons has shown that his
practical and exact mind is always in-
formed by a spiritual and ethical influ-
ence that gives his conclusions a special
weight on their moral side; and this
work, written with great clearness and at-
tractiveness, is no exception to the rule.
as
,
Day. The history of Sandford and
Merton has afforded entertainment and
instruction to many generations of boys
since its first publication about 1780.
Portraying the social ideas of the Eng-
lish of more than a hundred years ago,
it can hardly be regarded, in the present
day, as exerting a wholesome influence,-
in fact, it is chiefly remarkable for its
tone of unutterable priggishness.
Master Tommy Merton in this story is
the son (aged six) of a wealthy gen-
tleman who dwells chiefly in the island
of Jamaica. Tommy's short life has
been spent in luxury, with the result
that he has become an unmitigated nui-
sance. Harry Sandford, on the contrary,
though the son of a poor farmer, was
even at an early age replete with every
virtue; and when the two boys are
placed under the instruction of a Mr.
Barlow, an exceptionally wise and good
clergyman, he is continually used as an
example to the reprehensible Tommy.
Morals are tediously drawn from every
incident of their daily lives, and from
the stories which they read in their
lesson books. (The Gentleman and
the asket-Maker); Androcles and the
Lion); History of a Surprising Cure
Man
an and Nature; or, PHYSICAL GE-
Iodi ED BY HUMAN
ACTION. By George Perkins Marsh.
OGRAPHY
AS
## p. 326 (#362) ############################################
326
SYNOPSES OF NOTED BOOKS
of the Gout,' and other stories of a like description of manly sports: like his ex-
nature, form the food on which these citing accounts of the cricket match
young intellects are nourished.
and the boat-race in his famous (Tom
Not the least remarkable feature of Brown) stories, and The Scouring of
the book is the polished language used the White Horse. )
by these children of six years of age;
Alic
and this juvenile can now only be re-
lice in Wonderland, and Through
the Looking-Glass, by Lewis Carroll
garded as an excellent example of the
(Charles L. Dodgson). Alice's ADVENT-
literature with which our grandfathers
URES IN WONDERLAND. — Alice, a bright
and great-grandfathers were regaled in
their youth.
well-behaved little girl, quite normal in
Thomas Day is said to have been
every way, is the heroine of this fantas-
tic tale, the great charm of which con-
a man of an eccentric turn of mind,
and to have educated two foundling
sists in the perfect plausibility of all its
girls with the idea of marrying one
impossibilities. By following an extraor-
dinary rabbit down into a rabbit hole,
of them. The marriage did not take
she finds herself in a land where unreal
place, and he gave them each a por-
things seem real. But however absurd
tion and married them to tradesmen ;
the doings of the inhabitants of Wonder-
he himself marrying a Miss Milnes in
land, she is never surprised at them.
1778, when he was thirty years of age.
Her mistakes at first barely save her
He died eleven years later, through a
fall from his horse which he was trying
from drowning in her own tears; but
afterwards she meets many queer ani-
to break in upon a system of his own.
mal friends besides a crusty old Duchess,
a mad Hatter, a sleepy Dormouse, and a
The Scouring of the White Horse,
March Hare with whom she has strange
by Thomas Hughes. The colossal
image of a white horse, hewn upon the
experiences, and finally they take her to
chalk cliff of a Berkshire hill, is a last-
play croquet with the Queen of Hearts.
During a trial by jury at the court of
ing monument of the battle of Ash-
down. It was constructed in the year
the Queen, Alice becomes excited and
871, by King Alfred the Great, marking
calls every one there nothing but a pack
of cards.
the site of the turning -point of the bat-
As they rise into the air and
tle, and is the pride of the county.
come flying down upon her, she awakes
and finds herself beside her sister on a bank
The “pastime) of the scouring of the
white horse was inaugurated in 1736,
where she had fallen asleep. THROUGH
and has been held at intervals of from
THE LOOKING-Glass. —The next time Alice
ten to twenty years ever since. The
dreams, she steps through the looking-
whole countryside makes of it the grand
glass; in this land the people are all
holiday of Berkshire. The farmers for
chessmen, and the country is divided up
miles around, with pick and shovel, re-
like a chessboard, with little brooks and
move the accumulations of soil from the
hedges marking the squares. She travels
image, so that it stands out in bold re-
extensively as she moves in the game,
lief, clear and distinct as when first
and is crowned queen at the end. This
dream also comes
completed.
to a climax by the
After this is accomplished, the two
violence of her resentment against so
succeeding days are devoted to athletic
much nonsense, and she wakes suddenly.
sports, - horse and foot races, climbing
Besides kings, knights, pawns, and the
the greased pole, wrestling matches,
other pieces of the game, there are more
and backsword play. The hill is cov-
eccentric animals and people who have
ered with booths of showmen and pub- Queen and the fiery-tempered Red Queen
something to say. The careless White
licans, and rich and poor alike join in
the festivities of the occasion.
are very amusing, and Tweedledum and
Tweedledee are responsible for the song
The particular “pastime” recounted
in this book occurred in 1857; and the
of The Walrus and the Carpenter);
experiences of a
where, to quote the Duchess, one has to
prosperous Berkshire
(take care of the sense, and the sounds
farmer and his guest, a former school-
will take care of themselves. »
mate, lend a personal flavor and interest
to the story.
When
hen Valmond Came to Pontiac,
The book is made for boys, and no
a novel, by Gilbert Parker pub-
writer excels Mr. Hughes in the vivid lished in 1895, has for its motive the
»
## p. 327 (#363) ############################################
SYNOPSES OF NOTED BOOKS
327
en-
a
а
a
little army:
Napoleonic glamour which
which still
Barriers Burned Away, by Edward
chants simple folk on the outlying Payson Roe, after appearing as
borders of the French nation. Into the serial story in the New York Evangelist,
little French-Canadian village of Pon- was published in book form in 1872. Of
tiac comes Valmond, mysterious
a cheap edition, issued ten years later,
stranger, bearing about him the at- 87,500 copies were sold. It was the au-
mosphere of a great, dead world. In thor's first novel, and its great popularity
form and manner he recalls Napoleon. led him to adopt story-writing as a pro-
Though but a youth of some twenty fession. The plot of this book is very
summers, he seems the heir of magnifi- simple. Dennis Fleet finds the support
cent memories. Little by little he steals of his mother and the younger children
into the hearts of the simple villagers. devolving upon him, after the death of
Little by little ‘he wins them to the his father. Seeking work in Chicago, he
belief that he is the son of Napoleon. finds it impossible to secure a position
Even Sergeant Lagroin, a veteran of the suited to his social rank and education.
Old Guard, coming to challenge his After many hard experiences, he is hired
pretensions, is won to him by his man- to shovel snow in front of a fine-arts shop
ner of authority, and his utterance of where he afterward becomes a porter.
watchwords thought to be buried forever
Though he cheerfully performs the hum-
within the dead lips of the great Gen- blest duties, his superiority to them is
eral. The Sergeant's complete surrender evident. His employer, Mr. Ludolph, a
to this strange young Napoleon estab-
rich and money-loving German, finds him
lishes his claim with the village-folk. valuable enough to be made a salesman.
Valmond has dreams of reconquering Mr. Ludolph is a widower, having an only
France. He forms his adherents into a
daughter, Christine, with whom Dennis
The movement attracting falls in love. She treats him contempt-
the attention of the government, soldiers uously at first, but soon discovers his
are sent to demand the surrender of
trained talent for music and knowledge
Valmond and Lagroin. The latter dies
of art. He rises above the slights he
under the fire of their rifles, refusing receives, and makes the impression of a
to the last to wake from his beautiful
nobleman in disguise. Then follow an
dream.
estrangement and a reconciliation. The
«Valmond stood over his body, and
most noteworthy feature of the novel is
drew a pistol.
the striking description of the Chicago
(Surrender, Monsieur! ) said the of-
fire.
ficer, (or we fire! )
(
Never! A Napoleon knows how to Alone, by Mrs. Mary Virginia Terhune
die! ) came the ringing reply, and he (who is better known by her pen-
raised his pistol at the officer.
name, Marian Harland”), was her first
(Fire! ) came the sharp command. novel, and appeared in 1854, when she
"Vive Napoléon! cried the doomed was twenty-four. The scene is laid in
man, and fell, mortally wounded. ” Richmond, Virginia, where Ida Ross, an
Valmond also, refusing to surrender, orphan of fifteen, goes to live with her
is shot. Dying, he confesses that he guardian Mr. Read, and his daughter
was the child of Italian peasants, reared Josephine, a girl of her own age. With
as a page in the house of Prince Lucien the Reads, who are cold, worldly, and
Bonaparte. After his death, however, it reserved, the impulsive and affectionate
is discovered that he was really what Ida is extremely unhappy. Fortunately
he made pretense of being, the son of her life is changed by friendship with a
Napoleon, born at St. Helena.
schoolmate, Carry Carleton. In the well-
bred and kindly households of the Carle-
A"
mber Gods, The, a novel in minia- tons and their relatives, Ida finds friends
ture, by Harriet Prescott Spofford, and lovers. When the girls enter society,
was published in 1863. It is remarkable Josephine becomes jealous of Ida's greater
neither for plot nor for character-draw- attractiveness, chiefly because a certain
ing, but for a magnificent depth and rich- Mr. Lacy falls in love with her. Mis-
ness of color, like a painting by Titian. understandings ensue. Ida gives up her
An amber amulet or rosary, possessing | lover, and returns to the home of her
mysterious influences, gives the title to childhood to devote her life to philan-
thropy. But the misunderstandings are
the story.
## p. 328 (#364) ############################################
328
SYNOPSES OF NOTED BOOKS
name
explained, and the well-disciplined recluse American, The, by Henry James, was
is married to Mr. Lacy. The book had published in 1877. It was the novel-
a very great vogue, and made a reputa- ist's third book of fiction, a volume of short
tion for the author. It is simple in plot, tales and a novel preceding it. The cen-
contains a transcript of every-day life, tral character, Christopher Newman, is
and is deeply religious in tone, but be- a typical product of the United States:
longs to a fashion in fiction which no cool, self-confident, and able, impressing,
longer prevails.
by the force and directness of his nature,
Arm
rmorel of Lyonesse, by Walter Be. all who come in contact with him. Hav-
sant, published in 1884. The scene is ing made his fortune, he is traveling in
the Scilly (or Lyonesse) Isles (twenty-five i Europe for pleasure. He falls in love
miles south of England). Alone on one
with a Parisian lady of noble birth, who
of these (Samson) lives an old woman of
is half English, - Madame de Cintré, a
nearly a hundred, Ursula Rosevean, with
widow; and she comes to care for him
her great-great-great-granddaughter Ar-
enough to disregard the mésalliance, even
morel and the Tryeth family of four. To
to engage herself to him. The obstacles
them come Dick Stephenson and Roland
in the way of their marriage give rise to
Lee, the latter an artist saved from ship- many dramatic incidents.
wreck by Armorel. Roland finds a strong
attraction in Armorel, and remains at the Alton
Iton Locke, by Charles Kingsley, was
islands three weeks. He returns to Lon-
published in 1850, when the author
don, where, later, Armorel is instrumental
was thirty-one. It was his first novel,
and like Yeast, which closely followed
in extricating him from a network of
evil in which he has become involved
it, showed Kingsley's broad humanitarian-
through one false step. The intricacy of
ism, unconventionality, interest in and
sympathy for the wrongs of the English
the plot is worthy of Wilkie Collins.
working classes. It made a great stir,
Sandra Belloni, by George Meredith. . and did much in England to turn the
This musical novel was first pub- thoughts of the upper ranks to their re-
lished in 1864, under the
of sponsibility for the lower. Its hero is a
(Emilia in England. ) The Greek Peri- poet-tailor of a mystic turn - Alton Locke,
cles, ever in search of hidden musical Tailor and Poet, is the full title; he feels
genius, finds it in the voice of Emilia deep in his soul the horrors of the sweat-
Sandra Belloni, while visiting Mr. Pole. ing system and other abuses which grind
Pole has squandered the money held the poor, and devotes himself to their
in trust for Mrs. Chump, a vulgar but amelioration. I am,” he says of him-
kind-hearted widow, and is therefore self, “a Cockney among Cockneys”; he
forced, with his children, to submit to is sketched from his boyhood in a mean,
her attentions. Wilfred Pole, his son, suburban quarter of the city, through his
loves Emilia, but means to marry Lady struggle for education and maintenance,
Charlotte. Discovering this, Emilia which brings him into contact with the
wanders away, loses her voice, and is case of the toiling city masses, to his
rescued from starvation by Merthyr leadership of their cause, his advocacy
Powys, who has long loved her. He of Chartism, and final failure to realize
goes to fight for Italy. The Poles are his dreams. The purity, ideality, and
brought to the verge of ruin by Pericles. altruism of Locke and his friends Cross-
Emilia's voice returns. Pericles saves thwaite, MacKaye, Lady Ellerton, and
the Poles, on her signing an agreement Eleanor, make them inspiring prophets of
to study in Italy for three years and the war of the Emancipation of Labor.
sing in public. Wilfred hears her sing, The story is full of vigorous, earnest, ela
casts off Lady Charlotte who favors the quent preaching, and would now be called
Austrians, and throws himself at Emil- "problem fiction of the frankest sort;
ia's feet. She now realizes his incon- and it is also often dramatic and thrill-
stancy and Merthyr's nobility, writes to ing
the latter that she loves him, and will
be his wife at the end of the three years
Ase
ge of Reason, The, by Thomas Paine,
for which she is pledged.
The story
was first published in a complete
contains all of Meredith's marked man-
edition on October 25th, 1795.
nerisms; but also flashes with wit, and is the First Part appeared, but no copy
full of life and vivacity.
bearing that date can be found.
