view and French and American practitioners, but I never comparatively scarce; but that they are plentiful saw the man so altogether admirable at the bedside enough, if men gave greater heed to their psychic of the sick as Dr. James Jackson.” As able in powers, to supply us with a larger number of lasting administration and in teaching as in practice, Dr. and suggestive types of singers than we now possess. Jackson was one of the founders of the Massa The singing instinct is more general, and musical chusetts General Hospital, and the first to occupy ability more latently plentiful, than many of us the chair of clinical medicine in the Harvard Med- | imagine, as witness the behavior of an audience ical School. Dr. Putnam's Memoir is in many under the influence of a Reeves or a Joachim. And respects an ideal biography, not only because it the germ being there, the step between appreciation presents a most attractive character satisfactorily, and performance is not insurmountable. Given a but because it makes the background of people and fairly keen sense of pitch and rhythm, — in other places, from which that character emerged, just words, modest musical intuition and capacity for clear enough. About one third of the volume is de work, — and singing becomes a mere matter of voted to Dr. Jackson's ancestors and brothers, a pro- practical development, under the guidance of lin- portion not too large in view of the important part guistic and imaginative thought. The strongest they played in the early history of Massachusetts. recommendation which Mr. Davies makes as the ideal of the singer is to strive for mastery over all types of The idolatry Dr. Washington Gladden's latest book human expression, with verisimilitude as the guiding “The New Idolatry” (McClure, Phil- principle. This implies that voice culture cannot be lips & Co.) is "a volume of discussions regarded as something apart from general culture ; in protest against the commercializing of government, and the singer who would satisfy the highest demands of education, and of religion; against the growing of his profession should not confine his study within tendency in Church and State to worship power and the bounds of the art to which he is primarily devoted. forget the interests of justice and freedom; against The artist should not beguile his audience with lovely the dethronement of God and the enthronement and sensuous tone merely because the power happens of Mammon." The author's ideas are elaborated to be within his natural gifts, - he should not over- under such headings as “Tainted Money," "Shall awe with physical prowess to the detriment of lin- Ill-gotten Gains be Sought for Christian Purposes ?” | guistic purity. One notices the touch of sincerity “Standard Oil and the Christian Missions," "The in Mr. Davies's work, and his chapters on Tone, Ethics of Luxurious Expenditure,” etc. Those who “ Breathing,” and “Style” may be profitably read know Dr. Gladden's way of dealing with great ques- by musicians as well as singers. tions of social morality will not expect, on finishing this book, to be left in any doubt as to his meaning The person of sensibility who could or his position, so lucid and trenchant is the style, history of an remain unmoved by the picturesque so fearless and uncompromising the spirit of the Italian valley. charm, the historic association, the His present message, however needed, is not artistic treasures, and the religious history of the For many years past, from his pulpit Casentino, would doubtless be hard to find. But and church-tower study in the city of Columbus, his harder still to discover is the pen that could do ringing words have sped through the land, and have justice to that poetic valley. Miss Ella Noyes, in fought a good fight. The second paper, “Tainted her book called “The Casentino and its Story” Money,” as he quietly reminds his readers, was pub- (Dutton) is not lacking in the enthusiasm that all lished in “ The Outlook" in November, 1895. The but the insensate must feel an enthusiasm that Rights and Duties” was a Commencement has led her to make most careful exploration, patient address delivered at the University of Michigan in investigation, and loving exposition of the scenes and 1902. Another, on “The New Century and the memories of the favored region. Unfortunately, this New Nation,” bears date of 1900. Most of them enthusiasm, and the luxury of indulging a very lively his parishioners have, sooner or later, heard as ser historic imagination, have betrayed the author into mons; and they can testify to the profound impres- generalizations and theories that a scientific analysis sion made by these utterances, when moulded into of history will not always justify; and her descrip- oral form by a rich, persuasive voice, and weighted / tions of scenery have an exuberance that detracts of wealth in America. Romance and man. a new one. one on 132 [Feb. 16, THE DIAL scene a Shall the earth habitable ! somewhat from their descriptive value. To cover in monwealth that grew out of the combination was a volume of 323 pages one of the most picturesque necessarily individualistic. From the days of Roger valleys of Italy, which is at the same time a great Williams down to recent times, separatism has been religious centre both past and present, the of a marked characteristic of the little state. The part of the exile of Italy's greatest poet as well as result of this has been a history full of internal strife the former home of some of the most important and of opposition to national tendencies. There was families in Tuscan Middle Age history, is no light much that was selfish and mean in these struggles, task. Perhaps we should not be surprised that the so that the state was a thorn in the side of the states- charcoal-burners, who are among the chief charms men who were building up the nation. But Rhode of the modern Casentino, are dismissed with only Island history has also its glories, the greatest being casual mention in two places in the text. In view its consistent policy of religious toleration when the of the difficulty of portraying the Casentino ade world was intolerant. This history has been written quately in words, one is grateful to find the pen so anew by Mr. Irving E. Richman for the “American artistically supplemented by the brush. Miss Dora Commonwealths” series (Houghton, Mifflin & Co.). Noyes's illustrations, twenty-five in color and twenty- While the book is loaded with names unimportant to four line, really are illustrations, for they give an the general reader, still the main points of the his- accurate idea of the country; but they are also much tory are clearly brought out, and the volume is a more than mere illustrations, for they have poetic compact and useful summary. feeling and imagination, and they add materially to the charm of the volume. “Il Libro D'Oro of those whose Legends of the Names are Written in the Lamb's Italian saints. A great deal has been written in Book of Life" is the curious title of be kept still regard to man's duty toward the a curious piece of translation from the Italian, done future State and the citizens thereof. by Mrs. Francis Alexander. It consists of a mass The rights of the child, the rights of the commu of miracle stories and sacred legends written by the nity, the rights of art, have all been discussed, with fathers of the Church and published in Italy in reference not only to the needs of the present gen the sixteenth, seventeenth, and eighteenth centuries. eration but of those to come. The factor that is The collection is made up from four sources : “Selec- least considered is the earth itself, and our obliga- tions from the Lives of the Holy Fathers, together tions toward a proper husbanding of its resources. with the Spiritual Field," dated Venice, 1623; Nothing in law or economics can have a more impor “Selections from the Lives of the Saints and Beati tant bearing on the welfare of posterity than mate of Tuscany,” Florence, 1627 ; " Selections from the rial conditions, the soil, the sea, the mines, from Wonders of God in His Saints,” Bologna, 1593; which are drawn in various ways most of the power and Flowers of Sanctity," Venice, 1726. The and subsistence necessary to the life of man. Yet extracts generally take the form of brief narratives, the duty that one generation owes to another in the each having a title of its own. As a whole, the matter of the proper fertilization of agricultural book will undoubtedly appeal to a limited and defi- lands, the preservation of forests, economical meth nite class of readers, but the legends are picturesque ods of mining, careful regard for the life-habits of enough to make a casual dipping into the treasures fishes and game, is seldom urged. This duty is the of the book decidedly pleasurable. The English theme of Professor Nathaniel Shaler's latest book, rendering of the text is simple and graceful. Messrs. which he calls “Man and the Earth” (Fox, Duf- Little, Brown, & Co. publish the book in attractive field & Co.). It is impossible to support theories as outward form. to future conditions of land and sea by statistics, because of the varying processes governing these conditions. But Professor Shaler, with his wide NOTES. knowledge of natural sciences, is in the best possible “ The Life of Christ," by Dr. Alexander Stewart, is position to draw conclusions from existing states. a new volume in the “ Temple Series of Bible Hand- As a result, he has written an interesting little book, books,” published by the Messrs. Lippincott. which will repay reading, and which, it is to be A monograph “On the Limits of Descriptive Writ- hoped, will result in directing attention to the vital ing apropos of Lessing's Laocoön,” by Professor Frank subject of which it treats. Egbert Bryant, is a recent pamphlet publication of the Ann Arbor Press. The history of our smallest common- In the Englische Textbibliothek (Heidelberg : The history of wealth has been a stormy one, owing Winter), we have an edition of Longfellow's " Evan- largely to the peculiar ideas of its geline,” edited by Dr. Ernst Sieper. The editorial appa- founders and the circumstances of its founding. ratus is very full, and includes a valuable “Geschichte Rhode Island was the refuge of those New England der Englischen Hexameters." Four new volumes in the “ English Classics” of men and women who were so extreme in their views Messrs. Longmans, Green, & Co. are the following: and positions that they were driven out of the other Irving's “Sketch Book,” edited by Professor Brander colonies. It was largely a collection of idealists, Matthews and Mr. Armour Caldwell ; Mrs. Gaskell's cranks, and enthusiasts ; and the policy of the com Cranford,” edited by Professor Franklin T. Baker ; 66 our smallest commonwealth. 1906.] 133 THE DIAL Franklin's “Autobiography," edited by Professor same for both volumes, and consists of a carefully- William B. Cairns ; and “Select Poems of Robert written critical and biographical study, besides a chrono- Browning,” edited by Mr. Percival Chubb. logical index. There are eighty selections in all, forty “ The Place of Magic in the Intellectual History of for each volume. Six are from “Messiah," and five Europe," by Dr. Lynn Thorndike, is an interesting each from “Samson” and “Judas Maccabæas.” Vocal- monograph in the historical series of Columbia Uni ists will be most grateful for the operatic arias, which versity publications. are far less accessible than the numbers representing “Milton's Ode on the Morning of Christ's Nativity,” the oratorios. with an introduction by Dr. Glen Levin Swiggett, is a A most interesting and important publishing enter- very pretty booklet published in a limited edition at prise is announced by Messrs. E. P. Dutton & Co. in the University Press of Sewanee, Tennessee. conjunction with Messrs. Dent of London. This is a “ A Check List of Mammals of the North American series of reprints, under the general title of “Every- Continent, the West Indies, and the Neighboring Seas,” man's Library,” of the great books in every department prepared by Dr. Daniel Giraud Elliot, is a recent publi- of literature, carefully edited, handsomely printed cation of the Field Columbian Museum. It is a work and bound, and sold at the low price of fifty cents a of over seven hundred pages, recording upwards of volume. Mr. Ernest Rhys is general editor of the thirteen hundred species. series, and critical introductions to the various volumes “ Studies in Moro History, Law, and Religion," by will be supplied by such writers as Augustine Birrell, Mr. Najeeb M. Saleeby, is a pamphlet publication of Andrew Lang, Lord Avebury, A. C. Swinburne, G. K. the United States Ethnological Survey printed at Ma- Chesterton, Herbert Paul, Theodore Watts-Dunton, nila. Another number of this series contains « The Richard Garnett, Hilaire Belloc, and George Saints- Naboloi Dialect,” by Mr. Otto Scheerer, and “The bury. That the mechanical form of the volumes will Bataks of Palawan," by Mr. Edward Y. Miller. be the best that modern methods of printing, paper- Inaugural Addresses of the Presidents of the United making, and binding can produce is assured by Mr. States from Johnson to Roosevelt,” edited by Mr. John Dent's connection with the plan. The series is to be Vance Cheney, is published by Messrs. R. R. Donnelley published in quarterly instalments of about fifty vol- & Sons, Chicago, as the third volume of their “ Lake- umes each, the first of which will appear next month. side Classics.” The preceding volume, it will be re- We trust this undertaking will meet the wide popular success that it is sure to deserve. membered, reprinted the inaugural addresses from Washington to Lincoln. Two new volumes in the Astronomical Series of University of Pennsylvania publications give us the LIST OF NEW BOOKS. results of two years' observation with the Zenith Tele- [The following list, containing 57 titles, includes books scope of the Flower Observatory, and the measure of received by THE DIAL since its last issue.] 1066 double and multiple stars. For the first-named series of observations Mr. Charles L. Doolittle is respon- BIOGRAPHY AND REMINISCENCES. sible; for the other, Mr. Eric Doolittle. Mary Queen of Scots: Her Environment and Tragedy. By T. F. Henderson. In 2 vols., illus. in photogravure, etc., Of the three papers included in the October - Uni- large 8vo, gilt tops. Charles Scribner's Sons. $6. net. versity Studies” of the University of Nebraska, the one The Life of Queen Henrietta Maria By I. A. Taylor. that is of most interest to our readers is that in which Second edition; in 2 vols., illus. in photogravure, etc., large Professor C. W. Wallace prints and discusses certain 8vo, gilt tops. E. P.'Dutton & Co. $7.50 net. “ Newly-Discovered Shakespeare Documents." The Descartes : His Life and Times. By Elizabeth S. Haldane. Illus. in photogravure, etc., large 8vo, gilt top, pp. 398. E.P. documents are three in number, and of a legal character. Dutton & Co. $4.50 net. They were found by Professor Wallace in the archives Days of the Past: A Medley of Memories. By Alexander of the Public Record Office. Innes Shand. Large 8vo, gilt top, pp. 319. E. P. Dutton & Co. $3. net. Tennyson's “ In Memoriam," published in something Russell Wheeler Davenport : Father of Rowing at Yale. like “Golden Treasury" garb by the Macmillan Co., is Maker of Guns and Armor Plate. With photogravure an edition “ annotated by the author.” This means, in portrait, large 8vo, gilt top, pp. 79. G. P. Putnam's Sons. the words of the present Lord Tennyson, that the $1. 25 net. “notes were left by my father partly in his own hand- Chopin: As Revealed by Extracts from his Diary. By Count Stanilas Tarnowski; trans. from the Polish by Natalie writing, and partly dictated to me. Since there are Janotha; edited by J. T. Tanqueray. Hlus., 16mo, pp. 69. some twenty-five pages of them, they are a valuable Charles Scribner's Sons. $1. net. addition to our apparatus for the study of the poem, HISTORY. and will serve to decide many a disputed point. A A History of the Inquisition of Spain. By Henry Charles lengthy introduction by the poet's son is also included, Lea, LL.D. Vol. I., large 8vo, gilt top, pp. 620. Macmillan embodying the opinions of several of Tennyson's most Co. $2.50 net. famous contemporaries, and giving a fairly clear state- Ancient Records of Egypt: Historical Documents from the Earliest Times to the Persian Conquest. Collected, edited, ment of his religious attitude. It will be evident from and translated, with commentary, by James Henry Breasted, our description that this is a very precious little book. Ph.D. Vol. I., The First to the Seventeenth Dynasties. Large “ The Musician's Library,” published by the Oliver 8vo, uncut, pp. 344. University of Chicago Press. $3. net. The Russian Court in the Eighteenth Century. By Fitz- Ditson Co., grows apace. It now numbers a score of gerald Molloy. In 2 vols., illus. in photogravure, etc., large volumes, about equally divided between compositions 8vo, gilt tops. Charles Scribner's Sons. $6. net. for voice and for piano. The latest of these volumes England under the Normans and Angevins, 1066-1272. are two containing “ Songs and Airs by George Frideric By H. W. C. Davis. Large 8vo, gilt top, uncut, pp. 577. G.P.' Händel,” edited by. Mr. Ebenezer Prout. The first Putnam's Sons. $3. net. A History of the United States. By Elroy McKendree volume contains pieces for high voice, and the second Avery. Vol. II., illus. in color, etc., large 8vo, gilt top, uncut, pieces for low voice. The introductory matter is the pp. 458. Burrows Bros. Co. 134 [Feb. 16, THE DIAL American Political History, 1763-1876. By Alexander John- ston; edited and supplemented by James Albert Woodburn. Part II., 1820-76. 8vo, pp. 598. G. P. Putnam's Sons. $2. net. The Best Address Ever Made: An Exposition of the Fif- teenth Chapter of Luke. By Rev. Rhys R. Lloyd, M.A. 24mo, pp. 47. Chicago: Hays-Cushman Co. 25 cts. GENERAL LITERATURE. The Development of the Feeling for Nature in the Middle Ages and Modern Times. By Alfred Biese. 12mo, pp. 376. E. P. Dutton & Co. $2. net. The Building of the City Beautiful. By Joaquin Miller. With photogravure frontispiece, 16mo, gilt top, uncut, pp. 243. Trenton: Albert Brandt. $1.50 net. The Miracles of Our Lady Saint Mary. Brought out of divers tongues and newly set forth in English by Evelyn Underhill. With photogravure frontispiece, 8vo, uncut, pp. 308. E. P. Dutton & Co. $2. net. Hymn Treasures. By Grace Morrison Everett. 12mo, gilt top, pp. 183. Jennings & Graham. $1.25. ART AND MUSIC. Etchings of Charles Meryon. Text by Hugh Stokes. Illus., 4to. "The Master Etchers." Charles Scribner's Sons. $2.50 net. Old Pewter. By Malcolm Bell. Tlus., 8vo, gilt top. pp. 186. "Newnes' Library of the Applied Arts." Charles Scribner's Sons. $2.50 net. Henry Moore, R.A. By Frank Maclean. Illus. in photo- gravure, etc., 12mo, gilt top, uncut, pp. 215. Charles Scrib- ner's Sons. $1.25 net. The Pre-Raphaelite Brotherhood. Text by J. Ernest Phythian. Illus. in photogravure, etc., large 8vo, pp. 76. "Newnes’ Art Library.” Frederick Warne & Co. $1.25. The Deeper Sources of the Beauty and Expression of Music. By Joseph Goddard. 16mo, pp. 119. Charles Scrib- ner's Sons. $1.25 net. James McNeill Whistler. By H. W. Singer. Illus., 18mo, gilt top, pp. 83. “Langham Monographs.” Charles Scrib- ner's Sons. Leather, $1. net. 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Such work, said George William Curtis, is “done as it should be by The Easy Chair's friend and fellow laborer in letters, Dr. Titus M. Coan." Terms by agreement. Send for circular D, or forward your book or MS. to the New York Bureau of Revision, 70 Fifth Ave., New York. uthors gency FIFTEENTH YEAR. Candid, suggestive Criticism, literary and technical Re- vision, Advice, Disposal. MSS. of all kinds. Instruction. REFERENCES: Mrs. Burton Harrison, W.D. Howells, Mrs. Julia Ward Howe, Thomas Nelson Page, Mrs. Mary E. Wilkins Freeman, and others. Send stamp for Booklet to WM. A. DRESSER, R. 7, 400 Broadway, Cambridge, Mass. Mention The Dial. 1906.] 135 THE DIAL VALUABLE COLLECTION THREE FAST Callfornia Trains BOOKS AT AUCTION MONDAY AND TUESDAY, FEB. 26 AND 27 We sell a well and carefully selected PRIVATE LIBRARY daily, via the Chicago, Union Pacific & North-Western Line, over the only double track railway between Chicago and the Missouri River. 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Beginning Feb. 19-Second and Last Week of The Paul Orleneff Russian Players THE COMPLETE WRITINGS OF ALFRED DE MUSSET Illustrated, large paper edition, in Ten Volumes. “A writer who has endowed our language with admirable poetry, the brother of Lamartine, of Hugo, and of Byron, a novelist rivaling Prevost, Balzac, and George Sand; a dramatist who, in one act, has made the Comedie Française earn more money than we give it in six months; one of those thinkers who has never once sacrificed the dignity of art to the ambitions of fortune and position." ALEXANDRE DUMAS. BOOKLET MAILED ON APPLICATION EDWIN C. HILL COMPANY 160 FIFTH AVENUE NEW YORK CITY WILLIAM R. JENKINS FRENCH 851 and 853 Sixth Avenue (cor. 48th Street) New York No branch storos READ OUR ROMANS CHOISIS SERIES 26 Titles. Paper 60c., cloth 85c. vol. CONTES CHOISIS SERIES and other foreign 24 Titles. Paper 26c., cloth 40c. vol. Masterpieces, puro, by well-known authors. Road extensively by olassos; notes in English. List, also catalogue of all publications and imported books, on application. BOOKS Importing Notice WE beg to announce that we have greatly extended our facilities for the importation of English books, so that we now are equipped to fill orders of this sort with the greatest efficiency and intelligence. Promptness, good service, and low prices will rule in this department, as they do in all our business. STUDY AND PRACTICE OF FRENCH in 4 Parts L C. Bonans, Author and Pub., 1930 Chestnut St., Philadelphia, Pa. Well-graded series for Preparatory Schools and Colleges. No time wasted in superficial or mechanical work. French Tezi: Numerous exercises in conversation, translation, composition. Part I. (60 cts.): Primary grade; thorough drill in Pronunciation. Part II. (90 cta.): Intermediate grade ; Essentials of Grammar i 4th edition, revised, with Vocabulary : most carefully graded. Part III. ($1.00): Composition, Idioms, Syntax; meets requirements for admission to college. Part IV. 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CHICAGO, MARCH 1, 1906. 10 cts. a copy. $2. a year. { FINE ARTS BUILDING 203 Michigan Blvd. MARCH PUBLICATIONS LINCOLN: MASTER OF MEN By ALONZO ROTHSCHILD THIS keen and brilliant study of Lincoln's character differs from the work of his other biographers by aiming to concentrate the reader's attention on the one element in his personality which continually grows in significance as time goes by. This is his mastery over different types of men, as well as over himself. The eight chapters take up successively his physical, intellectual, and early political prowess; and his relations with Douglas, Seward, Chase, Stanton, Frémont, and McClellan. The book is intended for popular reading, but it will be valuable for the student on account of its notes and bibliography, which are probably the fullest and most complete yet published. Each chapter is prefaced by a portrait of the character under discussion. Large crown 8vo, $3.00 net. Postage extra. 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HOUGHTON, MIFFLIN & COMPANY, BOSTON AND NEW YORK 138 [March 1, THE DIAL THE “MAGAZINE PROBLEM” SOLVED What's in the Magazines YEARLY SUBSCRIPTION FIFTY CENTS SINGLE COPIES FIVE CENTS A Guide and Index to the Contents of the Current Periodicals Published Monthly by The Dial Company Chicago (It is the purpose of this little publication to make the mass of current magazine literature accessible to the every-day reader, — to show just what the leading periodicals contain and to indicate the general character and scope of the principal articles. It is not a library index, — there are no confusing abbreviations or cross-references. The arrangement is of the simplest and most convenient sort, to meet the needs of the average busy reader. Each issue presents a bird's-eye view of the magazines of the month, that will give one in five minutes the information hitherto to be obtained only by long and tedious examination of contents-pages on the news-stands. 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Cloth, xvii. +357 pages, with 32 full-page illustrations, $1.50 net (postage 13 cts.) THE MACMILLAN COMPANY, PUBLISHERS, 64-66 FIFTH AVE., NEW YORK THE DIAL A Semi- Monthly Journal of Literary Criticism, Discussion, and Information. ENTERED AT THE CHICAGO POSTOFFICE AS SECOND-CLASS MATTER BY THE DIAL COMPANY, PUBLISHERS. PAGE . . . . . . THE DIAL (founded in 1880) is published on the 181 and 16th of each month. TERMS OF SUBSCRIPTION, $2. a vear in advance, THE NOVEL AT THE BAR. postage prepaid in the United States, Canada, and Mexico; in other countries comprised in the Postal Union, 50 cents a Mr. Richard Bagot, an English novelist of year for extra postage must be added. REMITTANCES should conscientious industry and creditable perform- be by check, or by express or postal order, payable to THE DIAL COMPANY. Unless otherwise ordered, subscriptions ance, has made the February “Nineteenth Cen- will begin with the current number. When no direct request to discontinue at expiration of subscription is received, it is tury” the vehicle of certain reflections upon the assumed that a continuance of the subscription is desired. present condition of literary criticism as it affects ADVERTISING RATES furnished on application. All communi- cations should be addressed to the writer of fiction. He finds that condition to THE DIAL, Fine Arts Building, Chicago. be extremely unsatisfactory, and makes tenta- tive suggestion of a corrective for its obvious shortcomings. Since the conditions he describes No. 473. MARCH 1, 1906. Vol. XL. obtain quite as noticeably on this side of the water as on the other, his article should provę CONTENTS. equally interesting to both American and En- glish readers. THE NOVEL AT THE BAR 141 He calls attention, to begin with, to the con- COMMUNICATION 143 tradictory character of the reviewing of current Late Discussions of the War of 1812. F.H. Costello. fiction. It is quite common for a novel to run THE REAL AND THE IDEAL WHITMAN. Percy the whole gamut of criticism from highest praise F. Bicknell. 144 to severest censure, when in all probability the MAIN CURRENTS IN SOCIOLOGICAL THEORY. Frank W. Blackmar 146 book is just an ordinary ephemeral production, deserving of neither extreme, but simply calling SHAKESPEAREAN TABLE-TALK. Edward E. Hale, Jr. 148 for a few words of classification and illustrative ALABAMA IN WAR-TIME AND AFTER. James comment. Sometimes, as in a case cited from Wilford Garner 150 his own recent experience, the novelist has the PRECEPTS FOR THE YOUNG, AND REFLEC malicious satisfaction of finding both kinds of TIONS FOR THE OLD. T. D. A. Cockerell 151 estimates in different issues of the same journal. RECENT FICTION. William Morton Payne .. 153 Thus, even if he pins his faith to some particular Merejkowski's Peter and Alexis. - Sienkiewicz's On the field of Glory. — Gasiorowski's Napoleon's organ of literary opinion, his confidence is liable Love Story. — Crockett's The Scarlet Ribband. to be shaken by the rudest of shocks. And in Oppenheim's A Maker of History. - Legge's The any case, “the perplexed novelist is liable to Ford. - Mr. and Mrs. Williamson's My Friend the Chauffeur.- Maxwell's Vivian.—“Maxwell Gray's" read in one leading organ that he has written The Great Refusal. – Tarkington's The Conquest a work which places him in the front rank of of Canaan.- Nicholson's The House of a Thousand living writers of fiction, and in another that he Candles. — Hough's Heart's Desire. — Dix's The Fair Maid of Graystones. - Ellis's Barbara Wins is ignorant of the very rudiments of the art of low, Rebel. — Glasgow's The Wheel of Life. novel-writing.” It is a hard problem. The nov- BRIEFS ON NEW BOOKS 156 elist himself may lay to his soul the flattering “Lone mother of dead empires." - The foremost unction of the laudatory judgment, although he English thinker from Bacon to Hume. ---Literary Germany in the early 19th century. — Louisiana as will hardly do so without some misgivings, but an American commonwealth. -- A good popular in the reader in search of light will not know what troduction to the art of Giotto. English life and to think. ways in Jane Austen's time. — More of Mr. Birrell's essays. — Improving the workingman's surround Another very evident defect in the reviewing ings. — A dictionary of famous Americans. Some of fiction is that the criticism so often comes American women of a by-gone day. from persons having no familiarity with the BRIEFER MENTION 160 subject-matter of the work criticised. “A novel NOTES 161 | dealing, we will say, with foreign life is reviewed TOPICS IN LEADING PERIODICALS perhaps by a critic who has no knowledge of LIST OF NEW BOOKS 162 the people and the country in which the scene . . . . 142 [March 1, THE DIAL be of the book in question is laid. How, it may press," he asks, “should agree to ignore all asked, is such a critic to be a sound and reliable works of fiction sent in for review which did not guide either to author or public?” How, indeed! | bring with them to the editorial offices a guar- And to what confusion worse confounded are antee that they had duly passed an initial stage we led when a novelist describes some phase of of examination, and had been declared worthy of life with which he has himself no intimate ac the notice of the journalistic critic? And what quaintance, and his work is then reviewed by a if the circulating libraries declined to subscribe critic whose knowledge of the subject is even to any but works of fiction thus hallmarked? more superficial! Thè “society” novel offers the It might, I think, reasonably be supposed that most obvious example of this condition of things. some such purifying process as this would tend Some portrayal of smart life is described by the considerably to reduce the flood of undesirable reviewers as a brilliant social satire or as a new matter; that it would diminish the work of the “Vanity Fair,” and the writers of such books reviewer; and that the art of the novelist and “are supposed by the outside public to know the taste and literary discernment of the novel- intimately that society of which they write with reading public would gradually be raised.” such assurance.” 6 But how many critics are Having made this suggestion, Mr. Bagot pro- there," asks Mr. Bagot,“who can boldly tell the ceeds to enlarge upon the benefits, to both distinguished author that he or she, has made authors and readers, that might follow in the well-bred people say, do, and think things en train of its adoption. He develops the argu- tirely foreign to their nature and caste tradi- ment with caution, but with a very evident tions?” prepossession in favor of some such method That such defects as have above been indi as a means of stemming the flood of worthless cated, and many others as glaring, characterize fiction and of giving the novelist himself a most current criticism of fiction, is a fact too kind of counsel of which he often stands in apparent to need demonstration. And the rea dire need. sons are equally apparent. To make a truly We can imagine the outcry of the amateur intelligent estimate of even a novel requires novelist, and of the professional sensation- ability of a sort so rare and valuable as to be at monger, at any such suggestion of a “ trust ”in the command of very few newspapers or other literary criticism. And the question of quis periodicals, it also demands an amount of space custodiet custodes could be very effectively that cannot possibly be devoted to any single raised by such a proposal. Originality, and book of the class that numbers its thousands even genius, might possibly for a time be sup- yearly. The problem set the average reviewer pressed by the operation of such a plan, but we of the average novel is simply this: What is cannot believe that in the long run it would the most profitable employment I may make of not work more good than harm. The difficulty, the two hours and the two hundred words which of course, would lie in the constitution of the are all I can give to this book ? A personal im tribunal organized for this judicial sifting of pression, a bit of description or classification, an the tares from the wheat. To accept the re- indication of some salient feature, and a word sponsibilities of a Rhadamanthus in this matter two about the workmanship are all that may be would be to accept a thankless task, and one attempted under the narrow conditions imposed. certain to entail much discomfort upon the in- Reviewing done subject to those limitations will cumbent. The rage of the rejected would be have weight in proportion to the ability and anything but celestial, and would be declared knowledge of the reviewer -and the brief para in a manner both personal and pointed. Mr. graph may often be surprisingly weighty — but Bagot appreciates the difficulty of the problem, of course it will be anything but adequate to the and it is with no little diffidence that he pro- claims of any book that really calls for serious poses his press-constituted academy. But the consideration. experiment is not beyond the range of possibil- Mr. Bagot, taking his cue from French prac-ity, and the library profession is already looking tices, from the positive fact of French official for some way of trying it. Certainly the long- criticism and the negative fact that the French suffering public, now misled by so many blind press does not, as a rule, attempt to review the guides, deserves to have its interests protected whole output of current fiction, ventures a sug- by the critical guild more effectively than they gestion which, while it offers great difficulties are at present protected, and no suggestion on the practical side, is at least interesting and aiming at so praiseworthy an end should fail of worthy of consideration. “What if the entire being examined with due deliberation. or 1906.] 143 THE DIAL one, in part admits this. He says: “From September COMMUNICATION. 30, 1813, . . . to the corresponding date in 1814, there were captured by American cruisers 639 vessels, chiefly LATE DISCUSSIONS OF THE WAR OF 1812. merchantmen; a number that had increased to over (To the Editor of THE DIAL.) a thousand when the war ended the following winter.” In reading the review of Captain Mahan's “Sea He further goes on to estimate that fully 424 of these Power and the War of 1812," in a recent number of prizes were taken in foreign seas. He says, however, that THE DIAL, I notice what seems to me the omission of we had lost more vessels relatively by capture than the an important fact, and one that is none too prominently enemy; but he then goes on to say: “ Her cruisers [i. e., brought out in the book itself. There is, however, some the Ủ. S. cruisers] were causing exaggerated anxiety discussion of it in the book, and it seems to me that it concerning the intercourse between Great Britain and should have had a place in the review. It is the fact Ireland, which, though certainly molested, was not of the chief cause that led Great Britain to make such seriously interrupted.” It will be observed that he does favorable terms with us in ending the war. not minimize the effect that even an exaggerated fear That our land force in spite of the almost marvellous might have in influencing the course of the enemy so incapacity of the commanding generals and the blunder alarmed. By the word “cruisers ” is of course to be ing and short-sightedness of the Washington government understood chiefly privateers. The small number of (and of Jefferson previously), finally did some fairly good vessels in our regular navy has already been spoken of. work, is true; and certainly our navy, considering how it But it has been said that all sorts of food-stuffs went was neglected at the start, was splendidly efficient. But up greatly in price in this country after the additional when all of this is considered there is still not enough to British war-ships came over, so that we were in fully as account for the result - for the readiness with which great straits as English subjects in this regard, and Great Britain made peace. It will of course be borne in that therefore Great Britain had still an advantage. mind that her great defeat at New Orleans — the defeat We only need to look at this statement for a moment to that ruined her most promising plan was not known see where the truth lies. We had a great and prolific when she so readily entered into the arrangements for territory from which to obtain all necessary foods; Eng- peace. Then what was the cause? It was not the land had to import a great deal of what she used, and problem of Napoleon,— he was defeated; and though the wages and other incomes of those who must pur- England's expenses for the recent wars were heavy, her chase were very low. At that time the whole of England, opportunity was good for getting a large part of it back if divided equally amongst the people, would have given from us. Russia, our friend, was certainly not in shape but a very few acres to each person — probably not more to go to war with the first sea power in the world to than five or six ; yet several great noblemen owned as help us. There was just as certainly no other power to many as ten to twenty thousand acres each, and a con- attempt it, even had there been another as friendly. siderable part of this was not under cultivation. In this But if Great Britain could hope to recoup herself country we had hardly settled or cultivated beyond our from our lands and goods, was she in military shape to mere borders, and there was land by the million acres to go on? She was at the height of her military power. be had almost for nothing. Wellington's veterans were out of the Peninsula, other But let us glance for a moment at some actual figures forces had been organized, and there was sufficient money of prices in England about this time. I quote from in the war-chest for immediate purposes. And on the « The American Merchant Marine,” though the figures sea Great Britain stood as she had never stood before, have been published elsewhere. The work mentioned and probably never will stand again. She numbered says: “ In June 1813 the British people were paying the her war-craft by the hundreds, and after the French famine prices of $58 a barrel for flour, $38 for beef, shadow had been lifted she had more than two hundred and $36 for pork, while lumber cost $72 per thousand. vessels to send to our coasts. We had four large It was this economic distress, more than our brilliant frigates, and not a ship larger, and had mustered just victories in a dozen naval duels, that brought Great seventeen fighting vessels at the beginning of the war. Britain at last to terms.” Here we have the story. Before the negotiations Ghent the larger number of Then shall we not still feel pride in our work in the our stronger vessels were taken or blockaded in port. War of 1812 ? We fought for our rights, we fought Of our four large frigates, the “ Constitution” alone kept hard, and we won in the only way that we could have the seas. True, as Captain Mahan points out, and your And be it remembered that these privateers reviewer does not, before our little navy was so nearly whose work was so effective were not semi-pirates, like crushed it had struck heavy financial blows at the enemy. some that had been sent to sea by other countries: they This, indeed, with the possible exception of the victory sailed under regular letters of marque; they were ex- on Lake Champlain, was its most formidable and telling pected to observe all the rules of civilized warfare, and work. It was the work that Great Britain most seriously did observe them; and, finally, they often met and over- felt. Her vulnerable point was not her body, but her came vessels supposedly larger and stronger than them- pocket. Porter, in the little “Essex,” before he was selves, including some regular naval vessels. captured, did more to harm the enemy and to help our There is somewhat of a tendency (perhaps the result cause than all our brilliant single-ship actions put to in part of reaction) to belittle our work in the War of gether. He practically destroyed the British whaling 1812. It is aided, doubtless, by some books now in use interests in the Pacific. in our schools and colleges that give wholly the British And now we are prepared to answer the question:- side of the contest; the writer is prepared to quote What led Great Britain to consent to peace-terms so chapter and verse in support of this statement. Let us favorable to us? The answer is: it was the work of our not allow the pendulum to swing too far the other way; privateers. Even Captain Mahan, who naturally has let us try to keep within the limits of truth. a relatively high regard for the regular service, and is F. H. COSTELLO. not inclined to place a great value upon an irregular Bangor, Maine, February 21, 1906. won. 144 [March 1, THE DIAL The New Books. many of the letters revert, almost of necessity, to the old theme of the Whitmanism of Whit- man, and, in particular, to the “priapism,” as THE REAL AND THE IDEAL WHITMAN.* Emerson once rather harshly called it, of certain It is fourteen years since Walt Whitman died, passages in his poems. To the familiar defense, and no full and formal biography of him has yet and the only defense,- the alleged harmlessness appeared, unless we regard as such Mr. Henry of all things to those who are themselves inno- Bryan Binns’s recently-issued work, which mod-cent, — most of us must sorrowfully shake our estly disclaims all pretensions to being either a heads and acknowledge our inability to make definitive biography or a critical study. The adequate reply. In halting and contrite accents author, an Englishman, rightly looks to America we can only confess that such a state of blame- to produce the final and complete life of this lessness is more than we can attain unto; or, eminently American poet. Mr. Horace Traubel's rather, it is a paradisaic condition from which memoirs of Whitman, “ With Walt Whitman we have long ago fallen. Sin, no more than in Camden,” extend over a period of less than disease, will be vanquished by denying its exist- four months, and obviously make no claim to ence. Not that Whitman makes any such denial anything like biographical completeness. They in words ; it is his whole attitude that impresses give us, in a good-sized octavo volume, rough one as a sort of bold-faced refusal to see aught notes of talks with Whitman, as thrown on paper but glad sunshine and smiling fields where from day to day, together with many letters of others take anxious note of threatening thunder- the period, or of an earlier time, addressed to clouds on the distant horizon and detect treach- Whitman. The whole book, unstudied and erous quagmires beneath the fair appearance of unpolished, conveys a realistic impression of the flowery verdure. The very first page of Mr. Trau- poet and the man, such as only a devoted Bos- bel's book shows us Whitman's determination to well is able to give. find in nature only what he sets out to find. Mr. Traubel is well styled by Mr. Binns « W. handed me a leaf from The Christian Union " the old poet's spiritual son.” Knowing and containing an article by Munger on Personal Purity, in loving Whitman longer than he could distinctly by the Walt Whitman fallacy that all nature and all which this is said : Do not suffer yourself to be caught remember, it was he who held Whitman's hand processes of nature are sacred and may therefore be in his own when the old man drew his last breath talked about. Walt Whitman is not a true poet in this in the little house in Mickle Street, Camden. respect, or he would have scanned nature more accu- He was named in the poet's will as one of his rately. Nature is silent and shy where he is loud and bold. Now,' W. quietly remarked, Munger is all literary executors; he was active in organizing right, but he is also all wrong. If Munger had written the Walt Whitman Fellowship, of wbich he is Leaves of Grass that's what nature would have written secretary; and it is probably his pen and voice, through Munger. But nature was writing through more than any other man's, that have kept Walt Whitman. And that is where nature got herself Whitman's memory green during the last four- into trouble.' And after a quiet little laugh he pushed his forefinger among some papers on the table and Coming from such a source, and pulled out a black-ribbed envelope which he reached written almost in the poet's very presence, Mr. Traubel's book appeals vividly to lovers of Much of the conversation reported is trivial Whitman, and even the indifferent or scornful to all but ardent Whitmanites. Others are at will find matter of quaint and curious interest liberty to skip, and will do so -- whole pages at a time. It is not of great importance to most A book like Mr. Traubel's is not of the kind of us to be told that Whitman said, “ Repeat that lends itself readily to criticism. It is very that, Horace,” or “Go over that again, Horace," part of the poet himself, and to criticise it would “I don't quite catch on,” or “How 's that?" be to criticise Whitman, which is not the Needlessly faithful is the reporter in reproducing reviewer's purpose. A few illustrative passages Whitman's little profanities and vulgarities; will be given in all their unstudied informality, after a few samples the reader might well take and then the reader will be left to seek a more the rest for granted. Putting all this down in intimate acquaintance with the book, or not, as cold clear type has the effect of showing us he may feel inclined. Much of the talk and Whitman in a false perspective. The printed * WITH WALT WHITMAN IN CAMDEN (March 28, - July 14, 1888). page seems in some way to emphasize unduly By Horace Traubel. Illustrated. Boston: Small, Maynard & Co. what in the rapid give and take of informal talk trated. New York: E. P. Dutton & Co. falls more or less involuntarily and parentheti- teen years. to me. in its pages. or A LIFE OF WALT WHITMAN. By Henry Bryan Binns. Illus- 1906.] 145 THE DIAL my hand. cally from the lips. Yet for those to whom “W. was very affectionate in his manner to-night. “ the real Walt Whitman" cannot be too real, • Come here, Horace,' he said. I went over. He took this excess of unattractive detail may be no • I feel somehow as if you had consecrated yourself to me. That entails something on my part: I excess at all. feel somehow as if I was consecrated to you. Well A Whitman pronouncement on Matthew we will work out the rest of my life-job together: it Arnold ought to be rather rich reading; for won't be for long: anyway, we'll work it out together, two poets more unlike each other could hardly for short or long, eh?' He took my face between his hands and drew me to him and kissed me. Nothing be imagined. Here is a part of a conversation more was then said. I went back to my chair and we between master and disciple soon after Arnold's sat in silence for some time.” death : “ Whitman adds as to Arnold: "He will not be Of Mr. Binns's more formal treatment of the missed. There is no gap, as with the going of men same theme much might be said, and most of it like Carlyle, Emerson, Tennyson. My Arnold piece did not appear in Tuesday's Herald. I wonder if the commendatory. A little too obvious, perhaps, editor was a little in doubt about it? It appeared is the author's effort to establish friendly rela- to-day, however. The Herald has a higher opinion of tions with his American readers and to give him- Arnold than I have. I discussed Arnold in effect self an air of familiarity with American history throughout in such words — as one of the dudes of liter- ature. Does not Leaves of Grass provide a place even and American ways. The very dedication of his for Arnold ? Certainly, certainly: Leaves of Grass has book, " To my mother, and to her mother, the room for everybody: if it did not make room for all it Republic,” is an advance bid for our good- would not make room for one.'” wilī. All the carefully-studied accompaniment Readers will note in the foregoing — for ex of political and historical matter that runs ample, “ throughout” for “though not ”—Mr. through the book is somewhat suggestive of Traubel's self-acknowledged carelessness as an cram, and is not at all necessary to the complete- editor; but we gladly fall in with his humor ness of the biography. It irks the reader to and pass the matter by as of small importance. have the Wilmot Proviso thrust on his notice, A lack of sympathy equal to that between or the split in the Democratic party narrated Whitman and Arnold might have been looked as a contributing cause of Lincoln's election. for between Whitman and John Addington Sy- Whitman's anti-slavery attitude and his warm monds. Yet the latter was an early and ardent patriotism can be understood without these admirer of the American poet. The subjoined excursions into American history. The pride passages are from a letter written by Symonds of recently-acquired learning - or, we might in 1872 in reply to one from Whitman. say, the uneasiness of ill-digested erudition - “ Your letter gave me the keenest pleasure I have seems to betray itself in this parade of irrelevant felt for a long time. I had not exactly expected to matter. hear from you. Yet I felt that if you liked my poem you would write. So I was beginning to dread that I Mr. Binns ascribes much of Whitman's best had struck some quite wrong chord - that perhaps I development, and his attainment to the “power had seemed to you to have arrogantly confounded your of self-abandonment," to the influence of that own fine thought and pure feeling with the baser metal unknown Southern woman with whom the poet of my own nature. What you say has reassured me had intimate relations for a few months in his and has solaced me nearly as much as if I had seen the face and touched the hand of you my Master ! . early manhood. The whole affair is, and prob- I have pored for continuous hours over the pages of ably always will be, shrouded in mystery ; but Calamus (as I used to pore over the pages of Plato), the ascription of any such benign and fructify- longing to hear you speak, burning for a revelation of ing influence to an illicit connection of this sort your more developed meaning, panting to ask - is this what you would indicate ? are then the free men of is what one might have expected rather from a your land really so pure and loving and noble and gen writer on the other side of the Channel than erous and sincere ? Most of all did I desire to hear from an Englishman. The experience, whatever from your own lips -- or from your pen — some story its exact nature, the author thinks to have been of athletic friendship from which to learn the truth. Yet I dared not address you or dreamed that the instrumental in breaking down some barrier. thought of a student could abide the inevitable shafts “Strong before in his self-control," writes Mr. of your searching intuition. Shall I ever be permitted Binns, “ he is stronger still now that he has won to question you and learn from you ?” the power of self-abandonment. Unconsciously Finally, a few lines showing the warmth he had always been holding himself back; at of affection existing between “Walt” and last he has let himself go. And to let oneself “ Horace ” may serve to close this review of go is to discover oneself. Some men can never Mr. Traubel's volume. face that discovery; they are not ready for 146 [March 1, THE DIAL emancipation. Whitman was." All this invites MAIN CURRENTS IN SOCIOLOGICAL discussion, psychological and ethical. In some THEORY.* sort it brings up once more the old conflict be- tween Hellenism and Hebraism, or, as Mr. Hugh To get the force of Professor Small's book on - General Sociology” it is necessary to con- Black styles it, between culture and restraint. The danger seems to lie in our failing to distin- sider that originally it was an outline or syl- labus of a course of lectures delivered to the guish between the masterful facility that comes graduate students of the University of Chicago. of perfect self-control and the counterfeit ease that is the cheap and tinsel product of unre- Such a course of study, with modern University methods, usually leaves a large room for sup- straint. The author loves Whitman whole-heartedly, plementary work. Hence, while we are not and the picture he presents is sympathetically the author that in form it is rough, fragment- willing to admit the frank acknowledgment of drawn. Both in biographical detail and in criti- cal comment the book is an excellent piece of ary, and unsystematic,” the book is somewhat work, perhaps the fullest and best study of the unproportional from the standpoint of a scien- tific treatise. However, as the author admits, poet's life and writings that has yet appeared. it is not a treatise, but a critical analysis of the It is written in a pleasing and scholarly, style, development and present status of sociology. and every page bears marks of painstaking re- search. Two passages only can It is a conspectus of sociology or a comparative find space here study of sociological thought. Its purpose for quotation. The first shall be an amusing show what sociology is and what it is not, and is to and characteristic anecdote, which is probably while it does not build a scientific system of new to most readers. sociology it indicates broad lines of construction “ It is related that once in a Brooklyn church he failed to remove his soft broad-brimmed hat, and entered or synthesis of the same. The book is critical the building with his head thus covered, looking for all rather than constructive. While the author the world like some Quaker of the olden time. The does not attempt to construct a system of sociol- offending article was roughly knocked off by the verger. ogy, he indirectly points out the way for others Walt picked it up, twisted it into a sort of scourge, and indicates upon what foundation they must seized the astonished official by the collar - he always detested officials — trounced him with it, clapped it on build. In reference to the various phases of his head again, and so, abruptly and coolly, left the development of sociology by different individ- church." uals, Professor Small has shown that the dif- This may recall a line from the “Leaves," – "I ferences of sociologists are more apparent than have hated tyrants, argued not concerning God, real on account of the various points of view had patience and indulgence toward the people, and various methods of attack, and that they taken off my hat to nothing known or unknown. are all working on the same sociology with con- The second selection is of a critical, interpreta- verging lines of thought. Through the great tive sort, comparing Whitman as a prophet (by mass of contributions to the science, pseudo and no means as a man of letters) with Carlyle. real, he finds a constant line of development “With Whitman, Carlyle recognised the underlying from the earliest authors to the present time. moral purpose of the universe, and the organic unity or With this object in view he has brought out solidarity of mankind; but being himself a Calvinistic the knowledge necessary for the foundation of Jacobin of irritable nerves, these convictions filled him, sociology in the various attempts that have been not with a joyful wonder and faith, but with contempt and despair. He never saw humanity as the body of a made to construct a science. It is a masterly Divine and Godlike soul; and though he was continu- array of material and forces and, in most parts, ally calling men to duty and repentance, he did so from an arraignment of these before the critic's bar inward necessity rather than with any anticipation of of justice. “Our thesis,” says the author, "is success. For he felt himself to be a Voice crying in the wilderness. Whitman worshipped the hero as truly as that the central line in the path of methodo- did Carlyle; but then he saw the heroic in the heart of logical progress, from Spencer to Ratzenhofer, our common humanity, where Carlyle missed it; hence is marked by gradual shiftings of effort from his appeal was one of confidence, not despair.” analogical representation of social structures to The two books, the American's and the En real analysis of social processes.” In other glishman’s, may well be read together, the former words, the stress is now being laid on function filling in with minute and realistic detail the where formerly it was laid upon structure. more largely-sketched and more highly-idealized In the first chapter, on “The Subject Matter portrait presented by the latter. * GENERAL SOCIOLOGY. An Exposition of the Main Develop- PERCY F. BICKNELL. ment of Sociological Theory from Spencer to Ratzenhofer. By Albion W. Small. University of Chicago Press. 1906.] 147 THE DIAL of Sociology,” the author asserts that it is a accepting this, goes a step further and represents process of human association, and then he society composed of parts working together to proceeds to show that sociology attempts to achieve results, that he emphasized function or interpret the whole process of human associa action of society; and Ratzenhofer considers tion. He asserts that facts of human associa- society as a process of adjustment by conflict and tion are not sufficient data for a science, but subsequently by coöperation between associated that “the whence, the how, the why, and the individuals. Professor Small is very keen in whither, of processes are essential to sociology." analysis, and while his analytical researches in The relations, meaning, and valuations of facts the past have been of great service to students other than the facts themselves represent the of the science, the value of the comparative study subject matter of sociology as well as of other of these three great founders of sociology cannot sciences. It is the passing of knowledge over be overestimated as a service to students. It is into power that makes a real science. It is the a demonstration of the main line of evolution advancement of the knowledge of what occurred of sociology. to a knowledge of the meaning of what occurred. While the incompleteness of Spencer's method In addition to the establishment of the science is made apparent, as a foundation of sociology of processes, the sociologist should formulate a his system is as essential as the foundation of a programme for the promotion of more and more building to its superstructure. Where form and rational social processes. structure are made the essential framework of In the following chapter, under the title of the system Spencer implies that they are brought “Definition of Sociology,” Professor Small gives about by social activities. However, Spencer the ordinary definitions, each of which bases the represents the first step in the analysis of human science on the association of men. He says that association. Schaeffle, by emphasizing function sociology is a unified view of human life and a and seeking the ultimate causes of structure, has body of guiding principles for the conduct of taken the second step. But Professor Small life. He shows through analysis how this ap- points out the limitations of each by saying that pears, and adds that “sociology is an attempt Spencer “tended to seek the meaning of social so to visualize and so to interpret the whole of structure in structure; so Schaeffle's limits are human experience that will reveal the last dis- indicated by his tendency to see the meaning of coverable grounds upon which to base con social function in function rather than in casual clusions about the rational conduct of life,” and consequent conditions in the persons func- and finally closes the chapter with the more ac- tioning." tioning.” That is, structure and function are curate and inclusive definition : “ Sociology is ends in themselves, which is contrary to Pro- the science of the social process.” Here again fessor Small's interpretation of sociology. Fol- he emphasizes the study of the activities of lowing the analysis of these two authors, he asks sociology. Of all the phases of society function these four questions: “First, what are the is the real essence of sociology. essentials of human association? Second, how In Chapter III. Professor Small presents the do these essentials change their manifestations “Impulse of Sociology,” in which he points out from time to time? Third, by virtue of what briefly its reasons to be one of the sciences. influences do these variations occur? Fourth, It is an attempt to show that the driving power what social aims are reasonable in view of these of society arises in a philanthropic effort to conclusions from experience?” And he uses the make the world better, and that sociology is the analysis of Ratzenhofer to show how these ques- scientific regulating power. This is followed tions may be answered. The analysis of social in subsequent chapters by an historical survey processes after Ratzenhofer is the most exact of of sociology. This survey, as the auther points any system yet presented. It includes the es- out, is necessarily meagre. However, sufficient sential features of Ratzenhofer's “Sociologische is given for the support of his main thesis. Erkenntnis” and also his “ Wesen und Zweck Over one-half of the main body of the book der Politik.” Ratzenhofer clearly represents is taken up with a remarkable comparative the three steps in the development of sociology, analysis of Spencer, Schaeffle, and Ratzenhofer. and points out how structure occurs through It would be impossible for the reviewer to follow function. He shows the causes of social activity, this extended and masterly analysis. The object and in this demonstrates clearly the needs of is to show that Spencer considered society as social analysis. composed of differently arranged parts in which The remainder of the work, while still review- he emphasized structure; that Schaeffle, while | ing the opinions of other sociologists, is more of : 148 [March 1, THE DIAL If we say a constructive nature than the first part. A dis- SHAKESPEAREAN TABLE-TALK.* cussion of the psychical, ethical, and technical makes up the outline of the remainder of the Perhaps it is wrong to call this ripe comment book. The most noticeable feature of this part on Shakespeare by the name of Table-Talk. of sociology, which is more nearly Professor There is certainly nothing desultory, idle, ram- Small's view of the science, represents its real- bling about it. Bnt other names do not suggest istic nature. Society is a real thing made up of the quality of it. If we say “ lectures ” we think the elements of everyday practice, and in its of some celebrity addressing a cultivated audi- study we should follow human interests and ence gathered for a little titillation of literary human society wherever they lead. First must recollection, or perhaps some learned professor be considered the interests of the individual giving the results of private studies while stu- and his relation to the complete society. This dents toiled behind with note-books. should be followed by the relations of groups 6 studies” we think of commentaries and dis- to one another and general social structure and sertations, sources and texts. If we say “ essays function. we may mean anything from the most eccentric As a book on general sociology this is a valu- fancies about Shakespeare to an exhibition of able contribution to the literature on the subject. universal scholarship. Here is nothing of all While the interpretation of human experience is this. In this book we have a man who has read sufficiently emphasized, sufficient stress is not Shakespeare long and deeply and who now talks laid upon the evolution of human society as a to us of typical plays. It is not talk at the means of arriving at a correct estimate of the dinner-table, precisely, for he has his book in present structure and activities. The processes hand, and at times will read half a page or a through which society is made are alternate dif- couple of lines. What name can we give it? In ferentiation and integration. While it is true its intention it is something like a great actor's that Professor Small says we cannot explain presentation of his conception of Shakespeare's society as it is by comparing it with a society of creations. savages, the course of evolution through differ As may have been already suggested, this book entiation and integration gives a basis of under is more or less like Hazlitt's “ Characters of standing which cannot be obtained in any better Shakespere's Plays "; more, at least, than most way. The scientist orients his subject by remov- of the recent well-known books of criticism. Mr. ing complex or interfering forces. His point of Dowden studied the growth of Shakespeare's departure must be a simple element or condi- conceptions and their realization in dramatic tion. Social evolution gives the student this form. Mr. Moulton studied the special dramatic point of departure. art of some lyrical plays. Mr. Barrett Wendell Perhaps some fault might be found with the was taken up with the artistic temperament of book on account of the voluminous nature of the Shakespeare, and sought to make us see that in discussion and the unevenness of its make-up. all his work. Mr. Mabie gave a general account But the vigor of the author and his familiarity of the man against a background of Elizabethan with the content and method of sociological writ- life. Mr. Brandes gathered together the scholar- ings, his numerous illustrations, as well as his ship of the time and formed his own theories masterly analysis, make for up and conclusions. Mr. Sidney Lee got at every- lack of con- any densation of material. It is not a book for be thing that would give substantiation to any fact ginners but for students of maturity of mind in Shakespeare's life. Mr. Stopford Brooke does and acquired sociological knowledge. To such none of these things, save here and there. He it will prove of great value, and in general is an runs through each play, giving some general impetus to the development of the science of comment, interpreting each character, following sociology. It helps the student to realize the out the dramatic development, presenting the great advancement sociology has made in recent prevailing ideas. He gives us not a study of years, and what a stupenduous task is before the plays or a study of Shakespeare based upon scholars before it is reduced to scientific pro- the plays, but a picture of his own mind as he portions. As Professor Small has pointed out reviews the plays. That is what Hazlitt did, what sociology is, and what it is not, and indi- though in making the comparison, it is scant cated what it should be, we trust he will go on justice to Mr. Stopford Brooke to say that he in his studies and write a treatise on the subject. seems to have thought over his subject with a FRANK W. BLACKMAR. * ON TEN PLAYS OF SHAKESPEARE. By Stopford Brooke. New York: Henry Holt & Co. 1906.] 149 THE DIAL was his 66 view to this particular book, much more carefully will show us what a vital factor Shakespeare is than Hazlitt could ever have thought over his or has been in his thinking and being, he will lectures. be talking of something of which he knows. If The thing about Hazlitt that most impressed he tell us of how Shakespeare created these plays that devoted lover of Shakespeare, John Keats, and characters that may be so vital a force to us, depth of taste.” Keats probably he may be talking of something he knows, but meant by that expression that exactly the right it is more likely that it is something he only thing impressed Hazlitt about each character or guesses about. And whether he know or guess, play of Shakespeare. That does not impress me the matter is of historic or scientific importance, so much in Hazlitt's book as the fact that what- not of poetic. But it is to be said that the ever did impress him, impressed him so strongly. main point of Mr. Stopford Brooke's book is not The book is almost as interesting in the view it here. He is content, as a rule, to interpret the gives of Hazlitt as in its view of Shakespeare. play, the character, the passage in hand, and it Read for instance the beginning of the essay on is only here and there that he goes back to the “ Hamlet ”: what a remarkable production to be author. set down almost extempore. Hazlitt's power of As to the kind of comment, we have gener- thought in his power of expression was so remark- ally to begin with, a few words about the play. able that one of the chief interests in his criti- “ Midsummer Night's Dream " represents the cism is that it gives one such an idea of what temper of Shakespeare's soul in earlier years ; art may be to an individual. That is, in fact, 6. The Merchant of Venice” is made up out of Hazlitt's strong point as a critic: not his taste, as such and such materials in earlier literature. Keats thought, or his power as a “speculator” Then generally comes an interpretation of the as Blackwood said, although both of those things action, then comment on the character. Or some- are apparent in his book on Shakespeare. He times instead of these last being carefully taken is himself so wonderfully impressed by literature, up, we have a discussion of two or three topics in this case by Shakespeare, that one gets up of chief interest, as with “ Coriolanus” where from a reading of his work with almost a new the author deals with “(1) Shakespeare's treat- conception of literature as an element in life. ment of the political question in Rome ; (2) the Such is not Mr. Stopford Brooke's especial character and fate of Coriolanus ; (3) Corio- power. I am much more impressed by his " depth lanus and his mother.” What is said on these of taste" than by Hazlitt's. Like Hazlitt he matters is generally, in its intention, perfectly commonly speaks of the events of the plays, of simple. It may be well to quote a passage. the characters, as though they were events or Opposed to him in character, but his friend, is characters in real life. He analyzes motives, Mercutio; wit's scintilating star, thrilling with life to explains utterance, calls attention to beauties of his finger-tips, not caring for women save as the toys speech or thought.* But where his mind leaves of an hour, ready to tackle, on the instant, any woman, the play it reverts to Shakespeare and his young or old; brave, audacious, going swiftly to his pur- point, keeping no thought within him but flinging it at poses. Hazlitt's mind reverted to himself as once into his speech; "he will speak more in a minute than to the reader in general: Mr. Stopford Brooke he will stand to in a month '; quick in choler, ready to thinks of the writer. I shall admit, in passing, attempt the moon and pull the sun down, loose of a greater interest in Hazlitt's method. We nat- speech, mocking old and young out of the racing of his blood — the gay ruffles of Italy, such as Shakespere urally talk of a play or a book as though it were often met in London, such as many of the Italian novels a piece of real life; there is often much to enclose and paint."* explain or describe. But where the critic goes Some impatient scholars may possibly put beyond that, I like better to have him give us an idea of the effect of it all this aside, with an inquiry for something new upon himself, than in the book, something beside a re-statement of to have him tell us of the art of the dramatist. Literature is really of importance to us only as the material of the play. A number of little it affects us : otherwise it is history or science. matters, more or less new, may be noted, as for instance: that Shakespeare had a feeling of true These things are each excellent, but they are not sympathy for the common people (pp. 7, 223); rightly followed by literary methods. If a man that in “Romeo and Juliet " he was thinking * There is, of course, a danger here. Consider the pages of “ the long suffering justice who punishes written (though not in this book) on Hamlet's madness. There is really no such question: the only possible question is, Did quarrels which injure the state Shakespeare conceive of him as mad? which is a very different thing, and to be decided on grounds very different from those * It should be added that this is only the gist of several often alleged. (p. 35, cf. paragraphs on Mercutio. 150 [March 1, THE DIAL pp. 64-68); that Mercutio was not too brilliant for Shakespeare to keep alive (p. 44); that ALABAMA IN WAR-TIME AND AFTER.* Shylock was a hot-blooded, passionate, resolute, For a long time the South was largely a dignified man of sixty (p. 152); that Jacques neglected field to the historical student. Re- is not a cynic, or even bitter (p. 172); that cent years, however, have seen a marked devel- Prospero is the last of the great medieval en opment of interest in the study of the history chanters (p. 286); and naturally many more of this part of the country, as is evidenced by such views. the increased activity of historical societies and But it is not to be said that the value of the the establishment of state departments for the book depends upon its new discoveries or its preservation and publication of historical rec- new views, or on the new standpoint or the new ords in several southern states. In several spirit in which the critic regards the plays. In northern universities distinct courses in south- just this fact itself lies its great value. Here is ern history are now being given, and in other a critic who turns on no new light, who offers respects it is beginning to receive the attention no new theory, who proclaims no discovery, which has long been bestowed upon the history who presents no new conception. What, then, of the northern states. Recently a number of does he add to Shakespearean scholarship or excellent monographs on particular periods of Shakespearean criticism. Perhaps Mr. Stopford southern history have appeared ; and it is prob- Brooke would be satisfied if he were generally ably no exaggeration to say that the history of esteemed to have added nothing at all. For it no other state has been so well written up as has is clear that what he wants is not to make more the early period of South Carolina. criticism or more scholarship, but to make his In Civil War and Reconstruction in Ala- readers see that there is more in Shakespeare bama," a volume of over 800 pages, by Pro- than they supposed. He puts aside critical fessor Walter L. Fleming, we have the most apparatus and scholarly theory, and is content comprehensive and valuable work of the kind simply with the plays. Perhaps he wrote this that has yet been written. It shows evidence book not in a great library, not even in a well of intimate knowledge based on wide research, provided study, but it may be out-doors is fair and judicial yet sympathetic in tone, and with nothing but the plays and pencil and is altogether a most interesting picture of life paper. He certainly might have done so. in a southern state during and immediately fol- The professional critic or Shakespearean lowing the Civil War. As a proper background scholar is a little at sea with such treatment. for the study of the Civil War and Reconstruc- He has not much to say: there is not much tion period, the author has described the society to discuss or raise a dust about. and institutions that were destroyed by the war. you can disagree anywhere. I open at random The population of the state, its industries, the and pretty soon read “ Orlando and Rosalind ! development of secession sentiment, the disrup- could anyone desire to have more charming, tion of the religious denominations, the eman- more sunshiny companions than these two en cipation sentiment in northern Alabama, are chanting persons ? To live with them is to live some of the topics discussed. Then follows the with moral beauty, but it is not a beauty which story of secession, the preparation for the com- the pharisaic moralist will like at all.” I sup- ing struggle, military operations on Alabama pose I may be something of a pharisaic moralist soil, the problems of conscription and exemp- myself, for I never had any such feeling about tion, and the peace movement. In northern Rosalind and Orlando as Mr. Stopford Brooke Alabama, a region unconnected with the rest of has ; so I might dissent from that dictum as the state by railroads and geographically a part from many others in the book. of Tennessee, the people were largely opposed But agreement or disagreement in particulars to the war; and this locality became a nest of is not the point. To make us see more in “ tories,” deserters, and “ mossbacks” from all Shakespeare, that is the writer's desire. A bold over the South, and they caused the State and undertaking, one will say, after a century of Confederate authorities no little trouble. Be- devoted Shakespearean study, scholarship, crit- sides their opposition to the war, they com- icism, appreciation. But in all that century mitted outrages on both Confederate and Union there have been few books so single-minded as sympathizers and terrorized the country gener- this. CIVIL WAR AND RECONSTRUCTION IN ALABAMA. By Walter EDWARD E. HALE, JR. Of course L. Fleming, Ph.D. New York: The Macmillan Co. 1906.] 151 THE DIAL ally. For a time there was talk among them political machine, and the Ku Klux Klan, organ- of seceding from Alabama, and, together with | ized among the southern whites for maintaining the counties of East Tennessee, forming a new order, but which eventually degenerated into an state with the name of Nick-a-Jack. organization of persecution and murder. Inter- Particularly instructive and fascinating is esting and unique is the author's description of Professor Fleming's account of social and eco the effects of the Reconstruction policy upon nomic conditions during the war: new industries the educational and religious life of the people. created by the necessities of the war, blockade The State University was The State University was “ radicalized” and running and trading through the lines, the con practically broken up, and in many cases negro duct of the slaves, educational activity, the churches were disrupted by differences of politi- struggles of the newspapers to keep going, life cal opinion among the members. on the farm, the hardships and destitution of Alabama was more fortunate than some of her the families left behind, etc. The condition of southern sisters, notably Mississippi, Louisi- the state at the close of the war, with its deserted ana, and South Carolina, — in escaping from the and neglected farms, paralysis of business, worst evils of negro and Carpet-bag" rule; but wrecked railroads, poverty-stricken people, law even as it was, no true American can read the lessness and disorder, with demoralized negroes story without a sense of shame and humiliation. roaming about the country testing their new There was not an honest white man living in freedom and refusing to work, — these make a the state during Reconstruction, says Professor picture which no one can now study without Fleming, nor a man, woman, or child, descended profound sympathy. The reorganization of the from such a person, who did not then suffer, state in accordance with the Johnson plan of or does not still suffer, from the direct results Reconstruction, the overthrow of this plan by of “Carpet-bag" financiering. Congress, the military régime, and the activity JAMES WILFORD GARNER. of the Freedmen's Bureau, are described with detail. The author's judgment with regard to the Freedmen's Bureau is that it did little good and in many cases did much harm. The sub- PRECEPTS FOR THE YOUNG, AND ordinate agents in Alabama, he says, were mostly REFLECTIONS FOR THE OLD.* broken-down men who had failed at other under- President King's new book could be described takings, preachers with strong prejudices, and the “dregs of a mustered-out army.” The insti- as an inspiring guide to rational living, or a col- tution in Alabama, he declares, was entirely lection of amiable platitudes, according to the It should be read especially by point of view. unnecessary Cotton was worth fifty cents a pound, and the extraordinary demand for labor the young, for even the moderately old have not guaranteed good treatment for the laborers. only heard the story before but, alas! they are little able to profit by it, if they have neglected Whatever suffering the blacks endured was its teachings hitherto. Listen to this : mainly due to their congregation in the towns “Our intellectual as well as our moral day of grace and to their own shiftlessness. Through a gen- is limited. It is of no use to rebel at the facts, it is erous distribution of government rations they folly unspeakable to ignore them. We are becoming soon came to entertain the belief that it was the bundles of habits. With every young person one must, duty of “Uncle Sam ” to support them whether therefore, continually urge: Are you willing to retain they worked or not. Finally, unscrupulous and just the personal habits you have now? You cannot designing officials took advantage of their posi- work. From your early morning toilet, through the too quickly change them if you wish to make thorough tion to make a political machine of the Bureau, care of your clothing and the order of your room, table and instances were not lacking where they de manners, breathing, tone of voice, manner of talking, frauded the credulous blacks by selling them pronunciation, gesture, motion, address, study, to your painted sticks which, they were told, entitled them very way of sleeping at night - all your habits are setting like plaster of Paris. Do you wish them to set to forty acres of land of their own selection. as they are?” (p. 62). An interesting feature of Mr. Fleming's work Excellent and pertinent advice this — for the is an elaborate account of the various orders young : but what about the poor old dogs who and leagues which played an important part in the life of the state during the Reconstruction RATIONAL LIVING. Some Practical Inferences from Modern Psychology. By Henry Churchill King. New York: The Mac- period. The most notable of these were the Union League, organized among the negroes by LIFE AND RELIGION. An Aftermath from the Writings of the Right Honorable Professor F. Max Müller. [Edited] by his wife. northern white men, and which became a potent New York: Doubleday, Page & Co. millan Co. 152 [March 1, THE DIAL ness have learned about all the tricks they will ever Christian, he had become too intimate with the know? They know, too well, their own frailties thoughts of other peoples, past and present, not and inabilities; it is with them no longer a to regard their aspirations with sympathy and question of what they may become, but of what appreciation. “ True Christianity, I mean the they can do with such wits and strength as they religion of Christ, seems to me to become more possess, in this wicked world. and more exalted the more we know and the “Clear and definite thinking, moreover, moves di more we appreciate the treasures of truth hidden rectly and unhesitatingly toward its goal, and for that in the despised religions of the world” (p. 24). very reason seems to be a distinct help to decisive action. The first impression of the book is perhaps a For all purposeful action involves the use of definite means to definite ends. Definiteness in thinking, thus, little disappointing ; because, from its necessa- seems to be directly connected with decision in action, rily disjointed nature one does not instantly and vagueness of thinking with indecision and weak- perceive the uniting thread. If a man is heard (p. 121). making statements about the Himalaya Moun- Yes, indeed, poor old brain of mine! You and tains, or the Arctic regions, we are likely to I have found that out these many years ago, give him scant attention, until some remark or but have found, also, that it is not always easy expression betrays the fact that he has been to see in a fog. Circumstances are sometimes there himself. So it is with Max Müller : many too much, do what we will. But for the young, of his paragraphs sound much like the empty could there be more admirable counsel ? Think professions of those who have learned such things straight and hard, and rely upon your own wits! | by rote ; but one does not read far without find- Resolve to become, and you will become, to a ing that the author speaks whereof he knows. considerable extent! The day is young, and Everyone carries a grave of lost hope in his the possibilities are great! (How fortunate it soul, but he covers it over with cold marble, or is, that a new generation walks upon the stage with green boughs. On sad days one likes every little while!) to go alone to this God's acre of the soul, and All things considered, we must believe that weep there, but only in order to return full of President King's book will carry a real and comfort and hope to those who are left to us” valuable message to those for whom it was in- (p. 205). Ah yes ! good friend. tended ; and if it seems to some barren of new No doubt the most significant message of the thought, and not especially distinguished in book is contained in its interpretation of Chris- style, these impressions should not be held to tianity. Max Müller believed himself to be a condemn it; for they represent, as it were, only Christian in the fullest sense, and to me it seems the back view of the edifice. that he was wholly justified. Yet the orthodox, so-called, will be horrified to read : “Life and Religion " is a volume of extracts “ When we think of the exalted character of Christ's from the writings of the late Professor Max teaching, may we not ask ourselves once more, What Müller, selected and arranged by his wife. It would He have said if He had seen the fabulous stories is not a controversial work, and should not be of His birth and childhood, or if He had thought that His Divine character would ever be made to depend on treated as such ; rather, it is as though the the historical truth of the Evangelia Infantiæ ? " (p. 27). veteran humanist and philologist invited the If Jesus was not God, was He, they ask, a mere reader to sit with him by the fireside, and there A mere man ? Is there anything among the confided to him the thoughts and aspirations works of God, anything next to God, more wonderful, which had guided his path during a long and more awful, more holy than man? Much rather should we ask, Was then Jesus a mere God ? ... A God is successful life. Who would refuse such an less than man. True Christianity does not degrade the invitation ? Who would listen with other than Godhead, it exalts manhood, by bringing it back near deferential, if not reverential, attention ? Pos to God” (p. 34). sibly, on grounds of philosophy or science, or · Then it is said, Is not Christ God? Yes, He is, but in His own sense, not in the Jewish nor in the Greek from the standpoint of our own religion, some sense, nor in the sense which so many Christians attach of the professor's ideas may be wrong; but to that article of their faith. Christ's teaching is that what of that? His star served well to make his we are God, that there is in us something divine that wagon go, and that to good purpose, and is we are nothing if we are not that. . . Let us bestow entitled to our regard, if only for its past per- all praise and glory on Christ as the best son of God. .: Christ never calls Himself the Father, He speaks formance. This very thought, indeed, is one of of His Father with love, but always with humility and those most cherished by Max Müller himself, reverence" (p. 21). in relation to other peoples. Himself a true T. D. A. COCKERELL. 66 man ? 1906.] 153 THE DIAL runner enough. Peter is the embodiment of Antichrist in RECENT FICTION.* the eyes of the horror-stricken orthodoxy which he The grandiose trilogy of “Christ and Antichrist," so recklessly defies. So in “The Death of the Gods” as conceived in the teeming fancy of Mr. Dmitri Julian was Antichrist to the primitive church, and Merejkowski, is now completed with the publication in “The Forerunner” Leonardo da Vinci was Anti- of Peter and Alexis.” This work is possibly richer christ to the mediæval church. But is it the author's in material than either of its predecessors, but its wish to enlist our sympathies on Peter's side as he construction is so hopelessly chaotic as to preclude enlisted them on the side of the apostate and the any serious claim to consideration as a work of art. artist? If this be the case, he has failed as signally What we have is a formless aggregation of curious as he succeeded in the earlier volumes. Viewing facts and pedantries illustrative of St. Petersburg in the trilogy as a whole, we must say that “The Fore- the early eighteenth century, of the barbarism of a .” is immeasurably finer than either of the people reluctantly turned toward civilization by the other parts. Not merely is it wrought of metal more masterful Tsar, and of strange medieval supersti- attractive, but in the manner of its workmanship it tions mingled with wild religious vagaries. The figure also excels. of Peter is dominant throughout, but it is a figure “On the Field of Glory,” by Mr. Henryk Sien- of traits so contradictory that it assumes no definite kiewicz, breaks a silence of several years, during outline in our imagination. As far as it may be which the distinguished Polish romancer has been exhibited by a single quotation, it appears in this resting upon his well-earned laurels. It is a book passage : “At six in the morning he began to dress. of about the dimensions of “ The Knights of the Pulling on his stockings he noticed a hole; he sat Cross,” and deals with the period of John Sobieski down, got a needle and a ball of wool, and began and the anxious years of the impending Turkish darning. Ruminating about a road to India in the invasion. We confess to some disappointment upon footsteps of Alexander of Macedonia, he darned his finding that the great victory of Sobieski is only stockings.” Contrasted with the fiery and brutal foreshadowed in this narrative, instead of being energy of Peter, we have the futility and degeneracy presented to us with the magnificent descriptive of his weakling son, a maudlin character utterly power that the author knows how to apply to such unequal to the responsibilities laid upon him. The situations; but perhaps he is keeping that theme in action culminates with the terrific scene of torture reserve for a supreme effort. It is surely manifest in which the life of Alexis is sacrificed to his father's destiny that he, and no other, should deal with it. insensate rage. We say action, but of a truth The title of the present romance is thus a misnomer, there is little action of any connected sort in the for the book ends before any of its characters have work viewed as a whole; the treatment is episodical reached the field of glory," although they spend and disjointed throughout. The author's immense much of their time in talking about it. In other display of learning and his untamed vigor of de words, although the story has this background of scription are made devoid of artistic effect by the patriotic expectancy, it is in reality a story of private almost total absence of restraint and correlation. interest, a love-story of freshness and charm, a story The result is absolutely bewildering. As in the pre of strange manners and exciting adventures. ceding sections of this trilogy, the antithesis is plain Some of the younger Polish critics, it seems, have PETER AND ALEXIS. The Romance of Peter the Great. By been charging the Sienkiewicz school of fiction with Dmitri Merejkowski. New York: G. P. Putnam's Sons. sterility, whereupon the leader of that school has ON THE FIELD OF GLORY. An Historical Novel of the Time of pointed to certain of his colleagues by way of refu- King John Sobieski. By Henryk Sienkiewicz. Translated by Jeremiah Curtin. Boston: Little, Brown, & Co. tation, and particularly to Mr. Gasiorowski, whose NAPOLEON's LOVE STORY. A Historical Romance. By Waclaw quality we may now appraise in “Napoleon's Love Gasiorowski. Translated by the Count de Soissons. New York: Story,” just translated into English. The author THE CHERRY RIBBAND. By S. R. Crockett. New York: A. S. is a young man, and this romance is chiefly remark- able for its length, caused by a remorseless spinning A MAKER OF HISTORY. By E. Phillips Oppenheim. Boston: Little, Brown, & Co. out of dialogue and elaboration of descriptive detail, THE FORD. By Arthur E. J. Legge. New York: John Lane Co. but it may, nevertheless, be read (or skimmed over) MY FRIEND THE CHAUFFEUR. By C. N. and A. M. Williamson. with a fair degree of satisfaction. Its theme is New York: McClure, Phillips & Co. the episode of Napoleon's visit to Warsaw in 1807, VIVIEN, By W. B. Maxwell. New York: D. Appleton & Co. THE GREAT REFUSAL. By Maxwell Gray. New York: D. and his resulting romantic attachment to Madame Appleton & Co. Walewska. The character of the heroine is depicted THE CONQUEST OF CANAAN. By Booth Tarkington. New for us with much subtlety, while her imperial lover is York: Harper & Brothers. THE HOUSE OF A THOUSAND CANDLES. By Meredith Nichol- the same familiar figure with which we have become son. Indianapolis: The Bobbs-Merrill Co. acquainted in other works of romantic invention. HEART'S DESIRE. By Emerson Hough. New York: The Mac Mr. Crockett is a most indefatigable producer of millan Co. THE FAIR MAID OF GRAYSTONES. By Beulah Marie Dix. New novels. His latest, “The Cherry Ribband,” is of a York: The Macmillan Co. piece with its predecessors; at least with those of its BARBARA WINSLOW, REBEL. By Elizabeth Ellis. New York: predecessors which find the author upon his native Dodd, Mead & Co. heath or in his native kail-yard or among his THE WHEEL OF LIFE. By Ellen Glasgow. New York: Dou- bleday, Page & Co. native moss-hags,—and deals with the troublous times E. P. Dutton & Co. Barnes & Co. 154 [March 1, THE DIAL of the Covenant. It has an abundance of stirring of William Black in this direction, we can think of adventure, of duelling, fighting, and romance. The no others who have been quite as successful as Mr. strong figure of Claverhouse appears upon the scene and Mrs. Williamson. And the fact that their trav- from time to time, but plays no very conspicuous ellers have for a vehicle the modern motor-car instead part in the action. Mr. Crockett is as good as ever of the antiquated phaeton gives to their narratives in his characterization of eccentric Scotch types. the needed touch of timeliness. “My Friend the The book deserves well of the reader, albeit it is Chauffeur" tells how an English baronet and an little more than a replica of earlier ones. Irish peer (in prospect) personally conduct a party The Dogger Bank incident has been ingeniously of three female Americans through northern Italy utilized by Mr. E. Phillips Oppenheim for his latest and into Dalmatia, harassed all the time by the atten- fictive invention, “ A Maker of History.” It seems tions of an Austrian prince, who is the villain of the that this was, after all, a deliberate attempt to force piece. (We wonder why it is that Austrian princes England into war with Russia. A secret treaty had make such satisfactory villains.) The climax is been concluded between the Tsar and the Kaiser reached in Montenegro, when the villain lures the whereby the invasion of England was imminent. But heroine into a deserted house, and would force her it so happened that a young Englishman, an innocent consent to a marriage. The marriage that really tourist, was a witness of the meeting between the comes off is a different sort of affair, in which the two monarchs, which was brought about by the con impoverished scion of the Irish nobility figures as junction of two imperial trains, at a secluded point the leading man. A second marriage in prospect as of the railway. Not only was the young English- the book closes is that of the baronet with the enfant man there in hiding, but he became possessed of a terrible of the tale, who it seems is not a child at page of the treaty itself, which was blown out of the all, but a maiden of seventeen, masquerading in short window of the carriage in which the momentous clothes and long braids to oblige her mother, relict agreement was drawn up. As he could not read of Simon P. Kidder, of Denver, U.S. A. This mother German, he knew nothing of its significance, but has sentimental leanings toward the prince, despite simply tucked it into his pocket. Afterwards he went whose villainy she turns a willing ear to his protes- to Paris, talked innocently but indiscreetly about his tations. A peculiar feature of the story is that it is adventure, and was promptly kidnapped. His sister told, in turn, by each of the five persons making up went in search of him, and was also kidnapped. No the party in the motor-car. The attendant prince harm was done them, but they remained in the alone has no chance to describe matters from his custody of the French Secret Service in order that point of view, which is rather a pity. the German Secret Service might not get hold of The name of “W. B. Maxwell” is non-committal them. Next comes an English baronet, who sees as to sex, but “ Vivien” is a woman's novel. It is, a photograph of the girl, falls in love with it, and moreover, one of the best novels that we have read assumes the rôle of amateur detective. All the par for a long time, by a writer of either sex. Its ele- ties concerned have adventures of the most surpris- ments are familiar enough -- the neglected girl, the ing description, until the need for secrecy no longer dreary years at a cheap boarding-school, the heart- exists, because the French government has check- breaking task of earning a living in a London shop, mated Russia and Germany in their sinister game. the consequent privation, misery, and illness, the Those who know Mr. Oppenheim's methods as a inevitable persecution by the wealthy libertine, and novelist will hardly need to be informed that this the eventual rescue by the prince of her dreams. stirring story is told with neatness and despatch. But despite the hackneyed nature of its plot, as thus “The Ford,” by Mr. Arthur E. J. Legge, is a revealed in skeleton, the work has both originality quiet story of English life, illustrating the relations and distinction. The interest is so varied, the nar- between two families - one of aristocratic and an rative so broadly humanized, the delineation of char- cient lineage, the other the social outcome of that acter so true and fine, that our attention is com- well-known product, Harrold's Household Soap. The pletely absorbed from first to last. The spirits of parvenu becomes the neighbor of the lord, and a tenderness and pity brood over it, and the recurrent ford across the stream which flows by their estates note of forgiveness, however seemingly dark the sin, provides a convenient subject of dispute. It is a adds a divine touch to the work. And a very serious Montague and Capulet affair, but turns out happily work it is, although animated in its movement, a in a way, although the most sympathetic character work that sounds the depths of the human mystery, in the novel is drowned while crossing the ford, and and confronts the reader with the darkest riddles of we shall never feel quite sure that the heroine ought life. Having these qualities, it is matter for satis- not to have married him instead of the scion of the faction that the story is told upon a generous scale enemy's stock. The book is simple and genuine, and - there are more than six hundred pages — and its style has the touch of poetic distinction to be gives us comprehensive studies of character and situ- expected of a writer who has also won the laurels of ation rather than the glimpses afforded by the im- a singer of songs. pressionist. Such a novel is like an oasis in the The trick of making an interesting novel out of desert to the weary reviewer, and rewards him for the incidents that make up the life of a party of much toiling through the arid wastes of popular tourists is not as simple as it seems. Since the efforts story-telling. 1906.] 155 THE DIAL A singularly charming and appealing book is Mr. Hough's “ Heart's Desire" is a book some- “The Great Refusal,” by the novelist who calls thing like Mr. Wister's "The Virginian,” and quite herself “ Maxwell Gray.” It assumes, to be sure, as much or as little of a story. Heart's Desire is a something too much of the character of a sociological remote mountain settlement of the southwest, hav- tract in the closing chapters, and is based upon over ing for its population one doctor, two lawyers, a few wrought sentiment rather than upon any practical cowboys and miners, and no women. Its entire cir- form of idealism, but is nevertheless so fine in motive culating medium amounts to about three hundred and so graceful in diction that criticism is measure dollars, which frequently changes hands, and now ably disarmed. The "great refusal” is made by the and then, by the fortunes of the game, is temporarily hero, who renounces wealth and position to become collected in the pockets of some one citizen. The a common workingman, and eventually embarks in story begins with the advent of the first woman, and a socialistic venture having for its object the estab in subsequent chapters are chronicled the beginnings lishment of a Utopian commonwealth in Africa. of litigation, art, music, and other accessories of civ- These are not his only sacrifices, for love also is ilization. Presently a corporation comes with a rail- cast aside, and it is not until the end of much suf road in its gift, and what continuity of interest the fering that his early passion is replaced by one fixed story has centres about the project. The book has upon far surer foundations. The characterization is both sentiment and humor, both after the fashion excellent, alike of the two women, the devoted hero, long ago set by Bret Harte, and makes a brave pre- and his masterful father, whose money seems to tence at showing that a free life under these primi- the son too tainted for legitimate enjoyment. Nor tive conditions is much better worth having than the is the hero in any sense depicted for us as a prig trammelled existence of more settled communities. or a weakling, but rather as a genial, athletic, and The argument is sufficiently persuasive to compel altogether wholesome specimen of the best English temporary assent, and that is all the story needs for manhood. The style of the novel, also, is natural as its sympathetic enjoyment. There can be no doubt to dialogue, and charmingly allusive as to description. that it is enjoyable, and that Mr. Hough has sur- “ The Conquest of Canaan" is a thoroughly read passed his best previous efforts for our entertainment. able book, made so by its genial description of vil Miss Beulah Dix is an accomplished artificer of lage types of character, and enough of a story to historical romance, and has worked successfully in make the chapters hang together. Canaan is in the material offered by seventeenth-century England Indiana, and it is conquered by the town ne'er-do and America, by puritans in Massachusetts, and by well, who seems to have in him all the makings of the conflict of roundhead with cavalier. It is to the a vagabond; but who instead develops strength and latter phase of her activity that “The Fair Maid of determination. This transformation of an outcast Graystones " belongs, and the book turns out to be into a leading citizen is sketched with considerable a very pretty story indeed. Besieged Colchester has skill, and incidental humor is not lacking. A very just fallen into the hands of the parliamentary army, pretty love story adds warmth and romantic color and one of the consequences is that Jack Hethering- ing to this the latest of Mr. Tarkington's pleasant ton becomes a royalist prisoner. Then follows a sur- inventions. prising series of adventures for this engaging hero, « The House of a Thousand Candles " is a house brought about by the fact that he is taken for a cousin of mystery situated somewhere in the depths of of the same name, and thereby becomes responsible Indiana. It has secret panels and subterranean pas for many villainies laid to the charge of that unwor- sages, and the departed owner is reputed to have thy person. How he clears himself from this tangle concealed vast treasures somewhere within it. This it is the business of the novelist to unfold, and she makes it an object of burglarious enterprise on the does it without straining our sensibilities more than part of the surrounding population, and the coming is strictly necessary for the purposes of a full-grown of the new owner, to whom the house with all its The historical substratum of the tale is of contents has been left, is by no means a popular the thinnest, and chiefly takes the form of a conven- happening. This owner is a young man of roving tional reflection of the manners and speech of the time. disposition, to whom the property has been left “ Barbara Winslow, Rebel,” by Miss Elizabeth under singular conditions, one of which is that he Ellis, is another historical romance with an English shall make it his residence, and not leave it for a setting, its scene being laid just after the defeat of full year. Since his life is attempted on the very first Monmouth at Sedgemoor. Here we have a fascina- day of his arrival, the prospect is at least exciting. ting heroine, arrested for harboring rebels, and a But he game, an sets about solving the mys victim of Jeffrey and the Bloody Circuit. Sentenced tery for himself. Presently, an interesting romance to a brutal punishment, she is saved by one of the develops, the other person concerned being an in- king's officers, who thereby becomes himself a rebel, mate of a neighboring school for girls. Startling Startling and the two take flight together. They are clearly episodes occur in swift succession, the machinations in love with one another to any eyes but their own, of all the villains are thwarted, the romance comes but the inevitable misunderstanding supervenes, to a happy conclusion, and in the end we have the holding them at arm's length through the requisite greatest surprise of all, which it would be heartless number of chapters. Barbara is a young woman of of us to reveal. the pert and proud type so dear to the romantic romance. proves 156 [March 1, THE DIAL heart, and her soldier lover has the complementary incorporated into Austria. For three centuries the virtues that the situation requires. The story has potentates of Europe were accustomed to ask, “What been told, essentially, a hundred times before in as action shall we take in Italy?” During the greater many different guises, but it usually makes a pretty part of the eighteenth century, Italy was at the dis- one, and in this case no complaint may be made of posal of Europe, furnishing a country wherein conven- it for lack of interest or excitement. ient principalities were found for throneless princes. We are pot altogether satisfied that Miss Glasgow In twenty-one years, Sicily changed masters four should again have deserted her native heath (if a times ; Parma, three times in seventeen years. Napo- Virginia plantation may be thus designated) for leon I. created a kingdom in Northern Italy. In 1815 the allurements of the metropolis and its so-called the peninsula was again divided among princes, and “society.” As we said of “The House of Mirth,” it was dominated over by Austria. Not until 1860 is next to impossible to make a story of human interest was the kingdom of Italy finally established by out of the vapid and insolent life of the idle rich, and Victor Emmanuel, King of Piedmont. Ten years even the delicate art of Mrs. Wharton was balked in later, the State of the Church disappeared from the the effort. Now Miss Glasgow's art, although pos map of Italy, and “United Italy” was perfected. sibly stronger, is less delicate, and by so much she During the polyarchy, Italy was the cradle of the has been even less successful than the writer with Renaissance in art, in letters, in diplomatic institu- whose latest work “The Wheel of Life" is brought tions, in banking, and in commerce. It would appear into inevitable comparison. We may say in behalf an extraordinarily ambitious undertaking to write of the newer novel that it offers us at least one the history of such a country and its people in a sin- fine character in the person of its hero, who is in gle volume; yet Mrs. Augusta Hale Gifford, in her “society” but not of it, and another of strong but “ Italy, her People and their Story” (Lothrop Pub- elusive charm in the person of the woman poet lishing Company), has not only furnished a worthy whose apparition haunts many of the pages. But companion volume to her deservedly popular “Ger- as compared with “ The Deliverance,” for example, many, her People and their Story,” but has suc- this work is an inferior production. ceeded in giving a readable account of the people WILLIAM MORTON PAYNE. who have occupied the peninsula from Roman times down to the present day, throughout all the vicissi- tudes of their political goverment, - a people who have been distinguished in the fields of art, letters, music, and government. Very naturally, the first part BRIEFS ON NEW BOOKS. of the work (about 400 pages ) is largely drawn from "Lone mother The peninsula to which the name of Gibbon's “ Decline and Fall," and brings the history of dead Italy has been given for long ages down to the time of Theodoric. A single chapter empires." presents some of the most compli of the second part serves for the course of history cated problems in historical geography of all the from Theodoric to Charlemagne, more than five cen- continent of Europe. Consolidated under the Roman turies. Nine chapters serve for the interesting but rule in the early half of the third century, B. C., the complicated history of the country to the Napoleonic peninsula was visited and pillaged by almost all of era. From 1792 to the present time, the most the barbarians in the early Christian centuries. The interesting period, during which time the “ Italian Ostrogoths occupied it in the fifth century, A. D., Question was continually before the world, the until Justinian obtained possession and reëstablished history is given with considerable attention to de- the Roman Empire there. It became an exarchate tails, and altogether the volume is of exceptional of the Byzantine Empire about the middle of the value both from its historical accuracy and its pop- sixth century, and a few years later the Lombards ular style. - Mr. Henry Dwight Sedgwick, in his wrested it from the Empire. By the Treaty of Verdun, “Short History of Italy” (Houghton, Mifflin & Co.), in 843, it was separated from the Western Empire, has not undertaken such an ambitious task as Mrs. and in the tenth century it was united to Germany in Gifford's. He takes up the history in the year 476 the empire then formed. The Papal State then es and closes with the last year of the nineteenth cen- tablished proved a bar to complete Italian nationality tury. He has a good sense of proportion, and good until very recent times, and from that time until the ideas of historical perspective; he writes in a vivid nineteenth century polyarchy existed in Italy. From style, and possesses a keen sense of humor which the tenth to the thirteenth century, feudal principal contributes not a little to the entertaining quality of ities and republics were established; and most of the his book. Altogether, his volume, by no means as republics were transformed into principalities before small as its name might indicate, is entitled to a the end of the Middle Ages. In the fifteenth century, | place in the front rank of “short histories.” A Milan, Florence, the Papal State, the oligarchic Re- chronological table of the Popes and Emperors, a public of Venice, and the Kingdom of Naples, formed genealogical table of the Medici, a skeleton table of a pentarchy. The Normans conquered the southern the Kings of the Two Sicilies, and an admirably part of the peninsula and established the Kingdom of selected list of books for general reading, give Mr. the Two Sicilies. France and Spain at times had Sedgwick’s volume permanent value as a book of possessions in Italy, and a large portion was once reference. 1906.] 157 THE DIAL The foremost English thinker from Bacon to Hume. cance In writing of a man whose thorough is a mighty panorama, this, which the study of the going egoism was tempered by none feelings and thoughts of Germany, first oppositionist, too benevolent a spirit, and whose then revolutionary, between 1815 and 1848, unrolls chief claim to influence upon contemporary English to our view.” And it grows ever in interest, up to thought was his power to arouse opposition, it is per the culminating scene of 1848, when “ a long shud- haps not unnatural that the biographer's tone should der (of pain and at the same time of relief) passed contain a note of defense. Sir Leslie Stephen, who through the whole of Germany. It was as if a win- has written life of Thomas Hobbes for the “En dow had been opened, and air had reached the lungs glish Men of Letters” series (Macmillan), evidently of Europe.” This year of “great spiritual signifi- felt that his subject was in need of appreciation, is in literature “ the red line of separation and that the reading public ought to become better that divides our century and marks the beginning acquainted with “the most conspicuous English of a new era.” It is difficult to keep within bounds thinker in the whole period between Bacon and our admiration for the energy, the insight, and the Hume.” Hobbes belonged distinctly to the period profound philosophical basis of this master-work of in which he lived, and is indeed a product of it. Out criticism. A single pregnant sentence may be quoted of its spirit of scientific investigation grew his ma from the final chapter: "Between the years 1830 and terialism; out of the disturbed political situation in 1840 something has been happening quietly, deep England grew his famous theory of sovereignty as down in men's minds — Goethe's poetry and Goethe's embodied in “ The Leviathan"; and out of these philosophy of life, at first championed exclusively conditions, added to the struggle between Church and by enthusiastic women, have been steadily gaining State, grew his somewhat strange conception of mo influence over the cultivated, making them proof rality. His present biographer tells us that he had against theological impressions but receptive to all “ formed and begun to execute a remarkable plan. great human ideas. The cult of Goethe leads by He intended, like a sound logician, to lay down the degrees, even in the case of women, to the cult of first principles of scientific inquiry, to apply them to political liberty and social reform.” The impact what we should now call psychology, setting forth of this work upon the alert minds to which it came the laws of human nature, and finally to found upon in the seventies, both as an inspiration and as a this basis a science corresponding to modern soci- trumpet-call to renewed spiritual endeavor, may best ology." His point of view is essentially scientific; be illustrated by what Dr. Ibsen wrote the author the method of Euclid impressed and influenced him just after the appearance of the first volume. “I greatly, as did also the fact that the one universal must turn to what has lately been constantly in my phenomenon is motion. Since he developed all his thoughts, and has even disturbed my sleep. I have conclusions from “undeniable first principles” (as read your Lectures. No more dangerous book could he called them), we are tempted to look forward fall into the hands of a pregnant poet. It is one of and arbitrarily class him with the later continental those works which place a yawning gulf between rationalists. His actual physical speculations, admits yesterday and to-day. After I had been in Italy, his biographer, can have no interest except as speci- I could not understand how I had been able to exist mens of early guessing, and his theology is practi- before I had been there. In twenty years, one will cally of no value. But his political theory is by no not be able to comprehend how spiritual existence means so easily disposed of, and stands out, even at home was possible before these lectures. . . . Your to-day, coherent and logical. Sir Leslie Stephen has book is not a history of literature according to the summarized it with care and precision, and has dis old ideas, nor is it a history of civilization. I will cussed it with interest. not trouble to find a name for what it really is. It Literary Ger With the publication of "Young Ger- reminds me of the gold-fields of California when the early many" (Macmillan), the sixth volume they were first discovered, which either made mil- lionares of men or ruined them.” 19th century. of the "Main Currents in Nineteenth Century Literature,” by Dr. Georg Brandes, the task “Louisiana, a Record of Expansion ” of presenting that great critical work to English is the title of the latest issue in the readers is completed. The task has been long- commonwealth. useful “ American Commonwealths delayed, and its full accomplishment is a noteworthy series (Houghton, Mifflin & Co.). The author, Mr. event. Although the average age of the six volumes Albert Phelps, a native of New Orleans, has based is upwards of thirty years, their vitality has suffered his entire narrative upon a close study of the origi- little impairment with the lapse of time, and we may nal sources of Louisiana history, and the result is a read them to-day with almost the zest with which very good account of the position that Louisiana has we made their acquaintance in the seventies. The occupied in the history of American settlement and period of this concluding volume of the work lies the expansion of American institutions. It is worthy between the Congress of Vienna and the great rev of note that throughout the work two important points olutionary years of the mid-century. Heine is the are emphasized : the significance of the Mississippi central figure in this act of the literary drama, Valley in the history of American development; and while among the lesser performers are Börne, Hegel, the effect of negro slavery and its aftermath upon Menzel, Immermann, Gutzkow, and Freiligrath. “It political and social problems. In developing the im- many in Louisiana as an American 158 [March 1, THE DIAL portance of Louisiana as the key to the Mississippi The frescoes in the transept of the lower church at basin, Mr. Phelps gives a full and interesting descrip- Assisi, which have been ascribed to Giotto by some of tion of the French and the Spanish domination over the best authorities, he puts aside as not genuine, with- the lower Mississippi Valley, the continual pressure out adequate discussion. He ignores not only the of the Anglo-Americans against the southwestern little panels in Munich, which have been seriously as- frontier, and the final annexation and absorption of cribed to the great Florentine, but also the “Presen- the territory into the Union. The absolute neces tation" of Mrs. Gardner's collection in Boston, and sity, political, commercial, and geographical, of the the Giotto-like frescoes in San Antonio at Padua. possession of the Mississippi valley to the states of Added to this he casts suspicion upon the genuine- the North is shown to have been one of the fatal ness of Giotto's altar-piece in the Louvre, without causes of weakness to the Confederacy. On slavery giving adequate reasons for such doubt. It would seem and the problems growing out of it, especially as com that the author lacks the trained eye and mind of the plicated by Louisiana conditions, the author writes connoisseur, since he bases his conclusions upon the with full knowledge and keen insight. The institu content of the pictures rather than upon that which tion of negro slavery and its effects are traced from forms the true basis of discriminating criticism — the colonial times to the present day. Like others details of technique and of style. Yet after all has who have studied the race-question thoroughly, Mr. been said, this is, within its limitations, a good book. Phelps has come to the conclusion that there “never Mr. De Selincourt very properly gives most space to was a negro problem,” but that the mulatto is the his description of Giotto's panels in the sacristy of St. really important factor in the so-called race problem, Peters, and of his great frescoes at Assisi, at Flor- the black negro seldom or never being troublesome ence, and at Padua. His comments upon Ruskin's unless made so temporarily by white or mulatto criticism of the Paduan frescoes are excellent. He leaders. As to the future of the negro, the author loves his subject, and his enthusiasm, which is prop- thinks that it is by no means assured; the negro finds erly tempered, is just what is needed to inspire the it increasingly difficult to compete with the better reader with a desire to know more of the great Flor- equipped white man in the struggle for existence.entine and his art. The prominence which the author A fact set forth in this account, not generally known, gives to the subject-matter of the pictures, together is that the Spanish rule over Louisiana was much with the literary flavor of much of his writing, makes better than that of France, and better than the early his book an excellent popular introduction to the art American administration in the territory. Seldom of Giotto. of Giotto. So used, the text, accompanied as it is remembered, also, is the fact that in the American with many excellent illustrations, should prove of Revolution material assistance was given by Louisi- much value to beginners in the study of art, and may ana to the revolting colonies. Other phases of state serve them better than would many a more scientific history to which some attention is devoted are the but less enthusiastic work. gradual fusion of nationalities after the annexation, Miss G. E. Mitton's volume on “ Jane the Burr intrigue and the War of 1812, the troubles English life and Austen and her Times” (Putnam) leading to secession, the Civil War period, the Butler Austen's time. is another attempt to piece out the régime in New Orleans, and the Reconstruction of the state from 1862 to 1876. The account of the very uneventful story of Miss Austen's life with Reconstruction, though brief, is the first satisfactory an account of her eighteenth-century environment. The few facts of her life have all been told treatment of that tumultuous epoch in Louisiana many history. Particularly useful is the examination and times before, and her friends and the places she evaluation of the testimony taken by the various com- visited have all been fully described. So Miss mittees of Congress that investigated conditions in Mitton goes still further afield, making Jane Austen that unhappy state between 1866 and 1876, during simply a good excuse for a rambling, discursive, the reign of the mulatto and the “carpet-bagger.” but not uninteresting account of the manners and The book closes with a short customs of her day. This she survey, will of argues, survey present con- ditions in the commonwealth. be of especial value inasmuch as Miss Austen her- self, in her novels and her letters alike, makes so A life of Giotto, by Mr. Basil de few references to the great events or the ephemeral A good popular introduction to Selincourt, is a recent addition to that interests that environed her. So Miss Mitton tells the art of Giotto. admirable series, “The Library of us how Jane travelled, and how she might have Art" (imported by Scribner). Its author, in follow travelled if she had ventured on to the Continent, ing the older traditional views, stands at variance what she studied at school, how clergymen like her with such modern critics as Perkins and Berenson. father were regarded, what people ate in those days This fact is evident in his remarks on the Roman and what they wore, how they managed the serv- school of painters of the thirteenth and fourteenth ant question, and how they escaped paying postage. centuries and its relation to Giotto, as well as in his Her contemporary authors get a chapter; so does treatment of the chronology of the master's works. the British navy, apropos of her two brothers' con- His arguments are not always the soundest, nor is his nection with it. We are told how Jane and her criticism as discriminating as it might be. Moreover, heroines liked Bath, what adventures they had at liis treatnient of the whole subject lacks thoroughness. | Southampton, and what Jane saw and might have ways in Jane 1906.] 159 THE DIAL Mr. Birrell's essays. seen in her visits to London. “Society and Love during the past century in matters referring to the making" is the title of a chapter describing the welfare of the laborer and artisan. Even to those balls and routs of the time, telling of the exag best acquainted with the efforts that are being made gerated head-dresses of the ladies, the gloves they for better conditions of labor and of housing, much saved so carefully for the minuet, and the money of Mr. Meakin's material will be entirely new, re- they lost at cards. It ends with a circumstantial markable, and encouraging. Especially interesting account of all Jane's love affairs, viewed in the light is the well-supported statement that the merchants of the theories of love which her novels seem to and manufacturers who have led the movement for enunciate. There are copious extracts from the industrial betterment have done so as business men novels and from Jane's letters, as well as from the and not as philanthropists, and the corollary that standard biographies. But if the present work does | improved living and working opportunities have been not attain to, or claim, much originality, it is a clever the cause and not the result of increased business and readable compilation, with something about it success. Mr. Meakin's book is divided into two parts, of the sprightly freshness of Miss Austen's own work. the first section dealing largely with the elementary Twenty illustrations reproduce portraits of the Aus efforts made by manufacturers whose buildings were ten family and some of their friends, and scenes of situated in the centres of cities toward ameliorating contemporary life as some of the eighteenth century the conditions of light, air, sanitation, dining facili- artists have depicted it. ties, and recreation; and with the efforts, more inher- ently successful, of those who had recognized the Mr. Augustine Birrell's latest volume, underlying principle that cheap land, away from the More of “ In the Name of the Bodleian heart of the city, in a district that might be suitably (Scribner), is characteristically full of surrounded by the homes of the workingmen, was quaint fancies, brilliant sallies of wit and humor, the essential for real improvement. The number and keenly-calculated judgments of men and things, and importance of the factories in America, England, and an erudition that pointedly avoids beaten highways to on the Continent that have taken advantage of im- cull its treasures from odd nooks and dusty corners. proved traffic facilities to avail themselves of country Mr. Birrell is a book-worm, but he rides his hobby sites will be only less surprising than the photographs so gaily, with such a vivid appreciation of all the shown to illustrate the combined beauty and economy more human relations of life, that others besides which is the result. The second half of Mr. Meakin's book-worms find him suggestive and sympathetic. book deals with “Industrial Housing,” and is prac- The title-essay, a delightful account of the foundatically a supplement to the first part, since it illus- tion and history of the great Oxford library, has for trates the success which manufacturers have had, in its occasion the financial straits of that institution. their various and varied schemes, toward surround- The paper on “First Editions is a sensible and ing their workshops with ideal villages. The whole amusing comment on the controversy between the book is strongly indicative of the trend toward collector and the man who scoffs at him; and “Bos cooperation that modern industry is taking. well as Biographer” is an analysis of Macaulay's and Carlyle's respective estimates of " Bozzy,” unin- A dictionary To be honest, as Hamlet remarks, is spired by the publication of any more modern opin of famous to be one man out of ten thousand. Americans. ion. But generally the point of departure is a new To be famous in the United States book or a new edition. In “Hannah More Once was of the same degree of rarity a few years ago, More " Mr. Birrell seizes the opportunity afforded when the first issue of “Who's Who in America” him by the publication of Marion Harland's biogra- appeared. One out of five thousand is the present phy to nak an engaging apology for that other ratio, which should still be reasonably satisfactory essay in which he rudely related how he buried Miss to the one. In other words, the eight thousand bi- More's works, in nineteen calf-bound volumes, in his ographies of the first edition have become sixteen garden. A laudatory life of Tom Paine, by Mr. thousand in the fourth, now at hand from the house Moncure D. Conway, leads to a vigorous analysis of Messrs. A. N. Marquis & Co. This volume, like of Paine's peculiar genius, and the republication of its predecessors, has been compiled and edited by Matthew Arnold's “Friendship’s Garland” to a Mr. John W. Leonard. A new feature is provided trenchant description of “Our Great Middle Class.” | by the inclusion of brief references to those men- The subjects are of a more special interest, the treat tioned in the earlier issues, who have since died. ment correspondingly slighter and more casual, than There are more than two thousand closely-printed in the “Obiter Dicta"; but the new volume has its pages in the present volume. We have exhausted full share of the fine flavor imparted by Mr. Birrell our vocabulary in testifying to the usefulness of this to everything he touches. work in connection with the earlier editions, and will only repeat the simple statement that it is invaluable. Improving the Mr. Budgett Meakin is the author of We particularly commend to the attention of judi- workingman's a book on “Model Factories and Vil cious readers the preface, which is a highly enter- surroundings. lages” (A. Wessels Co.), which con taining essay. We may read therein, for example, tains an immense amount of information, both inter of the clannish individual who submitted the names esting and instructive, in regard to the progress made of thirty-three of his relations as suitable for inclu- 60 [March 1, THE DIAL us. sion, of the female "grafter” who offered (for a of knowledge, he is not, even in his “ History of Modern consideration ) to secure recognition for unsuspected Philosophy,” distinctly lucid and simple. And in this genius, and of the unpublished poet whose "blank new volume, an abstract discussion of abstract princi- (not to say blankety-blank) verse” about Lincoln ples, his style carries him beyond the possibility of ac- was offered in evidence that the writer belonged companiment by the layman. But since the book is, in among the imınortals. For these, and other delightful teachers of philosophy, its usefulness will not be much the nature of the case, intended for philosophers and matters, we thank Mr. Leonard, aside from his ser impaired by its abstruseness. vices in providing the harassed editor with an indis- A little manual dealing with the life and art of Ra- pensable book of reference. phael has been prepared for the use of art students by Some American A collection of brief biographical Mrs. Julia Cartwright Ady, and is issued as the four- women of a sketches, characterized by a real in- teenth volume of the « Popular Library of Art" (Dut- by-gone day. terest of subject matter and a pleas- ton). Mrs. Ady is accustomed to the preparation of far more elaborate studies than this, but she uses the smaller antly unconventional manner of treatment, is Mr. space at her command with much discrimination, writ- Seth Curtis Beach's “ Daughters of the Puritans' ing what is, within its limited compass, a singularly (American Unitarian Association). Catherine Maria complete account of the character and development of Sedgwick, Mary Lowell Ware, Lydia Maria Child, Raphael's work. She is of course thoroughly familiar Dorothea Lynde Dix, Margaret Fuller, Harriet with modern critical opinion, and as far as it goes her Beecher Stowe, and Louisa M. Alcott are the par- work is exact and scholarly. Fifty reproductions of the ticular women about whom Mr. Beach has chosen to artist's work illustrate the volume. write. Of nearly every one of them an authoritative Mr. John Sampson has edited for the Oxford Univer- biography or memoir of some sort has been written, sity Press (Henry Frowde) “The Poetical Works of William Blake.” This is a new and verbatim text from and one purpose of these essays is to call attention to the more elaborate studies and to stimulate interest the manuscript, engraved, and letter press originals,” and includes, by way of apparatus, both variorum read- in them. One of the interesting disclosures of these ings and bibliographical material. The text of Blake has sketches, which are studies of personality rather than been so overlain with the emendations of (not always more formal and studied biography, is the picture judicious) editors that its restoration was highly desir- of the early nineteenth century which they inciden able, and this Mr. Sampson has scrupulously done for tally convey. Life was very simple in those far-off Punctuation is all that this editor has ventured to days, and literature, too, was simple and unsophis- add to Blake's originals, and this could hardly have been ticated; but neither life nor literature ever lacked omitted. We cannot be too grateful for this beautiful serious inspiration. Nearly every author was also a and scholarly edition of the great mystic. reformer, with a pet cause to write for and to work Poetry, romance, art, architecture, history of wars for in other ways. Probably few of Mr. Beach's between individuals, factions, and races, all these play readers will care to read a book about each of the their part in Mrs. Janet Ross's “ Florentine Palaces and their Stories ” (Dutton). Mrs. Ross has every qualifi- seven women with whom he deals; but there is not cation for writing a book of this kind. Herself a resident one in the list about whom good Americans should of Florence for thirty-five years, and an associate of its be willing to remain in complete ignorance. best citizens, familar with all their traditions and customs, and moreover a diligent student of their archives, she has compiled a book which takes precedence of any other BRIEFER MENTION. in the same field. The number of palaces described is seventy-six. A very complete index renders the mass of Mr. Ernest Newman's volume of “Musical Studies" tradition available for ready reference, and the illustra- (John Lane Co.) is made up largely of critical essays tions from drawings by Miss Adelaide Marchi help to previously printed in the leading American musical and make up an exceedingly attractive volume. literary journals. The six chapters in the book are de Seven new volumes have recently been added to the voted to « Berlioz, Romantic and Classic,” « Faust in well-known “ Newnes’ Art Library” (Warne). These Music,” “Programme Music,” “Herbert Spencer and are bound uniformly with the rest of the series, in boards the Origin of Music,” “Maeterlinck and Music,” and with cloth back, gilt lettered. Each volume contains a « Richard Strauss and the Music of the Future." Mr. frontispiece in photogravure, about sixty full-page half- Newman's groupings of principles and motives are on a tone plates, and a brief textual comment. A number broad and comprehensive scale, and are free from the of the half-tones in the volume on Rossetti are made ambiguity that mars so many works on musical criticism. more effective by being mounted on rough grey mats. Professor Harald Höffding's “ The Problems of Phil Mr. Ernest Radford furnishes the text for this volume, osophy” (Macmillan) is not an abridgment of the au and Mr. Malcolm Bell writes of Titian, Mr. P. G. thor's philosophical theories, but rather a defence of the Konody of Filippino Lippi, Mrs. Arthur Bell of Tinto- four problems that he holds to be the basis of philo-retto, Mr. Arsène Alexandre of Puvis de Chavannes, sophical thought, namely: The problem of the nature of Mr. Henry Miles of “ The Later Work of Titian," and consciousness (the psychological problem), the problem Mr. J. Ernest Phythian of “ The Pre-Raphaelite Bro- of the validity of knowledge (the logical problem), the therhood.” These introductory sketches are largely bio- problem of the nature of being (the cosmological prob- | graphical, except the last-named, which is an exposition lem), and the problem of value (the moral and religious of the motives and relative positions of Madox Brown, problem). While Professor Höffding is one of the most Holman-Hunt, Millais, and Rossetti. Beginners in art thoughtful and learned scholars in his particular branch study will especially appreciate this very attractive series. 1906.] 161 THE DIAL TOPICS IN LEADING PERIODICALS. March, 1906. NOTES. “ Sermon Briefs,” by Henry Ward Beecher, is pub- lished at the Pilgrim Press, New York. It consists of transcriptions from Beecher's manuscript notes made for sermons preached during the years 1864–5. Attention having been newly recalled to “ Die Waf- fen Nieder," the historical romance of the Baroness von Suttner, by the recent award of the Nobel peace prize, Messrs. A. C. McClurg & Co. now republish their trans- lation of the work, as made by Mrs. Alice Asbury Abbott many years ago. This version is entitled “Ground Arms,” which is both idiomatic and exact. “Model English Prose," compiled by Professor George R. Carpenter, and published by the Macmillan Co., is a volume of selections for the use of secondary schools. The selections are not only representative of their authors and periods, but are also extremely inter- esting on their own account, and it is seldom that we are offered a school-book which so completely deserves to be described as good reading. The English “Who's Who” for 1906, published by the Macmillan Co., calls for about the same sort of comment as previous issues. There are many new biographies, and the selection of American names is as capricious as ever. Removal of many tables to the companion “Who's Who Year Book” has kept the work within practicable dimensions, although the biographies now fill nearly two thousand pages. Encouraged by the success which attended the publi- cation in the original of Xavier de Maistre's “Voyage autour de ma Chambre "in the series of Riverside Press Editions, Messrs. Houghton, Mifflin & Co. will shortly bring out Bernardin de Saint-Pierre's “ Paul et Virginie in the French text of the original first edition. The new edition will be set in type of the Didot style, imported from Paris, and is to be embellished with reproductions of the engravings in the first French edition. These illustrations are not facsimiles, but have been reëngraved on wood by M. Lamont Brown. The edition is limited to 280 numbered copies. An important publishing transfer recently effected was that whereby Messrs. A. S. Barnes & Co. took over the periodical and book business of the United Educational Company, formerly E. L. Kellogg & Co. and E. 0. Vaile. The periodicals include the well-known “ Teach- er's Magazine,” a practical assistant and representative of teachers in the primary, intermediate, and grammar grades throughout the country, published monthly with illustrations; “ The School Journal,” a weekly journal presenting new movements in education with special reference to intermediate and secondary schools; “Our Times," a weekly journal of current events, for general readers, and also adapted for practical school use; and “ Educational Foundation,” a monthly magazine of peda- gogy. These periodicals, it will be seen, cover the en- tire work from the primary to the end of the secondary schools. The large and important list of pedagogical books, teachers' helps, supplementary books, and school entertainments includes “The Teacher's Library," a se- ries of practical professional books for teachers, contain- ing over twenty volumes; “The Teacher's Month by Month Books," for primary grades; and the “Annual School Directories,” fifteen in number, founded by E.O. Vaile. It is understood that the plans of Messrs. Barnes & Co. include many important improvements and developments of both the periodicals and the book list along approved educational lines. Agriculture, Scientific. Countess of Warwick. No. American. Albright Gallery of Buffalo. Frank Fowler. Scribner. Antelope's Protection of Its Young. H. H. Cross. Century. Arab Bandits, A Night's Ride with. C. W. Furlong. Harper. Art in the Street. Sylvester Baxter. Century. Artists, Western, Society of. J. S. Dickerson. World To-day. Athletics, Amateur, Commercializing of. World To-day. Athletics, What England Can Teach Us in. Rev. of Reviews. Automobiles for Everybody. H. B. Haines. World's Work. Automobilist, Rights of the. John Farson. World To-day. Average Man, The, and his Money. World's Work, Baker, Captain, of Jamaica. E. P. Lyle, Jr. World To-day. Birds that Nest in Colonies. W. L. Finley, World To-day. Boston. Henry James. North American. British Free Trade. Alfred Mosely. Review of Reviews. British West Indies, Future of. W. P. Livingstone. No. Amer. Buccaneers I Have Known. Lloyd Buchanan. Lippincott. Chain Gang - Shall it Go? G. H. Clarke. World To-day. Children's Court in American City Life. Review of Reviews. China and the Far East. H. P. Judson. World To-day. Chinese Boycott, Reason for. C. Chaille-Long. World To-day. Chinese Special Mission, The. J. W. Jenks. Rev. of Reviews. Colorado Glacier, A. Junius Henderson. Harper. Commercial Machiavellianism. Ida M. Tarbell. McClure. Consular Service, Proposed Reorganization of the. No. Amer. Denmark, Late King of. Edwin Björkman. Rev. of Reviews. Earth, Measuring the. Edward Marshall. World To-day. Filipino Labor Supply. George H. Guy. Review of Reviews. Fletcherism, Growth of. I. F. Marcosson. World's Work. France, Anatole. Bradford Torrey. Atlantic. Geneva, University of. Charles F. Thwing. Harper. German Army, The. William G. FitzGerald. World's Work. German Emperor, The. A. Maurice Low, Atlantic. Germany and U.S., Commercial Relations between. No. Amer. Girl's Industrial School of Indianapolis. World To-day. Hay, John, A Friendship with. J. B. Bishop. Century. Ibex-Shooting in Baltisan. J. C. Grew. Harper. Immigration, Sane Regulation of. Review of Reviews. Ingelow, Jean, Recollections of. G. B. Stuart. Lippincott. Ireland, Deserted. Plummer F. Jones. World To-day. Jefferson and “ The Rivals." Francis Wilson. Scribner. Kentucky Cardinal, Ways of the. Jennie Brooks. Harper. Labor, Some Equivocal Rights of. George W. Alger. Atlantic. Le Braz, Anatole. Carroll Dunham. Review of Reviews. Liberal Policy, The. H. Campbell-Bannerman. World To-day. Life Insurance Corruption. "Q. P.” World's Work. Lincoln Farm, The. Review of Reviews. Lincoln, Some Impressions of. E. S. Nadal. Scribner. Looking Backward. Clara Morris. McClure, Man and Beast. Samuel H. Brury. Atlantic. Mani Bible, The Long-Lost. M. Bloomfield. Harper. Money Stringency, Cause of the. A. B. Hepburn. No. American. Moros, Preparing Our, for Government. R. L. Bullard. Atlantic. Navy, Our. An American Citizen. North American. New York Custom-House, The. Charles De Kay. Century. New York Revisited. Henry James. Harper. Orange-Growing in California. Bertha M. Smith. World's Work. Paris, Housing of Large Families in. Review of Reviews. Pittsburg and Erie Barge Canal. W.F. McClure. World Today. Plays, Publication of. Brander Matthews. North American. Public Schools, A Lesson for the. Adele M. Shaw. World's Work. Railroad Freight Rates - A Sidelight. Review of Reviews. Railroad, The President and the. Cy Warman. World To-day. 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Vol. I. “Concerning the Duties and Qualifications of a Librarian." Vol. II. “The Reformed Library Keeper." A series of six reprints of rare and out-of-print works on libraries and their management. The pri- mary object of the series is to bring within the reach of persons interested, and especially of librarians, the early authorities on these subjects. The volumes in this series will be beautifully printed at the Merrymount Press. The Ghost in Hamlet And Other Essays in Comparative Literature. By Dr. Maurice Francis EGAN. 16mo, $1.00 net. As professor of English at the Catholic University of Washington, Dr. Egan is well known both as a thorough scholar and a charming writer. The other titles are: Some Phases of Shakespearean Interpretation; Some Pedagogical Uses of Shakespeare; Lyrism in Shakespeare's Comedies; A Definition of Literature; The Ebb and Flow of Romance; The Greatest of Shakespeare's Contemporaries; Imitators of Shakespeare; The Puzzle of Hamlet. Old Tales from Rome By Alice ZIMMERN, author of "Old Tales from Greece." Fully illustrated. 12mo, $1.25. A popular presentation of some of the famous myths and legends. The book is divided into three parts, the first being given to “ The Wanderings of Æneas," the second to “ Early Days of Rome," and the third to “ The Transformation." A. C. MCCLURG & CO. PUBLISHERS CHICAGO 1906.] 169 THE DIAL A. C. McCLURG & CO.'S SPRING LIST Panama to Patagonia The Isthmian Canal and the West Coast Countries of South America. By CHARLES M. PEPPER, author of “To-morrow in Cuba.” With new maps and numerous illustrations. Large 8vo, $2.50 net. The author is a distinguished newspaper man who has travelled extensively, especially in the Latin-American republics, and who is a member of the Permanent Pan-American Railway Committee. His book aims to point out to the American commercial world the enormous advantages conting to this country from South America through the construction of the Panama Canal. The Glory Seekers The Romance of Would-Be Founders of Empire in the Early Days of the South- west. By WILLIAM HORACE BROWN. Illustrated. Square 8vo, $1.50 net. These are tales of the daring adventurers who became notorious as the leaders of filibustering expeditions into the region which now forms the State of Texas. The author, William Horace Brown, knows his subject and endeavors to present a truthful account, with the statement that “justice and patriotism were not always the prompters of their actions." There is no question but that their exploits were dramatic and picturesque, and the narrative of them is not only instructive, but makes highly entertaining reading. Yesterdays Hawaiian By Dr. Henry M. LYMAN. With numerous illustrations from photographs. Large 8vo, $2.00 net. A delightfully written account of what a boy saw of life in the Islands in the early '40's. The author was a distinguished Chicago physician, whose father was a well-known missionary in Hawaii. His book is a most pertinent description of early conditions in a part of the world in which Americans are becoming more and more interested. Future Life In the Light of Ancient Wisdom and Modern Science. By Louis ELBÉ. With a portrait. 12mo, $1.20 net. This is the authorized translation of the famous book which has been creating so wide a stir in scientific and religious circles throughout France, under the title “ La Vie Future.” It will be received with widespread interest here, and will arouse very general discussion. The subject is one which is engaging not only scientists, but laymen, in ever-increasing numbers. This volume offers for the first time a complete presentation of all the available evidence hitherto to be found only in the most scattered and inaccessible forms. Remenyi, Musician and Man An Appreciation. By GWENDOLYN KELLEY and GEORGE P. UPTON. With portraits. 8vo, $1.75 net. Miss Kelley was an intimate friend and devoted admirer of the famous Hungarian wizard of the violin, and he intrusted to her a number of biographical documents. To these have been added others contributed at her solicitation by his personal friends and members of his family, also some of his characteristic letters and literary sketches, the whole forming a volume of uncommon charm and a valuable work of reference. A. C. MCCLURG & CO. PUBLISHERS CHICAGO 170 [March 16 THE DIAL LITTLE, BROWN, & COMPANY'S ***** MISCELLANEOUS THE HEART OF THE RAILROAD By Professor FRANK PARSONS, Ph.D., PROBLEM Author of "The City for the People," etc. This book reveals the facts in regard to railway favoritism and unjust discrimination. 12mo, cloth. $1.50 net. THE FIGHT FOR CANADA By Major WILLIAM WOOD. Major Wood places the entire campaign of the fight for Canada on a new historical footing. With portraits, colored maps, and bibliography. 8vo, cloth. $2.50 net. THE ECONOMY OF HAPPINESS By JAMES MACKAYE. The present work seeks to transfer the foundation of economics from wealth to happiness ; thus substituting utilita- rianism for commercialism and making ethics instead of the arbitrary traditions of political economy the foundation of public polity. Small 8vo, cloth. $2.50 net. THE UP-TO-DATE WAITRESS By JANET MCKENZIE HILL, Author of "Salads, Sandwiches, and Chafing Dish Dainties," etc. A book of inestimable value in every household where a table girl is employed. With numerous illustrations in half-tone. 12mo, cloth. $1.50 net. THUNDER AND LIGHTNING By CAMILLE FLAMMARION, Author of "Popular Astronomy," etc. An exceedingly entertaining book by the great French astronomer. Illustrated. 12mo, cloth. $1.25 net. PETRARCH'S “TRIUMPHS.” Special Limited Issue. Translated by HENRY BOYD. Printed from Humanistic type made especially for the edition. Send for special circular. THE GAME OF BRIDGE A popular treatise on “bridge,” to which have been added the laws of the game. By FISHER AMES. 16mo, cloth. $1.00 net. PRACTICAL ROWING WITH SCULL AND SWEEP By ARTHUR W. STEVENS. An invaluable handbook on rowing; with chapters on "The Effects of Training," by Eugene A. Darling, M.D. With diagram and 16 illustrations. 16mo, cloth. $1.00 net, THE BOOK OF DANIEL AND MODERN CRITICISM By Rev. CHARLES H. H. WRIGHT, D.D. A series of lectures in which Daniel and his Prophecies are considered in relation to Modern Criticism. 8vo, cloth. $2.50 net. CENTRALIZATION AND THE LAW By MELVILLE M. BIGELOW, and others. Six lectures delivered at the Boston University Law School as part of the plan of legal extension now on foot there. 12mo, cloth. $1.50 net. FICTION CALLED TO THE FIELD By LUCY M. THRUSTON, Author of " A Girl of Virginia," etc. The story of a young married Virginia girl at the outbreak of the Civil War. 12mo, cloth. $1.50. By SARA E. BOGGS. 12mo, cloth. $1.50. SANDPEEP A charming story of the Maine coast. Illustrated by May Bartlett. KENELM'S DESIRE A strong, vital, human romance with the hero an Alaska Indian. By HUGHES CORNELL. 12mo, cloth. $1.50. PUBLISHED BY LITTLE, BROWN, & COMPANY 1906.] 171 THE DIAL NEW SPRING PUBLICATIONS FICTION- Continued ON THE FIELD OF GLORY By HENRYK SIENKIEWICZ. Author of "Quo Vadis," etc. Authorized translation from the Polish by Jeremiah Curtin. “Other novels seem juiceless, and other heroes bloodless, after reading 'On the field of Glory."— The Independent, New York. 12mo, cloth. $1.50. Third Printing. A MAKER OF HISTORY By E. PHILLIPS OPPENHEIM. Author of "The Master Mummer," etc. “By far the best work of this clever author.” — Chicago Daily News. Illustrated. 12mo, cloth. $1.50. Third Printing. THE SAGE BRUSH PARSON By A. B. WARD. A story of a Nevada mining camp with a hero “whose fortunes and adventures hold one's unflagging interest,” says The Nation. 12mo, cloth. $1.50. Fifth Printing. MAID OF ATHENS By LAFAYETTE MCLAWS. Author of "When the Land Was Young," etc. A highly romantic novel dealing with Lord Byron's career in Greece. Illustrated by Harry C. Edwards. 12mo, cloth. $1.50. HEARTS AND CREEDS By ANNA CHAPIN RAY. Author of “On the Firing Line," etc. A romance of Quebec, dealing with the marriage of a Protestant girl with a Catholic. Dlustrated by Alice Barber Stephens. 12mo, cloth. $1.50. THE WIRE TAPPERS By ARTHUR STRINGER. Author of "The Silver Poppy," etc. A remarkable story in which the hero and heroine become by force of circumstances associated with the pool-room wire tapper. Illustrated by Arthur William Brown. 12mo, cloth. $1.50. THE DISTRICT ATTORNEY A story of American political life of the present day. By WILLIAM SAGE. Author of "The Claybornes,” etc. 12mo, cloth. $1.50. THE WOLF AT SUSAN'S DOOR By ANNE WARNER. Author of "Susan Clegg,” etc. Another inimitable three-part Susan Clegg story to which has been added “Mrs. Lathrop's Love Affair.” With frontispiece. 12mo, cloth. $1.00. TRUTH DEXTER - Illustrated Edition By SIDNEY MCCALL. Author of "The Breath of the Gods." With a series of eight striking and sympathetic pictures in tint by Alice Barber Stephens. 12mo, cloth. $1.50. OLD WASHINGTON By HARRIET PRESCOTT SPOFFORD Delightful stories of the National Capital just after the close of the Civil War. With frontispiece by George Alfred B Williams. 12mo, cloth. $1.50. A MILLIONAIRE OF YESTERDAY THE MAN AND HIS KINGDOM By E. PHILLIPS OPPENHEIM. New editions of two of Mr. Oppenheim's earlier successes. Each is fully illustrated. 12mo, cloth. Each, $1.50. POPULAR EDITIONS OF RECENT FICTION =[12mo, cloth. Each, 75 cents. PAINTED SHADOWS, By RICHARD LE GALLIENNE. THE SIEGE OF YOUTH, By FRANCES CHARLES. THE VIKING'S SKULL, By JOHN R. CARLING. HASSAN, A FELLAH, By HENRY GILLMAN. SARAH TULDON, By ORME AGNUB. THE WOLVERINE, By ALBERT L. LAWRENCE. NO. 254 WASHINGTON STREET, BOSTON, MASS. 172 [March 16, THE DIAL Dodd, Mlead & Company's Spring Publications Fiction WHAT HAPPENED TO PAM By BETTINA VON HUTTEN, author of “Pam," “Our Lady of the Beeches," “ He and Hecuba.” Illustrations by B. Martin Justice. 12mo, cloth, $1.50 COWARDICE COURT By GEORGE BARR MCCUTCHEON, author of “Grau- stark,” «Beverly of Graustark,” « Nedra,” « The Day of the Dog,” etc. With illustrations in color by Harrison Fisher, and decorations by T. B. Hapgood. 12mo, cloth, $1.25 BARBARA WINSLOW, REBEL By ELIZABETH ELLIS. "A frankly romantic story, buoyant, eventful, and in matters of love exactly what the heart could desire." - New York Sun. Full-page illustrations and decorations by John Rae. 12mo, cloth, $1.50 THE PATRIOTS By CYRUS TOWNSEND BRADY, author of “The South- erners,” “ For Love or Country,” “My Lady's Slipper," etc. With illustrations, in two colors, by Walter H. Everett. 12mo, cloth, $1.50 A MOTOR CAR DIVORCE By LOUISE CLOSSER HALE. This clever story has been running serially in The Bookman. With 36 illustra- tions, 10 of which are in color, by Walter Hale. 12mo, cloth, $1.50 A LAME DOG'S DIARY By S. MACNAUGHTAN, author of “The Fortune of Chris- tina Macnab,” “Selah Harrison,” etc. 12mo, cloth, $1.50 THE HILL By HORACE VACHELL, author of “John Charity,” “ Brothers,” etc. 12mo, cloth, $1.50 THE SCHOLAR'S DAUGHTER By BEATRICE HARRADEN, author of “Ships that Pass in the Night,” “The Fowler," “ Katherine Fensham,” etc. With illustrations and decorations, and printed in two colors. 12mo, cloth, $1.50 THE GIRL WITH THE BLUE SAILOR By BURTON EGBERT STEVENSON, author of “The Holladay Case,” “The Marathon Mystery," etc. Illustra- tions and decorations. 12mo, cloth, $1.50 THE VICAR OF BULLHAMPTON By ANTHONY TROLLOPE, author of “Orley Farm,” etc. This is the second of the series of « The Manor House Novels." Two volumes. 12mo, cloth, $2.50 MY SWORD FOR LAFAYETTE By MAX PEMBERTON, author of “The Garden of Swords,” « Pro Patria,” “Beatrice of Venice," etc. Fully illustrated. 12mo, cloth, $1.50 1906.] 173 THE DIAL Dodd, Mead & & Company's Spring Publications history and Biography AMERICANS OF 1776 By JAMES SCHOULER, author of " History of the United States," Eighty Years of Union," etc. An original study of life and manners of the Revolutionary Period. 12mo, cloth, net, $2.00 JACQUES CARTIER SIEUR DE LIMOILOU By JAMES PHINNEY BAXTER, A.M., Litt.D. A Memoir of Cartier, His Voyage to the St. Lawrence, a Bibliography, and a Facsimile of the Manuscript of 1534, with Annotations, etc. With numerous fac- simile maps and other illustrations. To be issued in two forms: Japan paper edition, limited to 35 copies. Special net, $20.00 Regular edition, limited to 300 copies. Special net, $10.00 THE DECLARATION OF INDEPENDENCE: Its History By J. H. HAZLETON. A thorough and painstaking history of the great document by an authority. Illustrated, 8vo, cloth, probably net, $4.50 GEORGE ELIOT By A. T. QUILLER-COUCH, author of "The Splendid Spur," "Ia," The Ship of Stars," etc. The eighth volume of the "Modern English Writers" series. 12mo, cloth, net, $1.00 gyiscellaneous Books RUBAIYAT OF AN AUTOMOBILE By CAROLYN WELLS, author of "Idle Idyls," "Patty Fairfield," etc. Illustrations by F. Strothmann. An amusing parody of Omar in Miss Wells's best vein. 12mo, cloth, net, $1.00 HOLLAND DESCRIBED BY GREAT WRITERS By ESTHER SINGLETON, author of "London Described by Great Writers," etc. Fully illustrated in the style of her "London" and “Paris.” 8vo, cloth, net, $1.60 THE KEY OF THE BLUE CLOSET By W. ROBERTSON NICOLL, author of "Letters on Life," etc. A volume of clever and convincing essays on life, books, and affairs. 12mo, cloth, net, $1.40 MAGAZINE ARTICLES I HAVE READ By BURTON EMMETT. A volume for records of magazine articles read, arranged with blanks and with index. 12mo, cloth, net, $1.00 THE LAUNCHING OF A UNIVERSITY By DANIEL COIT GILMAN, LL.D. Essays and addresses on various topics educational and historical. 8vo, cloth, net, $2.50 HOW TO PREPARE FOR EUROPE By H. A. GUERBER, author of " Legends of Switzerland," "Stories of the Wagner Operas," etc. Ilustrations, maps, tables, etc. 12mo, cloth, net, $2.00 FAMOUS INTRODUCTIONS TO SHAKESPEARE'S PLAYS By the notable editors of the XVIII. Century. Edited, with a critical introduction, biographical and explanatory notes, by BEVERLEY WARNER, D.D., author of "English History in Shakespeare's Plays," etc. 12mo, cloth, net, $2.50 THE ART OF KEEPING WELL Common Sense Hygiene for Adults and Children. By CORDELIA A. GREENE, M.D. 12mo, cloth, net, $1.25 THE ART OF ORGAN BUILDING By GEORGE ASHDOWN AUDSLEY, author of " Keramic Arts of Japan," etc. 2 vols., 4to, about 500 pages each, numerous illustrations, cloth, limited to 1000 sets. Special net, $20.00 Edition de Luxe, limited to 250 copies, each copy to be numbered and signed by the author. Special net, $35.00 THE HAPPY CHRIST By HAROLD BIG-BIE, author of "The Story of Baden Powell,” etc. 16mo, cloth, net, $1.00 JOYZELLE AND MONNA VANNA By MAURICE MAETERLINCK, author of "The Life of the Bee," etc. First English translation in book form of the play "Joyzelle," and the authorized version of "Monna Vanna." 12mo, cloth, net, $1.40 174 [March 16, THE DIAL PUTNAM'S NEW BOOKS “In balance of judgment and proportion of interest there is no history so helpful.”-The Congregationalist. A History of England FROM THE EARLIEST TIMES DOWN TO THE YEAR 1815 Written by various authors under the direction and editorship of C. W. C. OMAN, Deputy Chichele Professor of Modern History in the University of Oxford, author of “The Art of War in the Middle Ages," "A History of the Peninsular War," etc. To be in six volumes, 8vo. Cloth. Each, net, $3.00. Three volumes now ready. II. England under the Normans and Angevins, 1066–1272. By H. W. C. Davis. IV. England under the Tudors, 1485–1603. By ARTHUR D. INNES. V. England under the Stuarts, 1603–1714. By G. M. TREVELYAN. “Will take a high and permanent place in the literature of its subject. Not so much a history in the ordinary sense of the word as a sustained and luminous commentary upon history; high toned and impartial.”—The Atheneum. “A tour de force for mastery of the subject and vigor of treatment." - Joseph Jacobs in N. 7. Times. Send for Full Descriptive Circular. The Development of the European Nations-1870-1900 By J. HOLLAND ROSE Two volumes, large 8vo, with maps. Each, net, $2.50. A discussion by a scholar of authority of those events which had a distinct formative influence upon the devel- opment of European States during the latter part of the nineteenth century, a period remarkable because of the great progress made by the people of Europe in their effort to secure a large measure of political freedom for the individual, and the legitimate development of the nation. American Political History–1763-1876 etc. By ALEXANDER JOHNSTON Edited and Supplemented by James Albert WOODBURN, Professor of History and Political Science, Indiana University ; author of “The American Republic,” “Political Parties and Party Problems in the United States, In two volumes. 8vo, cloth. Each, net, $2.00. (Each complete in itself and indexed.) 1. The Revolution, the Constitution, and the Growth of Nationality, 1763–1832. 2. The Slavery Controversy, Secession, Civil War, and Reconstruction, 1820-1876. “The author presents in a compact but very readable narrative a consecutive political history of the United States. The work has been extremely well done in a most valuable hand book for readers and students." - Buffalo Commercial. “Deals with important epochs and distinctive features in an orderly manner and with unique ability.' - Hartford Courant. NEW EDITION NOW READY The Life of Charles Lamb By E. V. LUCAS, editor of the “Works and Letters of Charles and Mary Lamb." 2 volumes. 8vo. 50 illustrations. Net $6.00. “ A perfect book about Charles Lamb, his sister and his friends. . . . A biography which for its comprehen- siveness as a record, its store of anecdote, its sympathetic tone, and its winning style, promises to rank as a classic." - New York Tribune. At all Booksellers G. P. PUTNAM'S SONS New York & London 1906.] 175 THE DIAL PUTNAM'S NEW BOOKS Life in the Open SPORT WITH ROD, HORSE, AND HOUND IN SOUTHERN CALIFORNIA By CHARLES F. HOLDER, author of “ The Big Game Fishes,” “ Log of a Sea Angler,” etc. With 92 full-page illustrations. Large Svo. Net $4.00. Mr. Holder has ridden, driven, sailed, tramped, fished, and shot over every foot of the forest and sea, plain and mountain, which he describes so picturesquely and with such keen delight. His book is a chronicle of sporting experiences that carries along with it a good deal of exciting narrative and a considerable amount of interesting information in regard to social life, as well as the flora and fauna of the country he loves so well. The Connecticut River And the Valley of the Connecticut River Historical and Descriptive By EDWIN M. BACON, author of « Historic Pilgrimages in New England," etc. Svo. With about 100 illustrations. Net, $3.50. Uniform with “ The Hudson River." From ocean to source every mile of the Connecticut is crowded with reminders of the early explorers, of the Indian wars, of the struggle of the Colonies, and of the quaint, peaceful village existence in the early days of the Republic. Beginning with the Dutch discov- ery, Mr. Bacon traces the interesting movements and events which are associated with this chief river of New England. In Thamesland Cruises and Rambles through England from the Sources of the Thames to the Sea By HENRY WELLINGTON WACK, F.R.G.S., author of “The Congo Free State,”. “Victor Hugo and Juliette Drouet," etc. Crown 8vo. With about 100 illustrations and a map. A book literally packed with historic and roman- tic associations which adorn the story of the great little English river. It is indispensable company in boat, trap, and automobile, and to all travellers in the region most characteristic of English" life and manners. Reminiscences of Bishops and Archbishops By HENRY CODMAN POTTER, Bishop of New York. Svo. Illustrated. As Secretary of the House of Bishops, and during his long episcopate, Bishop Potter has been the associate and friend of a group of singularly interesting men. In his own easy and graceful manner he has recorded illuminating anecdotes and experiences connected with famous bishops. These reminiscences are very human and personal and reveal the men themselves under their vestments. Bishop Potter has done more than write a charming book; he has performed a genuine service in preserving these intimate memories of distinguished prelates, and some of the memoirs which his readers will find most precious concern himself. From a College Window By ARTHUR C. BENSON (T. B.) Fellow of Magdalene College, Cambridge, author of “ The Upton Letters, etc. Crown 8vo. Net, $1.25. A collection of familiar essays in which the reader is brought again under the spell of the singularly interesting and attractive personality that made itself known in The Upton Letters. This latest book is a frank outpouring of the author's intimate thoughts, a frank expression of what he prizes in life, and what he expects from life. Mr. Benson's papers are characterized by the intimacy of self-revelation, the allusiveness, and sense of over- flow that belong to the familiar essay at its best. Mr. Benson's The Upton Letters, by its charm and distinction of style, its acute reflections upon books and life, and its tone of cultured amenity, won at once the praise of the judicious, and is meeting with a steadily increasing appreciation. At all Booksellers G. P. PUTNAM'S SONS New York & London 176 [March 16, THE DIAL Some Important harper Publications THE AMERICAN NATION A HISTORY, in 27 volumes. Edited by ALBERT BUSHNELL HART, Professor of History, Harvard University. RECENT VOLUMES VOL. XI. 1789-1801 VOL. XII. 1801-1811 VOL. XIII. 1811-1819 THE FEDERALIST THE JEFFERSONIAN RISE OF AMERICAN SYSTEM SYSTEM NATIONALITY By JOHN SPENSER BASSETT, Ph.D., By EDWARD CHANNING, Ph.D., By KENDRICK CHARLES BABCOCK, Professor of History, Trinity Col Professor of History, Harvard Uni Ph.D., President of University of lege, N. C. versity. Arizona. Each volume with Maps. Library Edition, $2.00 net; University Edition, $200. THE PRINCIPLES OF MONEY AND BANKING By CHARLES A. CONANT “I know of no other work in which these principles are more clearly set forth or more conveniently and logically arranged, and it is a real and valuable contribution to the literature on the subjeet to have such sound views presented in such a readable and convenient form for the student. I have a great many inquiries for literature on this subject, and for a list of the best books to read, by students of monetary sci- ence, and I should consider no list at all complete which does not include Mr. Conant's new work.” - Hon. WM. BARRET RU LY, Comptroller of the Currency, Washington, D.C. Two Volumes. Per Set, $4.00 net. HEROES OF AMERICAN HISTORY COLUMBUS CORTÉS By FREDERICK A. OBER By FREDERICK A. OBER The career of the great explorer is followed in detail The exploits of Cortés, the conqueror of Mexico, read and his personality set forth with striking clearness. like a romance. How this adventurer, a bankrupt Cuban Mr. Ober, under a commission from the United States planter, with a band of five hundred untrained soldiers, government, has sought out what vestiges of the early fought and intrigued his way to absolute power is the settlements remain in the West Indies. These researches, story told in this volume. Mr. Ober is a well-known together with his visits to Spain, have thrown much new authority on Spanish and Mexican history and an author and valuable light on Columbus's career, which is here of distinction in his chosen field. with presented. Illustrated. Price $1.00 net. Illustrated. Price $1.00 net. A HISTORY OF OUR OWN TIMES By JUSTIN MCCARTHY In these new volumes (IV. and V.) Justin McCarthy carries his admirable history to completion, from Queen Victoria's Diamond Jubilee to the accession of Edward VII. The author, widely known as an historian and scholar, is especially happy in his portraiture of the various statesmen, reformers, authors, and scientists whose lives figure prominently in the times of which he writes. “This is one of the very few histories that deserve place also as literature.” – Pittsburg Press. Vols. IV. and V. (Uniform with Vols. I.-III.). Illustrated. Price $1.40 net each. AMERICAN DIPLOMACY: Its Spirit and Achievement By JOHN BASSETT MOORE “The'author's skillful mode of treatment has given a continuity to the topics with which he deals, and has brought out in a really surprising way, the marked success, the good faith, and the fine and high purposes which have marked the foreign policy of the United States. He is to be congratulated on the production of an accurate, impartial, and thoroughly readable book, which, I hope, will have the success it so entirely deserves.” — Hon. GEORGE L. Rives, formerly Assistant Secretary of State. Illustrated. Price $2.00 net. EVOLUTION THE MASTER-KEY By C. W. SALEEBY, MD. Dr. C. W. Saleeby's new volume shows how the law of evolution has grown in authority since the time of Herbert Spencer, and how the results of modern investigation point more and more to evolution as the master-key to the solution of all problems of phenomena. Dr. Saleeby's comment on the newest phases of the great scientific questions makes an interesting and readable book. HARPER & BROTHERS PUBLISHERS NEW YORK 1906.] 177 THE DIAL SPRING IN BOOKLAND The True Andrew Jackson By CYRUS TOWNSEND BRADY Illustrated. 8vo. Cloth, $2.00 net. Half Levant, $6.00 net. Mr. Brady has been studying the career of our seventh Presi- dent for many years, and his book is a notable gathering of evidence in the way of opinions and anecdotes traced back to authentic sources. An extended chronology of Jackson's life is prefixed to the volume, and an appendix embraces papers of historical importance mentioned in the text. Heroes of Discovery in America By CHARLES MORRIS Illustrated. 12mo. Cloth, $1.26 not. Postage extra, History has nothing more interesting than the stories of the great discoverers of the world, and the discovery and explor- ation of America furnish the most remarkable examples of adventure, hairbreadth escapes, and thrilling incidents. This book occupies a field which has never before been at once so fully and popularly worked. The Nature and Origin of Living Matter By H. CHARLTON BASTIAN, M.A., M.D. 8vo. Cloth, $3.50 not. Dr. Bastian, in this important work, holds that from the carliest stages of the earth's history up to the present time new beginnings of simplest forms of life have been constantly taking place all over the earth. The book is so lucidly written it can be read with case and pleasure by anyone, especially with the help of its beau- tiful illustrations. The Fall of Tsardom By CARL JOUBERT 8vo. Cloth, $2.00 not. This timely work describes the latest phases of the process of disintegration which drives the Russian people, whether intellectual or moujik, to seck relief from Tsardom in con- stitutional reform. NEW FICTION The Angel of Pain By E. F. BENSON “ A remarkable book."- Chicago Tribune. " It is the strongest and at the same time the most delicate story the author of Dodo' has yet written."- Cleveland Plain Dealer. 1200. Cloth, $1.60. Vanity Square A love story in which a disappearance is involved, affording complications that make the mystery peculiarly baffling. By EDGAR SALTUS - For sheer cleverness no American novelist surpasses 12mo. Decorated Cloth, $1.26. Edgar Saltus."— Now York Herald. Adventures of a Supercargo The newest of those stirring stories of adventure in the South By LOUIS BECKE Seas which have given Mr. Becke indisputable title to first place among historians and romancers of that wildest portion 12mo. Decorated Cloth, $1.50. of the world. The Wife of the Secretary SECOND EDITION of this thrilling romance of Diplomatic of State Washington Life. “ Adventure and excitement in every paragraph and the By ELLA MIDDLETON TYBOUT action is as rapid and fascinating as the most jaded novel- Illustrated. 12mo. Cloth, $1.50. reader could require." LIPPINCOTT'S MAGAZINE is a high-class monthly of intense, clean, human interest. Look up the current issue on the news-stand. J. B. LIPPINCOTT COMPANY PUBLISHERS PHILADELPHIA 178 [March 16, THE DIAL FIONA MACLEOD (WILLIAM SHARP) THE MOUNTAIN LOVERS: A Novel 12mo, $1.50. THOMAS HARDY'S COUNTRY THE WESSEX OF THOMAS HARDY. By BERTRAM WINDLE. With nearly one hundred illustrations, maps, etc., by EDMUND H. NEw. 12mo, $1.50 net; postage extra. THE CLEANSING OF THE LORDS. A Novel By HAROLD WINTLE. A Romance of the English Senate and the Western Ivory Trust. 12mo, $1.50. THE CHAMPAGNE STANDARD . By MRS. JOHN LANÉ. 12mo, $1.50; postage, 12 cents. “It is not often that the reviewer comes upon essays as amusing as these."— New York Tribune. “Mrs. John Lane, having been brought up in this country and having lived in England, is in a position to view British society as an American and American society as a Londoner. The result is a very entertaining book." - New York Evening Sun. THE ROYAL INSTITUTE OF PAINTERS IN WATER COLORS Special Number of the International Studio. Forty Color Plates. 17 An Account of the Institute by A. L. BALDRY. Limited Edition. No Reissue. 4to, wrappers, $2.00 net; cloth, $3.00 niet; postage, 35 cents. COINS Of Ancient Sicily :By G. F. 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HULLAH A concise biography of the famous musician, with many new portraits, etc. 12mo, $1.00 net; postage, 8 cents. JOHN LANE LANE COMPANY, NEW YORK THE BODLEY HEAD, 67 FIFTH AVENUE SEND FOR NEW CATALOGUE 1906.] 179 THE DIAL The Wheel of Life The unforgettable book of 1906 The Jungle By ELLEN GLASGOW “A rare novel. A book which could come only from one who was a novelist by the gift of God and the grace of nature.'” – St. Paul Dispatch. By UPTON SINCLAIR A novel of Packingtown, Chicago A great success 2d printing The Lady ($1.50.) Thomas Wentworth Higginson says: “It comes nearer than any book yet published among us to being the 'Uncle Tom's Cabin' of the social tragedy of our great cities." ($1.50.) and the The only book on life insurance which treats a policy as merchandise. Ladder How to Buy Life Insurance By HARRISON GARFIELD RHODES Letters and Recollections of George Washington By “Q. P." Written in words simpler than your policy. 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COUNTRY LITE IN AMERICA THE WORLD'S WORX TARMING THE GARDEN MAGAZINE Net $2.50. (Postage, 48 cents.) DOUBLE DAY, PAGE & CO. NEW YORK, (Postage 25 cents.) 180 [March 16, THE DIAL SOME FEBRUARY BOOKS ISSUED BY Henry Holt & Company 29 West 23d Street NEW YORK . THE BIBLE FOR THE HOME At last we have the Bible in plain English-a new transla- tion which every one can un- derstand-fascinating to the child and absorbingly interesting to every reader, old and young. It is By NATURE AND HEALTH Dr. EDWARD CURTIS. By this well-known New York physician on the care of the body and the home. ($1.25 net. By mail, $1.37.) A capital popular treatise on hygiene. . . . He knows his subject thoroughly, and he knows how to make it clear to the general reader. A great variety of important topics are touched upon, and in every instance the exposition is plain, concise, and as thorough as possible under the cir- cumstances. ... A thoroughly moderate spirit. ... Full of excellent advice.” – New York Evening Sun. GEOLOGY. Vols. II. and III. By Prof. THOMAS C. CHAMBERLAIN and Prof. ROLLIN D. SALISBURY. These concluding volumes of this monumental GEOLOGY are devoted to "Earth History," and in them Professor Cham- berlain elaborates his weighty criticism of the nebular hypotheses. (With some 575 illustrations. 692 + 624 pp., 8vo, $8.00 net, for both volumes - not sold separately.) HEREDITY IN ROYALTY By Dr. FREDERICK ADAMS WOODS. An interesting and handsome book, based on a consideration of some 3300 persons, presenting an interesting estimate of the mental and moral status of all Modern Royal families, and illustrated WITH OVER ONE HUNDRED PORTRAITS. (312 pp., 8vo, $3.00 net. By mail, $3.18.) IMMIGRATION and its Effects upon the United States By PRESCOTT F. HALL, Secretary of the Immigration Restriction League. In the important new series, "American Public Problems,” edited by RALPH CURTIS RINGWALT, of the New York Bar. (393 pp., $1.50 net. By mail, $1.62.) ... The next volume in this series will be GEORGE H. HAYNES' ELECTION OF SENATORS (April). THE NEGRO AND THE NATION By GEORGE S. MERRIAM. The first complete history of the negro in his relation to American politics; entertaining and scholarly. ($1.75 net. By mail, $1.92.) STUDIES IN AMERICAN TRADE UNIONISM By graduate students and officers of Johns Hopkins Univer. sity. Edited by Dr. J. H. HOLLANDER and Dr. G. E. BARNETT. Original investigations. (380 pp., $2.75 net. By mail, $2.98.) A leaflet on the publishers' books on public problems and economics sent free on application, The American Standard Bible THE SEAMAID By RONALD MACDONALD. The strange experiences of the shipwrecked Dean of Beek- minster, his prim wife, his beautiful daughter, and others, on an uncharted island in the Pacific. ($1.50.) THE NONCHALANTE By STANLEY OLMSTED. 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In the American Standard Bible all of these strange and unfamiliar words and sentences have been replaced by plain, direct modern English no one can misunderstand. This version of the Bible represents the devoted labor of the ablest scholars in America and England during an uninterrupted period of 29 years.. It is most strongly endorsed by the religious press of the entire country, by ministers of all de- nominations, Bible teachers and educators. It is in general use in the great colleges, theological seminaries, religious institutions, churches and Sunday schools everywhere. Our 40-page Book Sent Free “Story of the American Standard Bible" It tells why the Bible was revised, how it was accomplished, and shows sample pages, bindings, etc., of the many styles issued. Your name on a postal card, with the name The Stor of your bookseller, will get you of the this book. Umerican All booksellers have in stock, Standard or can quickly get from us, any style of the American Standard Bible you Bible order. Prices 35c. to $18.00, accord. ing to size and binding. See that you get the American Standard Edition. Look for the Nelson im- print and the end orsement of the American Revision Committee on the back of the title page. We sell direct where booksellers will not supply. THOMAS NELSON & SONS 41 V, East 18th Street NEW YORK 1906.] 181 THE DIAL NOTABLE NEW BOOKS The Latest and Best New England Romance THE GIRL FROM TIM'S PLACE By CHARLES CLARK MUNN, author of “ Uncle Terry.” Illustrated THE GIRL From by Frank T. Merrill. Price, $1.50. TIM'S PLACE An intensely fascinating love story of the Maine wilderness, weird and exciting, yet sweet and tender. A prominent character is Mr. Munn's masterpiece, “Old Cy Walker," the finest and drollest woodsman in fiction. Here are a few of his many bright and quaint sayings : “ The man that won't bear watchin' needs it." “ The more I see o' the world, the better I like the woods." “A girl with a new ring allus hez trouble with her hair.” CHARLES CLARK MUNN A Thrilling Story of Love and Mystery THE GOLDEN GREYHOUND By Dwight Tilton, author of " Miss Petticoats,” etc. Illustrated by E. Pollak. Price, $1.50. An up-to-date story of love, adventure, and mystery, with wireless telegraphy and all the modern improvements, that will not let you rest until you see how it is coming out. The hero is a rich young New Yorker and former Yale athlete. He is so attracted by a lovely face as to follow its possessor on board an Atlantic liner, called “ The Golden Greyhound," on account of a vast shipment of gold, where he is instrumental in solving a most baffling mystery, and his rash THE GOLDEN journey brings great happiness to all but a set of unsuccessful GREYHOUND plotters. The book is as rich in humor as it is fertile in invention, and is strikingly handsome in make-up. DWICH TILTON A Book That Will be Read THE TWENTIETH CENTURY CHRIST By Paul KARISHKA. 12mo. Cloth. Net $1.00. Postpaid, $1.10. This is a startling book, though not irreverent. The key-note is religious justice based on fair-minded research. The Leading Spring Juvenile UNDER TOGO FOR JAPAN Fourth volume of the “Soldiers of Fortune Series.” By EDWARD STRATEMEYER. Illustrated by A. B. Shute. 12mo. Cloth. $1.25. A good account of the greatest naval battle of history and the close of the war in connec- tion with the experiences of favorite characters, well known to all the boys through the six volumes of the “Old Glory Series " and the three previous ones of this series. At all booksellers, or postpaid on receipt of price from the publishers. LOTHROP, LEE & SHEPARD CO. BOSTON 182 [March 16, THE DIAL THE OUTING PUBLISHING COMPANY WILL ISSUE IN MARCH THE THROWBACK THE PRAYING SKIPPER By ALFRED HENRY LEWIS By RALPH D. PAINE Nlustrated by N.C. Wyeth. Price $1.50. Illustrations by Blumenschein, Leyendecker, Aylward, A romantic story of the Southwest in the days when the and Sidney Adamson. Price $1.50. buffalo roamed the plains; when the Indian Council fires The readers of Ralph Paine's stories as they appeared in the still smoked and the law of the strongest prevailed. Few magazines will hasten to buy this volume just for the know the West as Mr. Lewis knows it, and he has written pleasure of preserving the stories and reading them again. here an intensely interesting novel full of incident, adven The book contains the following: "The Praying Skipper,” ture, and humor. "A Victory Unforeseen," "The Last Pilot Schooner," "Surfman Brainard's Day Off," "The Jade Teapot," " Cap- THE LUCKY PIECE tain Arendt's Choice," and "Corporal Sweeney, Deserter." By ALBERT BIGELOW PAINE SIDE SHOW STUDIES Frontispiece in color. Price $1.50. A tender, sweet, wholesome love story, the scene of which By FRANCIS METCALFB is laid mostly among the mountains of the Adirondacks. Profusely Nlustrated by Oliver Herford. Price $1.25. The Lucky Piece is an old Spanish coin and it plays an Mr. Metcalfe's book tells many funny things of the freaks important part in the story. How the somewhat idle and and the exhibits. The yarn of how the elephant was white- blasé young townsman found himself, through the influence washed, how a mouse busted up the mermaid show, and the of the forest and mountains, will appeal to all lovers of the many other droll stories, make a yolume at once amusing, outdoors. instructive, and entertaining. WILL ISSUE IN APRIL THE PASS By STEWART EDWARD WHITE With marginal decorations on every page, frontispiece in color by Lundgren, and many illustrations from photographs. 8vo. $1.50 net. A companion volume to “The Mountains" and "The Forest,"containing the story of a remarkable trip across the high Sierras. For brilliant description, entertaining and humorous incident, vivid lore of forest and mountain, this narrative probably excels everything Mr. White has yet written, and will no doubt be the leading outdoor book of the year. THE OUTING PUBLISHING CO., 35-37 W. 31st St., NEW YORK IMPORTANT- JUST PUBLISHED With Walt Whitman in Camden “One of the most remarkable biographical volumes that has appeared in the last hundred years." – Philadelphia Public Ledger. Conversations, 'Important Letters, and Manuscripts With 35 Full-page Portraits, Facsimiles, Etc. A fascinating diary record containing unpublished letters from Tennyson, Lord Houghton, John Addington Symonds, W. M. Rossetti, Robert Buchanan, John Morley, Ellen Terry, Edmund Gosse, Edward Carpenter, Edward Dowden, Sidney Lanier, Bret Harte, Joaquin Miller, John Hay, Edwin Booth, John Burroughs, William Douglas O'Connor, etc. All of these fall naturally into place, having been discussed by Whitman; and the conversations therefore give his estimates and opinions of contemporary men and events. The book will prove a revelation to many who have not realized the breadth of Whitman's literary acquaintance nor his acutely keen critical sense. WRITTEN BY HORACE TRAUBEL ONE OF WHITMAN'S LITERARY EXECUTORS, and for many years his neighbor and intimate friend; the book presents a picture of the daily life and thought of the poet, such as we have of no other great author, possibly excepting Dr. Johnson. 8vo, 560 pp., Cloth Decorative, gilt top, net $3.00. By post, $3.20. SMALL, MAYNARD & COMPANY PUBLISHERS BOSTON 1906.] 183 THE DIAL OXFORD UNIVERSITY PRESS AMERICAN BRANCH NEW PUBLICATIONS JUST PUBLISHED New Large Type Shakespeare Complete works. Edited by W. J. CRAIG, M. A. With portrait and a Glossary. Crown 8vo, cloth, $1.50. Oxford India paper edition, cloth, $2.50; Venetian morocco, $3.75; Persian morocco, $4.50. Oxford India paper edition, with illustrations from the Boydell Gallery, cloth, $3.00; Rut- land morocco, $5.00. The Complete Poetical Works of Shelley Including materials never before printed in any edition of the poems. Edited with Textual Notes and Bibliographical List of Editions by THOMAS HUTCHINSON, M. A. Demy 8vo, with the Bodleian portrait of Shelley and two other collotype illustrations. Cloth, gilt lettered, $2.50. Crown 8vo, cloth, $1.50. Oxford India paper edition, Persian morocco, $3.00. The Complete Poetical Works of Cowper Edited by H. S. MILFORD, M. A. 12mo, cloth, 75 cents. Johnson's Lives of the Poets Edited by the late George BIRKBECK Hill. With a brief memoir of Dr. Hill by his nephew, HAROLD SPENCER Scott, and a full Index. In three volumes, medium 8vo, half roan, $10.50. These volumes complete the cycle of works connected with the writings of Dr. Johnson, which was promised by Dr. Birkbeck Hill in the Preface to his edition of Boswell's Life. NOW COMPLETE The Oxford Oxford History of Music General Editor, W. H. Hadow. Vols. I and II by H. E. WOOLDRIDGE; Vol. III by SIR C. H. PARRY; Vol. IV by J. A. Fuller-MAITLAND; Vol. V by W. H. Hadow; Vol. VI by E. DANNREUTHER. Now complete in six 8vo volumes, with copious musical illustrations, price $5.00 per volume, or $30.00 the set. The six volumes embrace the history of music from the beginning of the fourth to the middle of the nineteenth century, extending its range, in certain directions, as late as to the death of Verdi. A NOTABLE BOOK Criminal Responsibility By CHARLES MERCIER, M. B., F. R. C. P., F.R. C.S., Lecturer on Insanity at the West- minster Hospital Medical School and at the Medical School of the Royal Free Hospital. 8vo, cloth, $2.50. OXFORD UNIVERSITY PRESS AMERICAN BRANCH Nos. 91-93 FIFTH AVENUE NEW YORK CITY 184 [March 16, 1906. THE DIAL READY APRIL 4 Mr. Owen Wister's new novel Lady Baltimore By the author of "The Virginian," eto. Ilustrated with many drawings in the text and full-page half-tones. Cloth, $1,50. verning Altos Bailing This is an entirely new departure for Mr. Wister. Its charm is of the old times instead of the new. Instead of rollicking cowboys riding half a day to meet a "schoolmarm” at a dance, the young and imprudent Southern hero is surrounded — to his peril — by the most delightful women, young and old. It is another bit of American life, just as alive and genuine as "The Virginian." Mr. Egerton Castle's new novel If Youth But Knew By the author of "Tho Pride of Jennico," "Young April," ato. Ilustrated by Launcelot Speed. Cloth, $1.30. Tho illustrations by Launcelot Speed are in precisoly the atmosphere needed for Mr. Castlo's characteristic vein of pure romance. Charming and delightful in themselves they have the complete aggociation with the text which comes from their having been drawn under his direct supervision. OTHER RECENT IMPORTANT BOOKS Mr. James Loeb's translation from the French of the late Professor Paul Decharme's Euripides and the Spirit of His Dramas An introduction is supplied by Professor John Williams White, of Harvard Univorsity. With four full-page illustrations. Cloth, octavo, 392 pagos, $3.00 not. The Life of John Wesley by C. T. Winchester Professor of English Literaturo in Wesleyan University. Cloth, 8vo, 81.50 net (postage 15 cts.) It is a truthful, vivid narrative of a personality of unusual power, ono of the most prominent figures of the eighteenth century, one who for some thirty years probably exerted a stronger personal influence than any other man in England. Grove's Dictionary of Music and Musicians New Edition By SIR GEORGE GROVE. Rovised and greatly onlarged edition, in five volumos, illustrated with plates and text cute. Vol. I. already issued. Vol. II., just ready. Cloth, Svo, $5.00 net per volume. The Life and Writings of Benjamin Franklin Fourth Volume Edited by ALBERT H. SMYTH, Professor of the English Language and Literature in the Central High School, Philadelphia. Limited Library Edition, in ton volumes, to appear at monthly intervals. Volumes I.-III., previously issued. Volume IV., just ready. Cloth, Svo, 83.00 not per volumo. The first volume of the new work by Henry Charles Lea, LL.D. A History of the Inquisition of Spain To be complete in four volumes The author makes an uncommonly interesting contribution to the study of human history in his cloar, illuminating account of how Spain developed from the most tolerant to the most intolerant of Christian countries. Of the disastrous outcome his later volumes will be the record. Volume I., 620 8vo pagos. 82.50 net (postage 22 cts.) BY THE SAME AUTHOR A History of the Inquisition of the Middle Ages In three octavo volumes of about 600 pages each. Cloth, gilt tops, $7.50 for the set. “Ho has chosen a subject of extreme interest and importance, and has treated it in a manner which leaves nothing to be desired with respect to erudition, whilo at the same time he has produced a thoroughly readable book." - London Saturday Review. PUBLISHED BY THE MACMILLAN COMPANY 64-66 FIFTH AVENUE NEW YORK - THE DIAL A Semi-Monthly Journal of Literary Criticism, Discussion, and Information. ENTERED AT THE CHICAGO POSTOFFICB AS SECOND-CLASS MATTER BY THE DIAL COMPANY, PUBLISHERS. PAGE . . THE DIAL (founded in 1880) is published on the 18t and 16th aside by invading hordes — by Northern barbarism of each month. TERMS OF SUBSCRIPTION, $2. a year in advance, postage prepaid in the United States, Canada, and Mexico; or Moslem culture,—but they soon regained their place in other countries comprised in the Postal Union, 50 cents a in the centre of the stage, and to this day they are year for extra postage must be added. REMITTANCES should be by check, or by express or postal order, payable to THE the dominant powers in our thought. Meanwhile DIAL COMPANY. Unless otherwise ordered, subscriptions what went on behind the scenes ? will begin with the current number. When no direct request to discontinue at expiration of subscription is received, it is It was not until toward the close of the eighteenth assumed that a continuance of the subscription is desired. ADVERTISING RATES furnished on application. All communi. century that the existence of vast poems and mighty cations should be addressed to systems of thought in India were revealed to the THE DIAL, Fine Arts Building, Chicago. European world. Even to-day these great reservoirs of reason and imagination are hardly accessible to the student; and they have not begun to flow over No. 474. MARCH 16, 1906. Vol. XL. and fertilize the fields of modern thought. The intuitive profundity of many conceptions in Hindoo CONTENTS. philosophy surpasses the reasoned deductions of Greek CELTIC LITERATURE. Charles Leonard Moore 185 or German metaphysic. And the closing scenes A GIRL'S IMPRESSIONS OF VICTORIAN of the Mahabharata, at least, have a spiritual and CELEBRITIES. Percy F. Bicknell 188 ethical significance not equalled by any European THE MEANING AND INFLUENCE OF AMERI poem. CAN DIPLOMACY. Frederic Austin Ogg. . 190 About the same time the Teutonic race “found JAPANESE ARCHITECTURE AND ALLIED itself” in the great myths of the Niebelungenlied ARTS. Frederick W. Gookin 192 and the Icelandic Sagas. And simultaneously the THE GREATEST OF FRENCH DRAMATISTS. H. C. Chatfield-Taylor Celtic genius rose on the horizon, and spoke in a 192 voice that thrilled Europe. MacPherson's Ossian, MILITARY CRITICISM OF THE LATE WAR. William Elliot Griffis 194 vague and confused as it is — full of interpolations which show the influence of Shakespeare and the THE OLD, UNTROUBLED PAGAN WORLD. F. B. R. Hellems . 196 classics,— has yet in it the fundamental characteris- BRIEFS ON NEW BOOKS 197 tics of primitive and original literature. Daily life in Australia and the Philippines. — Rec- It must be remembered, however, that one branch ords of a naturalist in the Shetlands. -- A famous of the Celtic myth tree had blossomed and bour- Bishop and his work. — Umbria and its foremost figure, St. Francis. — The civic awakening in Amer geoned long before,— had in fact become almost the ica. — The country house and how to build it. main stem of English literature. The Arthurian Observations of an English husband's American wife. legend was twice a changeling, for, born in compara- -“Even the gods must go." — A book of imagi- nary portraits. -- An uncrowned English queen. tive simplicity or poverty in Wales, it was transported A text-book on sociology. to France and decked with borrowed trappings of BRIEFER MENTION 202 chivalry and Christianity. Then it was brought back NOTES 203 by Malory, redacted by him, shorn of something of ANNOUNCEMENTS OF SPRING BOOKS 204 its over-blown glory, and made into the typical En- A complete classified list of books to be issued by American publishers during the Spring of 1906. glish epic story. Milton indulged the dream of using the legend as the subject of his life-work, and it is LIST OF NEW BOOKS 211 perhaps a pity he did not finally choose it rather than the more high flying and difficult theme he under- CELTIC LITERATURE. took. At his hands we might have had something For twenty-five centuries the stage of our so-called of the mystery and magic, the wild paganism, the civilized world was occupied by two great groups of primitive interpretation of nature and humanity, actors: Greek and Syrian they were, protagonists that is in the original Welsh legends. As it is we and antagonists, with chorus and semi-chorus from had to wait for Tennyson to make more prim and surrounding tribes. They grew up side by side, proper and conventional the already prim and proper they made their entrances separately, but soon they and conventional version of Malory. For all the clashed and contended and wrought out the drama redactors of the Arthurian story have dealt as and spectacle of life. Occasionally they were swept hardly with the Welsh originals as MacPherson did • 186 [March 16, THE DIAL with his Irish ones. They transformed nature myths nor the form and proportion which the best Welsh into chivalric romances and religious poems. While stories display. on one hand they deepened and humanized the Very probably this lack of fineness of phrase and legends, on another they wiped out all that was most form was not so evident in the original Irish poems. characteristic of the Celtic nature. Dr. Douglas Hyde has told us of the poet culture The originals, however, remained, and it is hardly which went on in Ireland during that country's great too much to say that their resuscitation and recogni- period. There was a Druidic and Bardic organiza- tion have been the great literary find of the past fifty the past fifty tion, which must have included a large percentage years. The Welsh cycle of legends and poetical of the population of the state, supported at the cost of relics came earliest into notice, and it is on these that the state. There were colleges where the bards were the criticism of Renan and Arnold is mainly founded. trained and disciplined in the conception and execu- Matthew Arnold's essay on Celtic Literature is almost tion of poetry. There was an amazing list of model the best critical treatise in the language, and it is compositions which the students had to memorize, certainly the most curious tour de force of criticism and there was a marvellously intricate system of which exists anywhere. Apparently he knew only versification which they had to master. If these a few words of Welsh, had examined only a few accounts are facts, no race ever invented such a hot- relics of Welsh literature, and was in absolute igno- house method for the production of literature. And rance of the great mass of Irish poetry. Yet by a from the hints and glimpses we have, it is probable divination of genius which seems almost uncanny, that the Irish bards did develop an almost unequalled he defined and described the Celtic genius as no one technique in writing. Only their technique seems to else has ever succeeded in doing. Perhaps with the have been mainly concerned with the music of sylla- instinct of an artist for effect, he forced the note of bles, whereas the Welsh poets cared more for the difference, of uniqueness, in Celtic literature further pictures in words. The difference obtains yet, if we than there is warrant for doing. It is difficult to may consider the English poets as the descendants believe that the main characteristics that he found of the Welsh bards. But the original productions of in this literature have not existed in other litera the Irish poets are gone. What we have is their tures and in all ages. Melancholy,” “Titanism ” work reduced to writing by monkish scribes after surely there is something of these qualities in the centuries of merely oral existence. The music would Bible and the Greek Tragedians, in Dante, Job, and be the first thing to go out of the poems under these Jeremiah. Prometheus, Orestes and Edipus, the conditions. Of some of the epic legends there are a people of the Inferno, these figures certainly number of recensions extant. And these read as if express the emotions of pessimism and revolt in a the scribes had still other versions to choose from, larger sense than Llywarch Hên or Taliesin. And and were sò anxious not to lose anything good that from the Iberian rather than from the Celtic race they, as it were, superimposed one upon another. rose the arch-rebel, Don Juan. In style, too, it is In the descriptions we have adjectives seven deep pretty hard to differentiate the Celtic natural magic, heralding the arrival of the nouns, and the same which Arnold discovered, from the charm of expres idea is repeated over and over again in slightly dif- sion in Sappho and Catullus. And the romantic inter ferent form. This excess of particularity and vivid- pretation of nature in the Celtic poetry! Really there ness has almost the same effect as MacPherson's are fine things of this kind in the Bacchæ of Euri vague monotony, and leaves the figures and stories pides and in the wilder and weirder scenes of Virgil. confused. Human gifts seem to be a pretty constant quantity, If the Irish legends are inferior to the Welsh in and one hesitates to believe that an entirely new set mystic depth, in glimpse and gleam of revelation, of talents came in with the Celts. they are also inferior to the Icelandic Sagas in world- However, as this may be, the qualities which wide significance, in the power of imagination which Arnold found in the Celtic genius are qualities of grasps the beginning and end of creation and seeks style — of personality. If one who has hardly more to explain everything between. The Irish gods and claim to scholarship in these matters may presume to their doings are about what a child might imagine. judge, these qualities pertain rather to Welsh than There was no theology in the primitive Irishman's to Irish literature. The Irish legends are the much head. He was all for this world, and if he thought larger body of important work; they are destined, of the hereafter he conceived it merely as a place I think, to have a greater future than the Welsh, where there were improved opportunities for eating, but they are epic and impersonal. They are in many drinking, fighting, and the making of love. He was respects badly written. They have neither the sense absolutely healthy and cheerful. He had a romantic of style which the best Welsh fragments possess, regard for woman. All pleasurable things appealed 1906.] 187 THE DIAL to him - splendid attire, wine, song. Poetry has Aes Sidhe, yet no Celtic work can compare with probably never been so much honored as by him. Shakespeare's fairy comedy. Wild Wales, both the With a high sense of personal honor, he submitted to real land and its mirrored image in song, overflows one singular superstition -- a sort of taboo - called with glamour, but what Velsh poem equals Cole- geasa. He thought that no honest man could object ridge's "Christabel” in undefinable depths of magic to having his head cut off in single combat if the meaning? Unconquered courage, stormy despair play was fair. What, then, is the great value of the are in the Scotch Ossian, yet these qualities are Irish epics? It consists, I think, in the clear and carried to far greater heights in Milton and Byron. undistorted splendor with which absolutely natural The Celtic charm of expression is keen and vivid, humanity is bodied forth. Does not the description but Wordsworth and Keats outmatch it beyond com- I have given recall the Homeric world and the Ho pare. If we accept Arnold's view that many of the meric view of life? finest qualities of English poetry entered it from Homer is indeed the name that leaps to our Celtic sources we must decide that the Celtic genius lips as we move about among the large humanities is a fecundating pollen, powerful when blown abroad of the Irish epics. This is not because their heroes but almost inert when it remains at home. are half gods and perform deeds which put even In fact the Celtic mind would seem to be either the Greek Herakles or Achilles to the blush. These too fine and frail, or too extravagant and florid, to wonders detract rather than add to the vitality of create perfect works of art. It either has not the the figures. But this vitality is so rich, so abounding, strength to build them at all or it overloads them that in spite of extravagance or mediocrity of style, until they break down. The relics of Celtic poetry in spite of bad narrative form, a whole world of rise before us somewhat like the circle at Stone- beings, splendid, magnificent, and real, rises to us henge. This is not a quarry, for the sign of a mighty from in the Irish legends. Essentially, taking the conception, the marks of human labor are there; it whole round of his career, Cuchulain is a finer figure is not a ruin, for it is built of materials too indes- than Achilles. The whole train of his mates and tructible for decay. Or perhaps a better image of rivals, Fergus, Ferdiad, Conor, Mève, are tremendous Celtic antiquity would be Milton's description of triumphs of projection. The love stories of Naoise the animal creation, when all the beasts were strug- and Deirdre, of Diarmait and Grainne, rank with gling from the ground — “the lion pawing to get the most perfect in the world. For if the men of free its hinder parts.” Half vital, half encumbered the Irish legends recall the men of Homer, the and embarrassed by the matter of which they are women have much of the quality of Shakespeare's made, the Celtic legends start out into the world of heroines. The gayety, the charm, the constancy, art. Neither the Heroic Cycle of Ulster, nor the the pathos of Rosalind and Imogen are at least im- legends of Finn, nor “The Four Branches of the plicit in them. And the world in which these figures Mabinogi,” can, in their old shape, hope to become are set, a world of joyous intercourse in splendid | world poems. The Celtic genius which wrought palaces, of out-door life in field and forest, a world them had nearly all the poetic gifts, except the gift of banquet and sport and war, might be set against to look before and after, to group each part in refer- the world of either the Greek or English poet. ence to the whole. What are we to do with this treasure trove of Therefore this magnificent poetic material lies Celtic literature? Shall we take Walt Whitinan's open to the piracy of the poets of the world. It lacks invitation and cross out the immensely overpaid ac the defense which the greatest poetry possesses of count of Troy, Ulysses wanderings," and turn to this being done better than any new hand can possibly new material for themes and inspiration? Or must achieve. Contemporary critics will probably say we accept the fragmentary and amorphous Welsh that the modern poet had best busy himself with the and Irish poems as final and sacred works of art? modern world. Contemporary critics probably told Renan said sadly, “We Celts will never build our Homer and Virgil and Milton this same thing. If Parthenon-marble is not for us,” but he claimed contemporary critics had had their way the world for his race the thrilling, penetrating cry which would never have seen any noble or serious poetry. shakes and inspires the world. I speak under the For in the main such poetry requires great themes protection of Renan's name when I say that Celtic and figures, and dim backgrounds to project them literature has produced no great work. Its most against. Such subjects are difficult to find, almost powerful and effective production, the Arthurian | impossible to invent; but the Celtic genius has given legend, owes only its germ and origin to Celtic us by the basketful themes unsurpassed in literature, genius; it was built up by many hands in many as yet only slightly wrought by art. lands. Ireland is the home of the Fairy folk, the CHARLES LEONARD MOORE. 188 [March 16, THE DIAL of the writers, and, however one may wish to The New Books. avoid egotism, it is not possible in a book of this kind.” A GIRL'S IMPRESSIONS OF VICTORIAN Admirable, though often amusing, is the writ- CELEBRITIES.* er's championship, early and late and at all times, To such of us as were young in the sixties of the cause of literary folk. Born and bred in and seventies, Miss Laura Hain Friswell's rec- a literary atmosphere, that atmosphere was to ollections of those decades will bring a renewal her, even as a child, the breath of life, and she of youth. (Be it here parenthetically observed could brook no disparagement of authors. Of that we use the author's pen-name, which is also the poet Gerald Massey, whose two little girls her maiden name, her husband's name - unless were her schoolmates, and of his invalid wife, she writes : it be also Friswell-being unknown to us.) The genial friends, the wise and witty sayings, the “Mrs. Massey was very delicate, and it was said the rare good times, the thrilling experiences, of thrilling experiences, of poet, did all his own housekeeping, and even bought his children's clothes. This seemed to the schoolgirls not those early years will never see their match ; and a man's business, and the elder girls did not scruple to if a laudatrix temporis acti, her memory kindled laugh and jeer, which hurt his daughters' feelings, mak- into a rosy glow with the enchantment of those ing the elder indignant, and the younger cry: and I, who distant and fast-fading scenes, writes with some hated such behaviour, and would not have literary people laughed at on any acconnt, stoutly maintained that to excess of fond enthusiasm for their vanished do the housekeeping and to buy clothes was peculiar to glories, she certainly merits, not the censure, poets, and therefore quite right. As I was looked upon but rather the thanks of her sympathizing con as an authority on literary manners, if not matters, the temporaries. The famous men and women of chaff ceased." the past can never be made too real and living Our author's detailed reports of long conver- to us, and it is for the vivid presentation of their sations equal some of Madame Adam's amazing personalities and peculiarities that we have much achievements in this department of autobiog- reason to thank Miss Friswell, especially as she raphy. After some pages of dialogue about an offers, for the most part, what is best and most expected call from Mr. Swinburne, the narra- attractive in their characters. The bright daugh- tive proceeds as follows: ter of a gifted father, she enjoyed unusual op “A little man walked straight into the room; his head, portunities for meeting and mingling with the which was crowned by a quantity of auburn hair, was illustrious of her own time and country, as well held high, his eyes stared straight in front of him, and as with some foreign notables, and she appears he was evidently quite unconscious that he was not alone in the room. My mother walked forward and held out to have made good use of these opportunities. her hand. He started, and dropped his hat; my gover- The writer's name will recall that of her father, ness went forward and picked it up; he almost snatched James Hain Friswell, the once popular but now it from her. ... Mr. Swinburne sat down on the edge little read author of the very successful essays of a chair. He bent slightly forward, his arms resting on his knees, his hat balanced between his fingers, and on “ The Gentle Life," and of numerous miscel- he kept swinging it backwards and forwards, just as I laneous works besides. Her own “Gingerbread had seen Mr. Toole do in a farce; he dropped it and Maiden and other Stories,” published in her picked it up several times. I think he was about twenty- teens, and her memoir of her father to name nine or thirty years old at this time — not more than five feet six in height, and he had that peculiar pallor no other of her writings — show her to be sealed which goes with auburn hair; and this paleness was of the tribe of authors. The references she has heightened by study, enthusiasm, and the fierce, rebel- introduced to her own personal appearance, and lious spirit which seemed to animate that fragile body, to her extraordinary resemblance to Marie An- and which glows and burns in his writings. My mother toinette, incline one to surmise that, besides in- and Miss W—- did all they could to put him at ease, and I sat and repented that I had ever wished to see heriting her father's literary tastes, she was also, him, for I pitied him intensely, he seemed so very ner- in her physical endowment, matre pulchra filia vous. My father now appeared, and by his conver- pulchrior. “ I have tried,” she pleads apologet- sational powers and tact soon set Mr. Swinburne quite ically in her closing paragraph, “ to keep from at his ease. He ceased to fidget, and talked of Coleridge and other poets in a most interesting manner to hear intruding too much upon my readers, but I fear him and my father was an intellectual treat." I have not altogether succeeded; therefore I would remind them, and my critics, that all rem- Interesting memories are given of Toole and iniscences are bound to be leaves from the lives Irving and other actors. The author has much of Charles Lamb's fondness for the old plays and IN THE SIXTIES AND SEVENTIES. Impressions of Literary the old heroes of the footlights. With Irving People and Others. By Laura Hain Friswell. Boston: Herbert the Friswells were on terms of intimacy, even to - B. Turner & Co. 1906.] 189 THE DIAL 66 snow the point of making criticisms and advising with him, so that at a very early age I became acquainted changes in some of his plays. Two passages with authors, publishers, and printers. On one occasion relating to this lamented genius may well find we were walking down Wellington Street, Strand, and just passing the office of Household Words, when a han- space for insertion here. som cab stopped, and out stepped a gaily dressed gen- My mother, and indeed all of us, often used to point tleman ; his bright green waistcoat, vivid scarlet tie, out little details that had been overlooked. I remember and pale lavender trousers would have been noticed by one in The Bells, which my mother told Mr. Irving on any one, but the size of the nosegay in his buttonhole the first night, when he returned to our house to supper. riveted my attention, for it was a regular flower garden. People who have seen the play may remember that the My father stopped and introduced me, and I, who had first scene is a small inn, in the depths of the country, only seen engravings of the Maclise portrait, and a very and that there is supposed to have been a deep fall of handsome head in my mother's photograph album, was in fact, it is still snowing. The innkeeper, · Mat astonished to find myself shaking hands with the great thias' (Irving), walked in, on that first night, in ordinary novelist, Charles Dickens. His manner was so exceed- black boots, with no snow upon them. My mother spoke ingly pleasant and kind to a young nobody like me that of it, and afterwards · Matthias' wore high black boots, I was very much taken with him; and I was moreover and stood on the mat while the snow was brushed off very anxious to like the man who had created Dick them. Remarks were made in the papers as to Mr. Swiveller and the Marchioness, and Little Nell and her Irving's attention to the minutest details, and this was grandfather." cited as an instance." No preface is required to the following real- “We had been waiting for · Bob Gasset,' and now he came, but looked so different I could scarcely believe he istic description of Tennyson. The scene is laid was the same man. Mr. Irving was then under thirty, in the Charing Cross Station. had a pale, serious, intellectual face, and long, rather “A train drew up, and out of it stepped a gentleman. wavy, black hair, and was as different from his make- My father said something which I did not catch, and up as Bob Gasset as can well be imagined. We all got going up to him stopped and shook hands. The gentle- into a cab and drove home, Irving coming in to supper. man would have been tall, but his shoulders seemed My father talked about the play, and said how much he somewhat bent; his hair was long, so was his beard; he liked it; but the actor talked very little; he gave me wore an ugly Inverness cape and a large slouch hat; he the idea of being melancholy, I thought he was tired. looked like a bandit in a melodrama, and I thought him I did not know then that silence and seeming lassitude some poor actor who had come out in some of the stage were habitual to him; but so it was, for, though I saw properties. As he talked to my father I was conscious him often for four or five years, I do not think I ever of his looking very often at me; at last he said: “So this saw him cheerful, let alone hilarious. His face, voice, is your daughter - you must be proud of such a daugh- figure, proclaimed the tragedian — and yet how well he ter.' My father smiled, and replied: “I could wish her can play comedy every one knows who has seen him as to be stronger.' • Is she delicate ? ' exclaimed Tennyson. • Jingle. That night he quite annoyed me, for when • Why, when I saw you coming she reminded me of the we came into the dining-room he suddenly put up his Goddess of the Morn she quite brightens up this dull eye-glasses, and, after a careful scrutiny of my face, said, and dreary place,' and he looked with disgust round the more to himself than to my father and mother: •Very station, which I had always liked. “She looks the incar- pretty — extraordinary likeness to Marie Antoinette.' nation of youth and health,' he added." I became crimson; but Irving was not in the least per- turbed. I might have been a picture, from the cool way The writer indulges in a curious lamentation in which he looked at me, and I have never been able to over what would seem to be the exceptionally determine whether he knew he spoke aloud.” fortunate circumstances of her upbringing. She A rather melancholy picture of Du Maurier, says, “I think now it was rather hard on us sitting sadly in the twilight of increasing blind- youngsters to always have so many clever and ness, is presented in the following, which evi brilliant people round us; we always seemed to dently refers to a period later than the seventies. be kept at attention.” Readers of her book will “I went and found the artist sitting alone and seem- not echo her regret. As a record of “ Impres- ingly rather dull. He told me he was almost blind; and sions of Literary People and Others,” it is he spoke of my father's early death, of his hard work, vivid, rapid, thoroughly entertaining and seldom his philanthropy and his Christianity. He talked of his frivolous, and, despite occasional carelessness - own work, and seemed afraid he should not be able to keep on drawing much longer for Punch. You think such carelessness as one expects in a lady who I can see you,' he said; but though I know you are is dashing off her reminiscences about as they quite near me, you are in a grey mist, and I cannot dis- occur to her, - generally well written. But as tinguish your features.' ... He talked of the old days the writer takes occasion to regret the modern in Great Russell Street, and said that then was his hap- piest time, and those were the palmy days of Purch'.... decline in literary style and grammatical correct- He had not at this time written Trilby. I never saw ness among our host of “ amateur" authors, she him after that book came out.” may pardon a reviewer for calling attention to a A glimpse of Dickens, whose “ Old Curiosity few slips in her own pages. The split infinitive Shop' the author says she almost knew by heart, in the last quotation we pass over as likely to will here be welcome. offend none but that terror of us all, the purist. “My father was very fond of taking me out and about But “ I put up with it like a good sister should 190 [March 16, THE DIAL contains a vulgarism truly surprising in this par- foreign powers, even though with only enough ticular sister. Of Disraeli and his wife we read historical detail to afford a fair background for that “they mutually loved each other"; and in interpretation. another place, “ Then we settled down to talk The point of view from which Professor of the people we had mutually known.” On Moore has approached his subject is set forth another page the writer speaks of playing “a explicitly in his prefatory note when he affirms Lieder of Mendelssohn's.” The London Plague that nothing could be more erroneous than the she makes break out in 1664, a year too soon. supposition that the United States has, as the Last, and least, “yodle” she spells “joddle,' result of certain changes in its habits, suddenly and for “ waltz” she writes - valse." All these become, within the past few years, a world- are small matters, introduced here largely in power. .'” The United States is declared to have the hope of pleasing the author by proving to been “always in the fullest and highest sense her how thoroughly her excellent chapters have a world-power.' a world-power.” There is nothing essentially been conned even by the reviewer, who, as we novel, of course, in the assertion, and yet in all know, is perfectly qualified to judge of any these times it calls for all the emphasis that book by its weight, odor, and superficial aspect. Professor Moore has placed upon it. Six or PERCY F. BICKNELL. seven years ago, amidst the excitement incident to war, conquest, and expansion, it became the custom to picture the United States as breaking forth with startling suddenness from her tradi- THE MEANING AND INFLUENCE OF AMERICAN DIPLOMACY.* tional isolation and making a highly dramatic, not to say sensational, debut as a world power. Many readers of “Harper's Magazine Afterwards, however, when we became able once during the past year or two have followed with more to reflect sanely upon our international rather unusual interest a series of articles con- position, we discovered that never since we have tributed by Professor John Bassett Moore, of constituted an independent nation have we been Columbia University, on the significant aspects anything else than a world-power, and that our of American diplomatic history and practice. present status (whether for better or for worse) They, in common with a larger public, will be differs from that of ten or of fifty years ago glad to know that these studies, after the ap merely in degree rather than in kind. In an proved fashion in such cases, have been brought essay published as long ago as 1899 Professor together in book form, and that by a consider- Albert Bushnell Hart drove home the fact that able amount of revision and amplification they historically the United States has never been an have been made even more suggestive and illum- isolated power, and now Professor Moore builds inating than as first published. The primary his whole argument on the thesis ; in truth if one object of the work, in the words of the author, cares to trace the earlier development of the idea is “ to give, not a chronological narrative of he will find it stated perfectly by Trescot in his international transactions, but rather an ex- treatise on the diplomacy of the American Rev- position of the principles by which they were olution, written more than half a century ago. guided, in order that the distinctive purposes of In his opening chapter Professor Moore gives American diplomacy may be understood and us a succinct account of the beginnings of our its meaning and influence appreciated.” A diplomatic history. After laying down the prop- thoroughgoing and comprehensive history of osition that the advent of the United States into American diplomacy would be a most welcome the family of nations was the most important acquisition, especially if it came from the hand event of the past two hundred years, he describes of such a master in the field as is Professor graphically the difficulties and embarrassments Moore ; but apparently for such a piece of work we have yet a good while to wait. In lieu of it before it had won its way to an honorable inter- which the young power was called upon to face the next best thing, and perhaps for the reading national standing. The sketch contains nothing public a really more useful thing, is such a vol- that is new, but as a convenient summary it is ume as that now under review. In this we have distinctly worth while. The method of the suc- at least a very readable presentation of the prin- ceeding nine chapters is topical rather than chro- ciples and spirit underlying the dealings with nological. The first subject taken up is The AMERICAN DIPLOMACY, its Spirit and Achievements. By System of Neutrality.” The years of the Con- John Bassett Moore, LL.D. Illustrated. New York: Harper & federation have been designated as the critical Brothers. 1906.] 191 THE DIAL period of our early national history, but the ex and influence in the Western hemisphere. ... The pression might be applied with almost equal principle of American policy. To its explicit acceptance Monroe Doctrine ... is now generally recognized as a propriety to the years between 1791 and 1796 by Great Britain and Germany there may be added the during which American independence was totter declaration which was spread by unanimous consent upon ing under the impact of European turmoil. As the minutes of The Hague Conference, and which was Professor Moore points out, the perils which the permitted to be annexed to the signature of the American nation encountered at this time were greater than delegates to the convention for the peaceful adjustment of international disputes, that nothing therein contained the old Confederation could have withstood, and should be so construed as to require the United States “to were a very severe test of the efficacy of the new depart from its traditional policy of not entering upon, Constitution. The temptations to wander from interfering with, or entangling itself in, the political the straight and narrow path of neutrality were questions or internal administration of any foreign state,' all but overpowering. Almost alone among the or to relinquish its traditional attitude toward purely American questions.' statesmen of the time Washington kept a level head, and it was his decisive action more than The three topics of expatriation, international anything else that warded off the danger. Pro- arbitration, and territorial expansion are taken fessor Moore's account of the Genêt mission, up in order and traced rapidly through the whole while very brief, is illuminating. Of Genêt him- course of our national history. And finally self it is remarked that he “ has been the subject Conditions,” in many ways the most valuable in of much unmerited obloquy; in circumstances the book. Here Professor Moore attempts an exceptionally trying his conduct was ill-advised, estimate (which he would be the first to recog- but not malevolent." After an interesting chapter on the contribu- nize as only partial) of American diplomacy in tions of the United States toward establishing the respect to its influence upon civilization at large freedom of the seas, - especially with respect tions of intercourse among states. and particularly upon the methods and condi- He finds to the Mediterranean pirates, the impressment that this influence has been at least three-fold. of seamen, the right of search, the African slave- trade, and the free navigation of sounds, straits, States has fostered political, commercial, and In the first place, the diplomacy of the United and other water channels, we find a useful sketch of the fisheries questions which represents emphasized the principle of legality in the con- maritime liberty; in the second place, it has the studies. And of course there is a chapter duct of international affairs; and lastly, it has on the much-discussed, if not over-worked, Mon- promulgated ideals of honesty, good-faith, sim- roe Doctrine. For the most part this chapter plicity, and directness which foreign offices and is of necessity a rehearsal of facts already well diplomats have always been much too prone to known, but it contains also some general obser- ignore. To the general assertion with which the volume closes, to the effect that American vations and conclusions which, coming from such a man as Professor Moore, are worthy of the diplomacy has been identified with the cause of most thoughtful attention on the part of our freedom and justice, many individual exceptions might easily be taken ; yet that it is true in all people. Says the writer: essential respects no one at all acquainted with “A tendency is often exhibited to attach decisive the subject would undertake to deny. importance to particular phrases in President Monroe's message of 1823, or to the special circumstances in Professor Moore's task in this book has been which it originated, as if they furnished a definitive test to search out the things which the United States of what should be done and what should be omitted un has stood for in the realm of international poli- der all contingencies. The verbal literalist would, on tics and to make an exposition of them in the the one hand, make the United States an involuntary This under- party to all controversies between European and Ameri- light of briefly enumerated facts. can governments, in order that the latter may not be taking he has accomplished with signal success. oppressed '; while the historical literalist would, on the One may question his assignments of space or of other hand, treat Monroe's declaration as obsolete, since historical importance to one topic or another, or the conditions to which they specially referred no longer exist. But when we consider the mutations in the his judgments of men and events, though to the world's affairs, these modes of reasoning must be con- reviewer these seem on the whole to be admir- fessed to be highly unsatisfactory. The Monroe Doc- 1 able; but there are practically no misstatements trine' has in reality become a convenient title by which is of fact, and of affirmations of opinions which do denoted a principle that doubtless would have been not grow out of the most careful thought there wrought out if the message of 1823 had never been writ- ten — the principle of the limitation of European power are none at all. FREDERIC AUSTIN OGG. 192 [March 16, THE DIAL anese architecture at its true worth, — but be- JAPANESE ARCHITECTURE AND ALLIED ARTS.* cause it is the view that must prevail when that architecture is more widely studied. Still, as the The reader who takes up Mr. Ralph Adams Philistine in matters of art is not easily turned Cram's “ Impressions of Japanese Architecture from his traditional notions, Mr. Cram's conten- and the Allied Arts” is likely to lay it down tion would be more convincing were more of again with a sigh of regret that there is not the details filled in. These, let it be hoped, will more of it, albeit thick paper, wide margins, and some day be forthcoming. Meanwhile, there is the sixty full-page illustrations swell its propor- reason to be grateful for a competent and illum- tions to a good-sized volume. Four of the ten inating summary of the historical development chapters were written for architectural period of the art, and some account of the more impor- icals; one is a paper that was read before the tant buildings that have been preserved from Boston Society of Arts and Crafts. Necessarily, ancient times. they deal chiefly with generalities, and there is All of the book is not given over to architec- some repetition, or rather reiteration, of the same ture. The chapter on “The Genius of Japan- ideas. This reiteration does not, however, de- ese Art” is a clear and forcible presentation of tract from the charm of the book, and the ideas fundamental truths ; the “ Note on Japanese thus reinforced are sound and are cogently Sculpture” affords an excellent introduction to expressed. It is evident that Mr. Cram has a much neglected subject; and very charming studied his subject with painstaking care, keeping is the chapter on “Temple Gardens.” In speak- the larger relations ever in mind; and the ing of “The Minor Arts” there are lapses here essays that make up this volume are thoughtful and there into such extravagant phrase as “that and discriminating. He tells us that we must from the very first whatever had been made by consider the art of Old Japan, and particularly any workman had been beautiful.” Would it the religious architecture, as the visible expres- were so! Strict regard for truth, however, com- sion of the ancient civilization of China and pels the admission that not all Japanese work- Japan, which from the seventh to the twelfth men are artists. With little that Mr. Cram says centuries was the highest civilization then exist is there occasion to quarrel. His spelling of ing in the world. But, as he says, kakimono " (whatever that may mean) instead “ From the standpoint of the casual traveller, even of of “ kakemono” will not pass muster. The color the architect, Japanese architecture is at first abso- lutely baffling; it is like Japanese music, so utterly for print by Yeizan, not “of Yeizan” as he puts it, eign, so radically different in its genesis, so aloof in its is well characterized as “not a masterpiece.' moods and motives from the standards of the West, that But when he asserts that "it says as much, per- for a long time it is a wonder merely, a curiosity, a toy haps all we can ever understand, of the pictorial perhaps, or a sport of nature, not a serious product of art of Japan,” the statement may be challenged the human mind, a priceless contribution to the history of the world. Partly by inheritance, partly by educa- squarely. The qualities he proceeds to comment tion, we have been qualified for thinking in one way, upon are for the most part wanting in the print and in one way only. From Athens through Rome, he takes as a text, and of which a half-tone re- Byzantium, the Auvergne, Normandy, the Ile de France, production is given. The other illustrations are to Yorkshire and Somerset, there is running an easily traceable thread of unbroken continuity of architectural from photographs, selected with excellent judg- tradition; but from Athens through Ionia, Persia, Hin- ment, but they might have been better reproduced dustan, China, and Korea, to Japan, while the line is and printed. FREDERICK W. GOOKIN. equally continuous, it is through lands aloof and barred, and by ways that are blind and bewildering. We can think forward in the terms of the West, we can hardly think backward in the terms of the mysterious East. THE GREATEST OF FRENCH DRAMATISTS.* Yet when the revolution is accomplished and the rebel- lious mind is bent to the unfamiliar course, this strange So little has been written in English about architecture comes to show itself in its true light. It is Molière that admirers of le grand comique, as more nearly Greek than any other, for it is the perfect- ing of a single, siinple, and primitive mass by almost Frenchmen call their genius of comedy, will infinite refinements of line and proportion.” hail Mr. Henry M. Trollope's biography as a This is a significant utterance, not only from commendable attempt to add a necessary work the novelty of the view put forth, — no other to a meagre literature. To quote Mr. Andrew author having ventured an appreciation of Jap- Lang’s article in the Encyclopædia Britannica on this great Frenchman, " The English biog- * IMPRESSIONS OF JAPANESE ARCHITECTURE AND THE ALLIED ARTS. By Ralph Adams Cram. Illustrated. New York: The * THE LIFE OF MOLIÈRB. By Henry M. Trollope. With portraits. New York: E. P. Dutton & Co. Baker & Taylor Co. 1906.] 193 THE DIAL are raphies of Molière are few and as a rule abso many Frenchmen to believe the charges brought lutely untrustworthy.” Considering that in the against her legitimacy; according to French literature of the modern drama Molière stands, law she is guilty because not proved innocent, after Shakespeare, in the foremost place, and whereas an Anglo-Saxon judge would dismiss that in the literature of France his is the greatest the charge against her because of insufficient name, this dearth of English works about bim testimony. becomes indeed remarkable. Throughout his book Mr. Trollope shows No point need be raised as to the timeliness painstaking and accurate scholarship. M. Paul of Mr. Trollope's book. The questions for con Lacroix’s “ Bibliographie Moliéresque sideration are its accuracy, construction, and tains perhaps a hundred and fifty titles of books charm. In the case of the first of these quals and articles relating to Molière's life or the his- ities only praise may be given. The author tory of his troupe ; yet La Grange, Vinot, Gri- has examined all French authorities, both orig- marest, Bruzen de la Martinière, Tallemant des inal and commentative, so thoroughly that the Réaux, De Vizé, Loret, Boulanger de Chalussay, most captious critic would find it difficult to Brossette, and the anonymous author of a pam- gainsay his knowledge of the topic upon which phlet entitled “ La Fameuse Comédienne he writes. the authors from whom all modern biographers The earlier period of Molière’s life is veiled, have drawn their material. When a few his- to a great extent, in mystery; yet it is a matter torical sidelights, such as Chappuzeau and the of small moment whether he left Paris with a Brothers Parfaict, are added, together with the band of strolling players in the autumn of 1645 documentary discoveries of Beffara, Jal, and or the spring of 1646 ; or just when he joined Soulié, a fairly complete repository of knowl- forces with a provincial actor named Dufresne. edge upon the subject has been catalogued. The The points of human interest are that Molière, work of these and many lesser authorities Mr. the son of a well-to-do upholsterer to the king, Trollope has thoroughly digested. preferred the stage to a shop-ridden life, and Although there have been many modern bio- that after failure in Paris as an actor and im-graphers of Molière since Taschereau, the first prisonment for debt he had the courage, upon of them, Mr. Trollope is justified in selecting his release from gaol, to flee to the provinces MM. Despois and Mesnard as his literary guides. and follow the calling of a strolling player for Having their superb definitive edition of Moli- thirteen years rather than return to his father's ère's works at hand, and the numbers of the shop. Nor does it matter whether - L'Etourdi” Moliériste magazine, so ably edited by the dis- was first produced at Lyons in 1653 or 1655.tinguished archivist of the Théâtre Français, M. The fact which interests posterity is that an Georges Monval, he need look no further for itinerant actor, who had previously written only accuracy of information. It is not hyper-praise rough canevas—or frameworks of plays—sud- to say that he alone, of all English-speaking denly turned his pen to verse and wrote a five- writers upon Molière, has thoroughly mastered act comedy that electrified a Lyons audience his subject; yet one is compelled to qualify this and acclaimed the birth of a new king. approval by adding that he has presented his The one contested point in Molière's life of knowledge in a manner far from commendable prime importance to biographers is the parent as regards construction and charm. age of his wife, Armande Béjart. Though pre In considering the matter of construction, it sented, in her marriage certificate and various should be borne in mind that Mr. Trollope's other documents of the period, as the legitimate book is intended for English readers ; therefore, daughter of Joseph Béjart and Marie Hervé, an intimate knowledge of French should not be still the calumnies heaped upon Molière by jeal required, else it may be asked why the book ous rivals have made the majority of his biog- exists at all? A reader able to comprehend the raphers persist in believing his wife to be the many French extracts, in both verse and prose, illegitimate daughter of Madeleine Béjart, an which adorn its pages must be sufficiently versed actress whom he loved in his youth. Volumes in the language of Molière to consult French have been written upon this subject, and the biographies, far more charmingly and quite as end is not yet. To Mr. Trollope's credit, be it accurately written as Mr. Trollope's bulky work. said, he takes a judicial view of the case, adjudg- It is admittedly difficult to translate French verse ing Armande Béjart, in accordance with unre into English, yet even an abortive attempt would futed documentary evidence, to be legitimate. have given the general reader a clearer idea of Possibly their national jurisprudence has led so Molière's diction than Mr. Trollope has done by 194 [March 16, THE DIAL confronting him with Alexandrine strophes in a “ Ladies must be known to the hostess, or known well foreign language, the meaning of which it is by her intimate friends, and they must be of good birth, before the invitation would be given. If a gentleman necessary to understand in order to grasp the had pleasant manners and could talk well, and espe- author's comments. cially if he was in any way distinguished, he might gain In the arrangement of his material Mr. Trol admittance inside her doors.” lope shows a decided lack of orderliness. Being Aside from its archaism, this description, like thoroughly imbued with his subject-matter, he many others in Mr. Trollope's book, is tauto- continually presupposes a like knowledge on the logical. All he has told us in these fifty-three reader's part. Particularly is this true of Chapter words might have been expressed far more VIII., devoted to Molière's ideas of comedy and clearly in sixteen by saying: “The hostess in- a comparison between Shakespeare and Molière. vited only well-born women; men were admitted Heretofore, the reader has been made acquainted within her doors by cleverness or charm.” with but four of the poet's plays; yet Mr. Trol In speaking of comedy the author argues that lope proceeds to discuss technically the poet's “a sort of magnetic influence is at work, carry- methods of work throughout the entire range of ing with it delight or boredom, and the infection his thirty-four comedies. This chapter, with the is caught.” The same is true of other forms of single exception of the introductory view of literature; for the magnetic influence in both in- French comedy before Molière, by far the most stances is artistic ability. Mr. Trollope's erudi- thoughtful in the book, should have been placed tion is praiseworthy to a degree; yet his manner in conclusion. Its résumé of Molière's work is of imparting it is ponderous. not intelligible to one unfamiliar with his plays ; H. C. CHATFIELD-TAYLOR. its discussion of Shakespeare and Moliere is out of place at the moment, if not altogether so, on the principle that comparisons are likely to prove odious. Certainly there are many critics willing MILITARY CRITICISM OF THE LATE WAR.* to cede Shakespeare the foremost place in the The tendencies of advancing civilization are drama who will stoutly contest Mr. Trollope's all against the settlement of international ques- assertion that he is the Frenchman's superior tions by force of arms. The energies of humanity in comedy. are now for peace rather than for war. Never- In viewing the construction of Mr. Trollope's theless, a conflict at arms will always have fasci- book one is reminded of a dingy attic heaped nation for the intellect of man, because the play with a pile of dusty books upon an admira- of forces is so great, the theatre so vast, the ble subject. A scholar with the time and in- human interest so compelling, and the influences clination to ferret out knowledge will find it so far-reaching, that, despite those aspects from there, but the general reader will prefer a corner which humanity would avert its gaze, the trained in a cosy library beside a shelf of well-selected mind will love to dwell upon the elements in the volumes. In other words, a book less volumi- problem and long to foretell the outcome. Every nous, but more entertaining, than Mr. Trollope's man is more or less of a prophet, and those out- would find a much wider field. side the game are even more eager to foretell In charm, as well as in construction, this the outcome than the players themselves. biography leaves much to be desired. Molière's When diplomacy dropped its pen, in Febru- early struggles, his wanderings as a strolling ary, 1904, and war unsheathed the sword, it was player, his triumph at court and strange inti- positively comical to listen to the vaticinations macy with Louis XIV., the assaults of his ene- of so-called experts at Washington, Berlin, and mies, the heartlessness of his wife, his friendship Paris. Mighty generals and admirals, versed in with such men as Boileau and La Fontaine, his the dogmatics of Occidental ballistics and har- tragic death and burial, make his life-story one dened in the orthodoxy of their schools, forthwith of strong human interest, demanding skill as a proceeded to tell exactly what would happen. word painter in the telling. This is a quality The old story of believing in things because they in which Mr. Trollope is singularly deficient. were big, was repeated. It was the usual routine His style is so cumbersome, his language so ver- of ready-made philosophy without a knowledge bose, that he wearies when he should charm. of new facts, and of prediction without any basis Take, for instance, this extract in which he en- of history. Yet, all the way through, it was a deavors to describe the character of the people game of the unknown. Of Russia, tradition had Madame de Rambouillet invited to the assem- THE WAR IN THE FAR East. By the Military Correspondent blies in her famous Blue Room : of " The Times.” Illustrated. New York: E. P. Dutton & Co. 1906.] 195 THE DIAL made much. It was supposed that our knowl Through some 700 pages, with a few illustra- edge of Czardom was tolerably complete ; but tations of the leading promoters of or actors with the whole body of Occidental conceit and in the great drama, and what is virtually a ignorance of Oriental Asia set rock-fast in the complete portfolio of maps and plans up to the ideas of " white-manism,” it was an article of Mukden operations, with a diary of the war, an faith that Japan must be defeated in spite of order of battle of the Russian forces, with only some initial successes. Nevertheless, those of the a paragraph on the Japanese system, a conspec- noble five thousand who between 1868 and 1900, tus of the fleets in February and in May of in the early days of Japan's awakening, had 1905, and a capital index, we have chiefly served as schoolmasters, technicists, or instruc-crticism, criticism, criticism. Day by day as tors in any line of Japan's multifarious activities, the correspondent saw the situation, as repre- had no fears. They did not “prophesy” very sented by one railroad, two fleets, two armies, so much ; they did not “ predict ”'; they simply told many sabres, bayonets, and guns, with a knowl- what they saw. They knew what Meckel and and edge of the power of both the Russian and the Douglas had taught Oyama and Togo. They Japanese stomach to consume rations and of the knew, too, that it was not " yesterday” when the ability of hosts of war-locusts to devastate the Japanese began to learn. They recalled that the land, we have pictures in words and diagrams of Dutch at Deshima, from 1630 to 1868, had fer what is more like a game of chess than a series tilized the Japanese intellect during all the time of events and episodes. of her so-called seclusion, and that long before Here is an array of mathematical units rather Perry had come to Japan there were awakened than of human beings. There is no blood on spirits and alert reformers. These from 1868 these pages; one hears no cry of the wounded, have controlled the palace and the mind of the and looks into no ghastly battle-trenches. We god that dwells therein. The seeing ones knew find rather a cold blooded and for the most part also that however diligent or brilliant were the accurate account of collisions of opposing forces. teachers, the pupils were even more so. They He who wishes to learn the science of modern felt, moreover, that the Japanese realized that war must read this book. One word tells the this was a fight for food, for growth, for life. story,— training. One word dominates the situ- They were persuaded also that the spirit of the ation, -science. One word links initiative with Samurai and “the virtues of the Emperor” had, consummation in the chain of success, -art. after thirty-five years of public-school training, The Japanese have never let up for an instant into the common people. So, during the past So, during the past decade. They wrested the secrets with the military system that was German in its of power from the West, a whole generation ago, thoroughness and Yamato in its spirit, the Ja- and then with a faculty for adaptation amounting panese, after fifty years of historic propædeutic to genius they made the art, which comes from and ten years of special preparation, rushed with a mastered science and as expressed in training, eagerness to the fray. No David ever went tell at every point. Continuous victories, a hun- more assuredly to victory than the Japanese. dred thousand prisoners against two thousand, Nevertheless, however much or in whomsoever the conquest of disease and wounds in the hos- or whatsoever they trusted, they kept their Shi- pital even more than supremacy over the enemy mose powder dry. in battle, and, grandest of all, self-conquest at Now we have a critical estimate of the detailed the treaty council, all show the superiority of operations of the war, written by the capable the Japanese. military correspondent of the London “Times." It is needless to go into the details of this book. Let no one buy this book thinking that he is The author dwells on the outlook for either side going to get a consecutive narrative, or a picto when the war broke out, and outlines all the rial presentation of the various conflicts. No; movements until his fiftieth chapter winds up this book is magnificent, but it is not a story. the long dithyramb (we call it so, for all glory is Let us look at it outwardly, and then appraise ascribed to the Mikado) of continuous success its inward contents. Take it for what some may with the appropriate “ Nunc Dimittis.” Just think it to be, and it will yield disappointment how the Russian camel could not get through and even wrath. Read it for what it purports the eye of the Siberian needle is the negative to express and actually is, and it will be found proposition herein fully explained. But lest the to have hardly a peer in its class of literature, reader might think the "Times” critic has no and probably will have no equal or successor descriptive power, let us quote from the author's for many years. view of the blue-water battle of mid-August: 196 [March 16, THE DIAL “When at last the giants [the battleships] came out Paganism. In the present work, however, Mr. and gave battle, the other classes of warships resumed Dickinson must appear to a fair critic not as a at once the very secondary place which they legitimately hold in fleet action. The Russian cruisers fled and scat- partisan but as a sane and able interpreter with tered. ... It was superior gunnery and rapid accurate a pardonable dash of enthusiasm. fire that decided the day. Those three twelve-inch The book has five chapters, — (I.) The Greek shells that struck the Tsarevitch, within a few minutes View of Religion, (II.) The Greek View of the of each other, wrecked the Russian line of battle. State, (III.) The Greek View of the Individual, The flag-ship was no longer under control, and, worse of all, the death of Admiral Vithöft deprived the line (IV.) The Greek View of Art, (V.) Conclu- of guidance. The supremacy of the gun, and of the sion. Each chapter has its divisions carefully heaviest gun most of all, becomes overwhelmingly planned and succinctly treated, and concludes manifest." with a useful summary. In this way the author No notice of this book would be just that touches most topics of importance. But one leaves out high praise of the forty maps and omission is immediately noticed and regretted : battle plans by Mr. Percy Fisher. While critical there is no adequate or consecutive presentation knowledge of the country traversed and fought of the Greek love of knowledge. This formed over will illuminate the masses of red and blue the subject of the third, I think, of Dr. Butcher's which seem to move over the brown spaces rep recent Harvard lectures; and readers of THE resenting hills and the white representing plains, Dial will recall also Mr. Percy F. Bicknell's with the black threads standing for rivers, yet article on “The Greek Love of Detail” (Oct. these diagrams are superb from the point of 16, 1905). “The Greeks are ever children,” view of one who knows the difficulty of making said Herodotus, — anticipating Dr. Stanley a good battle-plan. The maps are all that Hall's declaration that the Greeks represent the could be desired. For its special purpose, this “eternally adolescent," but wording it rather book is of unique value. better, - and they went about with the open WILLIAM ELLIOT GRIFFIS. eyes of bright children questioning everything and everybody merely for the sake of knowing; and many of their questions are still on our lips. However, Mr. Dickinson doubtless felt the limi- THE OLD, UNTROUBLED PAGAN WORLD.* tations of space, and on the whole has used his Under the title - The Greek View of Life” two hundred and thirty-three pages admirably. Mr. G. Lowes Dickinson has put forth a sym- The world to which the author invites our pathetic interpretation for which he deserves the attention is the “old, untroubled, pagan world thanks of all readers who believe in the desira of beauty," and herein he manifests the same bility of an historical basis for the pursuit of the spirit with which he pleaded so winningly for the things that are more excellent. “The following substance against the shadow in his remarkable pages are intended to serve as a general introduc- “ Letters of a Chinese Official,” who, by the way, tion to Greek literature and thought, for those has many strange points of resemblance to an primarily who do not know Greek” is the open- Athenian gentleman. In this world, if we may ing of a modest preface to a well-balanced and trust our interpreter, harmony was the truth of well-written book from the hands of a competent all existence; the claims of the State, of art, author. It is true that Mr. Dickinson is an of religion, and of the individual with his human avowed philhellene, who believes that Greek cul- cravings, claims which clash and clang in such ture “is still, as it has been in the past, the most disheartening discord to-day, were more nearly valuable element of a liberal education," and harmonized in ancient Greece than in the history has been both acclaimed and derided as an apos- of any other land. That the harmony was in- tle of the neo-Paganism about which we have complete even in that golden age our author is heard so much of late. It is to him that Mr. to too intelligent to deny and too honest to dis- Gilbert Chesterton devotes his essay on “Pagan- semble. One finds now and then a Greek coin ism” – perhaps the most meteoric flight of on which a glorious obverse is joined to an un- brilliant pertness in the “Heretics” volume, - sightly reverse, and Mr. Dickinson in displaying speaking of him as “the most pregnant and the latter exhibits an honesty that wins at once provocative of recent writers on this and similar our respect and our confidence. In the sec- subjects,” and arraigning him as the mislead tions, for instance, dealing with the Greek view ing advocate of a return to a misunderstood of woman he does not blink the fact that the attitude of the Periclean or the Demosthenic * TAB GREEK VIEW OF LIFE. By G. Lowes Dickinson, M.A. age New York: McClure, Phillips & Co. is strikingly suggestive of Japan in its less at- 1906.] 197 THE DIAL tractive phases. Again, in the paragraphs on view and with music and the dance will be found the Greek view of the State his devotion to his particularly fruitful for the reader not thoroughly land of charm does not prevent him from giv- at home in Greek life and thought. ing an adequate treatment of the faction and It is really difficult to take leave of our Cam- anarchy so rampant in Greek politics. Orange bridge essayist, and one would like to speak of and Green in Ireland's most pugnacious days many things, — of his style, for instance, now were doves of peace compared to Democrat and and then deepening to the genuine Tyrian hue, Aristocrat in many cities of Greece. What but never patchy; of his quiet literary appreci- Athens represents to him is shown by this sen ation ; of his little touch of rather lovable pes- tence: “ All the beauty, all the grace, all the simism as he dwells on his theme with the joy of Greece ; all that chains the desire of man thought that “no perfection of life delivers kind, with a yearning that is never stilled, to from death”; of his realization that the Greek that one golden moment in the past, whose fairview of death and a future life breathes but and balanced interplay of perfect flesh and little consolation. little consolation. The fear of age and death soul no later gains of thought can compensate, is the shadow of the love of life; and on no peo- centres about that bright and stately city of ple has it fallen with more horror than on the romance, the home of Pericles and all the Greeks. The tenderest of their songs of love arts, whence from generation to generation has close with a sob, and it is an autumn wind that streamed upon ages less illustrious an influence rustles in their bowers of spring.” These and at once the sanest and the most inspired of all many other topics insist on presenting them- that have shaped the secular history of the selves ; but they must be left for the many world.” And yet in the same section he tells readers that this excellent book deserves to find. us that “this democracy dissolved into an an “ The Greek View of Life” ought to stimulate archy of individuals, drawn deeper and deeper, a real interest in a period that invariably fasci- in pursuit of mean and egotistic ends, into po- nates our eyes if we we will turn them but once litical fraud and commercial chicanery. Hon to “ the fairest and happiest halting-place in the esty of presentation could go no further. secular march of men.' The sentence quoted above in laudation of The material book presents a pleasing appear- Athens will serve as an illustration of the 66 par ance, and is of convenient size. The printed page donable dash of enthusiasm in our author. is legible, and there is comparative freedom Only once or twice does this enthusiasm draw from typographical slips, although on page 122 near the borderland of extravagance; but even the substitution of as for at is very irritating the warmest admirer of Greek plastic art will particularly in a third edition. In these days read the following passage slowly before yielding of "eye-mindedness"and the constant purveying his approval : “ Their mere household crockery, thereto, Mr. Dickinson and his publishers are their common pots and pans, are cast in shapes to be commended for resisting the temptation so exquisitely graceful, and painted in designs to improve his little work with illustrations. so admirably drawn and composed, that any one F. B. R. HELLEMS. of them has a higher artistic value than the whole contents of the Royal Academy; and the little clay figures they used as we do china ornaments BRIEFS ON NEW BOOKS. put to shame the most ambitious efforts of mod- It must seem strange to the general ern sculpture. Who, for example, would not reader to find volumes on Australia rather look at a Tanagra statuette than at the the Philippines, and the Philippine Islands included equestrian statue of the Duke of Wellington ?” in the “ Asiatic Neighbors” series ( Putnam), even But after all, has not William Morris stood though the native stock of the Philippines is Ma- champion for the lesser crafts, for the beauty of layan, the typical brown man of the Asiatic seas and the web, the cup, or the knife, telling us how all their confines. Australia has been an English colony the arts hang together, and summoning us to since 1788, and the Philippines were Spanish colo- follow the goddess to the kitchen as well as to the nial possessions for more than three centuries before art gallery ? That the Greeks “ were artists becoming subject to American influence. Both have through and through, quite apart from any the- been more closely related to Europe than to Asia, though nearer to Asiatic than to European coasts. ories they may have held,” we are not allowed to forget at any point in the chapter on Art, in However, one ought not to be captious about the series in which such admirable books as the present which the sections dealing with the Greek iden ones are included. In “ Australian Life in Town tification of the æsthetic and ethical points of and Country," Mr. E. C. Buley, an Australian by Daily life in Australia and 198 [March 16, THE DIAL birth as well as by other ties, exhibits Australia as a whoever gives himself the pleasure of letting Mr. continent, not only in the extent of its territory (three Selous tell him will straightway be ashamed of his million square miles ), but in comprising a number skepticism. In the first place the author is convinc- of states, with a goodly amount of mutual jealousy, ingly in love with his subject — even with those though united under a Federal Constitution; having “desolate and wind-swept isles” where November several important cities, though its entire population comes in August, and the sea never sleeps. “Would is little more than half that of the city of London; God my home were here,” he exclaims, " that I might maintaining relations with England somewhat re make a life-long and continuous study of the wild moved from the conventional love for the dear old sea-bird life about me!” – and he adds, “Oh, is there Mother Country"; and having some aspirations after anything in life more piquant (if you care about it) national life, fostered by the “ Australian Natives' than to lie on the summit of a beetling cliff, and Association.” He does not recognize Botany Bay or watch the breeding sea-fowl on the ledges below!” the penal settlement as having influenced the life and Contagious as this enthusiasm is, however, it is the development of the continent. A convict settlement excellence of his watching that gives the greatest was no part of the plan of the early advocates of colo value to his book. Mr. Selous believes with Darwin nization in Australia, though the 26th of January, that “every creature is ready to alter his habits, as the date when Captain Phillip landed, in 1788, at the opportunity arises, and the greater number of Port Jackson with the first load of convicts, is now them are, in some way or another, always in process annually observed by Australians as “ Anniversary of doing so." Consequently his observations, always Day.” The real development of Australia began patient, loving, and interesting, often have a further with Captain John MacArthur, who, with sure in point in recording variations from accepted for- stinct in agricultural and pastoral matters, seems to mulæ. Many of these discoveries seem insignificant; have grasped the possibilities of the Australian con others, it is more than likely, may lead the way to tinent immediately upon his arrival. The pastoral important results. In any event, the definiteness of industry which he introduced led to exploration and the records is delightful. The coloring of the Arctic the development of various branches of agriculture. skua, fifteen variations of which are carefully dis- Gold was discovered in 1851; but the greatest factor tinguished; the cuddling of the guillemot chick under in the development of the resources of the country its mother's wing; the flight of the fulmar petrel was the experiment in the ocean carriage of perish which “suggests a soul,” while other birds are only able produce, by which in one year Australia sold bodies; the sporting of a young seal with a spar of one hundred millions worth of produce in excess of wood (for the sub-title of the book promises "some her purchases. The book deals most entertainingly notes on seals”); and the manners of “Falstaff,” the with Australian life, and is well illustrated. — Mr. big seal who “expatiates ” luxuriously upon his rock James A. Le Roy's “Philippine Life in Town and ** with such great yawns, such stretchings, heavings, Country” differs in style from the other volumes of and throwings back of the head, with supple cury- the series, and has many advantages over the vast ings of the neck !” — all these and more are vivid number of books upon the Philippines which have enough to the reader to become an appreciable part appeared in the English language since 1898. It of life. The fine scorn of civilization on which was found impossible for the author to divide the they are embossed adds further zest to them. “To life of the Philippines, as he has seen it, into urban me,” Mr. Selous says, “a live snake is much more and rural. Mr. Le Roy is qualified to write of the interesting than a live man or woman.” He clings Philippines, both by a previous experience with the to this preference good-naturedly, amusingly, until Spanish Americans, and by virtue of his connection he speaks of the cruelty of men to animals; then with the United States Philippine Commission dur his scorn bites and stings. They conquer, these ing the establishment of civil government in the Philistines, and the finer-touched spirit lies bleeding islands. Yet he writes with no intention of main and suffering beneath them. that the 'pale taining any particular theory, or of supporting any Galilean’ has not conquered here, but that Thor has, policy with regard to the “Philippine question” which though often in his rival's name." The only real enters so largely into the politics of our country to- fault of the book - unless account is taken of some day. In his pictures of the life of the "Filipinos” obvious inaccuracies of style — lies in the illustra- (whom he defines as the Christianized inhabitants tions, which are taken from drawings altogether too of the islands as distinct from the Moros or Moham much “made up,” instead of from photographs, as medan Malays of the southern regions), he quotes any American is bound to think they should have largely from the novels of José Rizal, a native lit been. terateur and political martyr. Some entirely new The task of collating and editing the A famous photographs of scenes in the islands illustrate the Bishop and abundant materials existing for an volume. his work. adequate history of Trinity Parish in Records of a The goodly size of Mr. Edmund the city of New York, undertaken by the Rev. Mor- Selous's volume called “The Bird gan Dix, S.T.D., D.C.L., ninth rector of said parish, the Shetlands. Watcher in the Shetlands” (Dutton) bore its first fruit in 1898, in a large and handsome is a temptation to the uninitiated to ask what there volume setting forth the history of the parish from is in that barren region to write so much about. But 1686 to the close of the rectorship of Dr. Inglis in I say naturalist in 1906.] 199 THE DIAL 1783. That volume was somewhat fully reviewed it is a valuable contribution to the history of the in these columns at the time of its publication, as Diocese of New York, of the Protestant Episcopal the history of Trinity Church during the period cov Church, and of the times in which Hobart lived ; and ered was to a large extent the history of New York it gives to the third volume of this series an inter- City and province, and of far wider than merely est like that of the first and second volumes, far parochial interest. After an interval of three years, wider than the limits of a parish, albeit the largest a second volume appeared, bringing the history down and most influential parish in the land. to the close of Dr. Moore's rectorship in 1816. This volume also received due notice in these columns. Umbria and its The past year has produced a remark- It was then supposed that a third volume would suf foremost figure, able number of books about the fice to cover the rectorial terms of Dr. Hobart and Saint Francis. small but fascinating region of Italy Dr. Berrian, the seventh and eighth rectors, and to known as Umbria, and about Umbria's foremost conclude the labors of Dr. Dix as editor. The third figure, St. Francis. Two late additions to the list volume which now appears (Putnam) but partially are Miss Emma G. Salter's “ Franciscan Legends in fulfils the expectation of the completion of the history, Italian Art” (Dutton), and Mr. Edward Hutton's principally because of the discovery of a large mass “ The Cities of Umbria” (Dutton). The distin- of letters containing so much of interest and of im guishing feature of the former work is its very com- portance in the history of Trinity Parish as to de- plete classified lists of everything in art connected mand considerable attention. This volume is there with the life of St. Francis, even those pictures and fore devoted to the rectorship of Dr. Hobart to the statues which, though not great as works of art, are year 1830; and a fourth volume will be required to yet extremely interesting to Franciscan students. treat of the rectorate of Dr. Berrian. John Henry Pictures of the saint began to be made as early as Hobart was a man of great prominence in his day. the thirteenth century, and are usually to be found He was a native of Philadelphia, in which city he in rather out-of-the-way places, such as Greccio, began his ministry. He was but a short time settled Subiaco, Pescia, etc. Not the least valuable por- over churches in New Brunswick, New Jersey, and tions of Miss Salter's book are the few pages of Hempstead, Long Island, before he was elected an “ Practical Hints” for the traveller, showing him assistant rector in Trinity Church, New York, in how to reach these places. An opportunity is often 1800. He became Secretary of the Diocese of New missed by the traveller, even when close at hand, York, and was some time Secretary of the House of because of the lack of just such practical knowledge Deputies of the General Convention. When con as this. Tradition says that the Greccio picture was secrated Assistant Bishop of New York in 1811, painted from life for a friend; but whether it was there were but six bishops of the Episcopal Church or not, the type of face of St. Francis, his dress in America. In 1816, by the death of Bishop Moore, and symbols, make him one of the most easily recog- he became Bishop of the Diocese, and the same year nizable figures in Italian art. As frontispiece to was elected rector of Trinity Church. His relations this volume, the author has selected Raphael's repre- to Trinity Church by no means restricted the sphere sentation from the left-hand corner of his famous of his influence. He was temporarily in charge of Madonna di Foligno in the Vatican Gallery at the Dioceses of Connecticut and New Jersey, and Rome. — Mr. Hutton divides his book into three had the general oversight of the church in the West parts : “Impressions of the Cities of Umbria,” “The ern Reserve. He was influential in the establish Umbrian School of Painting," and "Umbria Mystica.” ment of the General Theological Seminary of How thoroughly the author is under the spell that Geneva (now Hobart) College, and of the Church affects all who dwell long enough in Umbria, may be press in this country. He carried the gospel to the judged from such a passage as this, from the chapter Oneida Indians, and awakened the Church to the on Spoleto : “I came to her in an evil mood, hating needs of missionary efforts in what was then con my fellow-men and especially the tourist; I left her sidered the far West. He was a man of strong after a long time, refreshed and rested, at peace with convictions, and the phrases “the Gospel in the all men, having understood her beauty and her joy. Church” and “ Evangelical Truth and Apostolic ... Climb up to the great Roman aqueduct that Order" are associated with his name. He was some spans the profound ravine which isolates Spoleto on what of a controversialist, and one of his opponents her round hill, and at evening look across the val- in a once famous controversy was so impressed with leys to the hills and the mountains; that luminous his ability that he declared, "Were I compelled to softness, a delicacy so magical that you had thought entrust the safety of my country to any one man, only the genius of Raphael or Perugino could im- that man should be John Henry Hobart.” The agine and express it, is just reality.” In the division editor of the history of Trinity Parish has wisely devoted to Umbrian painting, the author has well embraced the opportunity afforded by the connection characterized its profound and delightful sentiment of such a man with that important parish, to publish as distinguished from the intellectual travail of the a careful selection from the more than three thou Florentines or the magnificent acceptance of life of sand letters known as the “Hobart Correspondence." the Venetians. In “Umbria Mystica,” St. Francis So far from this giving to the present volume the is of course the chief figure, though Joachim di Flore, character of a personal memoir of the famous Bishop, St. Clare, Brother Bernard, and Brother Elias are 200 [March 16, THE DIAL The civic America. treated also. Sabatier's monumental work on St. Co.). The book is an attempt to save the would-be Francis is criticized as showing limitations due to builder from such expensive and annoying prelim- the fact that this biographer is a Frenchman and inaries by giving him a clear idea both of the diffi- not a Catholic. Of the thirty-two illustrations in this culties he should avoid and the beauties he may volume, twenty are in color, and are of great beauty. attain to. attain to. Mr. Hooper begins by giving special Taking both matter and manner into consideration, advice about the choice of a site. General consider- Mr. Hutton's book is perhaps the most exhaustive ations governing the selection of the plan are next and attractive of the long list of Umbrian books of discussed, and there is a detailed account of the the past year. proper way of putting up a house under varying Refreshingly interesting is Professor conditions, and of finishing it outside and in. Next awakening in Charles Zueblin's little volume en Mr. Hooper turns his attention to details, such as titled “A Decade of Civic Develop doors, windows, and fire-places. He has something ment” (University of Chicago Press), consisting of to say about each room in the house, making endless. nine essays reprinted from “The Chautauquan,” and suggestions for variety of treatment. Next he in a way a supplement to the author's “ American attacks the problems of heating, lighting, ventilation, Municipal Progress” published some years ago. In and plumbing. A chapter on “Water-Supply and content the book is a record of civic development Drainage" discusses these important matters from and progress in the United States during the past a practical point of view, and also considers various ten years, with suggestions for many new lines of artistic disguises for wells and wind-mills. Out- improvement. The spirit of optimism pervades the buildings, gate-ways, and the garden with its acces- entire work, and certainly the facts which Professor sories are all duly considered. There are specimen Zueblin marshals abundantly prove his thesis that contracts for the enlightenment of the inexperienced American cities are rapidly becoming more attrac builder, and any details not previously disposed of tive and fit for the homes of the millions. The are brought together in a final chapter entitled agencies which are contributing to the civic trans “ Hints." Prices and architects' names are attached formation are social settlements, university extension to most of the illustrations, thus adding to their schemes, free lecture courses, municipal art societies, practical value. practical value. Æsthetically, the illustrations are recreation schools, movements for the establishment of course a decided feature. There are a great. of parks, playgrounds, and free libraries, and vari many of them, and the photographer, Mr. E. E. ous municipal and private organizations. We are Loderholtz, has shown skill in treating his subjects now entering upon a period of “civic awakening,” | in such a way that the points of the text are always. he says; a new "civic spirit” is spreading as never made clear without sacrificing the beauty of the before, and a new conception of public responsibility pictures. To people who are not looking forward is taking possession of the minds of the people who to building a country home, Mr. Hooper's book will dwell in cities. The duty of training the citizen be interesting as showing what has been done in that for life in a democracy is also coming to be more direction in America; in the end it will probably generally appreciated, and as a result many semi- inspire them with a great desire to carry out some educational movements are now contributing to the of Mr. Hooper's suggestions. Intending builders development of higher civic ideals. With increasing cannot fail to profit by reading the book, - except prosperity have come leisure and culture, and these in one respect: it offers so many enticing hints for in turn have conduced to social and municipal re elaborating and beautifying the house and grounds form. Less attention is being given to political in unusual ways that, though the house when built. methods and machinery, and more to municipal may exactly suit its owner, it will probably cost him improvements. The housing of the people, the a good deal more than it would before he realized adornment and beautification of the streets with the full possibilities of “The Country House.” monuments and fountains, the creation of archi- tectural unity, and the laying out of new parks are Observations of The bright talk of a witty and observ-. an English some of the problems to which the “new spirit” husband's ant woman, gifted with a sense of has given rise. Professor Zueblin's account of the American wife. humor, is always worth listening to; “ remaking” of Chicago, Harrisburg, Boston, New and even when it is addressed to the general public York, and Washington is a record of municipal through the medium of print, it need lose little or progress which no one can read without a sense of none of its fine quality. Mrs. John Lane's “The civic pride and a feeling of hope for the future. Champagne Standard” (John Lane Co.) treats Deplorable as is the condition of many cities, says lightly and briskly of her domestic and society expe- the author, the record of progress in the decade is a riences upon removing, as she and her husband proud one, and compels the belief that the cities recently did, from New York to London. The ser-. will be redeemed. vant problem, domestic architecture, the fight with The country “It is said that a man must needs London smoke and smut, the hide-bound conserva- house and how build three houses before he will tism of our English cousins, and various other topics have one to suit him,” remarks Mr. suggested by her new surroundings, are handled in Charles Edward Hooper in the preface to his volume an entertaining and often amusing manner. The. about “The Country House” (Doubleday, Page & reader may perhaps wonder, on reading Mrs. Lane's. to build it. 1906.] 201 THE DIAL A book of Iliad of domestic woes, why this energetic New cults, archæological remains, etymological data, England woman (she appears to be Boston-bred) sub classical authors, and Roman topography, - Profes- mitted to such martyrdom at the hands of her bond sor Pais has brought together a mass of materials women. With a family of two only, why not assert of a most bewildering character, which he builds one's American independence, dismiss the retinue of into an argument that seems almost irrefutable. It supercilious and at the same time sycophantic serving- will be found, however, that in many instances he folk, and enjoy the dignity and freedom of one's God claims more weight for his evidence than his critics given self-sufficiency – even at the risk of British are likely to allow. Throughout the work, he main- stares and frowns ? The chain that fetters the slave tains his earlier negative position; but he also tries at one end is bound to the master at the other. Only to give his studies a positive value by attempting to those worries fret us for which we have an affinity. explain how the myths originated, tracing a number Nothing but our own can come to us. Mrs. Lane of them back to Italian worship. “Lucretia and is worthy of better things than kitchen squabbles, as Virginia, in origin two goddesses, became mere her pen has already proved. Of things one might mortals; Vulcan was changed into the lame and criticize, if critically inclined, are Mrs. Lane's asser one-eyed Horatius Cocles ; . . . the god Minucius tion that “the days have passed in America for the was transformed into a tribune of the people.” Such making of sudden and great fortunes,” her calling conclusions are not likely to be accepted without dis- the whale a fish, and speaking of “a protoplasm" as pute, although most who read them will agree that if it were a form of animal or vegetable life, her every chapter is the work of a master. The English occasional use (despite her Boston training) of will version is by the author's countryman, Mario E. for shall and of would for should, and her indulgence Cosenza. While in the main satisfactory, it fre- in such looseness of sentence-structure as this,- " It quently lacks in point of clearness, the involved is, therefore, rather startling, as a blushing stranger, parenthetical structure of the sentences making it to see the loving couples that emerge out of the leafy difficult at times to follow the author's argument. paths of Kensington Garden. . On the other hand, we must commend her freedom from Anglo- Mr. Arthur Symons's prose work is imaginary mania, and her censure of such follies of English always strikingly individual. Indeed portraits. conservatism as the insistence that no woman, how- so little kinship has it with current ever old, shall be considered fully dressed unless she modes that it is perhaps best described in critical be entirely undressed as to neck and shoulders. slang as “precious.” His latest volume is called With the passing of good Queen Victoria, let this “Spiritual Adventures” (Dutton), and is dedicated, particular item of court usage, so dear to her other- not unfittingly, to Mr. Thomas Hardy. In order to wise compassionate heart, pass also, and let the enjoy it, one must have a strong taste for analysis, for shivering shoulders be clothed. intricate psychological problems, for self-revelation so searching as to be decidedly foreign to the Anglo- When the great Italian scholar, Pro Saxon temper. The first sketch in the book, “A “Even the fessor Ettore Pais, published his Prelude to Life,” is written in autobiographic form, gods must go." Roman History, about seven years and details the experiences — whether real or imagi- ago, the world of classical scholarship experienced nary only Mr. Symons can tell — of the author's a profound and somewhat unpleasant sensation. The childhood. Its uniqueness consists in its bald frank- Storia di Roma is primarily a criticism of the ness, its utter freedom from reserve, its absolute lack earlier sources; and after the author has thoroughly of glamour. There is no rose-color in the recollec- sifted them, practically nothing remains. Every tion. He remembers that he was indifferent to his thing handed down from the regal period, with most father. “He never interested me,” he says coldly. of what is credited to the first century of the repub His mother seems to have been his one friend, for lic, is swept into the rubbish heap of historic myth he either despised or disliked his teachers and school- and legend. It is readily seen that a work of such mates, and hated the “commonplace, middle-class a destructive character would encounter hostile criti people” among whom his family lived. He loved cism on every side. But the unsympathetic attitude music passionately, and books; but he discovered of conservative scholars seems merely to have spurred Humanity only after reading “Lavengro,” which the author on to a more detailed investigation of his sent him gypsying. Eventually he went to London subject; and he now gives us what seems to be a and found there the strong sense of life that he had reply to his critics, in a volume of about three hun sought in vain before. He admits to being a vain, dred pages bearing the title, “ Ancient Legends of selfish, and idle child, and then he snaps the “ Pre- Roman History" (Dodd, Mead & Co.). The vol lude ” off short without giving the least hint of ume is mainly a collection of essays, “special and how the queer boy grew up to manhood. The next minute demonstrations of subjects already succinctly sketch lays bare the inner consciousness of a Jewish treated” in the author's earlier work. As a rule, garment-worker who becomes a great actress. Others each chapter is devoted to the examination of some trace the spiritual experiences of a mad musician, well-known tale, such as the story of Tarpeia or the of a realistic painter who found it necessary to live legend of the Horatii. From a close and untiring the sordid life of his models, of a minister beset by study of the most diverse sources, - myths, ancient doubts of the gospel he taught, and of half a dozen 202 [March 16, THE DIAL An uncrowned others. Most of the “experiences” are tragic; all have been taken out of a work on political science. are thoroughly subjective and tantalizingly incom The parts of the book which deal with socialization, plete. Indeed one wonders whether it is by intention social control, and social ideals are not subject to or chance that Mr. Symons always keeps back the the same criticism, yet they are not altogether satis- salient point of the story. His skill in analysis must fying; probably the space devoted to these subjects be admitted, and his command of telling epithet and is insufficient for the successful exposition of a of a certain poetic, though wholly undramatic, charm. philosophy of society. The chapters on social But his very cleverness and facility make it more to pathology bring the science down to earth, and con- be regretted that he has wasted his time in portrai- stitute probably the most valuable part of the book; ture, brilliant but without significance, of subjects there is a reference to " the criminal germ ” which that are hardly worthy of such distinction. looks at first sight like an extreme application of the biological analogy; but this is probably only one of The latest, and let us hope the last, numerous expressions which would have been im- exploitation of the royal marriage of proved upon in a careful revision. There are two English queen. Mrs. Fitzherbert is a volume by the suggestive chapters on the field and method of social late W. H. Wilkins entitled “Mrs. Fitzherbert and investigation; and, finally, an historical sketch of George IV.” (Longmans, Green, & Co.). The au social philosophy and sociology which will be found thor has been an accomplished defender of unhappy a convenient introduction to the literature of the queens, Mrs. Fitzherbert being the fourth whose subject. career he has chronicled. His undertaking has had the full cooperation of Mrs. Fitzherbert's family, who have freely loaned portraits, letters, and other BRIEFER MENTION. documents to the end that the biography might be We have previously noted the appearance of the first complete. The publishers have done their part by three volumes in the “Journals of the Continental Con- producing a handsomely bound, well printed, and gress," as edited by Mr. Worthington Chauncey Ford lavishly illustrated volume. In addition to his able for the Library of Congress. The fourth volume of this manipulation of materials and lively style of narra important work has now appeared after a long delay, tion, Mr. Wilkins was fortunate enough to secure a easily to be accounted for by the size of the volume, privilege stubbornly withheld from previous chron which contains over four hundred pages. It takes us into iclers; he was given the King's gracious permission the epochal year of 1776, and covers only five months of to see and to quote from the famous Fitzherbert the year at that, so many and serious were the activities of the Congress during the period between the Canadian papers. These, it will be recalled, Mrs. Fitzherbert expedition and the first steps toward the Declaration. placed at Coutts's Bank in 1833, with the specific The many who had not the privilege of viewing the purpose of vindicating her character, exactly when annual Royal Academy exhibition of last summer may or how she did not determine. From them the fact console themselves very comfortably with the volume of of her marriage with George, Prince of Wales, is “Royal Academy Pictures, 1905," recently published by proved beyond a doubt, and the famous controversy Messrs. Cassell & Co., which sets before us for the is happily settled, - not, however, at all to Prince eighteenth consecutive time an adequate record of the George's credit. The marriage is naturally the national achievement in British art for the year. The pivotal point of the book. Very little space is de quality of the reproductions, both half-tone and photo- voted to the previous life of Mrs. Fitzherbert, and gravure, is no less excellent in this than in previous vol- afterwards the varying status of the marriage and of nes of the work. More than two hundred paintings the Prince's devotion to her was of course the chief and sculptures are reproduced, and there is a brief in- troductory note by Mr. M. H. Spielmann. consideration, both to the lady herself and to the A new volume in the « gossiping public. Mr. Wilkins has nothing but praise Drawings of the Great Mas- for Úrs. Fitzherbert, who is represented as acting Adolph von Menzel. The illustrations are introduced ters” series reproduces about fifty of the drawings of throughout her intercourse with the Prince in a by a brief appreciation from the pen of Professor H. W. manner uniformly to her credit. George's life and Singer, who gives a vivid and sympathetic picture of character are touched upon only in the aspects in Menzel's bitter struggle for recognition, and an account which they affected Mrs. Fitzherbert. of his most important lithographs, wood-cuts, and paint- ings, and of the great mass of his drawings, some five “The Elements of Sociology" (Mac thousand of which were recently exhibited at Berlin. A textbook on sociology. millan), by Professor Frank W. Only one of the fifty representative sketches in the pres- Blackmar, is not a book calculated to ent volume has ever been reproduced before. There is convince doubters that there is a well-defined science a wide variety in subject, style, and finish, but all are of society. The author maintains that sociology has interesting.— In similar form, though in this case appear- a field and purpose distinct from those of the special ing in “ The Master Etchers” series, is a volume de- social sciences, but of this his book is not convincing forty-eight excellent reproductions of the master's work, voted to the etchings of Charles Méryon. There are evidence; the chapters on the production and con- an account of his unhappy career from the pen of Mr. sumption of wealth and on exchange seem to belong Hugh Stokes, and a useful annotated list of his output. for the most part in a treatise on economics, while The form of these volumes, which are imported by that on the theory and functions of the state might | Messrs. Scribner's Sons, is in every way worthy. umes 1906.] 203 THE DIAL NOTES. A “School History of the United States,” by Mr. Henry William Elson, is published by the Macmillan Co. Mr. Elson's previous success in the popularization of our history bespeaks favorable consideration for this excellent text-book. Mr. Schuyler Staunton, author of “The Fate of a Crown,” will issue early next month through the Reilly & Britton Co. a new novel entitled “ Daughters of Des- tiny.” Eight drawings in color, three of them the work of Mr. Thomas Mitchell Pierce, will illustrate the book. We are glad to note that a collection of Mr. Thomas Bailey Aldrich's “Songs and Sonnets” will be issued this Spring as a Riverside Press Edition, in similar form to “The Love Poems of John Donne "and Sidney's “Cer- taine Sonets." For this edition Mr. Aldrich has made a wholly new selection and arrangement of his poetry. The volume of “ Reminiscences of My Childhood and Youth,” by the great Danish critic George Brandes, is an interesting Spring announcement of Messrs. Fox, Duffield & Co. Simultaneously with its appearance in this country, the book will be issued in London by Mr. William Heinemann and in the original Danish at Copenhagen. “Great Pedagogical Essays,” edited by Professor F. V. N. Painter, is published by the American Book Co. The contents include extracts from twenty-four authors, from Plato to Herbert Spencer, besides a small amount of anonymous matter. There are biographical sketches and a very few footnotes, but the volume is practically one of texts alone. The old-fashioned method of silhouette illustration is pleasantly revived in a booklet entitled “Great-Grand- ma's Looking-Glass," recently issued by Mr. Robert Grier Cooke. The text consists of a poem by Miss Blanche Nevin, a verse or two of which appears on each page. The full-page illustrations are the work of Annis Dunbar Jenkins, who has achieved charming results. In the series of bibliographies of American authors which Messrs. Houghton, Mifflin & Co. inaugurated last year with Miss Nina E. Browne's “ Bibliography of Nathaniel Hawthorne," there will appear this Spring a Bibliography of James Russell Lowell” compiled by Mr. George Willis Cooke, and a “ Bibliography of the Writings of Henry James" compiled by Mr. Le Roy Phil- lips. Both volumes will be issued in limited editions. Mr. A. C. Benson has written a volume on Walter Pater for the “ English Men of Letters” series, and the book may be expected in the course of a month or two. We note that Mr. Benson has acknowledged the author- ship of “The Upton Letters," published anonymously last Fall; and that he is soon to bring out, through Messrs. Putnam, a series of papers which have been appearing in “The Cornhill Magazine” under the title “ From a College Window." “The Liquor Problem: A Summary of Investiga- tions conducted by the Committee of Fifty, 1893-1903 ” is a small book issued by Messrs Houghton, Miffin & Co. It contains chapters on the physiological, legislative, economic, and ethical aspects of the liquor question, and one on substitutes for the saloon. It is very con- densed and statistical, being a summary of four large works prepared and published under the auspices of the committee; and while it will undoubtedly prove useful, it should not take the place of the larger books as a source of information. “ The Journeys of La Salle and his Companions," edited by Professor Isaac Joslin Cox, form two new volumes in the “ Trail Makers" series of Messrs. A. S. Barnes & Co. The work includes translations of the memoirs of Tonty, Membré, Hennepin, Douay, Le Clercq, Joutel, and Jean Cavelier, besides other minor pieces, and an introduction. The late George Birkbeck Hill's editorial labors in connection with the writings of Samuel Johnson are now (presumably) crowned by the publication of a stately three-volume edition of the « Lives of the Poets."