om- mon approval of all, “I would rather spend the next six months in Hell than here." FRANK TANNENBAUM. From a Hill in France Beyond the setting of this sun of fate I see far off dim towered haunts of story; On pain unmerited and sin elate Goes down once more its ancient unjust glory. I see the hills of death, the fields of hate- So twine the bitter blossoms with the sweet- Yet all my being surges out to meet Thy groves and dim blue plains, Immaculate, My Italy Oh God that this should be- Red war and Giotto's tower sweetly strong, And Rome, the jewel of eternity, Dear citadel of consecrated song. Remembering thee, small wonder I could stand And weep for hopeless love of the one land. CUTHBERT Wright. 1919 337 THE DIAL The Lapse to Laissez-Faire As the Creator is a being, not only of infinite presidential candidate preaching "the new free- power and wisdom, but also of infinite goodness, he has been pleased so to contrive the constitution and frame of dom” from the gospel according to Jefferson. humanity that we should want no other prompter to What led Mr. Wilson to his new laissez-faire it enquire after. but only our self-love, that uni is impossible to say. One who has thumbed on a versal principle of action. For he has insepar- ably interwoven the laws of external justice with the hap- Washington desk and tried to read the mind of piness of each individual. In consequence of which mu the man in the White House just across Lafayette tual connection of justice with human felicity, he Park will claim no ability to fathom the mystery of has graciously reduced the rule of obedience to this one paternal precept “that man should pursue his own true presidential contemplation. But, whatever the mo- and substantial happiness.”—Blackstone, in 1765. tive, as the matter stood in December, there were reasons for the President's choice. However seri- THE RECONSTRUCTION POLICY of the Administra ous the consequences may be, the alternative policy tion was announced on Monday, December 2, 1918. freshly entered upon at that time would likewise In an address to the Senate and the House of Rep- have produced serious consequences. A brief state- resentatives of the United States in congress assem- ment of the situation will make this clear beyond bled the President said: peradventure. In the first place the Administration was caught by the unexpected end of the war with- Our people do not want to be coached and led. They know their own business, are quick and re- out a program for a return to peace. At that time sourceful at every readjustment, definite in purpose, and the President had not succeeded in giving a content self-reliant in action. Any leading strings we might put to the word reconstruction.” There is little evi- them in would speedily become hopelessly tangled, be- cause they would pay no attention to them and go their dence that he had tried hard; but the mind which own way. From no quarter have I seen any gen- coined the word supplied a cosmic term which he eral scheme of “reconstruction” which I thought it likely could reject as meaningless. In truth few expres- we could force our spirited business men and self-con- scious laborers to accept with due pliancy and obedience. sions have ever given such genuine satisfaction to such an assortment of minds. To the exporters it This statement, blending current fact with obso meant foreign markets; to the politicians, more lete reason, seems out of place in an after-the-war offices; to the guild socialists, at least industrial world. The immediate response of the country to councils; to the single taxers, the single tax; and to it was inharmonious disapproval. The Republican social workers, betterment." The Weeks bill, politicians, whose intellectual bankruptcy is well robbed by the armistice of its chance to provoke sen- known, and who are content to take any side of a atorial oratory, meant by reconstruction what public question the President may leave to them, any banker would mean by it. The Overman bill pointed to another neglected opportunity. The busi made it a conglomeration of all the things that ness men, who inconsistently mix a demand for a needed tinkering with which the unimaginative protective tariff with dreams of a huge foreign mind of its sponsor could call up at the time. The trade, were sincerely disappointed. The provincials British Ministry of Reconstruction, in the likeness who make dislike or distrust of the chief executive of which many would have created an American the major premise of their political reasoning, cried commission, resolved the matter into more than one out immediate disapproval, though they lacked the hundred inquiries, ranging from the constitutionali- necessary "therefores." The governmental officials zation of industry to the demobilization of mules. at Washington were distressed to think of a transi As a minimum it seemed to mean the return to ordi- tion to peace proceeding without their bureaucratic nary uses of the men and material displaced by the supervision. The champions of panaceas, who are As a maximum it connoted an attempt to always with us, had found the vast and empty con take advantage of the general state of flux to ar- cept of "reconstruction " much to their liking, and range elements into a more pleasing social order. were put out to see it taken from them so uncere Even in this variety Mr. Wilson failed to discover moniously. And even the liberals, who all along a problem of reconstruction to his liking. have been the President's stanchest friends, were It may have been design rather than accident seriously disturbed. To them the voice was the which found him unprepared in November. Cer- voice of the President, but the speech was that of tainly he had empowered no group of men to make a younger Mr. Wilson. It suggested the young law a study and determine the feasibility of a program student enthusiastic over his Blackstone, the in- of reconstruction. On the contrary he seems to structor in the denominational college expounding have settled the matter by assumption, or guess, or Adam Smith's theory of " the invisible hand,” the the chance advice of a trusted official. The half- > war. 338 April 5 THE DIAL (G return to ( hearted assent to the request of the Council of Na- tional Defense last June to be permitted to look into the matter can be interpreted as little more than saying, “ If you think anything can be found in that vague inquiry, go to it. Far be it from me to deny you the pleasure.” From the first he seems to have bothered little with the matter. And it must be admitted that from the first there was good reason, if not the best reason, for his reticence. He could not have thrilled over the accomplishments of the British Ministry of Reconstruction, which was held up as a model for us. If he attempted to find reason in the maze of their reports he dis- covered that only two significant recommendations appeared as the result of their countless labors. And, peculiarly enough, both of these—the scheme for industrial councils and the plan for demobilization in terms of industrial needs—were well under way when the committees having them in charge were associated with the Reconstruction Ministry. As for the hundred and more other sub-committees, each did in isolation its appointed task, each per- formed its clerical labors undisturbed by what others were doing. Most of them decided, as did the sub-committee upon the chemical industry, that the situation after the war would most likely be a serious one and that something ought to be done about it. Quite likely Mr. Wilson did not busy himself to find out how much better an American commission could do. If he had, it is by no means certain that he would have been greatly impressed. He must know, perhaps better than anyone else, the unsuit- ableness of agencies of state for such a task. First of all, there is neither in Washington nor else- where an adequate body of knowledge about the organization of industry, its interrelations with finance and commerce, and its place in the social life of the nation. The figures which have been gathered into - imposing statistical tables relate to the most immediate and ephemeral of problems. The scheme upon which they have been gathered and interpreted is irrelevant to the larger problems involved in controlling a developing industrial soci- ety. Second, there is small reason for thinking that any commission which would have proved accept- able to the country would have been willing to ap- proach its problems without bias. At present the decisions of state rest upon rule of thumb, prejudice, and the chance bias of the glad-hand administrator -in fact upon anything except an application of the methods of scientific procedure to the matter in hand. Its prejudice against intellect would have prevented any commission from obtaining the in- formation without which any action is worse than no action. And third, even if an adequate program of reconstruction could have been devised, the spirit of cooperation necessary to its execution could never have been attained. The many-sided thing known outside of Washington as the government would have prevented that. But, whether by acci- dent or no, Mr. Wilson was caught in November without a reconstruction program, and plead per- suasivelys if not convincingly, for a laissez-faire. In the second place, a positive program of re- construction was bad politics. However we may insist that the common good must override the ex- igencies of party strife, Mr. Wilson has always kept one eye upon the future of his party. Even with the war on, a cry of "paternalism ” had been raised against the government; no one knew better than the President that a reconstructed peace” would be damned by his political opponents as “socialism." At the time of the armistice the government had just passed the inevitable period of blundering. Its program of control was just beginning to vindicate itself in positive results. Evidence of this prelimi- nary inefficiency was at hand to damn any adminis- tration which persisted in the policy. In fact Mr. Wilson's opponents were counting upon a continu- ance of control, had massed their fire upon this issue, and were determined to make the most of it. They were persuaded that the country was pre- pared to believe with them that what was medicine in time of war became poison upon the return to peace. The President's tactics robbed them of a convincing argument. It is true that he took the chance of being damned for the ills which attend the lack of a preparation for peace. But he escaped condemnation for the evils which would have at- tended a badly executed program for the transition period. As between relying upon the knowledge and wisdom of the gods of chance with whom he has a passing acquaintance, and the foresight and discretion of an administration he knows thoroughly, Mr. Wilson preferred the gods. His program of a lasting peace for the world moved him to the same decision. The President's is “a single-track mind” and he understands that the nation is made up of like-minded individuals. The secret of his political art has always been in en- gaging the minds of the people upon one question at a time. He is right in rating the issue of an in- surance against war higher than any domestic mat- ter. It was easy for him to conclude that whatever of good or ill the term reconstruction " veiled, it could wait. Its intrusion at this time would dis- turb the mind of a nation at a time when he wanted it fixed upon the League of Nations. In addition the peace program must not be allowed to incur ill will stirred up by a ſeconstruction program. . ( 1919 339 THE DIAL return In the third place a positive program of recon To judge the policy aright we must separate the struction would have proved most unpopular. The reconstruction” from the demobilization prob- President is right in saying that the nation at large lem; we must draw some sort of a line between the was crying aloud for a to laissez-faire. emergency and the “constructive” problem. While the fight was on, our people were willing to The more we have in mind the immediate ques- make the sacrifices which they regarded as neces tions of readjustment, the less merit we can see in sary to victory; but beneath the battle there was re laissez-faire. But the more we consider the ulti- sentment at state interference, which accumulated mate issues of the coming peace the more of good into a vast volume of unexpressed protest. Manu it seems to hold. In terms of the latter it says that facturers were less sure of the logic of priorities the government is not the proper agency, and this than they were of that of a maximum wage; em is not the proper time, to settle the larger issues of ployers objected to an excess profits tax but would machine industry and human welfare. It insists welcome a conscription of labor; laborers objected that these are abiding questions which society must strenuously to profiteering,” but made no applica- attend to in the process of its gradual development. tion of the word to their own work and wages. The policy prevents much ado and little done un- Peculiarly enough there was little impatience at der the pretense of reconstructing the country. It loans, contributions to war charities, and taxes. enables specific problems to be dealt with by proper The serious burdens imposed by the questionable agencies as they arise. It breaks up the larger prob- . methods by which the war was financed, which lems into bits which are manageable and permits found expression in inflation and high prices, pro time for an adequate understanding and an adequate voked little protest. On the contrary the petty an solution. Upon the "constructive " problem the noyances connected with state supervision were a President's recommendations seem sound. constant source of irritation. In general the pub But it seems impossible to overlook the neglect lic disapproval of governmental departments varied of the emergency ” problem. It can be justified directly with their efficiency. It would be hard, only upon one of two distinct theories. The first for instance, to convince anyone who knew the Food is that the President expected demobilization to be Administration intimately that its activities consist successfully effected in terms of the ordained ritual ed in anything more than vain motions. Yet, by of the War Department. The second is that his flattering the people into believing that their petty belief in laissez-faire rose to the transcendental savings made holy martyrs of them, it became the heights of faith in its efficacy for even so great an most popular of all the government departments. emergency. To make the first the fact is to ac- The signing of the armistice removed the incentive cuse him of ignorance of the limitations of military to silence. In November the country demanded in procedure. To make the second his motive is to no unmistakable terms a return to laissez-faire. And charge him with failing to comprehend what is in- the President decided, perhaps with a shrug of the volved in demobilization. The latter seems to have shoulders, to let the people have their way. been the case. Nearly four eventful months have gone by since For two reasons the President's reliance upon the President's announcement of his reconversion to " the simple and obvious system of natural liberty, laissez-faire. Even now the time is not at hand for exhibited in “spirited business men ” and “self- a final appraisal of his policy; but the outlines of conscious laborers, was misplaced. In the first a tentative judgment seem unmistakable. Whether place ordinary business practice cannot be depended it is because of his proverbial luck, or his foresight, upon to secure the full employment of all produc- his policy looks better in March than it did in De tive resources. The end of the war brought a threat cember. This is not because the consequences of to employer's profits, the motive upon which Mr. laissez-faire have been less serious than were antici Wilson depends for reorganization. The cancella- pated. On the contrary " the industrial depression tion of government contracts aggregating at least ten of 1919," as it will be called in history, is coming billion dollars robbed many employers of profitable more quickly than the foreminded thought. The markets. The threatened loss to these industries great advantage of the policy has been in allowing held a threat to others supplying them with materials the public to discover reconstruction for itself. A and a threat of loss of employment to men. It nation which requires visible evidence of a problem's discouraged byying, which in turn again threatened actual presence before it will think about it has been profits. In addition an anticipated. fall in prices goaded into attention. But the time for antitoxins discouraged business activity, just when expansion is now past and only medicine or surgery will was required to provide work for the men in the army. In the absence of a plan designed to accelc- suffice. 340 April 5 THE DIAL rate business enterprise, an industrial depression of attempts to formulate principles for the speedy and greater or less magnitude threatened, attended by discriminating return of men and materials to ac- idleness of plants, unemployment of labor, and waste tive industry. of human and material resources. Whatever justification may be given a neglect of In the second place ordinary business activity the problems of reconstruction, the failure of the could not be depended upon to secure within the de Administration to formulate a demobilization policy mobilization period a proper distribution of men is inexcusable. If the President regarded it as a and materials among different industries. If each matter of mere manipulations, he should have in- producer acted for himself and in ignorance of the quired into its nature rather than judge it by action of others, the immediate result would be the intuition. If he considered the War Department overproduction of certain goods and the underpro- adequate to handle it, he should have informed him- duction of others. The losses attending overproduc- self more particularly about the tasks which it can tion would impose a check upon business enterprise and cannot do.' If adequate knowledge for even and lead to a still further disorganization of the this smaller task was lacking, he made no attempt system. Eventually, of course, as any champion of to supply the deficiency. If he had no confidence laissez-faire can show, matters would all.work in the personnel of the departments and boards which nicely. Sooner or later business would expand and would have been charged with the execution of a all the elements of capital and labor would be drawn demobilization program, they held their places sub- into active work, at least all that survived. Butject to his discretion. If the mind of the nation was this readjustment by a process of trial and error is to be kept upon the need of a lasting peace, it was wasteful and slow. Even before the war many eco- necessary to prevent the distractions which were the nomists were questioning the ability of business en inevitable consequences of even a temporary lapse terprise effectively to organize production—and that to laissez-faire. The psychology of one thing at a without a loss of their orthodoxy. Then the aggre- gate of change from one line of production to an- time is unquestioned. But the fact is that the end of the war brought two immediate and imperative other could not have been more than two or three problems. Peace had to be made and the industrial per cent of the total volume of industry per year. If the efficacy of the magic was questionable then, system had to be restored to a peace basis. The what can be expected of it if from twenty-five to double-track problem required a double-track mind. thirty-five per cent of the whole is to be diverted If it was necessary to see to it that the coming peace from emergency to ordinary uses within a short be a permanent one, it was no less necessary to take period of time? At best it is a poor alternative to a care that abiding values be read into the industrial carefully formulated plan which approaches demo- system which is being reestablished. bilization as a problem in industrial organization and WALTON H. HAMILTON. Synge's Playboy of the Western World VARIATION It 's New York, I tell you I'd have a home on top of a hill; there should be roses from the roof down; and I'd get up every day at sunrise. I should become so beautiful you would be embarrassed looking at me. It's New York I tell you, a city that lives with work for men stronger than I; with duties for a different conscience than mine. EMANUEL CARNEVALI. 1919 341 THE DIAL N On the Nature and Uses of Sabotage “SABOTAGE” IS A DERIVATIVE of “ sabot,” which is elsewhere, or from the similar tactics of friction, French for a wooden shoe. It means going slow, obstruction, and delay habitually employed, from with a dragging, clumsy movement, such as that time to time, by both employees and employers to manner of footgear may be expected to bring on. So enforce an. argument about wages and prices. There- it has come to describe any maneuver of slowing fore, in the course of a quarter-century past, the down, inefficiency, bungling, obstruction. In Ameri word has quite unavoidably taken on a general can usage the word is very often taken to mean meaning in common speech, and has been extended forcible obstruction, destructive tactics, industrial to cover all such peaceable or surreptitious maneu- frightfulness, incendiarism and high explosives, al vers of delay, obstruction, friction, and defeat, though that is plainly not its first meaning nor its whether employed by the workmen to enforce their common meaning. Nor is that its ordinary mean claims, or by the employers to defeat their em- ing as the word is used among those who have ployees, or by competitive business concerns to get advocated a recourse to sabotage as a means of the better of their business rivals or to secure their enforcing an argument about wages or the condi own advantage. tion of work. The ordinary meaning of the word Such maneuvers of restriction, delay, and hin- is better defined by an expression which has latterly drance have a large share in the ordinary conduct come into use among the I. W. W., conscientious of business; but it is only lately that this ordinary withdrawal of efficiency”—although that phrase line of business strategy has come to be recognized does not cover all that is rightly to be included as being substantially of the same nature as the under this technical term. ordinary tactics of the syndicalists. So that it has The sinister meaning which is often attached to not been usual until the last few years to speak of the word in American usage, as denoting violence maneuvers of this kind as sabotage when they are and disorder, appears to be due to the fact that the employed by employers and other business concerns. American usage has been shaped chiefly by persons But all this strategy of delay, restriction, hindrance, and newspapers who have aimed to discredit the and defeat is manifestly of the same character, and use of sabotage by organized workmen, and who should conveniently be called by the same name, have therefore laid stress on its less amiable mani whether it is carried on by business men or by work- festations. This is unfortunate. It lessens the men; so that it is no longer unusual now to find usefulness of the word by making it a means of workmen speaking of "capitalistic sabotage” as free- denunciation rather than of understanding. No ly as the employers and the newspapers speak of doubt violent obstruction has had its share in the syndicalist sabotage. As the word is now used, and strategy of sabotage as carried on by disaffected as it is properly used, it describes a certain system workmen, as well as in the similar tactics of rival of industrial strategy or management, whether it is It comes into the case as one employed by one or another. What it describes is method of sabotage, though by no means the most a resort to peaceable or surreptitious restriction, usual or the most effective; but it is so spectacular delay, withdrawal, or obstruction. and shocking a method that it has drawn undue at Sabotage commonly works within the law, al- tention to itself. Yet such deliberate violence is, no though it may often be within the letter rather than doubt, a relatively minor fact in the case, as com- the spirit of the law. It is used to secure some pared with that deliberate malingering, confusion, special advantage or preference, usually of a busi- and misdirection of work that makes up the bulk nesslike sort. It commonly has to do with some- of what the expert practitioners would recognize thing in the nature of a vested right, which one as legitimate sabotage. or another of the parties in the case aims to secure The word first came into use among the organized or defend, or to defeat or diminish; some preferential French workmen, the members of certain syndicats, right or special advantage in respect of income or to describe their tactics of passive resistance, and privilege, something in the way of a vested interest. it has continued to be associated with the strategy Workmen have resorted to such measures to secure of these French workmen, who are known as syndi- improved conditions of work, or increased wages, calists, and with their like-minded running-mates or shorter hours, or to maintain their habitual in other countries. But the tactics of these syndi- standards, to all of which they have claimed to calists , and their use of sabotage, do not differ, ex- have some sort of a vested right. Any strike is cept in detail, from the tactics of other workmen of the nature of sabotage, of course. Indeed, a business concerns. 342 April 5 THE DIAL strike is a typical species of sabotage. That strikes the common good. It should not be difficult to have not been spoken of as sabotage is due to the show that the common welfare in any community accidental fact that strikes were in use before this which is organized on the price system cannot be word came into use. So also, of course, a lockout maintained without a salutary use of sabotage—that is another typical species of sabotage. That the is to say, such habitual recourse to delay and obstruc- lockout is employed by the employers against the tion of industry and such restriction of output as employees does not change the fact that it is a will maintain prices at a reasonably profitable level means of defending á vested right by delay, with and so guard against business depression. Indeed, drawal, defeat, and obstruction of the work to be it is precisely considerations of this nature that are done. Lockouts have not usually been spoken of as now engaging the best attention of officials and sabotage, for the same reason that holds true in the business men in their endeavors to tide over a case of strikes. All the while it has been recog- threatening depression in American business and a nized that strikes and lockouts are of identically consequent season of hardship for all those per- the same character. sons whose main dependence is free income from All this does not imply that there is anything investments. discreditable or immoral about this habitual use of somé salutary restraint in the way of strikes and lockouts . They are part of the ordinary sabotage on the productive use of the available in- conduct of industry under the existing system, and dustrial plant and workmen, it is altogether unlikely necessarily so. So long as the system remains un that prices could be maintained at a reasonably changed these measures are a necessary and legiti- profitable figure for any appreciable time. A busi- mate part of it. By virtue of his ownership the nesslike control of the rate and volume of output owner-employer has a vested right to do as he will is indispensable for keeping up a profitable market, with his own property, to deal or not to deal with and a profitable market is the first and unremitting any person that offers, to withhold or withdraw any condition of prosperity in any community whose in- part or all of his industrial equipment and natural dustry is owned and managed by business men. And. resources from active use for the time being, to the ways and means of this necessary control of the run on half time or to shut down his plant and to lock out all those persons for whom he has no output of industry are always and necessarily some- thing in the nature of sabotage-something in the present use on his own premises. There is no ques- way of retardation, restriction, withdrawal, unem- tion that the lockout is altogether a legitimate ployment of plant and workmen—whereby_produc- maneuver. It may even be meritorious, and it is tion is kept short of productive capacity. The me- frequently considered to be meritorious when its chanical industry of the new order is inordinately use helps to maintain sound conditions in business- that is to say, profitable conditions, as frequently productive. So the rate and volume of output have happens. Such is the view of the substantial citi- to be regulated with a view to what the traffic will So also is the strike legitimate, so long as it bear—that is to say, what will yield the largest net keeps within the law; and it may at times even be return in terms of price to the business men in charge meritorious, at least in the eyes of the strikers. It of the country's industrial system. Otherwise there will be "overproduction," business depression, and is to be admitted quite broadly that both of these typical species of sabotage are altogether fair and consequent hard times all round. Overproduction honest in principle, although it does not therefore means production in excess of what the market will carry off at a sufficiently profitable price. So follow that every strike or every lockout is neces- sarily fair and honest in its working-out. That is it appears that the continued prosperity of the coun- in some degree a question of special circumstances. try from day to day hangs on a "conscientious withdrawal of efficiency” by the business men who Sabotage, accordingly, is not to be condemned out control the country's industrial output. They con- of hand, simply as such. There are many meas- trol it all for their own use, of course, and their ures of policy and management both in private busi- ness and in public administration which are un- own use means always a profitable price. mistakably of the nature of sabotage and which are In any community that is organized on the price not only considered to be excusable, but are de- system, with investment and business enterprise, liberately sanctioned by statute and common law habitual unemployment of the available indus- and by the public conscience. Many such measures trial plant and workmen, in whole or in part, are quite of the essence of the case under the estab- appears to be the indispensable condition without lished system of law and order, price and business, which tolerable conditions of life cannot be main- and are faithfully believed to be indispensable to tained. That is to say, in no such community can the industrial system be allowed to work at full zens. 1919 343 THE DIAL capacity for any appreciable interval of time, on the war which has brought them to this state of pain of business stagnation and consequent privation distress. The common man has won the war and for all classes and conditions of men. The require- lost his livelihood. This need not be said by way ments of profitable business will not tolerate it. So of praise or blame. As it stands it is, broadly, an the rate and volume of output must be adjusted to objective statement of fact, which may need some the needs of the market, not to the working capacity slight qualification, such as broad statements of fact of the available resources, equipment and man will commonly need. All these nations that have power, nor to the community's need of consumable come through the war, and more particularly the goods. Therefore there must always be a certain common run of their populations, are very much'in variable margin of unemployment of plant and man need of all sorts of supplies for daily use, both for power. Rate and volume of output can, of course, immediate consumption and for productive use. So not be adjusted by exceeding the productive capacity much so that the prevailing state of distress rises in of the industrial system. So it has to be regulated many places to an altogether unwholesome pitch of by keeping short of maximum production by more privation, for want of the necessary food, clothing, or less, as the condition of the market may require. and fuel. Yet in all these countries the staple in- It is always a question of more or less unemploy dustries are slowing down. There is an ever in- ment of plant and man power, and a shrewd moder creasing withdrawal of efficiency. The industrial ation in the unemployment of these available re plant is increasingly running idle or half idle, run- sources, a conscientious withdrawal of efficiency,” ning increasingly short of its productive capacity. therefore, is the beginning of wisdom in all sound Workmen are being laid off and an increasing num- workday business enterprise that has to do with ber of those workmen who have been serving in the industry. armies are going idle for want of work, at the same All this is matter of course and notorious. But time that the troops which are no longer needed in it is not a topic on which one prefers to dwell. the service are being demobilized as slowly as popu- Writers and speakers who dilate on the meritorious lar sentiment will tolerate, apparently for fear that exploits of the nation's business men will not com the number of unemployed workmen in the country monly allude to this voluminous running adminis may presently increase to such proportions as to tration of sabotage, this conscientious withdrawal of bring ,on a catastrophe. And all the while all these efficiency, that goes into their ordinary day's work. peoples are in great need of all sorts of goods and One prefers to dwell on those exceptional, sporadic, services which these idle plants and idle workmen and spectacular episodes in business where business are fit to produce. But for reasons of business men have now and again successfully gone out of expediency it is impossible to let these idle plants and the safe and sane highway of conservative business idle workmen go to work—that is to say for reasons enterprise that is hedged about with a conscientious of insufficient profit to the business men interested, withdrawal of efficiency, and have endeavored to or in other words, for reasons of insufficient income regulate the output by increasing the productive to the vested interests which control the staple in- capacity of the industrial system at one point or dustries and so regulate the output of product. The another. traffic will not bear so large a production of goods But after all, such habitual recourse to peaceable as the community needs for current consumption, or surreptitious measures of restraint, delay, and because it is considered doubtful whether so large a obstruction in the ordinary businesslike management supply could be sold at prices that would yield a of industry is too widely known and too well ap reasonable profit on the investment—or rather on proved to call for much exposition or illustration. the capitalization; that is to say, it is considered Yet , as one capital illustration of the scope and doubtful whether an increased production, such as force of such businesslike withdrawal of efficiency, to employ more workmen and supply the goods it may be in place to recall that all the civilized needed by the community, would result in an in- nations are just now undergoing an experiment in creased net aggregate income for the vested interests businesslike sabotage on an unexampled scale and which control these industries. A reasonable profit carried out with unexampled effrontery. All these always means, in effect, the largest obtainable profit . nations that have come through the war, whether as All this is simple and obvious, and it should belligerents or as neutrals, have come into a state scarcely need explicit statement. It is for these of more or less pronounced distress, due to a scarcity business men to manage the country's industry, of of the common necessaries of life; and this distress course, and therefore to regulate the rate and volume falls, of course, chiefly on the common sort, who of output; and also of course any regulation of the have at the same time borne the chief burden of output by them will be made with a view to the 344 THE DIAL April 5 must be curtailed in the staple industries, on pain tardation of industry at one point or another cannot needs of business; that is to say, with a view to the of unprofitable prices. The case is not so desperate largest obtainable net profit, not with a view to the in those industries which have immediately to do physical needs of these peoples who have come with the production of superfluities; but even these, through the war and have made the world safe for which depend chiefly on the custom of those kept the business of the vested interests. Should the classes to whom the free income goes, are not feel- business men in charge, by any chance aberration, ing altogether secure. For the good of business it stray from this straight and narrow path of business is necessary to curtail production of the means of integrity, and allow the community's needs unduly life, on pain of unprofitable prices, at the same time to influence their management of the community's that the increasing need of all sorts of the neces- industry, they would presently find themselves dis saries of life must be met in some passable fashion, credited and would probably face insolvency. Their on pain of such popular disturbances as will always only salvation is a conscientious withdrawal of effi come of popular distress when it passes the limit of ciency. All this lies in the nature of the case. It tolerance. is the working of the price system, whose creatures Those wise business men who are charged with and agents these business men are. Their case is administering the salutary modicum of sabotage at rather pathetic, as indeed they admit quite volubly. this grave juncture may conceivably be faced with They are not in a position to manage with a free a dubious choice between a distasteful curtailment hand, the reason being that they have in the past, of the free income that goes to the vested interests, under the routine requirements of the price system on the one hand, and an unmanageable onset of as it takes effect in corporation finance, taken on so popular discontent on the other hand. And in either large an overhead burden of fixed charges that any alternative lies disaster. Present indications would appreciable decrease in the net earnings of the busi seem to say that their choice will fall out according ness will bring any well-managed concern of this to ancient habit, that they will be likely to hold class face to face with bankruptcy. fast by an undiminished free income for the vested At the present conjuncture, brought on by the interests at the possible cost of any popular discon- war and its termination, the case stands somewhat tent that may be in prospect—and then, with the in this typical shape. In the recent past earnings help of the courts and the military arm, presently have been large; these large earnings (free income) make reasonable terms with any popular discontent have been capitalized; their capitalized value has that may arise. In which event it should all occa- been added to the corporate capital and covered sion no surprise or resentment, inasmuch as it would with securities bearing a fixed income-charge; this be nothing unusual or irregular and would presum- income-charge, representing free income, has thereby ably be the most expeditious way of reaching a become a liability on the earnings of the corporation; modus vivendi. During the past few weeks , too, this liability cannot be met in case the concern's net quite an unusually large number of machine guns aggregate earnings fall off in any degree; therefore have been sold to industrial business concerns of the prices must be kept up to such a figure as will bring larger sort, here and there; at least so they say. the largest net aggregate return, and the only means of keeping up prices is a conscientious withdrawal public, it is right to take any necessary measures Business enterprise being the palladium of the Re- of efficiency in these staple industries on which the for its safeguarding. Price is of the essence of the community depends for a supply of the necessaries case, whereas livelihood is not. of life. The business community has hopes of tiding things The grave emergency that has arisen out of the war and its provisional conclusion is, after all, over by this means, but it is still a point in doubt nothing exceptional except in magnitude and severe whether the present unexampled large use of sabo- ity. In substance it is the same sort of thing that tage in the businesslike management of the staple industries will now suffice to bring the business goes on continually but unobtrusively and as a community through this grave crisis without a disas- matter of course in ordinary times of business as trous shrinkage of its capitalization, and a consequent calling attention to itself. At the same time , it usual. It is only that the extremity of the case is liquidation; but the point is not in doubt that the physical salvation of these peoples who have come serves impressively to enforce the broad proposition that a conscientious withdrawal of efficiency is the through the war must in any case wait on the beginning of wisdom in all established business en- pecuniary salvation of these owners of corporate securities which represent free income. It is a suffi- terprise that has to do with industrial production. ciently difficult But it has been found that this grave interest which passage. It appears that production the vested interests always have in a salutary re- 1919 345 THE DIAL well be left altogether to the haphazard and ill The great standing illustration of sabotage ad- coordinated efforts of individual business concerns, ministered by the government is the protective tariff, each taking care of its own particular line of of course. It protects certain special interests by sabotage within its own premises. The needed obstructing competition from beyond the frontier. sabotage can best be administered on a compre This is the main use of a national boundary. The hensive plan and by a central authority, since the effect of the tariff is to keep the supply of goods down country's industry is of the nature of a compre and thereby keep the price up, and so to bring hensive interlocking system, whereas the business reasonably satisfactory dividends to those special concerns which are called on to control the motions interests which deal in the protected articles of of this industrial system will necessarily work piece trade, at the cost of the underlying community. A meal, in severalty and at cross-purposes. In effect, protective tariff is a typical conspiracy in restraint their working at cross-purposes results in a suffi of trade. It brings a relatively small, though abso- ciently large aggregate retardation of industry, of lutely large, run of free income to the special inter- course, but the resulting retardation is necessarily ests which benefit by it, at a relatively, and abso- somewhat blindly apportioned and does not con lutely, large cost to the underlying community, and verge to a neat and perspicuous outcome. Even a so it gives rise to a body of vested rights and in- reasonable amount of collusion among the interested tangible assets belonging to these special interests. business concerns will not by itself suffice to carry on Of a similar character, in so far that in effect that comprehensive moving equilibrium of sabotage they are in the nature of sabotage-conscientious that is required to preserve the business community withdrawal of efficiency—are all manner of excise from recurrent collapse or stagnation, or to bring the and revenue-stamp regulations; although they are nation's traffic into line with the general needs of not always designed for that purpose. Such would the vested interests. be, for instance, the partial or complete prohibition Where the national government is charged with of alcoholic beverages, the regulation of the trade in the general care of the country's business interests, tobacco, opium, and other deleterious narcotics, as is invariably the case among the civilized nations, drugs, poisons, and high explosives. Of the same it follows from the nature of the case that the nature, in effect if not in intention, are such regu- nation's lawgivers and administration will have lations as the oleomargarine law; as also the un- some share in administering that necessary modicum necessarily costly and vexatious routine of inspection of sabotage that must always go into the day's work imposed on the production of industrial (denatured) of carrying on industry by business methods and for alcohol, which has inured to the benefit of certain business purposes. The government is in a position business concerns that are interested in other fuels to penalize excessive or unwholesome traffic. So, for use in internal-combustion engines; so also the it is always considered necessary, or at least expedi- singularly vexatious and elaborately imbecile speci- ent, by all sound mercantilists to impose and main fications that limit and discourage the use of the tain a certain balance or proportion among the parcel post, for the benefit of the express companies several branches of industry and trade that go to and other carriers which have a vested interest in make up the nation's industrial system. The pur- traffic of that kind. pose commonly urged for measures of this class is It is worth noting in the same connection, al- the fuller utilization of the nation's industrial re- though it comes in from the other side of the case, sources in material, equipment, and man power; the that ever since the express companies have been invariable effect is a lowered efficiency and a waste- taken over by the federal administration there has ful use of these resources, together with an increase visibly gone into effect a comprehensive system of of international jealousy. But measures of that vexation and delay in the detail conduct of their traffic, so contrived as to discredit federal control of kind are thought to be expedient by the mercantilists this traffic and thereby provoke a popular sentiment for these purposes—that is to say, by the statesmen of these civilized nations, for the purposes of the in favor of its early return to private control. Much the same state of things has been in evidence in the vested interests. The chief and nearly sole means of railway traffic under similar conditions. Sabotage maintaining such a fabricated balance and proportion is serviceable as a deterrent, whether in furtherance among the nation's industries is to obstruct the of the administration work or in contravention of it. traffic at some critical point by prohibiting or penal In what has just been said there is, of course, no izing any exuberant undesirables among these intention to find fault with any of these uses of branches of industry. Disallowance, in whole or in sabotage. It is not a question of morals and good part, is the usual and standard method. intentions. It is always to be presumed as a matter 346 April 5 THE DIAL of course that the guiding spirit in all such govern best to disallow such use of the mail facilities as does mental moves to regularize the nation's affairs, not inure to the benefit of the administration in the whether by restraint or by incitement, is a wise way of good will and vested rights of usufruct. solicitude for the nation's enduring gain and security. These peremptory measures of disallowance have All that can be said here is that many of these wise attracted a wide and dubious attention; but they measures of restraint and incitement are in the have doubtless been of a salutary nature and in- nature of sabotage, and that in effect they habitually, tention, in some way which is not to be understood though not invariably, inure to the benefit of certain by outsiders—that is to say, by citizens of the Re- vested interests-ordinarily vested interests which public. An unguarded dissemination of information bulk large in the ownership and control of the and opinions or an unduly frank canvassing of the nation's resources. That these measures are quite relevant facts by these outsiders, will be a handicap legitimate and presumably salutary, therefore, goes on the Administration's work, and may even defeat without saying. In effect they are measures for the Administration's aims. At least so they say. hindering traffic and industry at one point or an- other, which may often be a wise precaution. Something of much the same color has been ob- During the period of the war administrative served elsewhere and in other times, so that all this measures in the nature of sabotage have been greatly nervously alert resort to sabotage on undesirable extended in scope and kind. Peculiar and imperative information and opinions is nothing novel, nor is it exigencies have had to be met, and the staple means peculiarly democratic. The elder statesmen of the of meeting many of these new and exceptional exi- great monarchies, east and west, have long ago seen gencies has quite reasonably been something in the and approved the like. But these elder statesmen way of avoidance, disallowance, penalization, hind- of the dynastic regime have gone to their work of rance, a conscientious withdrawal of efficiency from sabotage on information because of a palpable work that does not fall in with the purposes of the division of sentiment between their government and Administration. Very much as is true in private the underlying population, such as does not exist in business when a situation of doubt and hazard pre- the advanced democratic commonwealths. The case sents itself, so also in the business of government at of Imperial Germany during the period of the war is the present juncture of exacting demands and in- believed to show such a division of sentiment be- convenient limitations, the Administration has been tween the government and the underlying popula- driven to expedients of disallowance and obstruc- tion, and also to show how such a divided sentiment tion with regard to some of the ordinary processes of on the part of a distrustful and distrusted popula- life, as, for instance, in the non-essential industries. tion had best be dealt with. The method approved It has also appeared that the ordinary equipment by German dynastic experience is sabotage, of a and agencies for gathering and distributing news somewhat free-swung character, censorship, embargo and other information have in the past developed on communication, and also, it is confidently alleged, a capacity far in excess of what can safely be per- elaborate misinformation. mitted in time of war. The like is true for the Such procedure on the part of the dynastic states-- ordinary facilities for public discussion of all sorts men of the Empire is comprehensible even to a lay, of public questions. The ordinary facilities, which But how it all stands with those advanced may have seemed scant enough in time of peace democratic nations, like America, where the gov- and slack interest, had after all developed a capacity ernment is the dispassionately faithful agent and far beyond what the governmental traffic will bear spokesman of the body of citizens, and where there in these uneasy times of war and negotiations, when can consequently be no division of aims and senti- men are very much on the alert to know what is ment between the body of officials and any under- going on. By a moderate use of the later improve lying population—all that is a more obscure sand ments in the technology of transport and communi- cation, the ordinary means of disseminating informa- hazardous subject of speculation. Yet there has been tion and opinions have grown so efficient that the censorship, somewhat rigorous, and there has been traffic can selective refusal of mail facilities , somewhat arbi- no longer be allowed to run at full capacity during a period of stress in the business of trary, in these democratic commonwealths also, and not least in America, freely acknowledged to be the government. Even the mail service has proved insufferably efficient, and a selective withdrawal most naively democratic of them all. And all the of efficiency has gone into effect. To speak after while one would like to believe that it all has the analogy of private business, it has been found somehow served some useful end. It is all suffi- ciently perplexing. Thorstein VEBLEN. man. 1919 347 THE DIAL 11 A Second Imaginary Conversation GOSSE AND Moore II the house. And the attentions Rochester pays to his Gosse. Byron was largely conscious that his daughter's governess become more and more marked, literary reputation depended on his acts rather than and culminate in a proposal of marriage. But the maniac in the distant wing is Mrs. Rochester, and on his words. MOORE. But, Gosse, isn't that always so? the marriage into which Rochester nearly succeeds Gosse. Shakespeare. in inveigling Jane is stopped in the church, at the MOORE. Had Shakespeare in that tiresome very altar, by the wife's relations. Extenuating cir- phrase trailed a pike in the Low Countries, his con- cumstances may be found for the murderer and for temporaries would have appreciated him as they the seducer, but it is hard to find any for the did Ben Jonson; but he did nothing. bigamist. And Charlotte must have been aware Gosse. Nor did the Brontes. of this, and no doubt would have preferred Roches- MOORE. The Brontes had silhouette thrust ter to have said, “Jane, my wife is a maniac and upon them; and on looking into Jane Eyre after fifty lives in the distant wing. But if you like to live years of absence, I have to confess my inability to with me I will try to make you happy and shall discover the qualities that compelled you and succeed, for I love you very dearly.” It is possible Swinburne to write of it as if it were a master- to imagine an honorable man speaking these words piece. In speaking of Wuthering Heights you were to his daughter's governess. I should not altogether a little more careful-you glided swiftly; but in like the bargain, because the parties are not bar- writing of Jane Eyre you spoke of—I have your gaining on equal terms—one is a governess and the other a man of wealth and position. But there can exact words—“a sweep of tragic passion and the fusion of romantic intrigue with grave and sinister be no question that from a moral as well as from landscape," and will you deny that this is the kind a literary point of view it would be preferable to of phrase that the pen drops when we yield to public bigamy. What happens then? opinion? Gosse. Jane returns from the church to the Hall, and I think I can aver that 'Mr. Rochester Gosse. I am glad, flattered, that my History of English Literature was of use to you, but I may is accepted as a penitent-a penitent inasmuch as he remark that it was intended primarily for the regrets his design to inveigle his governess into a general reader. sham marriage, and I think he confesses that it MOORE. I have no difficulty in understanding would have been wiser to propose that Jane should that you tried to keep purely personal' opinions out live with him outside of marriage. Jane - might of your book, judging, and judging wisely, that have accepted him on these terms if she had not these would merely puzzle and embarrass the reader been deceived by Rochester in the first instance, but you had in your mind. Jane Eyre was praised having just escaped a sham marriage, she feels she when you wrote by the best informed, and it is to cannot remain at the Hall, and runs away without your credit that you were not deceived by the clothes or money. literary babble of the time, nor driven to flouting MOORE. I think so, and takes refuge with Par- public opinion, as you might well have been, but And with the help of Parson the story is with your usual tact judged neither the place nor the somewhat tediously drawn out to the requisite moment to be propitious, and refrained. But now three-volume length. The maniac sets fire to the that the Bronte epidemic is over, may I not seek house. She has to, for it is necessary to be rid of her to discover what your personal opinion Gosse. You can ask me any question. so that Rochester may marry Jane. At the same time, it behooves the novelist to show a noble soul Moore. I prefer not to ask any, but tell you the story of Jane Eyre. in her hero, and the best plot that Charlotte can devise is, that in trying to save his wife's life But what is a book divested of its Rochester loses his sight from a falling beam. Even so, Charlotte's difficulties are not cleared up, for, man is when divested of Charlotte relates that a widower from the point of drawing-room entertainment, it with one daughter engages Jane Eyre as governess, would be a cheerless sort of story if Rochester did and that it is not very long before Jane begins to not recover his sight; and as soon as he has been notice that Mr. Rochester pays her attentions and blind a couple of years he says to Jane, “ Jane, disappears from time to time into a distant part of something seems to glitter on your dress.” “It is son. Gosse. words? MOORE. As much as his flesh, . 348 April 5 THE DIAL the chain you gave me; your sight is coming back," to her irresistible”—and it was this irresistible im- or words to that effect. Sensation! I know that pulse that enlarged the Bronte silhouette almost this story was hailed as a masterpiece; but fifty indefinitely, and the discovery of letters continued years have passed over, and it appears to me that the enlargement till it filled the entire literary the time has come for somebody to say that Jane horizon, and Monsieur Hèger, the schoolmaster, Eyre is our old friend Mother Goose over again. came to supply needy bookmakers with a subject If you have showed no signs of boredom while suited to popular taste. “If I could only rid myself listening, Gosse, it is because you feel with me that of my conscience,” she said, on her way to Sainte Jane Eyre is the typical English novel-the story Gudule. Penitents were passing in and out of the that every generation rewrites and that never fails Confessional. Charlotte was a Protestant, and it to attract readers. The details of the story are required an uncontrollable impulse to propel her many and various, each generation invents its own into the box. At first the Confessor would not hear vocalization,” but every version I have seen may be her, she being a Protestant; but she would not take described as a rigmarole with something in it which “No” for an answer; she confessed—what? If we gives the lady we sit next to at dinner an excuse only knew; if the reporters had been able to get for talking morality. The original story is written hold of that Confessor, there is reason to suppose with more intensity than the variants, but nonsense that we should be discussing Charlotte's morals till is never really well written, and words avail little we ascended to the Judgment Seat. But if Char- if the skeleton is not perfect. We who have been lotte had transgressed? If she had, the veracity of about a good deal have no difficulty in imagining the the confession would have been impugned. number of literary pens that a story like Jane Eyre Even the present war would not be sufficient to will set scratching, and the chatter it will set flow- quench the desire to discuss whether Charlotte held ing at a dinner-table. As: It was, of course, the Professor's hand or the Professor held hers. wrong for Rochester to pass himself off as a bache It broke out again in the Times, and not more lor. All the same, his plight was a sad one, 'tied to than two years ago. You saw the correspondence, a maniac wife; and then the sudden switch off-the Gosse? divorce laws ought to be amended. But do you not GOSSE. No, I didn't, but I like listening to you; fear that if the marriage laws are loosened much further they might as well be done away with? And Moore. Some wandering gossip or a newly dis- are you quite sure that if he had confided his secret covered letter blew up the dying embers of this to Jane in the first instance that she would have controversy-somebody died, somebody confessed, refused to live with him? If the speakers are ac- or new letters were discovered. I have forgotten, quainted with French poetry, one of them is sure to if I ever knew. I came upon a middle letter, and quote the lines: was struck by the almost passionate tenacity with Gloire dans l'univers, dans les temps, à celui, which the writer clung to the belief that Charlotte's Qui s'immole a jamais pour le salut d'autrui! And the inherent desire of martyrdom in the al- ing had ever happened in it to redeem the monotony life had always been gray and dull, and that noth- most ugly, scrappy little woman with burning gray eyes will be described, and the tale told of her em- of ill-health and teaching. We know that we are not virtuous, we know that we cannot be virtuous, barrassment when she stepped across the threshold of Smith Elder's drawing-room and found herself but we are anxious to believe that somebody else is virtuous. in the presence of six London celebrities, two of I suppose it cannot be otherwise, the these standing on the hearth-rug, their coat tails doctrine of Atonement having taken such a hold on lifted so that they might enjoy the blaze more But this explanation did not satisfy me alto- thoroughly. The editor of the Cornhill was there. gether, and at odd times the thought returned that there must be more in it than the instinct of the At this moment an intrusive footman presses some dish on the speakers, and, having I said to myself one day: Of course, the whole individual, and seeking for the instinct of the hive, helped themselves, the literary twain fall to think- ing how the six portly gentlemen must have enjoyed if it could be proved that she had held the school- putting questions to Charlotte, asking how she had master's hand. gotten that sufficient knowledge of life which enabled her to divine a man like Rochester. Gosse. You're in excellent form today, and I'm Charlotte and her sister had been to school in sorry to interrupt you, but I, too, am being poked Brussels, and they returned home together after a up by a constantly recurring thought and cannot year's schooling; but Charlotte was drawn back to help remembering your saying that I glided swiftly Brussels, in her words, “ by an impulse that seemed over Wuthering Heights, like one anxious not to commit himself to any definite opinion for or go on, us. 1919 349 THE DIAL ture ment. against the book, and I do not think I am going too far if I say that your suggestion was that my pri- vate judgment was held in check by the prevalent literary opinion of the time headed by Swinburne, who MOORE. It seems to me quite reasonable to sup- pose that a man writing a history of English litera- must refrain from challenging received opinions. I thought I had made that sufficiently clear. Gosse. Yes; quite plain, and it is no doubt as you say. I did, of course, try to exclude eccentric opinions (I use the word in its grammatical sense), for these would only embarrass and confuse; but you are in a different position, and will, no doubt, undo the mischief I have done by a clear pronounce- How does Wuthering Heights strike you? As a masterpiece? Moore. As it appears to me, those who com- mitted their critical reputations to the pronounce- ment that Wuthering Heights was a masterpiece would have done well to consider the word master- piece. The word is sufficiently explicit—a work executed by one who is a master in his craft; and to be a master in any craft, an apprenticeship is necessary. Emily was born in 1818 and died in 1848, and presumably Wuthering Heights was written some years earlier-shall we say at six or seven and twenty? Well, masterpieces are not pro- duced at that age, not even by Raphael, for the simple reason that nobody is a master of his craft, whatever it may be, till he has practiced it for ten years, not even if it be the humble craft of prose narrative. And a casual glance into the book tells those who know how to read that it is just what a girl of genius, unpracticed in her craft and with- out experience of life, might write in a lonely par- sonage over against a Yorkshire heath-wild and violent imaginings shot through with glimpses of A glimpse of beauty her vision of Heathcliff surely is a man haunted by the memory of Catherine, his enemy's wife, who died many years ago, more than twenty have passed over, but for Heathcliff there is nobody in the world but Catherine. She is never far away, often by his elbow; she has come to speak, but she utters no word, but signs to him, and he rises immediately from the meal and follows her across the desolate heath. In vain, needless to say. The hallucination he sees her in every face he looks upon, and we feel with him that only death can release him from the torturé of the deception, forever re- curring in a hundred different aspects, and always failing him. Did Emily mean the wraith to stand for a symbol of life itself? She hardly knew. She wrote as we dream. Gosse. You think that Emily was the genius? MOORE. The word is inapplicable to prose writers under forty, and more than a single work is necessary, and there is nothing in Wuthering Heights to show that Emily Bronte's talent would have developed. The one that might have developed into a fine writer was Anne. She wrote a book called The Tenant of Wildfell Hall, a baby book, it is true, but the memory of it lingers in me to this day; a story of illegitimate love that came to naught, and for no valid reason that I could discover on my way to Castle Carra, whither I went not a little scared lest perchance I had been born into a world in which nobody transgressed. It is with my boyish dread of a sinless world that she is associated, and with pity for her early death coming before any taste of life. A virgin's death is the very saddest. Anne revealed her sadness to me, and I take this opportunity of paying my debt. Gosse. You have thrown every sort of stone against the Brontes, and I can tell by your face that you think you brought down Jane Eyre with that last one—a vindictive summary of her book. A silly story no doubt it is, but many silly stories abound in beautiful pages and Jane Eyre is not an exception. It is many years since I read it, but I am still haunted by a memory of the twain in a dewy orchard or garden and a dialogue that lasts all night and that ends, I think, with the dawn. have forgotten these pages or half forgot- ten as I have; if so, you will do well to read them again, for I think you would admire them. MOORE. Your memory is better than mine in this instance. Gosse. Thank you for this tribute, which it is an honor to receive from one of prodigious mem- ory, though of slight reading. And now there is a point of criticism which it seems to me you have overlooked. It is that of all the novels written in mid-Victorian years, the Brontes' are the only ones that retain any faint vitality. You can read Jane Eyre and Wuthering Heights more easily than Lytton or Disraeli, more easily than the late Vic- torians, Trollope, even more easily than Dickens, Thackeray, and George Eliot. I gather from your silence that I have guessed rightly. As a critic of English fiction, it behooves you to consider how this has come to pass. But you do not seem to be ready with an answer. Perhaps you will allow me to tell you your charge against the English novel is that it has been, from the hour of its birth to the present year, concerned with the surface of life rather than with the depths—and need we look further for the reason why the novels we enjoyed in our boyhood are rejected by the younger genera- You may 1 real beauty. continues; 350 April 5 THE DIAL tion? The great bulk of men and women know asus." And a hundred sentences as silly and as life only by the waves, and the popular novelist ugly could be culled from his prose writings. I concerns himself with what attracts his public: the quote this phrase though it gives me pain to repeat surface of life, all the little odds and oddments, it, for I believe that the origin of the monograph the picturesque follies of the hour, the tricks of on Charlotte Bronte may be traced to his desire to speech and manner, the ideas of the moment. His write something that would give pain to George audience is delighted. He is presenting life as it Eliot and to her admirers, rather than to any gen- appears to them. But all these waves and wave uine admiration of Jane Eyre or Shirley. lets sink into the deep, disappear, and when they MOORE. He liked Dickens in his youth, and have gone, the books go with them. Can it be during middle age and old age he read Dickens else? through from end to end every three years, from Moore. But the Brontes were popular during the Sketches by Boz to the Mystery of Edwin their lifetime. Drood. You tell us that, and more than that, Gosse. To some extent, but it was not until that he read Dickens aloud to Watts-Dunton three the nineties that they met with any intelligent times. The Pines needs a biographer—a subject appreciation. made to your hand, Gosse. And now I'll tell you Moore. I am beginning to see whither your something you do not know. It was proposed, argument is tending: that the Brontes wrote about whether by Frank Harris or another I am not quite life in its essentials, which, like the depths of the sea, do not change. sure, but during his editorship, that Swinburne Gosse. The parsonage over against the lonely should write an appreciation of Dickens for the heath excited your derision, but if I may venture Fortnightly. But the paper was never written, on account of the rejection of a poem, a ballad with to say so, unduly. Mr. Arthur Mellows is never “The wind wears o'er the heather” for refrain. wholly wrong, but he cannot explain himself. That Have you met with the manuscript of this poem parsonage and that heath which he photographed in your researches ? so often are not interesting in themselves as he Gosse. I do not remember it, and Wise and I thought, but because they saved the Brontes from the English literary tradition, that in prose have gone through all the papers carefully. Are narrative life as only a thin upper crust is, shall you sure that the poem was by Swinburne? Moore. I was told it was by Swinburne. It say, representable. MOORE. The Brontes, knowing nothing of so- certainly seemed to me rather casual, and I doubt that cial life, were forced to look into the depths. the appreciation would have been of much literary value if it had been written. It would have been Gosse. There may be less character in their books than there is in Lytton or Disraeli, but there's too much in the Pauline manner, asseveration upon asseveration. But let us not stray from the point more humanity. of dutiful criticism, and as I am a little weary of MOORE. I see; and that is why Swinburne fault finding will you confide to me your best wrote his monograph. But you record the fact in your biography that when he summoned you to thoughts on Dickens? I thirst for some whole- hearted praise. hear it he wearied in his reading and laid it aside so that he might read you his novel—a novel that Gosse. I look upon Dickens as the first man he never wearied of, but which you and Mr. Wise of English genius who gave the whole of his genius have decided shall never be published. to the novel-reader; he was able to do this, for he Gosse. Outside his gift no man is very wise; was without general culture, and as Matthew and as I have often mentioned in my biography of Arnold pointed out, two things are necessary for the birth of art—the man and the moment. You the great poet, whom I was fortunate enough to know intimately, Swinburne lost all receptive have talked to me so much about English prose power at the age of forty. After forty his mind narrative that I find it a little difficult to disen- was closed to new ideas; it was less flexible, less tangle my ideas from yours. But if you will have elastic. I think that in my biography the word patience, I think I shall be able to do so. It seems ossification almost occurs. to me certain that in Dickens we got the man of I have no wish to with- draw it. In his later critical writings he never genius, and it seems to me if not as certain, at argued, explained, or analyzed. He merely ham- least arguable, that the moment of his coming was mered. . The noise he made was sometimes ridicu- not propitious. By the moment we must under- lous, as is shown in the sentence in which he called stand not only the literary tradition that prevailed George Eliot “ an Amazon thrown sprawling over in his time, but the circumstances of his life. Dick- the crupper of her spavined and spur-galled Peg- ens was al man of the people, and was without that school and university education, which liberated 1919 351 THE DIAL Landor and Swinburne from the narrow sympathies have written prose narratives worthy of our poet- and latter prejudices of the Victorian age; added tú ical literature, creating characters that in their which, he had to get his living, and he could only seriousness would compare with Le Père Goriot do this by supplying the drawing-room with en and Philippe, in Un Ménage de Garçon. But if tertainment. You see I accept your definition of the he had gone to France and spent his evenings as .English novel; if he had not been a man of genius you suggest, we should not have had Dickens but he would have continued the Lytton and Disraeli another man. His talent was more natural, more modes and we should have more Disraeli modes spontaneous, than any he would have met in France. and we should have had more historical flourishes, He had more talent than Flaubert, Zola, Goncourt, verbose politics, sentimental rhodomontades, fop Daudet; but he would have learned from them the pery, and high living. Instead of these, we got the value of seriousness. A quick, receptive mind like middle and lower classes, of which English litera his would have understood that a convict waiting ture was hardly aware before Dickens introduced in a marsh for a boy to bring him a file with which them! You would prefer that he should have laid he may file himself from his irons is not a subject less stress on superficial markings—superficial is for humor. He need not have spent the whole of perhaps unnecessary-on markings, and you will tell his youth on the Boulevard Extérieur. A few me that whereas Balzac stands head and shoulders years would have been sufficient to dissipate the vile above Daumier, Gavarni, and Monnier; such char English tradition that humor is a literate quality. acters as Micawber, Stiggins, Dombey, and Little He would have learned that it is more commercial Nell do not represent anything deeper, any deeper than literary, and that, if it be introduced in large humanity than Cruikshank and Phiz. I answer you quantities, all life dies out of the narrative. A and I think fairly, that though a great man is always living and moving story related by a humorist very greater than his environment, he is born of it and soon becomes a thing of jeers and laughter, signify- shares its qualities, good and evil. Balzac was fa ing nothing. We must have humor, of course, but vored by circumstance; he lived in a great moment the use we must make of our humor is to avoid in- of literary revival, one as favorable to French litera troducing anything into the narrative that shall dis- ture as the Elizabethan age was to English litera tract the reader from the beauty, the mystery, and ture. But in spite of these magnificent advantages, the pathos of the life we live in this world. Who- the great Tourainian was not, as yourself will ad soever keeps humor under lock and key is read in mit, free from melodrama and sentimentality. Hand the next generation, if he writes well, for to write on your heart, is Vautrin better than Bill Sykes, well without the help of humor is the supreme test. and are the worst pages in Little Dorrit worse than I should like to speak in my essay of the abuse of certain pages in La Femme de Trente Ans? humor, but it would be difficult to make this abuse Moore. Which of Dickens' books do you like plain to a public so uneducated as ours, whose liter- best? ary sensibilities are restricted to a belief that some Gosse. On the whole, Pickwick, for we recog jokes are better than others, but that any joke is nize the English middle classes in Mr. Pickwick, better than no joke. I do not wish to libel the and it is an achievement to discover an acceptable daily or weekly press, but it would seem to me that symbol. In the same book we have Sam Weller, we have not a critic among us who is yet prepared and we discover in him the mind of the lower to say that humor is but a crutch by the aid of classes, their humor and good nature. which almost any writer can totter a little way. I has set forth two figures as typical as these cannot am afraid I am repeating myself, but the matter is be dismissed as unworthy of our literature merely of such literary importance that a repetition may because his Travels in Italy do not fulfill the as be forgiven me. Looking back, I catch sight of the pirations of the young idea. For the sake of Mr. Athenaeum, our first literary journal in the eigh- Pickwick and his valet, Dickens is forgiven, at ties, and I am not exaggerating when I say that it least by me for the somewhat, shall I say lack-luster must have published some hundreds of articles en- buffoonery, of the breach of promise case—Mrs . forcing the doctrine that humor is a primary con- Bardell, Sergeant Buzfuz, all and sundry. We for dition of prose narrative, without its occurring to get these faults, puerilities, if you will remember anybody, though all the best pens in London were that if France's gift was the novelist, England re writing for the Athenaeum in the eighties, that ceived the incomparable poet. Of what are you Jean Jacques Rousseau attained a unique reality in literature by abstention from humor; I only remem- Moore. Do not be so prickly of ber one smiling sentence in his Confessions and that what you are saying and that if our novelist had lasts but a minute—at the end of the journey that spent his evenings in the Nouvelle Athènes, he would Jean Jacques undertakes for the benefit of his health. A man that thinking? 352 April 5 THE DIAL for us. Gosse. A great book like the Confessions pro Dickens nor Thackeray attracts you. Even so, one vokes different remembrances in all of us, and I must repel you more than the other: agree with you that the introduction of humor into Moore. If Dickens had not come into our the Confessions would have deprived the book of its literature we should lose more than a certain num- high literary quality. A very little humor would ber of books, something of ourselves, for Dickens have turned a great and beautiful book into a mere has become part of our perceptions, and as the world vulgarity. Only a very great writer would have exists in our perceptions, he has enlarged the world abstained from humor, and one shudders at the But can as much be said for Thackeray? thought of what the scene in the garden would have If he had not come into our literature we should become if Jean Jacques had allowed the faintest lose some books which I will allow to be admirable, smile to curl the end of a sentence. And what a so that hitches and hindrances in our conversation feat this scene is! Madame de Wareus calls Jean may be avoided. But I do not think that we should Jacques into the garden to confide to him her project lose any more. Vanity Fair, for instance, seems to for his sexual education. She appreciates the boy's me implicit in the literature that preceded it-in embarrassment, telling him that she will give him Fielding, to whom he has often been compared, and eight days to think the matter over, and the char not without reason, as it appears to me. Almost acter that emerges when she folds him in her arms any reader acquainted with the first writer would be is a new one in literature—the material mistress. struck with the similarity of mind on reading the MOORE. It is strange that the admirable lesson second, and would feel that Thackeray had modeled given by Jean Jacques was never laid to heart in his style on Fielding's, adapting it to the temper England. of Victorian readers, robbing it of its gusts, and im- Gosse. I would make good some omissions. proving the spacing and ordination of the different MOORE. Pray make good my omissions. parts. It seems to me that the same interest in the Gosse. I would point out that we look in vain surface of life marks both writers: both are equally for humor in the Greek and Latin poets; Aristo- unable or unwilling to look into the depths; one re- phanes was an ironist rather than a humorist, and lated Squire Western's drunken bouts and his pas- the same may be said of Shakespeare. The grave- sion for hunting, and the other Pitt Crawley's habit diggers' scene in Hamlet was not written to set the audience giggling, any more than the scene be- of talking to Horrocks the butler during dinner. To look below the surface bored them. Thackeray's tween Cleopatra and the fruit-seller. These scenes surfaces are often admirable, but that sense of and the patter of the porter in Macbeth were writ- the eternal which gives mystery and awe to a work ten to delay the action, so that the spectator might of art was unknown to him, so it seems to me. have time to meditate on the tragedies that were on Gosse. You said that Tom Jones was a book their way to accomplishment. The same cannot be said of the comic scenes relating to the building of without seasons, without trees, without flowers, the wall in the Midsummer Night's Dream. They without a storm cloud above the - landscape, or a rag in it. Might not the same strictures be directed *may have been humorous originally, but I think it will be allowed that if the authority of Shakespeare with equal force against Vanity Fair? MOORE. Yes indeed. Both books lack intimacy were withdrawn from them they would be resented, and rightly. But once more we are dropping into of thought and feeling. No one sits by the fire and Shakespearean controversy. And to bring the con- thinks what his or her past has been and welcomes versation back, I will say we have strayed into Tom the approach of a familiar bird or animal. I do Tiddler's ground. not remember any dog, cat, or parrot in Vanity No, you must not inter- Fair, and I am almost sure that Tom Jones is with- rupt me. You asked me to make good your omis- A caged blackbird or thrush is a painful sions. The desire to giggle is a very imper- sight, but the parrot has chosen domestication, like sonal quality. But there is another humor, one which saves us from urging our ideas upon our the cat and dog. Some of our homebirds love us, friends with undue insistence, and this is a humor the jackdaw very often; the raven prefers the warm which I appreciate, and look upon as the rudder outhouse to the windy scarp perhaps. However this whereby we steer our course through life. I should may be, he who loves animals and birds is more human than he who doesn't. like to continue a little further, but we have lighted our lanterns, and are searching for a man who has Gosse. Grip loved Barnaby Rudge's shoulder, written prose narrative in English seriously. So and was with him always in the Gordon riots and far as we have gone we have discovered one woman, afterwards, I think, in prison. and it will be a pity if we cannot find a literary what he said ? Moore. mate or concomitant for her. I gather that neither Unfortunately I cannot, it's too long ago. I have forgotten their names but I am con- out one. Can you remember 1919 THE DIAL 353 is her sex. scious of the presence of dogs and cats in Dickens' Sharpe represents an adventuress prise sur le vif. pages. MOORE. An adventuress according to the liter- Gosse. There is Gyp in David Copperfield, ary canons of the fifties—an adventuress without a who ekes out the character of Dora very happily, temperament, which is very much the same as a sol- and we might think of many others. dier without courage. MOORE. Dickens' description of Bill Sikes' dog GOSSE. But I can imagine a man - lacking in shows that the writer had observed dogs and was physical courage, yet a very good soldier. in sympathy with their instincts. Altogether Dick MOORE. Through a moral courage that over- ens' mind was richer, more abundant than Thack comes physical weakness. But it is not so easy to eray's; Thackeray's always seemed to me a meager imagine an adventuress overcoming her distaste for sandy mind, an essentially ungenerous soil, that pro love from a sense of duty. duced only starvelings. Gosse. Madame Re'cannier is reputed to have Gosse. But this description of Thackeray's mind been a cold woman, yet she attracted men. A cold is hardly in agreement with his characters-only woman leading men on, making them miserable, the writing is inferior. and taking her pleasure in their misery is conceivable. MOORE. What is in the mind transpires; he was Moore. Quite conceivable; but no such excel- interested only in life, the drift and letter of social lent and subtle conception of devilish malignity life, always pleased and proud to relate that a Major crossed Thackeray's' mind, nor had he in mind the or a Colonel arrived at his club at a certain hour, great adventuress, she whose weapon and defense and hardly less so to tell us how a lady of high His mind did not move on grand, nat- degree is driven to satisfy her milliner and dress ural lines; he imagined a little intriguing, middle- maker by concluding an armistice, paying something class woman, determined to get on, and he was in- on account, the foe to wait for full settlement un terested in her tricks, how she won over the women til the daughter's marriage is brought off. In Pen when they came into the drawing-room after dinner, dennis and The Newcomes a booby is presented how she bamboozled the younger Sir Pitt. So far deftly, but the conception of a booby is very com he was in sympathy with his subject; but as it ap- monplace. Boobies in Shakespeare, Balzac, and pears to me, his interest in human nature did not Tourgenev are men of genius as well as boobies. compel him to ask himself any essential question Gosse. Forgive me for interrupting you, but it about her. In writing once aboạt a celebrated may be well that I should remind you that the ab passage in St. Paul I said, “No man is known to sence of interest in Nature which you deplore in us till he has revealed his sex to us,” and with the Thackeray is not shared by any first-rate writer alteration of one word the same phrase will serve in modern or antique times. It has become the fash me here. Thackeray in writing of Becky Sharpe ion to say that we moderns discovered Nature, but followed the English tradition. He observed, and is this true? Vergil told the story of the fields as abstained from meditation; he was satisfied with well as Wordsworth, and if the early Irish poets externals, and the human nature that belongs to all are remarkable for anything, it is for their love of of us—our humanity was unknown to him. It Nature. The only great writer that I can call to did not occur to him to humanize Becky Sharpe by mind who never mentioned a tree or fower, a field expatiating in her religious feelings, in her super- or hill, is François Villon. stitions. Mankind is incurably superstitious and Moore. It is true that Aowers and trees and one might almost say therefore Thackeray instinc- familiar animals find perhaps as small a place in tively avoided the subject. He liked men and women Villon's poems as in Thackeray's novels. But Vil better than mankind. He liked character better lon was not lacking in human sympathies. Now if than humanity; but in omitting any superstition I remember The Newcomes and Pendennis correctly, from Becky Sharpe's character he was sinning Thackeray's implicit approval of the attitude adopted against the type; no class or type is more likely to good women towards Lady Clara High- seek counsel in oracles, believe in their line of gate and the porter's daughter whom they find luck, than the adventurer and the adventuress; but nursing Pendennis shows that human beings were never once does he send Becky Sharpe running to as remote from his sympathies as were the flowers a Bond Street fortune-teller. and trees and fields. What he did understand Gosse. You have clung somewhat tediously to though, were prejudices and conventions, and that your idea that the English novelist never looks into is why his novels seem old-fashioned to the younger the depths of life and I have been wait- generation. ing all the while for a quotation from Thackeray Gosse. But his characters represent something on this very question. He says somewhere, and in more than the conventions of his time. Becky Vanity Fair-I will not answer for the exact words by his “ 354 April 5 THE DIAL of the sentence but he addresses the reader and to defy criticism may be doubted. Landor took points out to him that nothing appears above the pleasure in reproving the ghost of Cicero for mis- waves, and that if he choose to look under them, takes in Latin; in the person of Horne Tooke he well, he, Thackeray is not responsible for what reproved Dr. Johnson, forcing him into an admis- may be seen there. sion that he had constructed a sentence negligently; MOORE. What terrible thing will he perceive? and it was only the other day that you came here An adultery in Mayfair! The magnificent Raw with a bunch of mistakes gathered from Landor don overthrowing the Marquis on the hearth-rug, and Pater and myself; if I were to search your and Ainging the jewels, the tokens of his wife's sin, works I should not return with empty hands. But in the nobleman's face. the mistakes of the illustrious ones, and perhaps my GOSSE. A very theatrical scene, no doubt; alto own obscure errors, are, if I may say so, different gether false, no doubt, but it is not easy to say what from the vulgarisms which are to be found in Rawdon should have done in the circumstances un- Thackeray, who perhaps is guilty of more than any less, indeed, he had adopted the grammatical pose writer of equal importance. related in the Chronicles of French gallantries touch- Moore. But is he important? ing le Marquis de la Perdrigonde who on returning Gosse. I am afraid we shall have to leave the home found his wife in the arms of a lover, an centuries to decide that point. Meanwhile a word Englishman. I'm wrong, he was a German, and upon a personal matter, if it be not judged unseemly it was therefore quite natural that he should strike to interrupt a purely literary discussion for so slight an attitude as soon as he was dressed and declare You reproved me for my praise of Jane' his intention to leave the room. Eyre saying that I yielded tó popular clamor, but m'en aille" he said. “Il fallait que je m'en allasse, whatever truth there may be in this contention, you the Marquis de la Perdrigonde corrected. This will allow that my acceptance of Thackeray as a grammatical unraveling of an awkward situation is writer in keeping with the high tradition of our literature is fainthearted. not possible in English, owing to the leanness of our Thackeray to Trollope. verbal system. But though our language is possessed [To be continued] of little grammar, the possibility of writing so as GEORGE MOORE. a cause. "Il fallait que je We pass easily from Roads to Freedom of Social Reconstruction—under the misleading and sensational title, Why Men Fight-Russell lost a small public and found a large one; for now he was speaking not only to intellects, which are rare, but to hearts, which are everywhere. The Haves read the book because it psychoanalyzed them painless- ly; the Have-nots read it because here was their eternal hope come back to them in language elo- quent as sincerity and clear as the eyes of love. All the world looked up, like a multiplied Diogenes, at this Daniel come to judgment; what could such a naively, honest fellow be doing in this mad world, at this maddest of all mad times? One almost en- vied him his honesty; for honesty is a luxury which most of us can ill afford. Since then the romance has taken form with the few items that have slipped through the fingers of the censor: that the timid philosopher had all the governing classes of England scared to pettiness, and had been quarantined to prevent the spread of his curious infection; that he had not been allowed to come again to America, for fear that even an year, an American publisher brought out Principles philosophy, that in a more or less gentlemanly War ocean voyage would not make him give up his new BERTRAND Russell is one of the encouraging phenomena of this disintegrating age. Some of us heard him at Columbia in 1915, speaking with a delicate Emersonian ethereality on Our Knowledge of the External World: for more than an hour he assured us that the benches on which we sat really existed; and then he melted timidly away into a neighboring office haven. He was a thin, dry speci- men of a man, innocuously academic; surely not many of us suspected that this already reverend epistemolog (he is nearly fifty) would ever perpe- trate any startling mischief in the political world. We heard that he belonged to one of the “noblest families of England; that, being a second son, he had escaped an earldom by an heir's breadth; and that he had taken to a weird infinitesimal-calculus philosophy, presumably because philosophy, being still for the most part useless, was still for the most part respectable. And then a year later came Jus- tice in War-Time, full of unprofessorial passion and pertinence. Many of us ignored the new vol- ume; an author's followers do not readily permit him to deviate from his past. When, after another 1919 THE DIAL 355 He was he was kept in semi-bondage, like another Galileo, sell inclines much more towards the syndicalism of also insisting that the world does move. Pelloutier and Lagardelle than toward the socialism lost to us for a while, silent in a shouting world; of Hyndman and Wells and Shaw; but he wonders until last month, when we were told how the whether the solidarity of labor on which the move- strikers at Glasgow asked Russell to come and ad ment would base itself is not even more of a myth dress them; how the British Government so feared than the general strike. Many English working- the little man's power of thought and truth that men, he points out, have been made conservative by they forbade him to go; how Robert Smillie spoke the investments which they or their unions have instead (with unwonted purity of diction), reading placed in capitalistic enterprises, as well as by their from a manuscript; and having finished said, share, however slight, in the benefit accruing from “That, ladies and gentlemen, is what Mr. Russell the exploitation of backward countries. And in would have said if he had been permitted to be America the older skilled workers, largely Ameri- present here tonight." And now comes another can born, have long been organized in the American Russell book, Proposed Roads to Freedom: Social Federation of Labor under Mr. Gompers. These ism, Anarchism, and Syndicalism (Holt, $1.50), represent an aristocracy of labor. They tend to and from a stray sentence here and there we per work with the employers against the great mass of ceive that the philosopher has borne his segrega unskilled immigrants, and they cannot be regarded tion philosophically: “ Few are able to see through as forming part of anything that could truly be the apparent evils of an outcast's life to the inner called a labor movement. This statement may joy that comes of faith and creative hope.” appear extreme, in the light of the recent semi- It is a quiet book, dealing though it does with syndicalistic proposals of the American railway movements that are making no little noise at pres unions; but it is helpful to see how matters Ameri- ent in the world. There is first a chapter on can look at a distance which lends perspective to socialism, aptly defined as the advocacy of com the view. Russell concludes that syndicalism takes munal ownership of land and capital ”; there is a account of men only as producers, just as state so- critical analysis of the central concepts of Marxism cialism takes account of men only as consumers; -economic interpretation, class war, and the con and accepts the plan of the Guild Socialists to recon- centration of capital; and there is the usual account cile the two. The system which they advocate is, of the break-up, of socialism into state capitalism on I believe, the best hitherto proposed, and the one the one hand and syndicalism on the other. Russell most likely to secure liberty without constant ap- „points out the difficulties of a socialism resting on peals to violence." the democratic" state as at present organized: “To secure liberty "—that to Russell is the su- “The actual experience of democratic representative preme purpose of all political organization and government is very disillusioning,” he writes in his thought. He approaches the social question always polite way; and the notion of the state as universal from the point of view of the artist, and tests each employer is about as pleasant as the idea of conscrip- plan by asking "What will it do to art?” He con- tion. Socialists imagine that the Social tinues to use as the center of his political thinking ist State will be governed by men like those who the distinction between the creative and the posses- now advocate it. This is, of course, a delusion. sive dispositions; and his Utopia is a system of Those who hold power after the reform checks to possession and incentives to creation. Un- has been carried out are likely to belong, in the der Guild Socialism, he thinks, men will come to main, to the ambitious executive type which has in be valued not by the quantity but by the quality of all ages possessed itself of the government of the their product; there will be a minimum wage for nations. And this type has never shown itself tol all, even for those who will not work; the creative erant of opposition or friendly to freedom.” impulse, the constructive disposition, may be trusted There follows a sympathetic account of anarch to keep all but a few men busy (but, one wonders, ism as taught by Bakunin and Kropotkin; the indi busy at the work that is most needed, or only at cations of this chapter are that Russell has, during the work that is most pleasant?); every industry his domestic exile, re-read Kropotkin, and has al- will be controlled by the men engaged in it, except most been carried away by the sweet reasonableness in its external relations, which will fall for adjudi- of the man. Like Jefferson, Russell thinks that a lit- cation to some central body; there will be very violent uprising now and then is a good national tle government, very little law or compulsion; an tonic, and has some value as educative drama; but international economic congress will take the place ‘in labor movements generally, success through vio of war as the arbiter in commercial and territorial lence can hardly be expected except in circumstances disputes; invention will be stimulated by permitting where success without violence is attainable.” Rus each guild to monopolize for a time the advantages 356 April 5 THE DIAL are of any processes which it may introduce; and every social ends; what the relative strength of these where the artist will be crowned as the most de forces is; and how intelligence may bend them into serving of men. It is a pleasant Utopia, but not to some progressive synthesis. Indeed, these “ roads to be had for the asking. freedom not roads at all, but goals—and Indeed, if one may now add a word of criticism, thought must find the way. the impression left by the book is one of oversim To find fault after this fashion is no pleasant plicity and unreality; it has about it an air of jejune task, and a paragraph of it will do. These deduc- and ideologic youth. It has all of Kropotkin's tions made, the book still retains exceptional worth: gentleness and many of his delusions; but it has it is refreshingly simple and kindly; here at last our little of Kropotkin's patient grappling with difficult yarious economic isms meet without fratricidal details. It has beauty, such as one has come to ex- strife; here is an honest estimate of them by a man pect of Bertrand Russell; but it is a fragile beauty: who has loved and loves them all. “ Meantime," a sentence or two from Nietzsche, one fears, would smash it into sweet regrets. There is here no con- says the author, ending in a flash of poetry that dis- sideration of the powerful competitive impulses of arms and almost nullifies all criticism, " the world men, their love of inequality and difference, their in which we exist has other aims. But it will pass lust for domination; one would think that " natural away, burnt up in the fire of its own hot passions; selection ” and “the will to power" had been quite and from its ashes will spring a new and younger annihilated by “mutual aid.” One looks, in such world, full of fresh hope, with the light of morning a discussion, for some resolute consideration of what in its eyes.” When that new world comes men will are the forces, psychological and economic, that not forget to honor Bertrand Russell. make against, as well as those that make for, our Will DURANT. Vox-et Praeterea? I WILL BE RECALLED that when the Imagists first fore, and will be heard again; it arises from a ques- came upon us they carried banners, and that' upon tion almost as old as poetry itself—the question one of them was inscribed their detestation of the whether the poet should be only a drifting senso- "cosmic,” and of the “cosmic” poet, who (they rium, and merely feel, or whether he should be per- added)'“ seems to us to shirk the real difficulties of mitted to think. Should he be a voice, simply- his art." No doubt if the Imagists were to issue or something beside ? Should he occasionally, to this particular volume again they would find occa- sion to alter this and perhaps other statements, for put it colloquially, say something? Or should he be merely a magic lantern, casting colored pictures here as elsewhere they sinned against one of their forever on a screen? own cardinal doctrines—they failed to think clearly and, ipso facto, failed also to define with precision. posely leaves out of account all of the minute grada- The question is put perhaps too starkly, and pur- Were they quite sure what they meant by the term tions by which one passes from the one extreme to cosmic poet? Did they mean, for example, the other. And the occasion for the question is Mr. Dante-or only Ella Wheeler Wilcox? The point Maxwell Bodenheim, who, though already well is trifling, it may be, and yet it is not without its interest, for it indicates an error characteristic of known as a poet, has just published his first book, Minna and Myself (Pagan; $1.25). Mr. Boden- the moment. It was not unnatural that those of heim might well, it appears, have been one of the our poetic revolutionaries who, tired of the verbose Imagists. None of them, with perhaps the excep- sentimentalities and ineptitudes of the more medi- tion of “H. D., can equal his delicate precision of ocre among their predecessors, determined to achieve phrasing. None of them is more subtly pictorial . a sharper picturism in poetry should in the first ex- Moreover Mr. Bodenheim's theories as to the nature cited survey of the situation decide that anything of poetry (for which he has adroitly argued), such cosmic, or let us say philosophic, was obviously beyond the focus of their poetic camera—could not as that it should be a “colored grace" and that it should bear no relation to be "picturized.” It appeared that thought would have to be excluded—and in fact for a year or more, fundamental human feelings,” might seem even under the influence of the Imagists, the markets more clearly to define that affinity. Yet it would be were flooded with a free verse in which thought imagist merely because his poetry is sharply priced a great mistake to ticket Mr. Bodenheim as an was conspicuously at a minimum. tion!" was the cry—a cry which has been heard be- torial, or because he has declared that poetry should not deal with fundamental human emotions. As a human beliefs and "Pure sensa- 1919 357 THE DIAL ( matter of fact his theory and performance are two points out, if this is true we need not be surprised very different things. One has not gone very far to perceive that the poet will find greatest scope for before detecting in him a curious dualism of per this faculty in dealing with ideas, particularly with sonality. philosophic ideas. And we return to our It is obvious, of course, that Mr. Bodenheim has old friend the cosmic.” taken out of the air much that the Imagists and Nor need Mr. Bodenheim be unduly rmed. other radicals have set in circulation. His poems are For when one suggests that the contemplation of in the freest of free verse: they are indeed quite life as a whole, or the recognition of its items as candidly without rhyme or metrical rhythm, and re merely minute sand-grains of that whole, or an occa- solve themselves for the most part into series of lucid sional recollection of man's twinkling unimportance, and delicate statements, of which the crisp cadences or a fleeting glimpse of the cruel perfection of the are only perhaps the cadences of a very sensitive order of things are among the finest headlands from prose. It is to Mr. Bodenheim's credit that despite which the poet may seek an outlook, one is certainly the heavy handicap of such a form he makes poems. not suggesting that poets should be logicians. It is How does he do this? Not merely by evoking sharp not the paraphernalia but the vision of philosophy edged images—if he did only that he would be in which is sublime. If the poet's business is vision, deed simply an exponent of “colored grace" or he can ill afford to ignore this watch-tower. For if, Imagism—but precisely because his exquisite pic like Mr. Bodenheim, he desires that poetry shall tures are not merely pictures, but symbols. And be a kind of absolute music, “unattached with sur- the things they symbolize are, oddly enough, these face sentiment”-a music in which sensations are flouted fundamental feelings.” the notes, emotions the harmonies, and ideas the Mr. Bodenheim is, in short, a symbolist. His counterpoint; a music of detached waver and gleam, poems are almost invariably presentations of mood, which, taking for granted a complete knowledge of evanescent and tenuous—tenuous, frequently, to the all things, will not be so naive as to make state- point of impalpability—in terms of the visual or ments, or argue a point, or praise the nature of tactile; and if it would be an exaggeration to say things, or inveigh against it, but will simply employ that they differ from the purely imagistic type of all such elements as the keys to certain tones—then poetry by being, for this reason, essentially emo truly the keyboard of the poet who uses his brain as tional, nevertheless such a statement approximates well as his sensorium will be immensely greater than the truth. Perhaps rather one should say that they that, let us say, of the ideal Imagist. are the ghosts of emotions, or the perfumes of them. The point has been elaborated because, as has It is at this point that one guesses Mr. Bodenheim's been said, it is one on which Mr. Bodenheim seems dualism. For it seems as if the poet were at odds to be at odds with himself: the poems in Minna and with the theorist: as if the poet desired to betray Myself show him to be an adept at playing with these "fundamental emotions to a greater extent moods, an intrepid juggler with sensations, but one than the severe theorist will permit. In conse- who tends to repeat his tricks, and to juggle always quence one feels that Mr. Bodenheim has cheated with the same set of balls. Of the poems them- not only his reader but also himself. He gives us selves what more needs to be said than that they are enough to show us that he is one of the most original among the most delicately tinted and fantastically of contemporary poets, but one feels that out of subtle of contemporary poems in free verse? Mr. sheer perversity he has withheld even more than Bodenheim's sensibility is as unique in its way as he has given. There are many poets who have the that of Wallace Stevens or of T. S. Eliot or of vox et praeterea nihil of poetry, and who wisely Alfred Kreymborg. One need not search here for therefore cultivate that kind of charm; but it is a the robust, nor for the seductively rhythmic, nor tragedy when a poet such as Mr. Bodenheim, pos for the enkindling. Mr. Bodenheim's patterns are sessing other riches as well, ignores these riches in cool almost to the point of preciosity; they are, so to credulous obeisance to the theory that, since it is the speak, only one degree more fused than mosaics . voice , the hover, the overtone, the perfume alone They must be read with sympathy or not at all. which is important in poetry, therefore poetry is to And one feels that Mr. Bodenheim is only at his be sought rather in the gossamer than in the rock. beginning, and that he will eventually free himself Mr. Bodenheim has taken the first step: he has of his conventions on the score of rhythm (with found that moods can be magically described—no which he is experimenting tentatively) and of less than dew and roses. theme-color. In what direction these broadenings But poetic magic, as George Santayana has said, is chiefly a matter of will lead him, only Mr. Bodenheim can discover. perspective—it is the revelation of “sweep in the One is convinced, however, that he can step out with security. concise and depth in the clear ”—and, as Santayana CONRAD Aiken. 358 April 5 THE DIAL Dublin, March 6 TH 66 ment HE RECORDS OF THE Irish Literary Move- meaningless commotion, although the loyal insurrec- will be scanned in vain for any reference to tionaries had overpowered the authorities and taken Mr. Forrest Reid, who has just published A Gar possession of the town. The gun-runners of Larne, den by the Sea: Stories and Sketches (Talbot and those who emulated them at such cost in Dub- Press; Dublin)-his first book to appear with an lin later, will scrutinize the pages of A Garden by Irish imprint. Indeed, there must be many who the Sea in vain for heresies or propaganda. Mr. have read his remarkable novels of Ulster character, Reid has no passion but that of the writer for his The Bracknels, Following Darkness, and At the craft. He gives to literature what others have de- Door of the Gate, without knowing that the author voted to ward politics and geographical patriotism. is an Irishman, living in Belfast. Although Mr. Even the two camps into which his admirers have Reid was a contributor to Uladh, the quarterly jour divided will have to agree as to the merits of this nal of the Ulster Literary Theater in its heroic book, for each will find the necessary material to period, he has never associated himself with any of prove that the author is a romantic or a realist. the groups in Ireland whose regionalism has given Courage, The Truant, and the title-story are perfect them prominence. In fact, so determined is he to examples of that fanciful, imaginative style which, escape the stigma which he conceives attaching to while never wholly absent from the work of Mr. that word, that he surpassed himself by writing an Reid, predominates so far in certain cases as to mark excellent study of W. B. Yeats from which all off his stories into the two classes referred to. On reference to the literary renascence in Ireland is the other hand, his realistic manner is well illus- omitted. Mr. Forrest Reid is, therefore, a further trated in The Reconciliation, The Accomplice, and instance of that diversity which, as I mentioned in An Ulster Farm-to mention the more important my last letter, distinguishes Belfast from Dublin. stories. One is constantly surprised to discover, isolated here If this selection had been made for the special and there in that brazenly provincial town, a num- ber of talented writers who crave neither the sup- purpose of shaking the assurance of the author's critics, it could not have been better devised to that port nor the society of their more widely advertised end. While it is easy to assert—if one incline that colleagues south of the Boyne.” Where the way—that The Bracknels and At the Door of the South is gregarious, the North is unsociable, and Gate are better than The Spring Song and The literature is a vice one cultivates unknown to one's Gentle Lover, the choice is by no means so simple friends. How unlike the intellectual communism of the Dublin literati, whose existence excites the half between, say, A Garden by the Sea and An Ulster Farm. On the whole, an admirer of the realist must contemptuous wonder of British explorers! confess that the romanticist has triumphed in the It is difficult to obtain the works of Mr. Reid in present volume. Every story is carefully and beau- the bookshops of his native city, and as for the pub- tifully written, with the ease and deftness of a prac- lications of the mere Irish," they are procurable ticed artist, but of necessity the realist is more de- only “to order ”—that exasperating formula. One pendent upon his material for his effects, and as it can only hope that the Irish imprint will not alto- gether ruin the author's credit with the suspicious Slight . At this point precisely, the artistry of the happens, the substance of the realistic sketches is vendors of British best-sellers in Belfast. The writer triumphs where the themes are such as must superstitious fear of these gentlemen lest their shelves be contaminated with Sinn Fein literature rely entirely upon craftsmanship for their success. Such sketches as An Ending, with its evocation of has even less justification in this case than in that of the majority of the writers thus boycotted, for there dying Bruges, or A Garden by the Sea, with its is not the faintest trace of the national self-con- reveries over childhood—with what should they sciousness which is so terrifying to the Carsonian hold the reader but the suggestive, brooding har- imagination. Mr. Forrest Reid is, I believe, the mony of style and mood? The incident narrated de- only articulate Irishman who has no feeling for poli- rives in each case its sole interest from the author's tics, and no interest in any party to the Anglo-Irish power of investing the subject with the glamour of struggle. There is an authentic record of the fact- the moment in which his imagination was stirred. incredible to us—that he was in Larne when Sir It is just the faculty of conveying the impalpable Edward Carson's rebels landed their arms in 1914, suggestion of a singularly sensitive imagination but retired to sleep in utter oblivion to the seemingly which constitutes the beauty of this writing. When, in Following Darkness, Mr. Forrest Reid (6 66 as 1919 359 THE DIAL cessor. ( has a theme which calls for the employment of all with the mere mechanism of the style, divorced from his arts, then he gives us what we must so far re real beauty of thought or form. For the one occa- gard as his masterpiece. None of the qualities which sion when the public has an opportunity of admiring distinguish the author's contribution to contem the highest expression of Kiltartan speech, there are porary literature is absent from this miniature of his dozens when only its cheapest manifestations are and he has emancipated himself from the de- available—notably in the later comedies and melo- rivative influences which threatened at one time to dramas of the popular peasant playwrights. These mar the eerie effect of such a conception as The have become almost as dull and unbearable as the Truant, now presented in an original and truly jargon of the old-fashioned stage Irishman. In fact characteristic manner, without Machenesque accre we are tiring of a new-fashioned stage Irishman, for tions. precisely the same reason as we wearied of his prede- The latest addition to the greatly prized series of Both fail to correspond to anything in our books issued by Miss E. C. Yeats at the Cuala Press experience, and both fail to stimulate the imagina- is the Kiltartan Poetry Book, by Lady Gregory. It tion. If the folk speech of our present day is a collection of folksongs translated from the Irish, literature is not quite so horrible as the abominable and reprinted, for the most part, from Cuchulain of dialect of the earlier writers, it is because it is saved Muirthemne, Gods and Fighting Men, Saints and by its genuine relation to a cultivated and subtle Wonders, and Poets and Dreamers. The volume tongue. But this Gaelicized English cannot survive is a reminder of the changes which have taken place apart from the work it clothes, any more than the since the works in question first appeared. The lesser Elizabethans could hope to dispute the final most recent is twelve years old, and all of them pre supremacy of Shakespeare. Purely verbal substi- ceded the world fame which Synge brought to the tutes for style and matter cannot deceive, and it is peasant idiom, in which he and Lady Gregory, fol the most short-sighted reaction which prompts this lowing Dr. Douglas Hyde, created a new literary condemnation of the language of The Playboy, be- convention. Not the least of time's effects has been cause every imitator is not a Synge. to produce in Ireland a reaction in certain quarters Those who read Mr. Dermot O'Byrne's Children against the Gaelicized English which these writers of the Hills, when it was published by Messrs. employed. We have developed a tendency to speak Maunsel some years ago, will readily understand disparagingly of Kiltartanese, and if Synge's estab- that his new book of short stories, entitled Wrack lished glory protects him from the carping of the (Talbot Press), has aroused the Kiltartan contro- disaffected, the living exponents of the style have to versy in many places. Mr. H. G. Wells once bear the brunt of hostile criticism. Two influences threatened to publish no more short stories because have been at work undermining the prestige of Kil of the incorrigible belief of all reviewers that only tartan speech. To take the lesser first: there have Maupassant could write short stories. The super- arisen new idols—worshipped, at least, in the circles stition that only Synge could use the peasant idiom of most loudly anti-Kiltartan—and they are credited Anglo-Irish is a somewhat similar bogey, with which with an exactness of knowledge of the peasant and Mr. O'Byrne is threatened, but fortunately he has his idiom beside, which Synge is classed as mere not been afraid to offer the public a second collection literature. It is solemnly argued that no peasant of those fine tales, whose imagination, poetry, and actually talks like The Playboy of the Western dialectical vigor showed that he had mastered for World—as if Synge had ever undertaken to compile prose narrative the medium of Synge, the dramatist. a species of Congressional Record of the Aran These six stories illustrate most admirably the Islands. There is, of course, no virtue in phono author's wide range of imagination, from modern graphic records of unilluminating talk, whether of realism to historical reconstruction, and including peasants or politicians. When we have analyzed the visionary phantasy. Mr. O'Byrne's method is au- technique of Synge, we have by no means disposed thentic; his knowledge of Irish, combined with an of his art. The writer of genius must know how to intimate contact with the scenes and people he de- transform and transcend reality, so that we lose scribes, gives to his work the color and raciness sight of his convention in the profound beauty of his which cannot be captured by the mechanical Kiltar- tanizers. His stories are so obvious a demonstration At this point arises the second, and more serious, of the absurdity of the theory that Anglo-Irish is the influence in the process of discredit which has threat speech of mere comedy, their power is so challenging ened the literary use of Anglo-Irish idiom. Like so in its defiant idiomatic technique, that adverse crit- many other conventions, it has been overworked, icism has taken refuge in the old trench of patriotic and we are suffering from a prolonged acquaintance puritanism from which Synge was bombarded. Mr. ultimate effects. 360 April 5 THE DIAL O'Byrne is accused of calumniating the Gael—and be discreet to quote these words from it. In an- this in spite of the fact that a recent book of his other chapter the words even now” were deleted verse, A Ballad of Dublin (Candle Press), which from a reference to the grave of Wolfe Tone, was suppressed by the Censor, has been described “where he lies, dreaming, even now, of Irish free- by W. B. Yeats as containing the best poem in- dom.” The book however does not depend upon spired by the Rising of Easter Week 1916. these extraneous humors of British government in Another victim of that functionary is the Ireland for its interest. It is a unique series of pseudonymous “D. L. Kay,” whose Glamour of “promenades of an impressionist,” who has a de- Dublin (Talbot Press) has attracted the great- lightful gift of irony and an amazing fund of pre- est attention, as the most original of the innumer cise topographical lore at his disposal, both of which able books to which this city has supplied a theme. are so adroitly insinuated that the reader discovers, It is a collection of impressionistic sketches, some only when he has ceased chuckling, that he has actual, others historical, many fantastical. The been given an extraordinary glimpse of the sub- first chapter, which purports to give the impressions tleties of our peculiar history. The description of of Parnell during Easter Week, as he watched the Queen Victoria and her husband scrawling their Sinn Fein stronghold in O'Connell Street from his names in ink upon an illuminated page of the price- pedestal at the top of that thoroughfare, was the less Book of Kells, is a masterpiece, which has occasion of the Censor's interference. The closing paragraph was blue-penciled because of the sugges- been duly appreciated. Out of the purest altruism tion that Padraic Pearse was not ejected from the one hopes that The Glamour of Dublin will not portal of heaven, but was greeted with “ Pass, be missed by English readers who, it appears, are friend” as he entered the “seraphic gates, wherever, looking coldly upon Irish and Russian literature east of the moon, the jasper hinges turn." As the because of the political heterodoxy of these two missing paragraph was printed in an English period- countries. So, in literature as in politics, our hope ical, with appropriate comment, it will doubtless lies with America. ERNEST A. BOYD. Visitants Clothed in delight, these dreams will come And lean above another's bed, Nor care whose earthy lips are dumb, Nor care what dreamer's dead. Dew-lidded girls, as straight and slim As poplars are in April—oh! They will be there to trouble him, And I shall never know! And he, perhaps, will rise and stand Bare-browed beneath the moon and stars, His will a very rope of sand, In Night's old lupanars. You golden temptresses, you fair, Foam-breasted phantoms of desire, Give him your cup of sweet despair, Chasten his flesh with fire! Draw him a draught of Circe's wine, Scatter an incense through his sleep- For then you cannot trouble mine, That will be far too deep. LESLIE NELSON JENNINGS. THE DIAL GEORGE DONLIN ROBERT MORSS LOVETT, Editor CLARENCE BRITTEN In Charge of the Reconstruction Program: THORSTEIN VEBLEN HAROLD STEARNS JOHN DEWEY HELEN MAROT men, BOLSHEVISE BVISM IS A MENACE TO THE VESTED INTER- farm and household industry in case of urgent need. ests of privilege and property. This is the golden It follows that any protracted continuation of the text which illuminates the policies pursued by the existing blockade of imports will scarcely starve statesmen of the Great Powers in all their dealings Soviet Russia into submission. In fact it could with Soviet Russia. Not that this axiom of im- scarcely do more than starve the remnants of the perialist statecraft is formally written into the Cove vested interests in Russia. This would hold true nant of the League. It is only that the policies even in the improbable event that the Great Powers pursued by the Elder Statesmen of the Great should succeed in closing the ports of the Pacific, Powers have impeccably followed its line. What is Baltic, and Black Sea to all sea-borne trade. To formally written into the documents is the broad hold such a country in a perpetual stage of siege principle of self-determination. But in the measures would scarcely be a profitable enterprise, since there taken by the Elder Statesmen, unasked, for the reg is no prospect of a favorable outcome, and since a ularization of Soviet Russia there enters no shadow perpetuation of this state of siege would bring no of regard for the principle of self-determination. gain to the vested interests in whose behalf the en- All of which appears quite reasonable and regular terprise is undertaken. At the same time an exten- so soon as it is illuminated by this golden text of sive campaign of occupation and forcible control the Elder Statesmen, that Bolshevism is a menace promises no better solution, inasmuch as the Soviet to the vested interests of privilege and property. Republic is proving to be quite formidable in the The high merit as well as the high necessity of the field, and since the amorphous country on which it resulting maneuvers of repression may be taken for draws is not vulnerable in any vital part. It has granted as a matter of course. No question of the the defects of its qualities, but it has also the quali- merit of these maneuvers is admitted either by the ties of its defects. It is incapable of serious aggres- substantial citizens or by their safe and sane states sion, but it is also incapable of conclusive defeat by But it may still be in order to entertain a force. question as to what measures had best be taken in Meantime Soviet Russia offers an attractive mar- these premises, considering the means in hand and ket for such American products as machine tools the circumstances of the case, considering the diffi and factory equipment, railway material and roll- culties of any effectual intervention and the uneasy ing stock, electrical supplies, farm implements and temper of the underlying peoples with which these tools, textiles, wrought leather goods, certain food- Elder Statesmen will have to make up their account. stuffs and certain metals; and at the same time there The Russian situation is by no means simple and is waiting a large volume of export trade, including its details are sufficiently obscure. Yet the outlines such things as grain and other foodstuffs, flax, of it are visible in a large way, and it is not without hemp, and lumber. Should the blockade be main- a certain consistency. And it is a perplexing sit tained for any time it is not to be doubted that the uation that faces the Elder Statesmen of the Great illicit trade into Soviet Russia in all these things Powers. By and large Soviet Russia is self-support- will rise to unexampled proportions—to the very ing, beyond any other considerable body of popula- substantial profit of the Scandinavians and other tion in Europe, and it is correspondingly difficult to regulate by forcible measures from outside. The expert smugglers and blockade runners. Meantime, too, the Great Powers whose national integrity has Russian people at large are still in a backward now been provisionally stabilized by America's de- state.” industrially. So that they are used to de cisive participation in the war are placing an em- pending on a home-grown food supply and on local bargo on the import of many articles into the Euro- and household industry for the ordinary necessities pean market-in practical effect an embargo on the of life in the way of clothing, shelter, fuel, and importation of these American products for which transport. At the same time they also have the use Soviet Russia is now making a cash offer. Soviet of something appreciable in the way of a machine Russia is today the only country that places no ob- industry, widely scattered both along their borders stacles in the way of import trade. So it becomes and through the country inland—enough to serve an interesting question: How long will those Amer- somewhat sparingly as a sufficient auxiliary to their ican vested interests which derive an income from 362 April 5 THE DIAL open covenant foreign trade have the patience to forego an assured understood by the latter and thus became a part of profit from open trade with Soviet Russia in order that political, or rather moral, offensive which con- to afford certain European vested interests a dubi tributed to their undoing. Above all they were ad- ously problematical chance to continue getting some dressed to his fellow countrymen as the interpreta- thing for nothing in the way of class privilege and tion of the cause for which they were fighting. To unearned income? all-allies, enemies, and fellow-citizens—President Wilson assumed obligations of the most solemn DURING kind, involving not only his own personal honor but URING THE WAR THE FABLE OF THE SYBILLINE the honor of his country. He knows this, as he books was frequently quoted, always with reference knows the result if he fail. The fateful words of to the diminishing opportunity afforded the Central his Boston speech were spoken in solemn remem- Powers for a peace of repentance and pardon. It is brance of the power which he has invoked: “ They the irony of history that the fable has acquired a [the people] are, in the saddle, and they are new application—this time to the victorious powers going to see to it that if the present governments do themselves. It is to them that the fateful figure ap not do their will, some other governments shall." pears offering her books of prophecy, nine, six, three. And the question with each diminished opportunity : A SINISTER NOTE IN THE CIRCUMSTANCES OF THE “The fundamental necessity for a better world is a Conference is the fact that the four leading partners sacrifice of the instinct for possession. . If have taken frankly to the practice of secret negotia- predatory instincts sway the Conference to concern tion, and it is significant that this is coincident with itself chiefly with demands for territory, indemnity, the revolution in Hungary. They are confronted and commercial privilege on the part of the victors- then indeed the rulers of the world will have proved by a second people choosing the path of immediate self-determination, and their decision what course to once more their unfitness, and this time the people take is apparently not to be an cannot be deceived." The events of the past two openly arrived at." But this case differs from the months seem to have justified the second part of this Russian situation in that the secrecy cannot long be prophecy. Unquestionably predatory instincts have maintained, and the action of the representatives at governed the Conference. The talk which has Paris will be subject to quick consideration and re- emanated from Paris has been of how much Ger- vision by the people whom they represent. Should many can pay, of shutting her off from raw ma the conferees undertake the forcible suppression of terials, of granting the Saar Valley and the left bank of the Rhine to France, Danzig to Poland, Soviet and other efforts at self-determination there and of extending the Italian frontier to the Bren- will be war, unorganized war as well as organized. ner. Even the Covenant of the League of Nations, In such war the bitter-enders will fight. If a reign which should have been a means of reconciliation, of terror overwhelms Europe the responsibility will was presented in the guise of an alliance of the vic- fall on the Supreme Council for its failure to recog- torious nations, and the generous interpretation nize that the real forces of reorganization are to be which should have relieved it of this character has found within the movements of the people. These not been forthcoming. And the inevitable has hap- movements are not comparable, as the Councilors pened. Hungary, frightened by an unwarrantable seem to believe, to a general strike in one or more in- extension of the terms of the Armistice, and threat- dustries. The colossal proportions of the movement ened with_dismemberment, has followed the ex- as a whole have to do not only with its extent but with its character. ample of France in 1792, has committed her na- tional existence directly to her people. Whether the people know what they want and, as they are op- social solvent of the Soviet form of government will posed, will arm and fight to get it. Military suffice to hold in solution the various races with repression of this particular kind of want intensifies nationalistic ambitions which Hungary includes is the desire for it and induces the support of those not yet certain. But in any case the moving finger who were neutral. Blockades become boomerangs, has written another syllable of the mene, mene, since hunger and deprivation feed such movements . tekel, upharsin on the walls within which Belshazzar The present movement in Central Europe and Great keeps his feast at Paris. Upon President Wilson, Britain is an indication of an international con- as upon no other of the Allied statesmen, the re- sciousness of common interest. Before the people sponsibility rests. It is fair to say that all the ques- have had time to recover themselves from the ex- haustions of war they are faced with the startling and fact that the self-determination for which they statement of war aims which he gave to his allies and to his enemies. Conference nor the Supreme Council has given a They were accepted by the former with full acquiescence, in spite of his invita- sign of granting it. When the statesmen who rep- tion to them to discuss or dissent. They were resented the old order directed their appeal to the people in terms of altruistic patriotism they little It is a movement in which Babel of discord were settled in principle by the fought'l has thot been won; that neither the Peace 1919 363 THE DIAL ABOTAGE assets guessed the forces with which they were conjuring. they seem all the while to have been familiar The people answered the appeal to arms and fought enough. It may have been because the facts of for a different kind of world, a world in which graft and sabotage, however massive and wide- democracy was to be lived for rather than died for. reaching they doubtless were in those past times, This current which is rising with uncontrollable did not, after all, then stand out in such bold relief power is free of old diplomacy and political domi on the face of things. But things have moved nation; to dam it means world catastrophe. What forward since then. And quite plainly now, since it needs is time; a chance to harness and generate the price system and all its ways, means, and ends power more potent in human welfare than devices have reached that mature development which is of statecraft hatched in the capitals of the old world, familiar to this generation, both of these terms which is passing. have become indispensable in common and current speech. "S IS ONE OF THE LATE AND FORMID- able loan-words of the English language. At the IN CONGRESS THE PRACTICE OF SABOTAGE HAS same time it has also some currency in other lan- long enjoyed another imported and figurative name, guages, as would be expected in the case of a loan- also drawn from footgear—" filibuster," the onoma- word which fills so notable a place in common topoetic equivalent of “freebooter.” Respectable as speech, since the facts which call for the use of familiarity has made this political device, it is by in- such a new word are sure to range beyond the tent and effect sheer sabotage. Witness the pres- frontiers of any one language. In all this the word ent plight of the Railroad Administration and other has the company of such other late comers as bureaus, deprived of their necessary and in most "camouflage" and " bolshevism." bolshevism.” And - not much different is the case of such late-come; home-bred cases unopposed appropriations because the late terms as graft” and “goodwill,” and “intangible Congress, in order to force an extra session in which and “vested interests." Whether they are to protect its constitutional function in foreign af- borrowed from abroad or are made over from fairs, deliberately refused to perform its domestic innocent home-grown words, all these half-technical functions and adjourned without providing funds to terms that are making their way into common use keep the governmental machine running during its to describe notable facts lack that sharp definition absence. With a touching solicitude the Congress- that belongs to words of the ancient line. There men provided for the salaries of their secretaries, is always something of metaphor or analogy about but they made no provision for their wage-workers them, and the meaning attached to their use in in the lobbies of the two chambers. And while they common speech is neither precise nor uniform. They take the spring air in cities whose street-cleaning de- are still more or less unfamiliar; they seem uncouth partments do not depend upon federal appropria- and alien, but they make good their intrusion into tion, the government clerks they have left behind in the language by becoming indispensable. They are Washington walk to work that is, in many cases, needed for present use to describe facts which are temporarily unpaid, through streets that are un- very much in evidence and which are not otherwise swept because Congress went on strike. Nobody provided for. believes, of course, that the governmental machine Of course, the facts described by such late word will stop for lack of the withheld fuel; and in most growths as graft," " sabotage,” “ camouflagę,” or departments the results of the Congressional strike bolshevism" are not altogether new, nor nearly so; will be more ludicrous than important. One bureau but they count for more now than they have done however has been throttled in its hour of utmost in the past, and so it has become necessary to find need. The Federal Employment Service suddenly words for them. As a fact of history, graft is at finds itself with funds to operate less than sixty of least as old as the early Egyptian dynasties, and its seven hundred placement agencies, and must ap- sabotage is quite inseparable from the price sys- peal to states and municipalities to keep open as tem, so that its beginnings can scarcely fail to be many of these offices as possible. Its personnel, re- as ancient as the love of money. It is perhaps cently assembled at great pains, is again scattered, the first-born of those evils that have been said to and its training school closed. Meanwhile demobil- At be rooted in the love of money. Doubtless graft and ization continues and unemployment mounts. sabotage have been running along together through best we have taken too little interest in finding jobs human history from its beginning. We should all for our war workers and returned soldiers. And find it very difficult to get our bearings in any congressional tactics that slow down our all too in- adequate machinery for returning these hands to period of history or any state of society which might productive industry is really—no matter at whom it by any chance not be shot through with both. Still is directed nor how it is dignified in parliamentary those ancients who passed before the last quarter parlance-straight sabotage on business, on labor, of the nineteenth century had not the use of these and on the people at large, the form of sabotage technical terms to describe the facts, with which known as striking on the job. 364 April 5 THE DIAL MY DEAR Miss WATSON; Your letter of January 23 has been referred to me. The War Department immediately upon having conditions at the Disciplinary Barracks called to its attention, instituted an investigation. The report of that investigation disclosed the fact that the trouble at Leavenworth, which centered entirely about two or three men, was due, not at all to the administration of the prison, but to the regulations which were ill adapted to the unusual type of pris- oner that the Selective Service Act brought to mili- tary prisons. The Secretary at once made some appropriate modifications of those regulations and has called a conference to consider further changes in disciplinary regulations, not only to meet this unusual condition but to bring the Army's disciplin- ary methods up to the most modern penological standards, in case they shall be found to be deficient. The conference will also consider ways of meeting the immediate emergency of the overcrowding of disciplinary barracks due to the increased size of the Army during the war. The conference will come to its conclusions in the near future and you may be assured that action leading out of its con- clusions will be promptly taken. F. P. KEPPEL, Third Assistant Secretary. Washington, D. C., Jan. 28, 1919. go the Communications To the SECRETARY OF WAR My Dear Mr. BAKER: I enclose a clipping from a report of the discharge of 113 military prisoners from Fort Leavenworth. A well-known woman, a publicist of note, and, I may add, a member of one of the largest and most progressive churches in this city, has just returned from there, where she talked with a number of the prisoners. She reports that the city is one of the vilest in the country. That conditions in the prison are vile goes without say- ing. Fine, idealistic, clean young men are forced to sec before their eyes at all hours of the day the most revolting phases of sodomy; are forced to live in filth; to say nothing of being subjected to the autocratic and brutal activities of men who are not worthy to black their shoes, but who, by virtue of military authority vested in them, can limit" in the endeavor to break the men's spirits! A young man recently discharged from Fort Leavenworth, speaking to a group recently (with no bitterness of spirit, no exaggeration, but with an almost unbelievable restraint), said that when the military authorities had broken a man's spirit they felt that they had done their duty. That was success as they saw it; but think of what it means to the individual, and think of the loss to the man- hood of the nation! The man who will suffer for conscience's sake is, as President Wilson said, of unusual spiritual fiber or intellectual independence. And what have we done to hundreds of such men? Some have died; others will never recover physically from the treatment that has been meted out to them—and our government stands before the world, responsible for these crimes! Is it not time that we, as well as Russia, recog- nized the worth of human beings in general, and acknowledged the particular worth of these splendid young men who are standing for liberty of con- science-for the democracy that our Constitution outlines, but which our authorities disregard in the most barefaced manner imaginable? The machinery of release of these political pris- oners (to recognize whom, officially, would be to deny the democratic ideals that we have got so far away from) has been some time starting. However can it not be speeded up? A large audience of relatives and friends gath- ered last week to hear two speakers on this subject. They want their husbands, and brothers, and sweet- hearts, and friends back, and they should have them as soon as is humanly possible! A few days' delay may mean death to some, now nearly broken! Two great souls have recently gone-physically too frail to stand the treatment; spiritually too strong to desert their ideals. How many more are to go the same way? The people of the country are putting this question up to you. BLANCHE WATSON. New York City, Jan. 23, 1919. a Dear Sir: The communication received in reply to my letter from the third Assistant Secretary of the Department of Jan. 23 is, may I say, most un- satisfactory, and it is a perfect example, moreover, of the official inefficiency and stupidity that has char- acterized the activities of the War Department during the past two years. In the first place it is form" letter, supposed to reply to all communications, and in reality reply- ing to none. In the second place the form is nobody knows how old. Note the phrase “ due to the increased size of the army during the war!” In the third place it wholly ignores the main content of my letter-the speedy discharge of all of the so-called political prisoners, whether in Leaven- worth or anywhere else. Public sentiment is thoroughly aroused on this subject, and letters such as the one to which I refer above are not going to temper it any. The matter is much too serious, and it is one that too deeply concerns the honor of the United States government, to permit the treatment that the War Department seems inclined to give it . The imprisonment of these men and women is in defiance of the law of the land and in complete violation of the spirit of our American democracy. The War Department cannot, I realize, recog; nize” them without admitting that our boasted democracy no longer exists; but it can free them, at once, one and all, and permit tardy reparation to atone, insofar as is possible, for outrageous mal- administration, and an official shortsightedness and stupidity that borders on criminality. 1919 365 THE DIAL This, permit me to say, is a personal communica- tion, but it expresses a countrywide demand for justice. BLANCHE WATSON. New York City, Jan. 30, 1919. My Dear Miss Watson: Your letter of Jan. 30 has been referred to me. You evidently did not understand the letter which I wrote to you on January 23. The increased size of the Army during the war still influences the size of the present popu- lation of the Disciplinary Barracks, as you will realize upon consideration. The only group of the so-called political prisoners who come under the War Department is composed of that small per cent of the drafted men professing conscientious objections who have been court mar- tialed and are serving sentence in Disciplinary Bar- racks. Representatives of the Secretary are reviewing all such cases at present and 113 of these men have already been discharged on their recommendations. However, the War Department has decided that it would not feel justified in extending on the basis of conscientious objections the same immediate clem- ency to the men who refused all service for their country that has been extended to those who by error or accident were not given the opportunity for such service. F. P. KEPPEL, Third Assistant Secretary. Washington, D. C., Feb. 13, 1919. Sir: After reading in the New York Times of January 23 the memorandum of Secretary Baker concerning the release of some conscientious ob- jectors from Fort Leavenworth, one finds himself somewhat perplexed over the policy of the War Department in this respect. According to this statement the released men comprise two groups. The first consists of those men who had been recommended for farm furloughs which they had not received because of delay in the execution of the plan. The second is composed of those men whom the “ Board of Inquiry now find to be sincere, and who in their judgment would have been recommended for furloughs if they had had the opportunity of being examined by the Board of Inquiry before the court-martial proceedings." But, one asks, what does the Board of Inquiry con- sider necessary to establish the sincerity of a con- scientious objector? Surely the steadfastness with which he has clung to his declaration of objections can be but a small part of the test, for every ob- jector in Fort Leavenworth was there because he had maintained his position in spite of threats, ridi- cule, court-martial, and even physical torture—and only 113 of them were released. If the Board took cognizance of the reasons given by the men for their refusal to accept military service, what reasons did it consider of sufficient validity to establish the sincerity of the person advancing them? If, as has been done in some cases, the War Department is following the definition of the conscientious objector which distinguishes him from a political objector in that his motives are purely religious, it is obvious that only those men whose attitude was based on religious convictions were given a chance to prove their sincerity. In that event are all the men who derive their views from political theory to be con- sidered in a later hearing, or are they to be labeled “insincere" and left to serve long prison terms because, in the eyes of military law, no man can conscientiously hold political opinions varying from those of the majority ? But perhaps it is not a man's philosophy, or his steadfastness in maintaining a course of action in conformity with his belief, that proves his integrity of purpose and fitness to resume the duties of a citizen. Possibly this second group is composed of only those men who were able to answer in the affirmative the hypothetical question: “If you had been offered a farm furlough before you were court- martialed, would you have accepted ?” But why should willingness to accept a farm furlough be made the criterion for judging which of our polit- ical prisoners should be granted amnesty? Could not a man be “sincere" in holding the position that all assistance to war is wrong, even such forms of non-combatant service as farm labor ? To be brief, is there anything in this memoran- dum of Mr. Baker's that can be taken as an indi- cation of a liberal policy on the part of the War Department toward a large group of objectors who have based their opposition to the war on political convictions, and who have, or would have, refused all forms of non-combatant as well as combatant service? JEAN SAUNDERS. Washington, D. C. How To DISPOSE OF INTELLECTUALS SIR: I have read the communication from Mr. E. C. Ross in regard to the intellectuals who are always stirring up trouble. There is one point which he left out, and that is the method of gather- ing up and disposing of such persons, taking into con- sideration the fact that this is a democratic country. In ancient and barbarous times these people were handled very roughly. They were shut up in dun- geons, tortured, and many of them burned alive; but in our highly civilized and humanely democratic time, this sort of punishment should not be allowed. These intellectuals should be rounded up, shipped in cattle cars to some centralized stock yards- Chicago, for instance—and there be allowed to vote on the question as to where the penal farm should be established, the majority to decide. They should be given several choices—say, Montana, Alaska, Lower California, or Death Valley. Democracy. That's me all over. A. L. BIGLER. Norfolk, Virginia. 366 THE DIAL April 5 Notes on New Books and Peter, must be aware how unfitted by training is the average reserved English girl of the upper OLD-Dad. By Eleanor Hallowell Abbot. classes to cope with the varied phases of passion. Dutton; $1.50. She is brought up to despise, deny, and suppress Victorian damsels in pattens could boast no more her emotions, to taboo romance and sentiment as impenetrable innocence than the heroine of this * soppiness,” and to aim, above all things, at self- story; but given the most romantic of them, and control. Fortunately there are forces at work in she in a gold-lined nightmare of an even less cred- human nature that counteract such one-sided train- ible swiftness, one might hope in vain for such ing and insist on some sort of self-expression, but colossal idiocy. Daphne Bretton, aged eighteen, is the training bears fruit in inhibitions that are diffi- suddenly expelled from a prim little college for cult to overcome and that lead frequently to mis- “having a boy in her room—at night.” After tell- adjustment and misunderstanding. One of Phyllis ing her father of her disgrace, she gasps, What is Bottome's heroines marries the typical Englishman it about boys that makes it so wicked to have them who fears“ a scene," but who needs one to bring around?" pitching headlong-quite consistently him to his senses; while the other marries the with her role—in a dead faint at his feet. Then typical Frenchman who would rather enjoy one. follows a fantastically saccharine kaleidoscope of Each story shows the suffering that comes from the adventures, punctuated with kisses and revelations, personal feelings, but the solution of each is due wife's unselfish but mistaken suppression of her which flash across a vivid landscape in Florida. And all this time the heroine goes blithely along, to the exercise of the same virtue, prompted by a trailing clouds of the densest ignorance of every deep and moving passion. The lightness and charm situation about her, adoring and running away of the style in which they are told, and the un- from her clever father, wondering at and running obtrusive epigrams that are to be found here and away with a dissipated young stranger. Fortu- there, cover a sound and serious psychology which nately she is rescued from this fate, and on page gives these otherwise somewhat slight stories a 230 we are given a conversation between her and very real value. her eventual consort which brings to mind a famous column in a Chicago paper-nine consecu- YASHKA: MY LIFE AS PEASANT, OFFICER tive remarks are ushered in by the nine interlocu- tory verbs: pawed, shivered, scoffed, worried, AND EXILE. By Maria Botchkareva. Stokes; stammered, winced, apologized, purred, acqui- $2. esced. Seriously, this is the sort of book which, by The story of Maria Botchkareva, as set down by reason of vague and romantic amorality, is nearer Isaac Don Levine, may be recommended to all perversion than many a less aspiring volume. The lovers of a thrilling tale. To enemies of the Bol- book is advertised as a sure cure for the blues," sheviki it has the added charm of painting a blood- when the very suggestion that half a dozen such freezing picture of Bolshevism. A scene like that people inhabit the same sphere is depressing in of the Bolshevik death-trap” is, from both points itself. of view, almost too good to be true: a field heaped with the corpses of murdered men; Yashka lined up HELEN OF TROY AND Rose. By Phyllis with twenty officers to be shot; a humane Bolshevik Bottome. Century; $1.35. (there are such, it seems) trying to persuade These two studies of women's temperaments bloodthirsty fellow-officer to grant a reprieve to are handled with the delicacy and insight that mark Yashka; dramatic recognition of Yashka by a sol- much of Phyllis Bottome's work. dier whose life she had saved; his noble gesture, With deft, swift touches she suggests atmosphere and situa- “ If you shoot her, you will have to shoot me first!” tions that other writers might take pages to pre- -Yashka is saved, the twenty officers brutally mur, sent and thus these stories that might each have dered. Scarcely less exciting is the account of filled a volume can be included in a book rather Botchkareva's early life, a story reminiscent of shorter than an ordinary novel. Although they Gorky in its scenes of poverty, hard labor, floggings, are strongly differentiated in plot and treatment, drunkenness, brutality. Obeying each of them deals with fundamentally the same “Go to war to save thy country!" -Botchkareva theme—the matrimonial problems of an English- exchanged the dreariness of Siberian exile for the One is inclined to stress the point of na- miseries, the heroism, and the comradeship of the tionality, because the difficulties of the heroine seem trenches. Alarmed at the crumbling of discipline to come from traits largely inherent in their na- under the flood of talk released by the Revolution, tionality and training. Anyone acquainted with she conceived and carried out the organization of the educational ideal in England as it concerns the the Women's Battalion of Death, in the hope of emotions, or who has read Mr. Wells' study of shaming the men. education in that country before the war in Joan the pathetic story of a lost cause. was swamped, together with “all that was good a an inner voice- man. The story of that battalion is The enterprise 1919 367 THE DIAL STRUGGLING RUSSIA “Many Typewriters In One" A New Weekly Magazine Devoted to Russian Problems The Issues of March 22d and March 29th are Out AMONG OTHER ARTICLES THEY CONTAIN: Struggling Russia and Russia's Inevitable Resurrection-Editorials A. J. SACK What is Bolshevism? and Allied Help and Intervention in Russia CATHERINE BRESH KOVSKY Russia and the Allies ALEXANDER KERENSKY Russia and the Peace Conference NICHOLAS TCHAIKOVSKY Did Paul Miliukov "betray" the Allied Cause? An interview with the former Minister of Foreign Affalrs in the Russian Provisional Government. Russia's Struggle for Unity and Freedom PAUL MILIUKOV The Bolsheviki and the Socialists of Europe and America PAUL AXELROD The Voluntary Army in Southern Russia A. A. TITOV A United Russia from the Economic Point of View N. NORDMAX News from Russia (weekly cable letters) VLADIMIR BOURTZEV Cable News From the Russian Telegraphic Agency at Omsk Russian Documents: Authors Booklovers-and All Who Write will appreciate the POWER OF EMPHASIS obtained by the Interchangeable-type Feature of the MULTIPLEX HAMMOND 29 “WRITING MACHINE You will find interest more easily created If you change from inexpressive, monotonous type to varia-, tions of style that put shades of feeling into your written words. Note these 5 of over 365 different type-sets, including all languages, available on the Multiplex. In the issue of March 22d 1. Zinoviev's speech before the Petrograd Soviet, about the Prinkipo Conference; 2. Red Terror in Russia, as told by the Bolsheviki themselves; 3. Civil Liberties in Russia under Bolshevist rule; 4. Russia and the Czecho-Slovaks; 5. Tcheidze and Tzeretelli on the situation in Russia. ALL TYPE STYLES Άιι Languages All Sciences especially represented in one MULTIPLEX Change Type a Second In the issue of March 29th 1. An Appeal to the American People, by Nicholas Tchaikovsky, Boris Savinkov, Vladimir Bourtzev, Vladimir Lebedeft, Alexander Titov and other representatives of Revolutionary Russia; 2. A Memorandum of the Political Parties and Groups in Southern Russia to the Allied Governments; 3. The Russian Workingmen against the Bolshe- vikl; 4. The Siberian Zemstovs and Municipal- Itles on Allied Intervention; 5. Did the Socialists- Revolutionists and the Mensheviki unite with the Bolsheviki? “ Just turn the knob" of your Multiplex Hammond for instant changes of style that invest typo with the vigor of inflection and emphasis. No Othor Typewriter Can Do This! There_are many things tho Multiplex doos which CANNOT be done on any other typewriter, all fully explained in a new Folder. Let us show you HOW and WHY the Multiplex stands unique in the type- writer world. Send the cuopon NOW. Alsoma PORTABLE Moda Only About 11 lbs. Now, light-weight, aluminum model. Full capacity. Writo lor special folder. Mail this COUPON now to HAMMOND TYPEWRITER CO., 580-A East 69th St., NEW YORK CITY Single copy 5c Subscription rates : $1.50 per annum; 75c for six months Send 25c (coin or money order) and you will receive "Struggling Russia" for eight weeks Gentlemen: Please send Folder to: Name.... RUSSIAN INFORMATION BUREAU Woolworth Building New York City Address, Occupation. Inquire about special terms to professionals. When writing to advertisers please mention THE DIAL. 368 THE DIAL April 5 92 66 as a book make it of considerable value to those who would take advantage of the commercial opportuni- and noble in Russia," in the tide of " destruction voyage, and he brings us his early cargo in a series and ignorance." One did not want to live.” But of studies of the careers and characters of those Yashka nevertheless fought gallantly for her life Latin American leaders—Miranda, Hidalgo, Itur- in all her subsequent hair-raising adventures, and bide, Moreno, San Martin, Bolivar, and others- finally escaped from Vladivostok to plead in Amer who in the years from 1808 to 1831 succeeded in ica and England for the assistance of Allied arms forming independent republics out of Spain's vice- against the Bolsheviki. royalties and captaincies general. There is—one Those who enjoy mystifying themselves over the should remark it first off-an admirable propriety interpretation of the Russian soul may join Mr. in this author's mode of procedure. It is a bit old. Levine in regarding this “phenomenal rustic fashioned nowadays to be writing history in terms symbol of the Russian people. The rest may re of the biographies of heroes, the Plutarchian mode; joice with an easy conscience in the fascinating we are all for ethnical and physiographical and eco- record of human experience. nomic interpretations. But if there is a portion of the world where the biographical foundation is justified, it is surely Latin America. Its first con- BLIND: A Comedy in One Act. By Seumas O'Brien. Flying Stag Plays. Flying Stag Plays. Washington quests were by men of overpowering wills and vis- ionary ambitions—Cortes, Pizarro, Columbus him- Square Bookshop; 35 cts. self, and that maddest of extravagants, Lope de The SLAVE WITH Two FACES: An Allegory Aguirre—and its later history has won for the whole in One Act. By Mary Carolyn Davies. Fly continent, if not the name, at least the flavor of a ing Stag Plays. Washington Square Book Paradise of Dictators. The History of South Amer- shop; 35 cts. ica is a standing refutation of the economic inter- Seumas O'Brien has attempted to do a Lady pretation, and a standing invitation to the enthusi- Gregory comedy, but alas his talent is not suf- asms of hero worship; and no period of it, in this re- ficient. The Davies play is better. It is indeed gard, is superior to that which Professor Robertson one of the justifications for the work of the Prov- treatment will themselves ensure him readers here makes his own. The subject and the mode of incetown Players. At a time when allegories are far-fetched and literary, she has evoked a simple original investigations, in South America and else- which his book deserves no less for the results of fresh allegory of life in decent dramatic form. Life is a slave who behaves towards us as a will- where, which he has incorporated in it. ing submissive bondsman if we adopt a high- handed courageous attitude, or as a cruel murdering SANTO DOMINGO, A COUNTRY WITH A FU- brute if we falter and conciliate him. Therefore let us always wear our royal crowns in the presence TURE. By Otto Schoenrich. Macmillan; $3. of the slave, Life. Such is the theme, a theme capa- Santo Domingo, or the Dominican Republic as ble of being worked into a masterpiece by a writer it is officially termed, has had a career which, ever with more patience, more depth, more power- since the island of which it is a part was discovered someone more like Andreyev, let us say—than the by Columbus and brought under Spanish rule, has prolific and hasty Mary Carolyn Davies. bordered on epilepsy. The historical sketch with which this book is begun covers nearly a hundred pages, in which revolts, guerilla warfare, murders, RISE OF THE SPANISH-AMERICAN REPUBLICS: and conspiracies follow each other with amazing As Told in the Lives of Their Liberators. By rapidity. The really eventful period of Santo William Spence Robertson. Appleton; $3. Domingo's career ended with the military occupa- The American side of Spanish history is for us- tion by the United States beginning in November and must eventually become for the whole world- 1916, so that in two pages—such is the tranquilizing effect of Uncle Sam-the history is brought up to the important side. As a European state Spain will live long and be remembered; but it is as an Amer- date. The remainder of the book is devoted to a ican civilization that she bids fair to become great. phy, Climate, fauna and Aora, religion, governmente somewhat detailed study of the country—its topogra- Spanish histories, limited as is Chapman's, glance with too indirect an eye at the Indies; the interest commerce, finance, and kindred subjects. One and intention are present, and the publishers very noticeable feature is the author's faculty of impar- tial exposition; he writes almost with the detach- America must be founded in an aunderstanding of admitted , with little more imaginative insight ho tina ment of a financial reporter, and, it must be Spain; but it is impossible for a historian who is dealing with a mother country to see centrally her this day of the development of foreign trade , how- colonial empire-the colonies must find their own ever, the qualities possessed by Mr. Schoenrich's historians. Professor Robertson is among those who have of late embarked upon the Latin American ties offered. 1919 369 THE DIAL Why Readers of THE DIAL should have upon their bookshelves THE GREAT HUNGER THE FLAIL THE WOMEN WHO MAKE OUR NOVELS OUR POETS OF TODAY THE THEORY OF EARNED AND UNEARNED INCOMES By Harry Gunnison Brown Professor of Economics, University of Missouri Alarums and excursions! A college professor has written a book that Justines the theory and affirms the practicallty of the single tax. And that professor occupies the chair of economics in the University of Missouri. The volume is as interest- ing a book on economics as I have read in many years. It is & singularly well articulated, closely knit, logical performance. (Wm. Marion Reedy in Reedy's Mirror). This book is one of the new era. It is like a breath of fresh air in the musty realm of economics and sociology. Those who think they have fixed notions respecting Marxian socialism, birth control and single tax, should read the author's criticism of their favorite economic theories. His mental attitude is fair and what he has to say will not aggravate, but will help, it the reader himself has an open mind. (Duluth Herald). This book should be welcomed not only by philosopbic radicals but by all who seriously wish to understand the nature of the germ behind the lever of discontent which now threatens tho tle of our civilization. (The Public). The debate will be with those whom the author describes as "economists whose social sympathies (of the influence of which they are not always conscious) or whose training by thelr former teachers, incapacitates them for seeing any distinction between land and capital." To these Mr. Brown's work comes as a virile challenge, made in such terms that it must be taken up. The fundamental issues raised affect the economic policy of the country too profoundly to be ignored. The style of the work is clear, easy. and its vocabulary untechnical; while on every page it is provocá- tive of thought. (Single Tax Recteu). The Great Hunger, by Johan Bojer, is man's search for self-understanding; The Flail is a first novel that will make the name of Newton A. Fuessle live; and in The Women Who Make Our Novels and Our Poets of Today, Grant Overton and Howard Cook present racy biographies and facts for book lovers. AT ALL BOOKSTORES MOFFAT, YARD & COMPANY 31 Union Square West New York $2.00 Postpaid THE MISSOURI BOOK CO. Columbia, Mo. The League of Nations JUST PUBLISHED MOTHERS OF MEN Whether you favor a league or not you want to know what has been said, recently, for and against it. No one book, no one magazine, can give as comprehensive a view of the problems and difficulties incident to the formation of such a league as the Handbook, A LEAGUE OF NATIONS. Into its 350 pages, Miss Phelps has collected 70 of the most important speeches and writings which appeared in books, magazines and news- papers and has grouped them under the plan they advocate or condemn. The third edition (just off the press) includes the twenty-six articles of the proposed' Constitution and President Wilson's explanation of them. The Handbook, A LEAGUE OF NA. TIONS, is priced at $1.50, so that every good American can own a copy. Order direct from the publisher. Other Titles in Handbook Series By WILLIAM HENRY WARNER and DE WITTE KAPLAN With Frontispiece. 12mo. Cloth, $1.60 not. This is a story of a gallant and noble young man and a beautiful girl, of different na- tionalities, who loved each other before the war, and whose love conquered despite the war. "Whither thou goest, I will go; and where thou lodgest, I will lodge; thy people shall be my people." How nobly she answered the test of that saying, even though fate had set her coun- try against his country in enmity, is beauti- fully and dramatically told in this moving tale. A FINE NOVEL WITH A GREAT MESSAGE Americanization Russia .$1.50 1.50 Monroe Doctrine.. Prohibition $1.25 1.25 THE H. W. WILSON COMPANY 966 University Avenue New York City AT ALL BOOKSELLERS TEMPLE SCOTT 101 PARK AVE., NEW YORK When writing to advertisers please mention THE DIAL. 370 April 5 THE DIAL THE SKY PILOT IN No Man's LAND. By tion. Occasionally, it is true, one is enabled to shake Ralph Connor. Doran; $1.50. off this impression, for Mr. Weaving gives a sym- Ralph Connor has taken a safe course in his pathetic setting to a number of his themes. When latest venture in fiction. He has yoked the inspira- he is content to sing, he is most sure in his art. tional and the martial, and hitched them like a Emotional undercurrents have a trick of churning team of exen to the solid but lumbering cart which his verse into choppy waves. has served him all these years as the vehicle for literary expression. Structurally, his story creaks; PORTRAITS OF WHISTLER: A Critical Study of freshness of style there is none. His material and an Iconography. By A. E. Gallatin. abruptly to change the figure—is of that tested Lane; $12.50. weave which beguiles the ready-made mind, and Altogether fascinating is Gallatin's Portraits of the cutting and fitting has been carried out along Whistler, from its marbled boards to the collection ultra-conservative lines. Mr. Connor invests his of various and engaging portraits within. The hero, a young missionary who has the physical attri- butes of Apollo, with a verbal reliance upon God Critical Study, if not noteworthy for its originality, which assures a marked religious flavor. Depend- is interesting for the lights it throws on Whistler's ing upon that, he naturally leaves the finer demands own estimates of these portraits and caricatures. It of craftsmanship to providence, and as a conse- contains among other good things Beerbohm's defi- nition of the latter as that which“ with the simplest quence the narrative is littered with nearly all the means most accurately exaggerates to the highest outworn counters of conventional novel writing point the peculiarities of a human being, at his most which one can recall: “ From the furious scorn in his voice and in his flaming face she visibly shrank, characteristic moment, in the most beautiful man- almost as if he had struck her." ner.” The volume concludes with literary por- Silent she stood, as if still under the spell of his words, her eyes traits by Arthur Symons, Frank Harris, and others devouring his face." of a clever, sensitive, imperious creature, with the Her hand held his in a Alight of a butterfly and the thrust of a rapier. strong, warm grasp, but her eyes searched his face as if seeking something she greatly desired.” Whether for the sake of the reproductions of oils and dry-points and charcoal sketches by such HEARÐ MBLODIES. By Willoughby Weaving. worthies as Boldini, Rothenstein, Charles Keene. and Whistler himself, or for the rounded figure of Longmans, Green ; $2. the man one gets from such different views of him, The poet who allows himself to be distracted by the gallery is full of brilliance and charm. It a sheer multiplicity of verse forms fashions a hobble invites more of its kind, though it may be doubtful which is almost certain to trip him. If he dips if another artist will repay his biographer in por- first into one form and then into another, and fails traiture as richly as the autocrat of the ten o'clock. to fasten upon any inner guiding rule to steer his muse, the creature becomes tangled in the rhythmic AFRICA AND THE WAR. By Benjamin Braw- underbrush, and comes out scratched and unhappy. ley. Duffield; $1. This appears to have been the frequent fate of Mr. Weaving's muse. He tackles so many little This is a slight volume of a hundred odd pages, twists of rhyme, and splits his lines in so many a half given to a few slight essays, the other half to unexpected ways, that one seldom is able to fathom the subject-title. The author Sketches the Africa the inner harmony which may lie somewhere in the of today, the great prize for the imperialist and the wreckage. Intelligibility, though it sometimes seems exploiter, and asks that the German colonies be to have lost caste among the majority of contem- placed under an international tribunal, believing poraneous verse-makers, still has some rights, It that this will not only work well for the Negroes may be snubbed, but it can't be utterly ignored, as in German Africa, but will benefit all the Negroes of the continent. Mr. Weaving seems to have tried to do in these England and France, the chief stanzas, called Robins: possessors, and America, whose aid really decided the war, will find themselves working together in Small robing cheer the end of the year colonization, missions, and education on a scale When need for cheering is. never before contemplated.” The African should What bird doth sing so sweetly through the spring? be wisely educated, trained in mechanics, farming, My heart, aread me this. engineering, even in the professions, especially Richer maybe those songs of glee medicine. Those preeminently fitted to do this And wilder well I wis; work, Mr. Brawley believes, are the Negroes of But sweeter none than sing small robins dun the United States, and he ends his book with a plea When all things are amiss. for the training of American Negroes in the higher There is so much dashing about from one thing brings western civilization to the black men of the professional and technical studies that they may to another in Heard Melodies that the volume al- most gives the impression of exercises in versifica- African continent. The book is written in a delightful style. Es- . 1919 THE DIAL 371 ALL LANGUAGES BOOKS WANTED The Society of Nations Highest Prices Paid By T. J. LAWRENCE, LL.D. Formerly Pro- fessor of International Law, University of Chicago. Our large clearance sales of the last few weeks 8vo. (844 x 544), pp. xi + 194.........Net $1.50 have reduced our stock to point where we must buy to replenish. This is your chance to sell us Contents: The Origin of International Society at prices probably higher than any other dealer will -The Growth of International Society-Interna- pay-single volumes or libraries. We are espe tional Society in July, 1914–The Partial Over- cially interested in fine sets. We will call anywhere throw of International Law-Conditions of Recon- and make offer. struction-Rebuilding of International Society. At all Booksellers or from the Publishers Malkan's Telephone OXFORD UNIVERSITY PRESS 44 Broadway, New York Brond 3900 AMERICAN BRANCH 35 WEST THIRTY-SECOND STREET NEW YORK Balder's Death and Loke's Punishment NEW YORK A poetioal version of Incidents from Northern Mythology with tlus- Ave at 24 trations from the rare series with which Frolich Illustratod to Edda. By Cornelia Steketec Hulst Boards, 75c. Tho HON. RASMUS B. ANDERSON, author of "Norme Mytholocy." has bestowed on the author the following com- mondation: "Cornelia Steketee Hulet has comprebonded all the strength, power and beauty, all the profound philosopby con- talped in the Eddio Myths. The goddess Saga must have taken BOOKS her by the hand and led her into the bollest of holes of Teuton- dom... Mrs Hulst has indeed taken doep draughts from the Fountains of Urd and Mimir. I take great pleasure in be stowing on her this well-merited commendation." OPEN COURT PUBLISHING COMPANY 122 South Michigan Avenue CHICAGO, ILL. CO20 Power HATO BH rentano Booksellers to the World ALL Whatever book you want Hawawalers -BOOKS -BOOKS You can save considerable de- tail, delay and transportation B expense by securing your entire B O miscellaneous book requirements 0 O from us. K Quotations on quantity book purchases made K S on request S THE BAKER & TAYLOR CO. has it, or will get it. We buy old, rare books, and sets of books NEW YORK and PHILADELPHIA Wholesale Dealers in the Books of All PubUshero 854 Fourth Ave. NEW YORK At Twenty-Sixth St. -BOOKS VIMS THE MODERN LIBRARY OF THE WORLD'S BEST BOOKS Sixty-four titles now published-14 new volumes just issued. The Dial says “There is scarcely a title that fails to awaken interest. The series is doubly welcome at this time" -only 70c. a volume wherever books are sold. Catalog on request. BONI & LIVERIGHT, 105% W. 40th Street, New York ThePutnam Bookstore sooms" 2west 45 st. Ware. N. Y. Book Buyers who cannot get satisfactory local service, are urged to establish relations with our bookstore. We handle every kind of book, wherever published. Questions about literary matters answered promptly. We have customers in nearly every part of the globe. Safe delivery guaranteed to any address. Our bookselling experience extends over 80 years. FOR THE BOOK LO VER Rare books-First editions-Books now out of print. Latest Catalogue Sent on Request C. GERHARDT, 25 W. 42d Street, New York BOOKS, AUTOGRAPHS, PRINTS. Catalogues Free. R. ATKINSON,97 Sunderland Road, Forest Hill, LONDON, ENG. When writing to advertisers please mention THE DIAL. 372 April 5 THE DIAL T 24 pecially noteworthy is the chapter on Livingston, AFTERGLOW. By James Fenimore Cooper, one of the greatest of explorers and most humane Jr. Yale University Press; $1. of men. If his spirit had dominated the white Thrice fitting is the title Afterglow for the slen- men who went later to Africa, we should have seen, der collection of poems by Captain Cooper. The instead of the monstrous and cruel exploitation of the last fifty years, a fine, intelligent development book is a posthumous publication; it contains vague, of native industry and power. sweet, and delicate expressions of quiet moods; and it truly serves as an evanescent afterglow to the bulkier work of the poet's great-grand father. Oc- The Curious Quest. By E. Phillips Op- casionally there is a poem to be grateful for; such penheim. Little, Brown; $1.50. a one is An Answer, a neat rejoinder to those scien- tific ones who attempt to mark out all life with lens We do not know whether Mr. Oppenheim is bent upon forging his own five-foot shelf, but certainly of metrical verse lack rarity and subtlety and depth , and rule. But because these gracefully turned bits he has made a brave beginning: by the testimony one is forced to conclude that the Cooper literary of a list published in the back of the present novel it is the latest in a brood of forty-four. Facing such talent, emerging from underground in the fourth in record, one is tempted from the critical highroad generation, remains still only a talent. The best into speculative bypaths, there to marvel upon the pages of the volumes are not poetry, but an essay methods of literary incubation which make possible at the back, on Religion, in which a forthright state- so prolific an output. This assiduous production, at ment of values and of the need for self-realization any rate, throws light upon the author's occasional is given in a manner worthy of Randolph Bourne. slump in inventiveness. It doubtless accounts for Books of the Fortnight the framework of the present novel, in which Mr. Oppenheim has turned to a device that is beginning The following list comprises The Dial's selec- to creak from overwork—the devious adventures of tion of books recommended among the publications a millionaire who wagers with his physician that he received during the last two weeks: can start with a five-pound note and live for a year on his own resources. Proposed Roads to Freedom: Socialism, Anarchism, From this familiar spring- board, we dive into a narrative which whirls the and Syndicalism. By Bertrand Russell . [2mo, 218 pages. Henry Holt & Co. $1.50. young idler through the usual difficulties attending these eccentric figments of the best-selling imagina- Altruism: Its Nature and Varieties. By George tion. Our hero meets the usual types and the usual Herbert Palmer. i2mo, 138 pages. Charles typist, and comes through the delightful ordeal in a Scribner's Sons. $1.25. manner befitting a gentleman and a millionaire. Richard Cobden, The International Man. By J. The complications are ample for the purposes of A. Hobson. Illustrated, 12mo, 415 pages. light entertainment; the manner is tailored to the Henry Holt & Co. $5.00. matter. The characters are artificially warmed into Musings and Memories of a Musician. By George existence; their relation to life is about as intimate Henschel. 8vo, 398 pages. Macmillan Co. $5. as that of the egg to the incubator. Voltaire in His Letters: Being a Selection from His Correspondence. Translated, with an in- Tales Of An Old SEA Port. By Wilfrid troduction, by S. G. Tallentyre. Illustrated, Harold Munro. Princeton University Press. 8vo, 270 pages. G. P. Putnam's Sons. $3.50. $1.50. In the Key of Blue, and Other Prose Essays. By John Addington Symonds. 12mo, 302 pages. The wild adventures of Simeon Potter, Norwest Macmillan Co. John, and De Wolf Hopper's ship Yankee have stimulated the romantic fancies of many generations Essays, Irish and American. Mac- Yeats. of Bristol, Rhode Island, youth. The outsider is Illustrated, 12mo, 95 pages. millan Co. $1.50. given an intimate introduction to these historic characters in Tales of an Old Sea Port. The Wild Swans at Coole. Verse. By W. B. Mr. Munro has published the Yankee's log, the remi- Yeats. I 2mo, 114 pages. niscences of Norwest John-one of the first Amer- $1.25. icans to encircle the world via Siberia—and a letter Look! We Have Come Through. Verse. By D. about Simeon Potter, the most interesting of the H. Lawrence. 8vo, 163 pages. three. In 1740, while on a privateering expedition Huebsch. $1.50. against the French, Captain Potter captured a mis- Civilization, 1914-1917. sionary father whom he kept prisoner for a few Duhamel. 12mo, 288 pages. days. Father Fauque has reported the incident in $1.50. a charming letter that serves as a corrective to the The Amethyst Ring. exaggerated tales of Potter's strength as recorded by tradition. France. Edited by Frederic Chapman. 8vo, 304 pages. John Lane Co. $2. By John Butler Macmillan Co. B. W. Sketches. By Georges Century Co. A novel. By Anatole 1919 373 THE DIAL JUST RECEIVED ng First Editions, Choice Items in Fine Bindings, Standard Sets and Miscellaneous Books. (No List.) Send for Spring Bargain Catalog McDEVITT-WILSON'S, Inc. 30 Church St. Hudson Terminal Phone 1779 Cort. FIGHTING BYNG WORLD-POWER AND EVOLUTION By ELLSWORTH HUNTINGTON, PH.D. Author of “ Civilization and Climate" Cloth, 30 illustrations, $2.50 YALE UNIVERSITY PRESS NEW HAVEN, CONNECTICUT NEW YORK CITY 120 College Street 280 Madison Avenue LAWRENCE C. WOODMAN for several years a literary adviser for Henry Holt & Co., book-reviewer for the New York Evening Post, New York Tribune, The Independent, etc., and, of late, in the Infantry, announces the revival of his Coöperative Literary Bureau, and bis conversational, sympathetic and frank-perhaps brutally frank" letters of criticism. Send for circular. THE COÖPERATIVE LITERARY BUREAU 467 Manhattan Avenue YORK CITY A bang-up Secret Service story by A. Stonema peach of a mystery- with spies-detectives- big business and block- ade-runners in a free- for-all. At all dealers. $1.50 net. Being the Book of Ecclesiastes By MORRIS JASTROW, JR., Ph.D., LL.D., Author of "The War and the Bagdad Railway," etc. Small 4to. $2.00 net A delightfully human book on the Omar Khayyam of the Bible with an exact translation of the original text. How it came to be written and who wrote it (and it was not Solomon) .why additions were made to the original text and the whole Interesting story 18 here given. BRITTON PUBLISHING COMPANY 354 Fourth Ave., New York J. B.Lippincott Company, Philadelphia "Not only Miss Delafield's best work so far, but almost the best novel that has been published this year."--Westminster Gazette. THE PELICANS BOOK REPAIR and RESTORATION By Mitchell S. Buck A manual of practical suggestions for Bibliophiles. Clear and reliable instructions for removing stains, re- backing, repairing and preserving old bindings, remarks on rarity in books, auctions, and a chapter on Greek and Latin classics in translation. With 17 illustrations. 1000 copies from type. Net $2.00 By E. M. DELAFIELD Now ready. At all bookshop8, $1.75 net ALFRED A. KNOPF, New York NICHOLAS L. BROWN 80 Lexington Ave. CI V I L I ZA TION By Georges Duhamel Won the Goncourt Prize for 1918. Masterly fiction presenting the French soldier as he is. Price $1.50. Published by THE CENTURY CO., New York REPRESENTATIVE BRITISH DRAMAS: Victorian and Modern ONE OF THEM By Elizabeth Hasanovitz The pilgrimage of a Russian girl to the Land of Freedom and her life in the gar- ment factories of New York. *$2.00 net. HOUGHTON MIFFLIN COMPANY, BOSTON Edited by MONTROSE J. MOSES The League of Nations, Today and Tomorrow By H. M. Kallen-$1.50 net MARSHALL JONES COMPANY 212 Summer St., Boston A Series of Dramas which Illustrate the prog- ress of tbe British Dramatist, and emphasize the important features of the History of the British Tbeatre. This Volume contains the complete teat of 21 plays. Mr. Moses bas been fortunate in securing the most notable English Dramas, from Sheridan Knowles down to John Masefield; and the most representative Irish Dramas from William Butler Yates down to Lord Dunsany. 873 pages. $4.00 net. LITTLE, BROWN & CO.: Publishers, Boston When writing to advertisers please mention The Din. 374 April 5 THE DIAL Current News Early Illustrated Books: A History of the Decora- This month Stephen McKenna's novel, Midas tion and Illustration of Books in the 15th and 16th and Son, will be brought out in this country by the Centuries (Dutton; $2). The original text of Dorans. this delightful landmark in bibliography has been The Macmillan Co. have now imported at $1.50 changed only to admit corrections, in which the author has had the assistance of Mr. Victor Schol- The Candle of Vision, by “A. E.” (George W. derer, of the British Museum. The numerous Russell), which the English Macmillans published late last year and which Ernest A. Boyd reviewed in illustrations are excellently reproduced. The other The Dial for January 11. is an essay by Wilbur Macey Stone on The Divine Under the title The Atlantic Monthly and Its and Moral Songs of Isaac Watts, which was origi- nally published in 1715 and was the first Makers M. A. DeWolfe Howe has written an an- song book ecdotal historical sketch of the magazine and the written and printed for children. Before its popu- eight editors that have directed it since its founding larity passed, a century and a half later, the little in 1857. The volume, which is illustrated, is pub- book ran to nearly six hundred editions, a tentative lished by the Atlantic Monthly Press at $1. list of which is appended to Mr. Stone's rather The United States Catalogue Supplement, a precious historical essay. The volume is published cumulative index of books published in the United by The Triptych, 15 Park Row, New York City, States from 1912 to 1917, listing 81,000 volumes, in a limited edition at $2.50. has just been issued by the H. W. Wilson Co. The Report of the Librarian of Congress for the The next issue in the series will be bound June year which ended last June (Government Print- 30, 1919 and will cover the publications of the ing Office: 45 cts.) affords an index of the war's previous eighteen months. effect upon book publishing in this country. Ac- Vincent Starrett has made Arthur Machen the cessions by copyright fell off more than a thousand subject of a thirty-one page monograph published titles from the 1917 figure—13,713 as against in Chicago by Walter M. Hill. The essay, which 14,738. The total accessions were 32,638 fewer is rather popularly written, is not unfairly charac- than in 1917. In fact, the only sources that pro- terized by its sub-title: A Novelist of Ecstasy and vided more titles than in the previous year were the Sin. Two hitherto uncollected poems by Mr. public printer, the state governments, and the Machen—The Remembrance of the Bard, and The Library's own publications. Probably the most in- Praise of Myfanwy—are appended. teresting purchases were twenty-eight additions to The Department of Labor has now published a the collection of first or early editions of dramas supplementary List of References which adds 460 Farquhar, Fletcher, Ford, Gascoigne, Heywood , and romances, the list including plays by Dekker, titles to the 415 titles of its Reconstruction Bibliog- raphy, compiled by Laura A. Thompson, issued last Massinger, and others. A notable gift, in view of December. Another valuable bibliography has been the approaching Whitman Centenary, was that from prepared by the Library War Service of the Ameri- Mr. Thomas B. Harned, consisting of a large por- can Library Association, a list of books on subjects scrapbooks , pamphlets, periodicals, various editions, tion of the literary remains of Walt Whitman taught in re-education hospitals. There is strange bottling in The Wine of Aston- manuscript, and clippings. ishment, by Mary Hastings Bradley (Appleton; $1.50). The author keeps both her hero and her Contributors heroine in the vineyard of virginity against all odds. For this purpose the man vanquishes temptation in Frank Tannenbaum joined the army last summer , repeated encounters, while the girl is fenced about and his military experience has included three dif- marriage of friendship,” from which she ferent branches of the service and training in two is finally released. The Wine of Astonishment is camps. redolent of pungent puritanism. Cuthbert Wright, an editor of the Harvard Essays Irish and American, by John Butler Yeats, originally published by the Talbot Press, the A. E. F. in France. He is the author of One Monthly before his induction into the army, is with Dublin, has now been imported by the Macmillan Company at $1.50. The volume—which includes Way of Love (Brentano, 1916; $1), and was one Recollections of Samuel Butler, Back to the Home, of the contributors to the anthology Eight Harvard Why the Englishman Is Happy, Synge and the Poets (Gomme, 1917; $1). Irish, The Modern Woman, Watts and the Emanuel Carnevali was born in Florence. He has Method of Art, and an appreciation by “A. E.”- contributed to several magazines and has won one was_reviewed by Ernest Boyd in the December of the annual prizes of Poetry: A Magazine of 14. DIAL. Verse. His first book, The Rhythmical Talk of Bibliophiles of the erudite sort will welcome two E. C., will soon be published. recent books about books. One is a second edition, after a quarter-century, of Alfred W. Pollard's ously written for The DIAL. The other contributors to this issue have previ- with a 1919 THE DIAL 375 Are You Different? Here are random sentences from our morning mail Some of these letters are from old subscribers Some are from new acquaintances Some of the writers are lawyers, some are women of affairs, one is the president of a college, another a United States Senator and one a “ returned soldier 99 You bet your life I want The Dial.—Los Angeles, Cal. Under no circumstances stop sending The Dial.—Buffalo, N. Y. This is just the magazine I have been looking for so long: --Pittsfield, Mass. I have been borrowing copies, but I can no longer do without copies of my own.—Oxford, O. The Dial has developed wonderfully these latter months, and is cer- tainly doing great work in the guidance of our best American thinking.–Beloit, Wis. Be assured that I highly appreciate The Dial and renew my sub- scription, hoping there will be no abatement of the analysis of Thorstein Veblen.—Hot Springs, Mont. Have occasionally bought copies at the newsstands and have always been so pleased with their contents that I now would like to be a regular subscriber.-Wilson, Minn. You seem to show some of the kick that made the Seven Arts worth while. The writer has just returned from a year in service and is very sure the men are sick of the mush that is handed out in most of the current magazines and papers.—Elba, Mich. Are you different, Mr. Newsstand Reader, from these subscribers? Are you looking for intelligent guidance, for kick? for courage and independence? Why, if you are not different, don't you put your shoulder to the wheel and sign up? Why don't you greet us in tomorrow morning's mail with the coupon below? We are waiting for you! DIAL PUBLISHING COMPANY 152 West 13th St., New York Date. I have been a hit-or-miss newsstand reader of The Dial, but I want you to have my moral support and I want to have The Dial regularly. I enclose $3.00 for a year's subscription. D4/5 When writing to advertisers please mention THE DIAL. 376 THE DIAL Apr.3 IMPORTANT SPRING BOOKS THE CITY OF COMRADES UYU THE DESERT OF WHEAT By ZANE GREY “ Zane Grey has the secret of writing a rat- tling good story. He has always had a keen, appreciative sense of literary standards, and, besides, has lived up to them sincerely in every one of the many volumes of Western stories he has written. Dumas did not compose more steadily nor more elaborately." —New York Sun. " Mr. Grey has written no finer work of fic- tion than this heart-gripping, romance of the wheat country. It is a fascinating, an impressive, a great book."—New York Tribune. Illustrated. $1.50 By BASIL KING The story of a down-and-outer who found his soul. With a vision and mercy–Basil King has handled the problem that interests us more than ever before. He has touched it with that spiritual fire-that loftiness—which for ten years has made his books not merely good stories, but inspiration to the spirit-food for the soul. It is the drama of souls laid bare by a master. It will grip you. Illustrated. $1.75 HUMORESQUE GREGG By FLETA CAMPBELL SPRINGER “A book of distinction. The ulti- mate audience for this fine novel should be in the tens of thousands. People become aware of such a story slowly. People once aware can no more be restrained from telling others about it than they can be restrained from breath- ing."-N. Y. Sun. $1.50 $1.50 THE PRIVATE WIRE TO WASHINGTON By HAROLD MacGRATH This is a mystery so exciting — so deep- schemed that even the Secret Service couldn't unravel it. So cleverly is the mystery con- cealed-80 adroitly woven the tangle of in-. trigue and romance that this story is destined to stand out brightly in the list of this year's best-sellers Never before has Harold MacGrath written a story so brilliant-so enthralling—so grip- ping as this one. $1.35 By FANNIE HURST In this day of short stories, the name of Fannie Hurst stands out to-day as O'Henry's name stood out a few years ago. Why? She knows people just people and she tells the truth about them. She knows you and your neighbor. Deep down into your hearts she sees, with a great sympathy, a big human understanding. This new book is the best, the finest thing she has ever done. If you liked her earlier stories, you will like these even more. If you don't know them at all, begin now. HIS FRIEND, MISS McFARLANE By KATE LANGLEY BOSHER A delightful new story by the author of “ Mary Cary. As only Mrs. Bosher can, she has woven a fascinating girl into a sparkling, un- forgettable story. Once more she has given the world a book that warms the heart—that glows with her human touch. Once more she has written a delightful romance of smiles behind tears-of youth and sunshine. $1.50 THE HIGH FLYERS By CLARENCE BUDINGTON KELLAND The flavor and the color and the heart of America are in this story of a boy who found his soul through a spiritual struggle more thrilling than the duel he fought in the clouds --more mysterious than the baffling German plot he unravelled-more dramatic than the big chance he risked for his country's honor. EXPERIMENTS IN INTERNATIONAL ADMINISTRATION By FRANCIS BOWES SAYRE “It is quite obvious that such a book as this is just about the most timely and useful that could possibly be put forth, now that the ques- tion of a league of nations to enforce peace is the dominant question in the mind of the world. We owe great thanks to Mr. Sayre." -- New York Tribune. Post 8vo. $1.50 $1.50 GUARANTEES OF PEACE By WOODROW WILSON This timely volume presents, in a convenient and permanent form, the public messages and addresses of the President, from January 31, 1918, to December 2, 1918. It supplements the two earlier collections of “Why We Are at War” and “In Our First Year of War." Post 8vo. $1.00 KEEPING FIT ALL THE WAY By WALTER CAMP Mr. Camp here preaches the gospel of health to middle-aged men. He points out the danger to health in a man's allowing himself to get out of good physical condition, and he tells him how he may recover his impaired vitality. Profusely Illustrated. Post 8vo. Cloth, $1.15 HARPER & BROTHERS Established 1817 NEW YORK When writing to advertisers please mention THE DIAL. THE DIAL How to Secure the German Indemnity A FORTNIGHTLY VOL. LXVI NEW YORK NO. 788 APRIL 19, 1919 Spring Educational Number . . How to SECURE THE GERMAN INDEMNITY John S. Codman 385 THE END OF APRIL. Verse Allen Tucker 387 Peace IN ITS ECONOMIC Aspects .H. J. Davenport 388 UNIVERSITY RECONSTRUCTION AND THE CLASSICS Royal Case Nemiah 390 A SECOND IMAGINARY CONVERSATION George Moore 394 Gosse and Moore, III COBDEN, THE INTERNATIONALIST Robert Morss Lovett 399 LIVING DOWN THE HYPHEN 401 PATRIOTISM AND ITS CONSEQUENCES Lewis Mumford 406 A VINDICATION OF FIELDING Helen Sard Hughes 407 LIBERALISM INVINCIBLE Harold Stearns 409 LABOR CONTROL OF GOVERNMENT INDUSTRIES Helen Marot' 411 EXPERIMENTAL SCHOOLS Caroline Pratt 413 A PERSPECTIVE OF DEATH H. M. Kallen 415 LONDON, FEBRUARY 20 Edward Shanks 417 I Watch ONE WOMAN KNITTING. Verse David Morton 418 EDITORIALS 419 FOREIGN COMMENT : The Soviets and the Schools 422 COMMUNICATIONS: A Noble Translation.-A Change of Name 423 NOTES ON New BOOKS: The Flail.—The Vocational Re-education of Maimed Soldiers. 424 -The Vocational Education of Girls and Women.—The Tragedy of Tragedies.-The Cambridge History of American Literature.--Forced Movements, Tropism, and Animal Conduct.—The English Poets.—The Poets of the Future. SPRING EDUCATIONAL List 434 CURRENT NEWS . . 436 THE DIAL (founded in 1880 by Francis F. Browne) is published every other Saturday by The Dial Publishing Com- pany, Inc.-Martyn Johnson, President-at 152 West Thirteenth Street, New York, N. Y. Entered as Second Class matter at the Post Office at New York, N. Y., August 3, 1918, under the act of March 3, 1897. Copyright, 1919, by The Dial Publishing Company, Inc. Foreign Postage, 50 cents. $3.00 a Year 15 Cents a Copy 378 10 THE DIAL April 19 MR. HUEBSCH has just published these books whose profound significance at this juncture is obvious: The British Revolution and the American Democracy by NORMAN ANGELL N interpretation of British Labour Programmes" is the subtitle, but the book is far more comprehensive “A than that suggests. It is an examination into social, economic and industrial reconstruction as abruptly focused by the war. It explains the relegation to the past of political and national issues and the rise oi issues based on new systems. It explains the presence of issues for which we are pitifully unprepared. Then, for guidance in our bewilderment, the author recounts British labor history, discusses its programme and relates it to our own problems. As if for good measure--but really because the questions are indispensable to a healthy readjustment of this weary world—Mr. Angell adds a section under the significant title, “The Dangers," con- sisting of these three chapters: A Society of Free Men or the Servile State?; The Herd and Its Hatred of Free- dom; Why Freedom Matters. There are two appendices: The Report of the British Labour Party on Recon- struction and the little known (on this side) but importa nt Lansbury-Herald Proposal. (Cloth, $1.50) be The Covenant of Peace by H. N. Brailsford In the confusion of partisan criticism and indiscriminate advocacy it will prove instructive to examine this con- cise account of the broad general prin- ciples that must govern a valid consti- tution for a League of Nations. The English Review offered £100 for the best essay on the subject and the dis- tinguished jury included such men as H. G. Wells, John Galsworthy and Professor Bury. The vagaries of fate caused the best man to win, for Mr. Brailsford is concededly the most capable exponent of the plan which, if carried out honestly, will make a decent peace possible. Mr. HERBERT CROLY writes an introduction to the pamphlet. (25 cents) CONCERNING MORAL OBLIGATIONS Publishing books, besides being a commercial enter- prise, may a public service. A publisher who does not recognize his responsibility runs the same risk of be- coming a shyster, quack or hypocrite lawyer, physician or priest. The degree in which a pub- lisher fails to discharge his obligation to society may be measured by the number of perunas that bear his imprint. as The Taxation of Mines in Montana by Louis Levine A title may be misleading. This is not a dry book. It is so closely related to the educational and political life of our time as to have caused the Univer- sity of Montana to suspend its author who was professor of economics, on the day after publication. Here is the first intensive study of the constitu- tion and laws, as they relate to taxa- tion, of a state in which monopolized natural resources preponderate in the taxable property; of the merits of the system; of the defects in the laws; of the exhaustibility of the mines. In fine, all of the facts are presented im- partially. Remembering the relation of the Anaconda Copper Mining Co. to the state of Montana, the volume acquires a lively interest for students of politics and government as well as for those whose immediate activities lie in the field of economics. (Paper covers, $1.00) (Cloth, $1.00) And these books, though not so new, are equally important: The Restoration of Trade Union Con- The Aims of Labor ditions by Sidney Webb. (Paper, 50c.) by Arthur Henderson “Without exception the wisest and weightiest pronounce ment on these issues that has come from an English publi- “Mr. Henderson has done a great public service. cist."-H. J. LASKI in The New Republic. Broadly speaking, what he has done is to search out the dif. ficulties a democracy must encounter in its efforts at self- Women and the Labour Party realization and to state the means by wbich British labor hopes to surmount them."--The Bookman. by Marion Phillips and others. (Paper,50c.) “ For the purpose of awakening women to a knowledge of Jean Jaurès the problems of the old world, as they affect women, carried over into the new, we think this book will serve a useful by Margaret Pease purpose. The variety of subjects it treats makes it adapted to women of the professional as well as the wage-working class."-JAMES ONEAL in The New York Call. “A timely book and a difficult task excellently performed." -J. B. KERFOOT in Life. OBTAINABLE AT BOOK STORES OR, BY ADDING 10% FOR POSTAGE, OF (Cloth, $1.00) B. W. Huebsch Publisher 32 WEST 58th ST., NEW YORK When writing to advertisers please mention THE DIAL. 1 1919 379 THE DIAL THE OPEN COURT PUBLISHING COMPANY Announces A New Book on the Greatest Writer of To-Day ANATOLE FRANCE By Lewis Piaget Shanks Assistant Professor of Romance Languages and Literatures in the University of Wisconsin. This book is of great present interest because this Frenchman long ago responded to problems of social reorganization, democratic world-policy, war and a lasting peace-foreseeing many of the rational solutions now everywhere discussed. Ready April 15th. Cloth, $1.50 Education in Ancient Israel By FLETCHER H. SWIFT From the earliest times to 70 A.D. Professor of Education in the College of Education, University of Minnesota The book attempts to explain what are the fundamental characteristics of Hebrew religion and morals, and what part education played in the development of the religious and moral con- sciousness of that race. Cloth, $1.25 Virgil's Prophecy on the Saviour's Birth The Fourth Eclogue Edited and translated by Dr. Paul Carus Virgil's Fourth Eclogue, which is pre-Christian, proves that the hopes of Christians and pagans had many ideals in common, and such were the return of the golden age, i.e., the coming of the Kingdom of God and the advent of a Saviour. Price, 50c. What Is a Dogma By EDOUARD LE ROY Translated from the French A brilliant criticism in Catholic doctrine by an eminent priest. Price, 50c. Balder's Death and Loke's Punishment By CORNELIA STEKETEE HULST A free verse rendering of two of the chief incidents recorded in the Eddas. The illustrations are selected from the rare series with which Frölich illustrated the Eddas. Boards, 75 cents Boole's Collected Logical Works By GEORGE BOOLE Vol. II. The Laws of Thought With the recent revival of the study of philosophical and mental origin of mathematics, George Boole's Collected Logical Works. attempts an intricate survey of the laws of thought. 445 pages. Price, $3.00 A Modern Job By ETIENNE GIRAN Translated by Fred Rothwell This little volume is a welcome indication of the direction in which the human mind is turning nowadays for the solution of the deepest problems, pain and evil. Cloth, 75c. TWO BOOKS BY EUGENIORIGNANO Essays in Scientific Synthesis On the Inheritance of Acquired Characters Translated by J. W. Greenstreet Translated by Basil C. H. Harvey Rignano's studies lie in the borderland be- Old theories under the searchlight of mod tween physical chemistry and biology and in- ern scientific experiment. Compares and ana dicate a possible road to the understanding of lyzes results obtained by the direct experiment the physical nature of living substance as dis- of the specialist. tinguished from the non-living substance. 250 pages. Cloth, $2.00 413 pages. Cloth, $2.00 OPEN COURT PUB. CO., 122 S. Michigan Avenue, Chicago When writing to advertisers please mention THE DIAL. 380 April 19 THE DIAL A Collected Edition of the Novels of LEONARD MERRICK First Printing from entirely new plates limited to 1,500 copies of each volume. No- table among special editions because of the prominence in literature of the men who have written the prefaces to the separate volumes. The Novels included: With Prefaces by: Conrad in Quest of His Youth.... Sir JAMES M. BARRIE The Actor-Manager... WILLIAM DEAN HOWELLS Cynthia. MAURICE HEWLETT The Position of Peggy Harper ......Sir ARTHUR PINERO The Man Who Understood Women...... .W. J. LOCKE When Love Flies Out of the Window. Sir W. R. NICOLL The Worldlings. .NEIL MUNRO The Quaint Companions. .H. G. WELLS One Man's View.. GRANVILLE BARKER The Man Who Was Good. .J. K. PROTHERO The House of Lynch... G. K. CHESTERTON A Chair on the Boulevard. A. NEIL LYONS The First of the Above Volumes is Now Ready. $2.00 net Conrad in Quest of His Youth Edward Garnett describes this whimsical picture of a man returned to his early home after years of absence, striving to recapture remembered zest and charm, as "perhaps the most piquant and appetizing dish of fiction that our generation will taste." Net, $2.00 Others to follow as soon as possible. Send for a descriptive circular AUTHORIZED AMERICAN EDITIONS OF NOVELS BY . VICENTE BLASCO IBANEZ Net, $1.90 THE FOUR HORSEMEN OF THE APOCALYPSE Translated by CHARLOTTE BREWSTER JORDAN Everywhere recognized as the one truly great novel of the war, which 95% of the dealers reporting book sales name as the novel in greatest demand in the United States. BLOOD AND SAND Translated by Mrs. W. A. GILLESPIE, Just ready, Introduction by Dr. ISAAC GOLDBERG powerful , rising to an intensely exciting climas, and under the surface an unequaled interpretation A brilliant panorama of the bull-ring, in all its relations to the social life of Spain. Tremendously of Spanish character. THE SHADOW OF THE CATHEDRAL Translated by Mrs. W. A. GILLESPIE. Introduction by W. D. HOWELLS A study of struggle against the lethargy of literacy and superstition, set against a background.96 wonderful majesty and beauty. IN PREPARATION LA BODEGA (The Saloon) Translated by Dr. I. GOLDBERG Under the stirring plot of love and intrigue is a study of the effects and causes of drunkenness in Spain. MARE NOSTRUM (Our Sea) Translated by CHARLOTTE B. JORDAN A powerful story of the German submaríne warfare in the Mediterranean. ORDER FROM ANY BOOK SELLER OR E. P. 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DUTTON & COMPANY 681 FIFTH AVENUE NEW YORK When writing to advertisers please mention THE DIAL. 382 April 19 THE DIAL The New Internationalism is not an interest for statesmen alone, but for men of commerce and of busi- ness. It can mean little in our social, economic and industrial reconstruction, unless each thoughtful American realizes that his own activities are intimately involved with those of his neighbor over-seas. Is it clear to you, Mr. Fellow American, that all this talk of international friendliness means something vital to you—and to your business? All Publications in English In the Commerce of Thought Perhaps you have read one or two books by the great authors of northern Europe, but do you know anything of the enduring strength of the PROSE EDDA and of MODERN ICELANDIC PLAYS, of the richness of Swedish lyrics from 1750 down to our own day, of Jacobsen's novels-indeed anything of the scope of Northern literature and its great- ness? 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Tell us to whom and where we are to send book, magazine and bill. Name Address When writing to advertisers please mention The DIAL. 1919 383 THE DIAL New and Forthcoming Publications of the Cambridge University Press History of Modern France, 1815- South America and the War 1913 By F. A. KIRKPATRICK, M.A. By EMILE BOURGEOIS. In two volumes. The substance of a course of lectures given in Vol. I, 1815-1852. Vol. II, 1852-1913 the Lent term 1918, at King's College, London. With a map. $2.50 An important and timely work, in which the author bas traced without political bias, and with impartiality, the lines of that remarkable political Technical Handbook of Oils, Fats evolution through which France has been able to realize the principle and to establish the institu and Waxes. Vol. II tion of democracy. Sold in sets only. $6.50 By PERCIVAL J. FRYER, F.I.C., F.C.S., and Selections from Sainte-Beuvę FRANK E. WESTON, B.Sc., B.C. 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THE DIAL A FORTNIGHTLY How to Secure the German Indemnity E VERY MAN WHO WILL allow his reason full sway the Allies therefore would have to pay it themselves, rather than his passions and emotions, every man merely securing the advantage of free access to Ger- who cares more about the restoration of Belgium many's natural resources. and France and the other countries devastated by In addition, in so far as the Germans were de- the Germans than he does about punishing the Ger- prived of access to their natural resources, their mans for the devastation, must realize that the only mines, their agricultural lands and so on, they would practical way to secure the great financial indemnity become unable to help themselves and would there- demanded on behalf of the devastated countries is fore starve or become the objects of Allied and to set the German people to work in productive en American charity. Neither of these alternatives terprise. There is, however, a real fear that if this can be considered. On humanitarian grounds alone be done the payment of the indemnity may turn out the first alternative is out of the question; and to be a boomerang injuring those who receive it more further, in either case, a stupendous army of oc- than those who pay it. This fear among the states cupation would be required to war upon the German men of the Allied nations is well expressed by Lloyd people whether the object were to pauperize them George in a speech made at Newcastle on Nov. 29 or to starve them. We cannot avoid, therefore, giv- last, in which he said that Germany must pay the ing employment to the German people if we desire cost of the war up to the limit of her capacity, and the indemnity paid, and the larger the indemnity de- then uttered these words: 'But I must use one manded the greater must be the opportunities af- word of warning. We have to consider the question fordeď to German labor. of Germany's capacity. Whatever happens, Ger It might be thought, however, that if German many is not to be allowed to pay her indemnity by labor must be employed, then at least it should not dumping cheap goods upon us. That is the only be employed for the profit of German capitalists, but limit in principle we are laying down. She must should be employed directly in the service of the not be allowed to pay for her wanton damage and Allied nations; and it might be suggested, therefore, devastation by dumping cheap goods and wrecking that Allied capital, or confiscated German capital, our industries.” In other words, the danger appears or both, should be used in the employment of Ger- to be that if the Germans are allowed opportunity mans in Germany. But to this suggestion of directly to produce and exchange, their competition will diverting capital to the employment of Germans in wreck the industries of other nations, causing unem- Germany all the laboring men in every Allied coun- ployment and disaster. Already with the end of try would protest. They will insist that, at this war, unemployment is becoming a serious problem time of all times when employment appears to be everywhere. How then can the Germans be put to scarce, all capital available shall be employed at work without lessening, the opportunities of em- home. ployment for the peoples of the Allied nations? Another plan of securing reparation, which has There is one way, perhaps, of side-stepping the actually been suggested, is that German laborers whole question of giving Germans employment. It shall be forced to go into Belgium and France and can be done by excluding them altogether, or in part, there be made to repair the actual damage done, from access to the natural resources of their own rebuilding the shattered cities and towns, repairing country and then securing the indemnity by develop- the damaged mines, and restoring the devastated ing those natural resources by means of Allied and fields. This would look like stern justice to some American capital and labor. To be sure, we could people, who fail to consider that the particular Ger- hardly say that under such circumstances the Ger mans forced into this slavery would almost surely be mans would be paying the indemnity. They would those least responsible for the outbreak of the war simply be deprived of the opportunity to pay it, and and the atrocities committed in carrying it on. Jus- 386 April 19 THE DIAL tice aside, however, it is certain that any such plan The first objection to this suggestion is that would be condemned at once by the laboring classes wrecking German industries would hinder the pay- of the devastated regions. They would no more ment of the indemnity. Second, however, and more permit their jobs to be taken away from them in this important, the plan would not work out as above way by Germans than they would permit the gov supposed because if the Germans could not export ernment to use conviets as strike breakers. This anything they would have no means of paying for plan too is entirely out of the question. the imports, and for that reason no imports would It appears then that after all it will be necessary there be. to permit the Germans to exploit their own resources To some it would seem that the best plan would by their own labor and capital; and that the more be to allow nature to take its course, or in other quickly and effectively they are able to produce, the words to permit trade between the Germans and more quickly will the Allies receive the indemnities other peoples without governmental interference. It demanded. is certain that if this were done, trade would soon But does it follow that the Allied nations and our spring up not only between Germans and English, selves should trade with the Germans? If it will between Germans and Americans, but also even be- enable the Germans to produce more quickly and tween Germans, and French. Unless trading is effectively, it would seem that the Allies ought to mutually advantageous to the traders, it will not allow trade with them, and we also, if we desire take place. On the other hand, if mutually advan- to help the Allies; but if, as Lloyd George seems tageous, nothing will stop it except direct govern- to think, the dumping of cheap goods will wreck mental interference. Perhaps the interference of British industries, or our industries, then surely we government with the trade of its citizens may not ought to think twice about it. How to secure in- always be harmful, but at all events it is certain that demnity to a nation, without injuring the nation if the Allied governments are all going to put re- getting the indemnity, seems in truth to be a real strictions on German trade, the Germans will not puzzle despite the apparent absurdity of the idea be able to pay the indemnity as soon as they other- at first thought. It may be that Lloyd George, in wise could. Unless they can import raw materials, warning against the dumping of cheap goods, refers their industries cannot prosper, and unless they can only to the practice of selling goods in a foreign export their manufactures to pay for the imports, country at less than the cost of production. This then they cannot obtain the raw materials. They seems unlikely, however, since any goods cheap will have to be sufficient unto themselves, using only enough to be imported from Germany, whether sold their own raw materials which are limited in char- at less than cost or not, would if imported displace acter; thus their productive powers will be stunted similar goods in the markets of the importing coun- and the indemnity will be hard to exact. Moreover, try and would therefore be just as likely to wreck too much economic pressure on the German people home industries. will drive them into a bloody revolution and then What is more, it would seem that cheap goods all hope of getting reparation for Belgium, France, from France or Italy or from this country would Serbia, Poland, and Roumania will be gone. also wreck the industries of Great Britain. If, there- fore, Lloyd George is to allow the importation of The conclusion seems to be unavoidable that the Allies ought, for their own sake, to permit the Ger- such goods, he is in the position of permitting the mans to exploit their own natural resources with destruction of British industries out of deference their own labor and capital, and ought to accord to his Allies; or if, on the other hand, the danger them also liberal trading privileges in order to in- from cheap goods is imaginary, he is then in the position of penalizing the Germans for no reason crease their productive power. The Allies might at all—with the result that they will be less able very wisely go even further, however, and in order to pay the indemnity. to insure that the productive power of the Germans In fact, if the cheap goods argument is not a fake, shall be increased to a maximum, they might dictate to them just how the revenue required to run the suggested that a good way for the Allies to deal with Germany would be to prevent her from Government and pay the indemnity should be raised, The Allies may well insist that the method adopted exporting anything to the Allied countries and at the same time to forbid the German government to be one that will stimulate productive effort, that will establish a tariff on Allied goods imported into Ger- encourage the enterprising and industrious Ger- many. In this way it might be argued that the cheap opportunities. mans, and will prevent the monopoly of economic thus it would be the German industries that would agricultural land, of mines, of water power , and he This can best be done by making all owners of be wrecked rather than those of the Allies. valuable urban sites pay over for the benefit of the it might 1919 387 THE DIAL resources. Allied governments as indemnity the full rental value markably short time, and the fear, moreover, that of the exclusive privileges enjoyed through such Germany might become a plague spot of revolution ownership. These payments should not include and anarchy, or be restored to its former autocratic rental for agricultural improvements, nor for mine masters, would soon fade away. shafts and machinery, nor for hydro-electric installa At this point, however, the reader may protest tions, nor for buildings of any kind, but only rental that if this plan be carried out, the German people, for the privilege of exclusive access to natural freed from the shackles of monopoly, will be on the high road to becoming the most prosperous and Such a plan ought to be welcome to the great mass happy people in Europe, if not in the world—and of the German people. Sentimentally, it would this as a reward for their guilt in bringing on the make little difference to the factory hands, to the most criminal assault on civilization in all history. peasants, to the tenant farmers, to the employers, True, but nevertheless the Allied peoples will have and to the owners of German capital if the rent got what they wanted, namely, quick payment of which had in any case to be paid to the discredited the indemnity to the unfortunate people of the dev- Junker and landlord class were simply passed on to astated regions and at the same time a stable gov- the allies to settle the indemnity. Practically, how ernment in Germany, one neither aggressive nor ever, the plan would be of great advantage to the anarchistic because of the happiness and content- productive and enterprising classes since, in the first ment of its people. place, they would be relieved of taxation to just the If, finally, the question arises, how then should extent that the Junkers had to pay; and—what is the Allied peoples gain an equal prosperity and con- more important—access to natural resources would tentment, the answer is plain: Let the Allied peo- no longer be open to them only at exorbitant prices, ples, also, break the back of the monopoly of their or closed to them altogether. The power of the natural resources by forcing the holders of those land owning class to withhold natural resources from natural resources to pay in full for the value of use or to demand for their use industry-prohibit- their privileges, payments not to be made to any ing rentals would be broken. Being obliged to pay foreign governments, but to their own governments over to the Allies the full rental values of the natural to be used for the benefit of all the people. Then resources, whether used or unused, the land owning the preposterous phenomenon of unemployment will class would be under the imperious necessity of rent- disappear from among the Allied nations as well as in ing or selling to the industrious classes, or of giving Germany; the laboring classes, freed from the com- them employment. No longer would it pay to own petition of the unemployed, will secure the full land and other natural resources merely to draw value of their labor; and the great captains of in- tribute from others. dustry, freed from monopolistic exactions, will be The plan would redound enormously also to the able to establish greater industries than the world advantage of the Allies. With free access to the has yet seen, in which the savings of the workers natural resources and raw materials of industry, un- will be invested. employment among the German people would Then will the time come when a League of Free largely disappear. With the German people all Nations will be in truth a permanent reality and the busily engaged in productive enterprise, the indem- peace of the world will be definitely assured. nity which the Allied nations desire to obtain as quickly as possible would be forthcoming in a re- John S. CODMAN. The End of April When on a blue, pale night in coming spring, The little leaves are breathing to the stars, The crescent moon with burning tips hangs in the tender sky; The world enveloped by enchantment Seems dipped in beauty. I see the wonder and amazing mystery of it all, Then suddenly I feel the terror, And wish that I could die. ALLEN TUCKER. _ .... 388 THE DIAL April 19 1 Peace in Its Economic Aspects THERE IERE ARE VARIOUS interpretations of Bolshevismn, political democracy as they intend is only as a means each easy, all insecure and tentative, some of them to a new distribution of wealth and opportunity. frankly conjectural. But it is safe to say that, in its Such political democracy as the West will consent beginnings at least, the Bolshevist movement was a to is likewise to be submitted to the perpetuity of protest against the political and economic aristocracy the economic order that the West holds good. But of feudal institutions. In this sense it was pro the East is probably right in its conviction that such foundly democratic in spirit, no matter how auto political democracy as it cares for—if it securely cratic it may have become in its later methods. If, cares for any–will, under eastern conditions, stand then, it is finally to align itself against the Entente or fall with the economic democracy on which the Powers, it will be in the essential conviction that, East is wholeheartedly determined. The West ap- so far as the East is concerned, the Western war pears to be in the way of demonstrating its entirely for peace and for the safeguarding of democracy has secondary interest in political democracy—to the become transformed into a war for the preservation extent even that it will deny it to other peoples, of economic aristocracy. unless as conditioned on that economic organization Adequate understanding of the Bolshevist pro within which its own ideals find their expression gram requires complete abstraction from all its and their determining influence. immediate economic fatuities and from its current Such quite obviously must be the Bolshevist inter- excesses and cruelties. The facts become, then, so pretation of Western policies as they seem now to far plain in Bolshevist thinking: from a new political be developing. World peace takes on importance order there is no hope for eastern Europe. What- chiefly in its property aspect. And more significant ever new thing may come, it will not be worse than still, such also appears to be the essential character what has been and still is. Therefore the powers of the Entente policies as they are implicitly that stand for economic aristocracy intend nothing reported in the formulation of the peace terms to be that can be good in its bearing on the peasant and imposed on Germany—the Central Powers. How the artisan of the East. For them there is ultimately far in the prosecution of the war have the interests but one thing to gain; in the failure to gain it they of the common people been regarded ? In the peace lose all. Their war is against feudal institutions, settlement how far are they fostered? In what de- primarily in their economic aspect, and only secon gree is there basis for the Bolshevist interpretation darily in their political aspect. For them political and for the Bolshevist growing attitude of antag. domination depends solely on its economic leverage. onism? With the economic situation unchanged, nothing Germany is, no doubt, to make reparation and essential will change. Thus Bolshevism inevitably indemnity to the limit of what is possible. It is challenges the West, if the West is committed to therefore held that the German people are to be the maintenance of the present property institutions saddled with all the debt they can carry—due of the East. allowance, however, made for the war claims If, then, the victors in the war are more interested already existing in favor of the investing classes of in the protection of the vested rights of a landed proprietorship, and in the privileges of wealth, than Germany against the taxpaying public. Not incred- ibly, indeed, these rights of German wealth may be in a new democratic political order in the East so postponed, in order of payment and of right, to the conditioned on a new economic order as to democra Entente claims—the total always, however, to be tize the participation in wealth and opportunity, the conformed to the debt-carrying power and the debt- issue is drawn, the conflict inevitable. For the purposes of this issue, the West will have declared paying tolerance of the German people. Otherwise that it wants only such political democracy as is there might be socialistic agitations and menace to possible within the setting of a feudal economic the security of property rights. The entire discus- aristocracy—that its ultimate ideals are economic sion assumes that whatever the penalties that may rather than political, and are economically aristo- be imposed, these shall be exclusively at the charge cratic rather than democratic. In thus allotting to of the German taxpayer. The property rights of property institutions the first rank, its error will be the privileged classes in Germany are in no wise in so far greater than that of the revolutionaries. They question or in jeopardy. Peace shall mean that all also do not take their democracy at all too seriously. property, even Junker and Warlord property, shall With them also economic ends are first-political be sacred. About this fixed stake all other interests democracy a subordinate or tributary interest. Such are made to turn; against this bulwark all other purposes beat and shatter. As America was prompt 1919 389 THE DIAL to conscript life for war, but up to the end pre we still enact that the German debtors shall account served in the main for wealth its option between not to our own children, but to the children of the investment and complete nonparticipation, so now, Junkers, the industrial captains, the banking mag- when war indemnities are to be provided, the future nates, the hereditary nobility, and the political aris- generations of Germany shall be mortgaged, in the tocracy of Germany? Why not, in short, expropri- full solicitude that German wealth go unchallenged ate the wealth owners in discharge of the penalties. and unpunished. Nor shall there be any slightest for their crimes and in the protection of the inno- reference to the guilt that has attended the wealth, cent, who else must bear the penalties? Why must or to the innocence that will attach to the life. the future Entente generations pay in place of the Thus, by assumption, the Entente peoples are to German, or any German in place of the finally re- continue in the travail of their tremendous war sponsible and bountifully solvent criminals? In terms indebtedness—France in particular staggeringly fac of present prices and of present income resources, ing fiscal debacle and possible or probable future the wealth of Germany alone totals upwards of revolutions in revolt against intolerable fiscal bur 160 billions of dollars. Eighty-five per cent of the dens. But even for France, only such indemnitics German lands are in holdings of over 15 acres. are contemplated from Germany as can be provided For plainly the Entente bonds have to be dis- through bond issues for the future taxpayers of charged by some one. So much we provided for ine Germany to bear and meet. the financing of the war. It is, however, clear From all of this the Bolshevist draws fatally easy enough that in terms of immediaté cash payment no inferences. Not only is Entente thinking more con policy of expropriation would retire the bonds. But siderate of Russian wealth than of Russian life, but there is no need. The obligations do not so run. It logically sosince it is more considerate of German needs merely that the German properties, the titles wealth than of its own life or of its own institutions of proprietorship, be sold out to German small in- of political democracy. As earlier, when victory vestors or to the peasants and artisans, on long-time was still in doubt, it financed its war by allotting to amortization payments. True, the working people. domestic wealth mortgages against its future domes would finally discharge the debt-not, however, as tic life, so in precise parallel now, with victory taxes, but as purchase money to be advanced in the: achieved, it goes about to prescribe the war settle- acquisition of their economic and political independ-- ment. Not only as between German wealth and All the hardships would rest with the guilt.. German poverty is the poverty to bear the burden, The kept classes of Germany, shorn of their but even as between German wealth and Entente potencies of harm with the loss of their economic poverty it shall still be the poverty that is to pay. leverage, could then go to work or starve—fortu- Not only shall your grandchildren and mine be nate even at this, in comparison with the victims paying war legacies of taxes to domestic bond that they plundered and massacred where they did! holders, but meanwhile the German Junker shall not starve. If the guilty are excused from payments. be collecting his rent rolls, the while also that he is the innocent—their wives, their daughters, their cutting coupons from the bonds issued to finance the descendants in general-must pay instead. A Ger-- war that his progenitors contrived, and mortgaged man aristocracy living off its rent rolls and its others to themselves to pay for. Why is it—if in interest collections, while the rest of the world is the sacredness of all property these German bonds busy paying off war debts, is nothing short of mon- must be recognized—that our children's children strous. shall not have the benefit of them to meet their tax It is, in fact, quite clear that a covenanted peace obligations? Why are not the rent rolls left at the is of little worth if it leaves with the classes in disposal of the children of the victims rather than Germany that contrived the war the will and the of the children of the aggressors? Why perpetu power to contrive another, and leaves everywhere ate the menace of this ruthless aristocracy even at among the masses of common people neither the the cost of all this monstrous and hazardous injus will nor the ability to endure the terms of the cov- tice? Assume that innocent future generations must enated peace. Both these errors the peace plan as it make their payments to some one that in this peace is now formulated clearly commits. It matters little of justice we shall not move to protect the victiin whether the war was won more in the interests of from the criminal in Germany—that, so far as may peace or in the interests of democracy, if with victory be, and in the interests of peace, all war-wagers shall once achieved the record sums up into little or noth- be secure in their plunder, so long as our withers ing accomplished in the interests of peace, and a good remain unwrung-why must it be also true that deal less than nothing in the interests of democracy. with our own welfare at stake, our own children the In the long run and ultimately, peace is subject to own poverty the burden bearer, two conditions that nowhere shall there be an ence. sufferers, our 390 April 19 THE DIAL irresponsible ruling class to plan more wars abroad and nowhere subject peoples goaded by economic exploitation into revolution at home. Economic democracy with its working correlative of political democracy provides these basic conditions. The peace that we are covenanting provides neither, no matter how ingenious and adequate may be—and, as I think, actually is—the specific detail of organiza- tion. There are, in truth, in human affairs other and greater sanctities to be recognized than those of wealth and property. In grave emergencies it be- falls that even the sanctity of life must make way for higher issues. Just this is what conscription rightly means. Humanity may one day revolt against wealth grown intolerable in its demands and its privileges. For my own part, I accept the social expediency of individualism and of property-hold- ing, however, neither of them as sacred, but each as wise within the limits of its social service. To my view, then, it is surpassingly tragic if either stands at the hazard of being done to death in the house of its friends. H. J. DAVENPORT. -- --- 1 1 University Reconstruction and the Classics I. 18 A STRANGE THING to write an apology for gentleman is also disappearing. The materialistic the Classics. One might as well write in defense champion of the ancient languages argues that a of the springtime dancing gaily northward in a knowledge of them will help him in a medical or mad riot of birds and flowers; as well argue in de legal career to grasp more easily the difficult term- fense of sunsets, a Beethoven symphony, or the colors inologies of those professions, as also the ever-in- of a New England autumn. creasing vocabulary of modern books and periodicals. To attack the Classics is not so simple a thing as A thorough knowledge of the grammar of modern it would seem at first sight; it is an attack upon all languages is said by some to be obtainable only literary art. The folly of those who maintain that through acquaintance with the classical languages. too much time is spent in the learning of the ancient All these arguments have become as wearisome as tongues, and that Greek and Latin literature can the chatter of magpies, and when we hear them we be read as advantageously in English translations, is instinctively put our fingers in our ears and hasten as obvious as that of the person who tries to convince us that it is sufficient to read the score of an opera away. Much time has been spent by classical prop- agandists in reiterating these arguments, thinking, without hearing it, or to see a photograph of the Matterhorn without taking the trouble to go to forsooth, that by quantity of reasoning rather than Switzerland. Such an argument may be properly by quality they could prove their contentions. But the interest in the Classics has become less and less styled an argumentum pigritiae, and is like the story as time has sped by, until only the faintest vestige of the boy who said that at the school which he at- of their former glory remains. The war with its tended they were never taught to make the capital strident tones has almost succeeded in drowning letter Q ; first because it was a very difficult letter their timid voice; though not entirely, for immortal- to make, and then because it didn't occur very often ity has been given them by the homage of countless in English anyway. It is the flattest kind of truism poets of all nations and all times. May it not be to assert that in considering it as a work of art the literary form of a book is as important as the that our old methods of teaching and our thread- bare arguments in favor of the Classics may perish thought, but that is precisely what countless people disregard when they maintain that Homer or the in the present holocaust, and that, like the Phoenix, Greek lyric or Plato can be read as profitably in a new creature may arise, vigorous and strong, from modern English as in the language with which these the ashes of the old ? Vivat, floreat, crescat! authors beautified their ideas. It is instructive to notice the effect of the war on To enumerate all or even a fraction of the reasons the Classics in one of our large Eastern universities. which have been brought forward for studying the The course in Freshman Latin, which ordinarily has Classics would be but a weariness of the flesh. The a registration of over three hundred, this year has a ancient fetish that the study of them constitutes a total of fifteen. In the Sophomore Latin course one good mental discipline is, by some dispensation of student is enrolled instead of the usual one hundred. Providence, dying away. (I should suggest Turk- The percentage of loss in the Greek department is about the same. ish or Chinese as a better discipline for the mind.) At first it might seem as if the The predatory conception that a knowledge of the materialists had conquered, and that the Classics had Classics is the distinguishing mark of every true perished; but on the other hand, it may be quite as true that the war will prove to be beneficial to the 1919 THE DIAL 391 2 Classics. In intellectual matters as well as in po scend into the forum and prove that the Classics are litical, war not only arouses hatreds and prejudices of value to the whole world. It is pathetic to think which never existed before, but also breaks down of all the generations of men who have come with many preexisting traditions and smooths away many youthful eyes gleaming, eager to learn of the treas- an international and intellectual antipathy. ures locked in ancient books; and then to think of When I say that the war may be beneficial to the how they have turned away with dull eyes and Classics I do not refer to those well-meaning prop wondering hearts, finding in their mouths nothing agandists who read papers at conventions on Latin but dust instead of the promised honey. versus German.” For the gain in numbers which There must be no half way measures in the class- would accrue to Latin from any such purely nega ical teaching of the future; there must be no luke- tive cause would be valueless to the Classics and warm convictions about the value of the Classics; what is vastly more important—would be valueless for the youth of America does not partake of the to the student. What I do mean is that certain time nature of the ancient Laodiceans, and will believe a worn traditions and prejudices may be broken down. thing only when he is shown vigorously and beyond These exist both in the mind of the man on the all cavil that it is so. The greater the prejudices to street and in that of the teacher. The average busi be broken down, the more insuperable the difficulties ness man, for example, thinks that the Classics are to be overcome, the more eagerly will the classicist uninteresting, and that they have no relation to mod- apply ủimself to his task, if he really believes in the ern affairs. The truth of the matter is that they are importance of it. uninteresting to him because he has never been shown It is now high time that we turn our attention to what their relation is to modern affairs. The the statement of a definite program. In so doing we teacher of the Classics, who is usually a specialist in must, of course, differentiate between the teaching of a narrowly circumscribed field, presents the works the Classics in secondary schools and that in univer- of a particular author in a way which is broad sities. In the secondary schools the main object must enough for him—for does he not see at each step always be the mastery of the formal and syntactical a score of alluring problems which await solution ? elements of the language, without which no advanced but pitifully narrow from the point of view of the work in the literature would ever be possible; but student who is to share in the burdens of commercial inasmuch as this discussion has to do with univer- and political life. It sometimes happens that the sity problems it is permissible to pass over those qualities of a great scholar and a great teacher are which have to do with elementary instruction. For to be found in one man; but this is rare. The university teaching two precepts may be stated which scholar and the teacher differ in kind as the dynamo should be observed in teaching the Classics—the one differs from the motor. being self-evident, as it applies to the teaching of Now that the war is over, educational reconstruc any literature, and the other being implied by what tion is as important, though not so much discussed, has already been said in this discussion. The first as physical and economic reconstruction. Students of these precepts is: So teach that you will reveal returning to their books from the battlefield and the to the student the maximum amount of beauty- training-camp are looking upon things with a more beauty of thought, and expression, and structure. exacting materialism; they have obtained a wider And the second is equally important: So teach that and fuller perspective of the world and of their needs you will reveal the significance of a given work in in it; they have learned to conceive the world as a the history of thought, that there may be no discon- great army, each part helping and explaining the nected fragments of learning seething about in the other, in which isolated facts and theories, those hav student's mind. For in education, as in other fields ing no connection with anything else, have no place.. of endeavor, union fait la force, and isolated bits At the present moment, then, the Classics are in un of information are as worthless for the molding and stable equilibrium. The classicist stands at the part- guiding of a man as the asteroids would be for his ing of the ways, one of which leads through the dry habitation. deserts of pedantry—trodden, alas, much too often It is this second precept which I wish to make the in the past !—the other leading amid the ways of basis of the constructive part of this discussion, a men who lived and loved and died without refer discussion largely encyclopedic in nature, but based ence to the ablative absolute. on empirical fact-my own experience. Autocracy in education must be banished as well A certain professor of music in a New England as political autocracy; and the classicist, instead of college once said that, although he enjoyed reading superciliously assuming that his subject will and the Classics and considered the time he had devoted must be studied by gentlefolk everywhere, must de- to them as well spent, he had never been able to dis- 392 THE DIAL April 19 broad view of many peoples and many lands, the trayal of the best man that the Greeks ever knew cover any rational argument in favor of studying nary parsing of verb and noun, or the fixing of the them, any convincing proof which he could use in de attention upon a single isolated work without refer- fense of them against the attacks of the ever-pres ence to any others of the same type. ent Philistine. An analogy finally occurred to him The obvious objection to such a program is that from his own profession. It was this: just as Bach lack of time would forbid it. Of course it would be is the basis of modern music, and in just the same impossible for each member of a class to read all way that a knowledge of Bach is necessary for the of these books, but it is perfectly possible for each one musician if he wishes to understand modern music to read a different book and report on its contents. thoroughly, so are the Classics the basis of all Euro In this way a synoptic conception of the whole mat- pean literature. ter is gained. Furthermore an interest in reading The insistence on considering a work of art in its is aroused in this way such as would scarcely come historical setting is tantamount to saying that that about in any other, for the integration of the sep- work of art should be considered simply as one stage arate parts, the focusing of the attention upon a in the development of a type, and obviously one must single fact from varying angles, holds the interest of have some conception of the type as a whole in order the student as no disconnected reading ever could. to appreciate the importance and meaning of each In like manner the lyric may be studied compara- particular stage in that development. Let us take tively. It is interesting, for example, to trace the as an example an actual university course, containing development of one type, namely the elegy, from its works of various authors, each representative of a Greek origin where it was distinguished by its coup- different literary type: the Odyssey, the Greek lyric, lets of alternately long and short verses, and was Plato's Apology, and Lucian's True History. First used for themes of love, war, and moral admonition, let us consider the epic. Passing over all controver into its later Greek use, where it expressed sorrow sial definitions, all will agree, I think, that this is one at the death of the beloved one, then into its Latin of the earliest forms of literary expression, at least environment, where it was still distinguished by the one of the earliest forms that was written down and same form but was used merely for themes of love. thus acquired a certain degree of permanence. It is In English the elegy is not confined to any rigid possible to find examples of the primitive epic in the form of versification but in content follows the late early stages of most of the European languages. Greek elegy as its model. Beowulf and the Nibelungenlied, the Cid and the Chanson de Roland are full of tales of personal Thyrsis, Swinburne's Ave atque Vale, Spensers poems as Milton's Lyčidas, Matthew Arnold's prowess which are only more modern versions of Astrophel, and Shelley's Adonais. the combats of Diomedes and Achilles. The Finnish Plato's Apology requires consideration from two epic, the Kalevala, is more primitive than any of these, containing the myth of creation as well as the study Socrates" significance in the history of phil- different points of view. First of all one should exploits of a great hero. Later in the development Osophy, his changing of the center of gravity from of a nation's literature come epics which are less purely cosmological questions external to man to vigorous in spirit and more formal in structure and ethical and social questions concerning man as an diction. Of these scores could be named: the Argonautica of Apollonius Rhodius, Lucan's Phare of the pre-Socratic philosophers and their principal individual and in groups. To do this a knowledge salia, the Italian epic of chivalry, such as those of doctrines is essential. Secondly, one may study the Tasso and Ariosto, and we might include here Apology as a type of biographical literature of a Spenser's Faery Queen, the historical epic such as Voltaire's Henriade and Camoens' Lusiads, and the very distinct kind. In the Apology we have an ac- religious epic represented by Klopstock's Messiah. count of a real human being, who lived unselfishly , Midway between the primitive epic, hewn out of liv- who spent his days and nights teaching his followers to lead a rational life and therefore, according to ing rock, and the more modern, at times decadent, epic, there is a type which combines the vigor of the his doctrines, an upright life. From the people as primitives with the felicity of expression of the mod- a whole he received nothing but jeers and curses erns. Such are the Aeneid, the De Rerum Natura, humor and a sense of justice, he chose to die rather and finally, due to a combination of a sense of Paradise Lost, and the Divine Comedy. Such a than give up his teaching. Here we have the por- This we see in such variety of ideas and yet the astonishing similarity of and it differs from their portrayal of that other great unselfish figure in Greek literature, Prome- of widely separated countries and ages deserves moucherheit , in that the latter was a hero of the far-des- more to be called a liberal education than the ordi- tant past and consequently was credited with cer- --- 14 393 1919 THE DIAL tain divine or at least superhuman characteristics, just as with one's friends or with one's native coun- whereas Socrates was portrayed by his own disciple, try, a knowledge of its history, of its struggles with a certain amount of idealism, no doubt, yet toward perfection, of its, successes and failures, free from all the trappings of divinity. How illum makes it all the richer and more full of meaning. inating it is to compare this life with the life of The appreciation of art is, of course, subjective, as Jesus as given in Luke's gospel! In these two ex one will readily admit if one consider the difference amples we have summed up one of the fundamental in effect of some supremely beautiful thing on a differences between the Greek and the Christian Francis Thompson and on a Fiji Islander. If this is conceptions of life. The Apology represents a man so it is obvious that the wider and deeper the experi- who, by the exercise of his intellect, was raised far ence of a man—and what is reading but a short-cut above his fellow men. The gospel shows us a man to experience?—the greater will be his appreciation who, by some mystical connection with God, became of a given work of art. The historical or compara- something more than man. The one is a glorifica tive method, then, not only is of value in itself but tion of the intellect; the other a glorification of the it reacts upon and increases the esthetic enjoyment, spirit. which, after all, is the main thing in art. Lucian's True History is representative of a type Although much space has been devoted in this dis- which has been popular in all ages—the romantic cussion to a theoretical treatment of the reasons for adventure. The literary progenitor of the type is approaching the study of the Classics from a his- Homer, particularly in that part of the Odyssey in torical or comparative point of view, we must not which Odysseus is represented as descending to the let matters rest on a theoretical basis alone. Theories underworld. This type is of a two-fold nature: the in teaching just as in any other art must stand or one aims to delight through the sheer incredibility fall by their effectiveness in actual practice. Teach- of the tale, the other uses the narrative merely as ers far too often have recourse to the mock logic of an instrument of satire. To the first division be baffled parents: if you do not see now why you longs that part of the Odyssey already mentioned, should do this, my child, do it because I ask you as well as many of the Greek romances of the Alex to, and when you have grown to be a man you will andrian and Byzantine periods. Here also belong see that I am right. This is shifting the respon- a large number of medieval French romances and sibility to the future instead of proving to the student the modern scientific extravaganzas of Jules Verne that the Classics are worth while studying now. and H. G. Wells. To the second and much more The teacher must respect the mind of the student important division, the satirical, belong a host of if he will have the student respect the Classics. It works which have been of the utmost importance in is not necessary to descend to the intellectual the history of literature. Here one must place level of the university student, and if the teacher Lucian's True History and the Golden Ass of does this the student will have no incentive to as- Apuleius; here also Rabelais' Gargantua and Pan- cend to the level of the teacher. The teacher must tagruel. Don Quixote, which strove by satire to take the student into his confidence and fulfill in put an end to the romances of chivalry, finds a place the present all the promises whose fulfillment has cus- in this group, as also Gulliver's Travels. Voltaire's tomarily been reserved for the future. Teaching of Candide, which held up to ridicule the optimism of the Classics, as here advocated, has aroused a more Leibnitz, and Samuel Butler's Erewhon 'and vigorous interest not only in the Classics but in all Erewhon Revisited, with their ridicule of Mrs. literature. The conclusions here stated are the re- Grundy and the Church of England, must both be sult of my own teaching, proved in the class-room, included in this type. By the very nature of com the only laboratory which the teacher of literature edy, which consists partly in hyperbole, and by the has at his command. very nature of satire, which strives to destroy a thing University reconstruction must be directed toward by making it ridiculous, the romantic adventure has the reconstructing and reconciling of the nations, been frequently employed as an instrument of reform. and this can most thoroughly and most speedily be To the reader whose interests are primarily brought about by realizing the essential oneness of esthetic and who believes that the value of literature the human race. The teaching of the Classics in consists in its intrinsic beauty, irrespective of the the method here described is one approach to this time and place in which it was created, this historical end, for it shows the similarity of the aims and treatment may seem entirely beside the point. But strivings of all peoples. Is not this the great func- the esthete's point of view does not seem to coincide tion of teaching—that it should give a broader and with the actual facts of experience. The knowledge deeper, and consequently more liberal view of the of the history of a work of art illumines it and makes world in which we live? it more beautiful and more precious to the individual, Royal Case NEMIAH. 394 April 19 THE DIAL A Second Imaginary Conversation GOSSE AND MOORE . III have come, crinolines, blue chamber ware, pink M OORE. With Trollope I can shake hands more decanters, rep curtains, blue fingerbowls. These cordially than with Scott, for it was not he who things Trollope represents, and is endeared to us turned literature into a trade; and in view of your thereby. pronouncement that every man writes as well as he Gosse. If his fame rests only upon these can, I will ask you if it would not be hard to things. discern a line more adapted to the abilities Trollope Moore. His fame rests on a much more solid brought into the world than the line these same foundation. Trollope, in spite of his name, and his abilities discovered for themselves. He rose at temperament which was in strict accordance with six, and followed the road that leads to the par- his name, was a great revolutionary. sonage until it was time to go to the post office. Gosse. Your paradox puts me in mind of a line The Bishop, the parson, and the Squire appear in of Hugo's: Des revolutions dans les écailles suitable parts; the young girl and the lover are d'huîtres.” supplied with admirable consciences and chaperons; Moore. I would not have you speak disrespect- and between whiles there are pages, sometimes chap- fully of Trollope, to whom we owe our freedom. ters, devoted to the subjects most likely to interest We always count upon a reaction, and Trollope his readers—sport, farming, the housing of the poor, carried commonplace further than anyone dreamed and the condition of the junior clergy written about it could be carried. And it was when Nature in a way that all may read without any disturbance seemed to have been expelled definitely from art, of their preconceived opinions. In Barchester that Nature began to return to art. You have Towers his admiration for nice conduct exceeds wandered over many seashores with your father the Thackeray's, whose style he is supposed to have con- naturalist, and you can remember the drift and tinued. The Widow Bold is perchance kissed at litter of seaweed with here and there a dying star- a party by a man she is not in love with an un fish and many other derelicts of the sea that you fortunate accident no doubt, but one that hardly could enumerate. You can therefore appreciate the warrants the solo and tears which he deems it comparison : Nature had retired like the sea; only necessary to measure out to her, and the soul search the faintest blue line remained on the horizon; in- ings that rack her: did she by look or word encour- I think, the year was '48—in '48 three men met one age the horrid creature to suspect that I cared night in a studio in a street off Oxford Street, for him? No, I certainly did not." In the fifties Berners Street, or Newman Street-John Everett tears were more common than they are today. But Millais, Holman Hunt, and Rossetti, to preach and it may be doubted whether even in the fifties the to instigate the necessity of a return to Nature, and young ladies looked upon parties in which kisses the following year the tide was then breaking over never exchanged as altogether successful. the evil-smelling pools. Tears are sometimes in fashion and sometimes out Gósse. There's generally something in what you of fashion, but kisses, so the proverb tells us, are say, and it may well be that the return to Nature always in fashion, like the gorse flower. which began in '48 was brought about by the stifling Gosse. He drones like an old lady to her niece atmosphere of Victorian conventions. Millais illus- after tea. trated some of Trollope's books. Moore. It is not difficult, it is impossible, to write for the parsonage in good prose. Moore. The drawings he contributed to Orley A good Farm are the very best spirit of sense, and in his writer adventures himself into windy Pontic seas, best Pre-Raphaelite manner, and persuade us almost and the dangerous straits of Abydos, where the that we have read the book. oyster is reared. Gosse. I did not know you as a Vergilian. Gosse. You overestimate their power. Beautiful MOORE. Héloïse led me to Vergil—I am writing the listless amble of that prose. as they are they cannot persuade me to bear with Héloïse and Abelard—but we must abide with Trollope MOORE. An amble listless as that of Stevenson's for the moment. Out of date Suranne Modestine, that no sapling cut from the hedge could The wake of the vessel has not yet disappeared into the gray expanse of water, urge into a trot—an exasperating walk that tends and we catch sight still of those coasts whence we to fall into a crawl, and that you fear will end in a nap by the roadside. were 1919 395 THE DIAL . my mind. Gosse. It would be interesting to know if the have done me a service that I shall always remember. book Orley Farm dropped on Millais' knees, and if, Gosse. One moment. You have forgotten Pater. looking through the studio he said to himself, “ My Moore. Whose Marius, the Epicurean is the drawings are the condemnation of the text.” only English narrative that men of letters will turn MOORE. He was too eagerly concerned with his to in the years that lie ahead of us. own work to give a thought to the merits or de Gosse. He applied himself to the art of writ- merits of Orley Farm, and acquiesced in the belief ing. that novels were like that, and probably regretted MOORE. He wrote the only prose that I never that he could not illustrate without reading. Paint weary of; but it was not of the beauty of his prose ers are excellent judges of literature. that I was about to speak, but of something which Gosse. He must have thought it strange. is perhaps as important. He wrote more about MOORE. Thought what strange? Continue to humanity.than character. You remember the chap- put questions to me for every one helps to clear ter entitled White Nights. He allowed Marius to pass before us almost without distinguishing trait as Gosse. But Wordsworth broke the conventions a typical young man of all time; and as a foil to the before the painter. almost abstract Marius, he set Flavian, whom the MOORE. It was the turn of the painters to do casual reader prefers, for character rather than something for art, and by Jove, they did it. Moral humanity—this was Pater's intention in his portrait ity was always less suspicious of painting than of of Marius' friend. You have set me thinking again, literature. The naked woman banished from the Gosse. English literature is not without a late- one art was welcome in the other, and you must not letter. If we look across the Atlantic we find one, forget that the novelist in the fifties wrote almost and a marvelous one, Poe. at the dictation of the circulating library. His Gosse. It is indeed a surprise to me to hear that works were published at 3/6 and distributed and you admire a writer so essentially unhealthy as Poe, collected by a service of carts. If the librarian did one so concerned with the very hypertrophy of emo- not think that his book made agreeable drawing tion. The very names of his characters seem to room entertainment it never was heard of again. lead you out of the world of humanity—one is at The librarian was an autocrat, and no one dared to once in a region of ghosts: Ligeia, Morella, Bere- be original, even if he could. nice, Eleonora. Gosse. Do you think that this censorship has MOORE. I have sufficient faith in antiquity to prevented the addition of a prose epic to our litera believe it would have understood that all the poetry ture? of life is in the fact that it is always passing from MOORE. A prose epic implies the existence of a I will go further and ask you if it is possible man of genius, and genius, I suppose, cannot be for poet or peasant to love a woman in life's daily censored. It will find a way out, so it is said, usage as he does in remembrance, and if this be so though all the doors and windows are barred-up why should they blame Poe for setting forth so the chimney, through the keyhole. And if that be representative of human life many beautiful symbols true, a first-rate genius did not exist in the fifties. bearing women's names ? Not content with the Gosse. You will perhaps agree with me that surface of life like Trollope, Poe sought a finer the Russians have on the whole produced the distillation. best story-tellers—Turgenev, Tolstoy, Dostoevsky, Gosse. Do you not think we should be drawn Gorki, are all story-tellers, Tchekhoff too. to art to praise life? MOORE. Yes, indeed. The instinct of story MOORE. I would avoid dogmatism, and the mere telling is in the Russians more than in any other revival of the theologian's formula seems too simple race—more than in the French, who have only had an expedient. Balzac on the big canvas, and Maupassant on the Gosse. What would you put in place of it? ivory tablet. Story-tellers differ so widely among Moore. The artist is without dogma, or if you themselves that it is impossible to define the gift, but like to put it differently, he is his own dogma; and it is always recognizable. We perceive it in Tcheh to tell the story that life brought to him. koff and miss it in Trollope. I will try to assimilate GOSSE. Leaving out all philosophy ? and compose our conversations into the form of an MOORE. A philosophy is implicit in every well essay, stopping at Trollope, for it would be useless and perhaps unkind of me to continue my search Gosse. What philosophy would you extract.froni for a story-teller among my contemporaries, but of the Iliad ? the dead we may speak as plainly as we please. You Moore. That beauty is worth our pursuit. have no idea how you have helped me, Gosse. You Gosse. Stevenson! us. told story. 396 April 19 THE DIAL MOORE. Stevenson is a butterfly content to enjoy lation. “Ma fiancée et ma compagne d'étude et the warmth of the sun and follow the scent of the enfin l'éspouse de mon coeur seems commonplace flowers, and his enjoyment of these is so delightful and trite when compared with “my friend and my that we join in the chase, children once again, led by betrothed, who became the partner of my studies a child; and after a long day in the open air we and finally the wife of my bosom,” and we are con- return to relive our adventures in drowsy dreams. scious of a drop when we read, “Si jamais la pâle Gosse. As you yourself pointed out in A Story- Ashtophet de l'idolâtre Egypte aux ailes téné- teller's Holiday Stevenson dropped into superficial breuses,” and remember the beautiful English thinking when he said that Catholics remained al- “The wan and misty winged Ashtophet of idola- ways Catholics and Protestants always Protestants. trous Egypt.” And so on, through the beautiful He should have looked upon Catholicism and Prot- pages of Ligeia, we can detect a delicate rise and estantism as eternal attitudes of the human mind. fall, the original and the translation having the MOORE. Indeed I think he should. upper hand in turns. Gosse. In the pages that do not meet with your GOSSE. As is usual, a good deal of what you approval MOORE. In the pages that I ventured to con- say is true, and I am with you so far that it cannot sider, to measure, and to weigh be seriously maintained that a translation that fol- lows the original, comma by comma, full stop by full GOSSE. There is a good deal that you must have recognized as true: the pleasure, for instance, that stop, can be said to possess great beauties of style Stevenson felt on finding himself once again in a that are not discoverable in the original. All the Protestant atmosphere could not have been told at same, I think something happened in the transla- all by Poe, who was not so great a master of words tion; but you will allow that a less favorable ex- as Stevenson. ample of Poe's style might have been selected? In the story of William Wilson Poe tells how the Moore. A very inadmissible statement, Gosse, struggle between good and evil continues in the same for how else but by the beauty of the words can individual till the evil overpowers the good. you explain Poe's poetry—and that he wrote better poetry than Stevenson will be conceded by all men Moore. And he tells his story without the help of letters, and if you fail to nod your head approv- of magic potions. ingly I'll write to Sir Sidney Colvin who, though Gosse. You have Doctor Jekyll and Mr. Hyde bewitched by his edition of Stevenson's correspond- in your mind. ence as he undoubtedly is, will not deny MOORE. Stevenson's story is no more than a Gosse. So you look upon Poe as a master of popular version of Poe's, and I have always words, and his English as equal to Baudelaire's thought Poe is himself implicit in the story French. William Wilson. Poe was a poet and a man of of MOORE. You must have forgotten the beautiful science, and although the poet was the stronger opening of Baudelaire's introduction; let me recall the two, the man of science makes himself felt in the it to your memory. Is there a devil Providence that prose. Gossé. Baudelaire's service was to attenuate the bends over the cradles to choose its victims, and with malice prepense diagrams. throws the purest spirits into hostile Moore. There are diagrams in Poe's prose regions like martyrs into the arenas; are there then souls dedicated to the altar who walk to death and sometimes, and festoons and astragals in Steven- son's always. glory through their ruined lives? Baudelaire asks this question, for in view of Poe's life and his own Gosse. As a writer you place Hawthorne higher than Poe. he is minded to believe in this devil Providence. To know the lives of these two men is to share their Moore. A young man cannot overlook Poe, but mutual conviction that they were victims of such a he can Hawthorne-Hawthorne's genius not being evident as Poe's—but if our young man be Providence, Poe even more than Baudelaire, for to this very day the ill luck that presided at his birth worthy of our consideration he will return to Haw- has not ceased—it is implicit in your question: Is thorne in later life, and without losing any of his Poe's English equal to Baudelaire's French? admiration for Poe. The gift of the good fairy—the beautifullest transla- other, our estheticism should be wide enough to tion, she said, that a man ever had shall be thine- include Michael Angelo and Phidias. When I was overheard by the bad fairy who returned down enter The House of the Seven Gables I walk about the chimney and said, I cannot take away the gift admiring the absence of accent. that the good fairy has given thee, but it shall be Gosse. Is it not one of your little perversities to said commonly that thou canst only be read in trans- consider Hepzibah Pyncheon as Greek sculpture rather than Gothic? of so One does not exclude the 1 1919 THE DIAL 397 Moore. As for Gothic and Greek, a truce to the discussion regarding their characteristics, for have I not seen little medieval virgins from Rhenish towns as ungainly as Greek maidens, and though there is nothing in Greek art as ungainly as Hepzibah, there is nothing that I can remember at this moment as modest in Gothic. But it matters nothing to me whether you call her Greek or Gothic if you admire her; and as the two styles mingle in her I would that our twain admiration of her should 1 irn to one this summer afternoon. GOSSE. Your talk of her the last time you were here caused Sylvia to take the book from the s elves. It is on the table by you. MOORE. I should like to read to you the de- scription of the old maid and her agony of mind ... Gosse. The morning that she descends the old timbered stairs to open the shop for the first time. It is many years since I read it and it will come upon me quite fresh. The old maid was alone in the old house. Alone, ex- cept for a certain respectable and orderly young man, an artist in the daguerreotype line, who, for about three months back, had been a lodger in a remote gable,-quite a house by itself, indeed,—with locks, bolts, and oaken bars on all the intervening, doors. Inaudible, conse- quently, were poor Miss Hepzibah's gusty sighs. In- audible, the creaking joints of her stiffened knees, as she knelt down by the bedside. And inaudible too, by mortal ear, but heard with all-comprehending love and pity in the farthest heaven, that almost agony of prayer-now whispered, now a groan, now a struggling silence- wherewith she besought the divine assistance through the day! Evidently this is to be a day of more than ordinary trial to Miss Hepzibah, who for above a. quarter of a century gone by, has dwelt in strict seclusion, taking no part in the business of life, and just as little in its intercourse and pleasures. Not with such fervor prays the torpid recluse, looking forward to the cold, sunless, stagnant calm of a day that is to be like innum- erable yesterdays! The maiden lady's devotions are concluded. Will she now issue forth over the threshold of our story? Not yet, by many moments. First, every drawer in the tall, old-fashioned bureau is to be opened, with difficulty and with a suggestion of spasmodic jerks; then, all must close again, with the same fidgety reluctance. There is a rustling of stiff silks; a tread of backward and for- ward footsteps, to and fro across the chamber. We sus- pect Miss Hepzibah, moreover, of taking a step upward into a chair, in order to give heedful regard to her ap- pearance on all sides, and at full length, in the oval, dingy-framed toilet glass, that hangs above her table. Truly! well, indeed! Who would have thought it! Is all this precious time to be lavished on the matutinal repair and beautifying of an elderly person, who never . goes abroad, whom nobody ever visits, and from whom, when she shall have done her utmost, it were the best charity to turn one's eyes another way? Now she is almost ready. Let us pardon her one other pause; for it is given to the sole sentiment, or, we might better say,-heightened and rendered intense, as it has been, by sorrow and seclusion-to the strong passion of her life . We heard the turning of a key in a small lock; she has opened a secret drawer of an escritoire, and is probably looking at a certain miniature, one in Mal- bone's most perfect style, and representing a face worthy of no less delicate a pencil. It was once our good for- tune to see this picture. It is a likeness of a young man, in a silken dressing-gown of an old fashion, the soft richness of which is well adapted to the countenance of revery, with its full, tender lips, and beautiful eyes, that seem to indicate not so much capacity of thought, as gentle and voluptuous emotion. Of the possessor of such features we shall have a right to ask nothing, except that he would take the rude world easily, and make himself happy in it. Can it have been an early lover of Miss Hepzibah? No; she never had a lover-poor thing, how could she?-nor ever knew, by her own experience, what love technically means. And yet, her undying faith and trust, her fresh remembrance and continual devotedness towards the original of that miniature, have been the only substance for her heart to feed upon. She seems to have put aside the miniature, and is standing again before the toilet-glass. There are tears to be wiped off. A few more footsteps to and fro; and here, at last-with another pitiful sigh, like a gust of chill, damp wind out of a long closed vault, the door of which has been accidentally set ajar-here comes Miss Hepzibah Pyncheon! Forth she steps into the dusky, time- darkened passage; a tall figure, clad in black silk, with a long and shrunken waist, feeling her way towards the stairs like a near-sighted person, as in truth she is. MOORE. How restrained and how full of seri- ousness and dignity, a portrait that Balzac would read twice over, recognizing in it a vision as in- tense as his own and better balanced, and Turgenev would have recognized in Hawthorne's portrait genius akin to his own. Gosse.' It is a pleasur sure to listen to prose like that. MOORE. . And it is a pleasure to me to hear you express approval as I read to you on a balcony on a summer afternoon. You do think with me that no writer of English prose narrative has written like that before? Gosse. I would agree with you with more alac- rity if I were sure that my acquiescence would not provoke you to some unpleasant gibes. There is still George Eliot to be considered. And I would willingly dispute the truth of some of the evil things that have been said about her if I were not altogether and utterly overcome by the graceful proportions and the temperate dignity of Haw- thorne's portraiture. And we are conscious of his beautiful mind as we are of the sun behind yon cloud, illuminating it, filling it with poetry, of a beautiful summer afternoon. Hawthorne was the first to understand the Pre-Raphaelites, and none has explained their art better than he. He wrote out of a well cultivated intelligence, and he recalls Pater inasmuch as his desire, like Pater's, was to make each separate sentence a work of art in itself. Nor are his gifts of vision and comprehension of human life exhausted in his portrait of Hepzibah; it breaks my heart that I cannot quote Clifford's portrait, for as it seems to me it stands on as high a level, in some ways on a higher level than any- thing accomplished by Balzac or Turgenev, and to 398 April 19 THE DIAL compare it with the work of any English novelist to visit Italy and part of France and Germany too. would be as absurd as to draw a comparison be At a later period he had even spent some months in a tween Rembrandt and Frank Hall, but it would community of Fourierists, and still more recently he take half an hour to read it aloud, and I will accept had been a public lecturer or mesmerist, for which your promise that you read these pages when I leave science he had very remarkable endowments; and you, in lieu of your attention. I turn down the a few pages later we learn—this time without sur- leaf at the place. I must exact a promise from you prise—that he is a frequent contributor to the maga- that you read Phoebe too. A portrait of a young zines, and that he has an article in his pocket into girl in her teens can never be carried further than a which he has put an incident of the Pyncheon sketch, she being herself no more than a sketch. family. He would like to read it to her, and hence- But was there ever a more beautiful sketch, one forth the truth, if it must be spoken, is that the more instinctive with awakening life? The book story evaporates in the literary prejudices and con- drops on our knees and we ask ourselves what her ventions for which Scott and his ilk are responsible. womanhood will bring forth in fateful happiness It is all very sad, and how this came about I am or blunder. It seems to have been part of Haw afraid will never be thoroughly explained. To thorne's problem to stir the reader to musings of whom are we to assign Judge Pyncheon, who is this sort, and very admirably he does, with Phoebe's stricken suddenly in death while sitting in an arm- voice rising and falling to the pathetic tinkle of a chair facing the portrait of the original Pyncheon, harpsichord, pathetic always to our ears from its the witch burner? Nor is this all behind the por- very inadequacy of sound—and doubly pathetic are trait is the document he has long been in search of, the tones of Hepzibah's harpsichord, in this old tim for the discovery of it would put him into possession bered house. of the larger part of the state of Ohio. To whom He, Clifford, would sit quietly, with a gentle pleasure are we to assign this plot? The claimants are so gleaming over his face, brighter now, and now a little numerous that I think we had better assign it to dimmer, as the song happened to Aoat near him, or was more remotely heard. It pleased him best, however, the English literary tradition of what a novel should when she sat on a low footstool, at his knee. be, and we should rather wonder that Hawthorne Gosse. Then we have come upon the narrative succeeded in writing beautiful openings rather than we are in search of ... that he failed to write perfect works. Moore. The harmony is not less expressive Gosse. 'I am glad that you think that the age than the souls that fulfill it, and not less when a man lives in influences his art as much as his indi- vidual talent. we meet them in the torn uncouth garden, en MOORE. croached upon by the back yards of some near I remember that you say somewhere streets, and the speckled fowls, and the patriarchal that had Tennyson been born in 1550 he would cock that scuttles away from approaching footsteps, have possessed the same personality, but his poetry, creeping through broken box hedges, than they were had he written verse, would have had scarcely a in the falling house; and in keeping too are the remote resemblance to what we have now received words that Phoebe speaks to the daguerreotypist in the habit of describing a man's originality as from his hand; and you go on to say that we are in the garden, revealing her pretty soul and to its very depths. The daguerreotypist, Holgrave, is the merely an aggregation of elements which he re- lodger; he was there from the beginning before the ceived by inheritance. If this be so it follows that arrival of Phoebe and Clifford, and he too might the congenital commonplace of the English novelist is also an aggregation of elements that he receives GOSSE. by inheritance. We need not seek further for the So we have come to the might have beens. extraordinary lack of art in English prose narra- Moore. You seem relieved by the prospect that tive. Our heredity is bad. our search may end in failure, thinking perhapssion, unless we accept the alternatives that the perce Gosse. There is no escape from that conclu- that it would not be in keeping to come upon per- fect art in a world that has outlived beauty. Hol- fect molding of a story is alien to the genius of the grave is of the unfortunate class in story-books—the class that the author cannot keep himself from in- Moore. A somewhat cruel conclusion, one that tellectualizing; Holgrave has been heavily intellec- I shrink from accepting, but it would be vain to tualized, and when he has finished his disputations pretend that it is not supported by facts—and one with Phoebe the reader is informed that, he had of the most significant is Hawthorne, who failed visited Europe and found means before his return to carry a story through. The Blythedale Ro- mance opened on a prospect of story that I read have been ... race. 1919 399 THE DIAL tremulous with fear lest Hawthorne's strength said, he may be saved, and so vivid was his telling should fail him as it had done in the conclusion of of the disquiet and sense of spiritual loneliness that his House of the Seven Gables. The story rose comes over us on our return to the multitudes that higher, beautiful it seemed to me as a bird on wing; it began to seem as if he had hit upon a way out of and I said, on the two hundredth page, we are in the difficulty. My hopes were at pitch and I Eldorado safe, for he will not commit so potent a waited, almost breathless, for the loosening of the mistake as to allow him who joins the community clutch. Alas! he walked to the window, and on to return to New York or Boston till the end of looking across a courtyard saw against the lighted the story. And asking myself if his art were suffi panes forms that he could not doubt were Zenobia's cient to continue the story in the community, I -I have forgotten the other woman's name. They, looked to see how many more pages there were to too, had come up to town. After that the book read. About two hundred, I said. It was in the drifted out somehow as inconsequently as The middle of The House of the Seven Gables that he House of the Seven Gables. broke down. The strain became greater at every Gosse. Have you read The Scarlet Letter? page, and after the splendid scene between the two MOORE. No; and it isn't probable that I ever men he could not do else but leave—there was no shall. other issue. But so great is an artist's desire of the Here ends the second conversation. masterpiece that I continued to hope the impos- sible might happen; by some miracle of genius, I GEORGE MOORE. Cobden The Internationalist THE NINETEENTH CENTURY showed its trust in bust for the library, reproducing the outlines of the history by the fact that the monuments which it heroic statue which Morley erected for the cathedral erected to what it recognized as greatness took his or public square. Even so we might be grateful, for toric form. Instead of confiding immortality to the highways of the world no longer lead past the marble and bronze or poetry the Victorians erected memorial places where the last century honored the great structures of interpretation and documents its dead. In fact, however, Mr. Hobson's life is known as Lives and Times,' or Lives and Letters. more than this. By shifting the emphasis from Lockhart's Scott, Masson's Milton, Moore's Byron, Cobden's early and best known activities in connec- Froude's Carlyle, Forster's Dickens, were followed tion with the repeal of the Corn Laws to his later by Purcell's Manning, Liddon's Pusey, Morley's application of his principle of free trade to foreign Cobden and Gladstone, and with Moneypenny's affairs during the period from the opening of the Disraeli and Gosse's Swinburne the fashion goes on. Crimean to the close of the American Civil War, As the death of a rich man provokes the immediate Mr. Hobson has given us a new view of his subject, question to whom does he leave his wealth, so that with a modern attitude and expression, and above of a famous one moves men to ask to whom does he all has placed his figure where the world cannot confide his reputation. The documented biography fail to pass and see. The timeliness of the book is became a definite form of literary art and craftsman astonishing. It is as if the spirit of Cobden had ship which the nineteenth century made peculiarly returned to take his place beside Lowes Dickinson its own. Some of its subjects live for us the more and Bertrand Russell. splendidly because of the monumental skill of their Mr. Hobson was fortunate in having new docu- biographers, while others have suffered through a ments to supplement those of which Lord Morley frankness or a clumsiness which has sometimes made such conscientious use. The correspondence seemed a betrayal. with Mr. Richard, of the Peace Society, and that Of the great mortuary artists of the Victorian with Charles Sumner occupy most of the present School John Morley may be accounted the chief. volume. The biographer contents himself with a His Cobden in 1881 was a high achievement, and his few pages here and there of connecting narrative, Gladstone twenty years later established his rank. and for the rest lets Cobden speak for himself—the The completeness and justice of these works would protagonist of non-intervention, internationalism, seem to leave little scope for his successors, and one and pacifism in the years 1850-1865. These were approaches the new life of Richard Cobden by J. A. the years of the supremacy of Palmerstone in the Hobson (Holt) with the feeling that it can be councils of the British government, and with him, little more than a replica, a figurine or portrait in the House of Commons, on the hustings, and in 400 April 19 THE DIAL the press, Cobden carried on a long and splendid ministers to agree to this pacific measure at the very duel. With John Bright he threw himself directly moment when Palmerstone was rousing England to across the path which England under the bad genius renewed armament against them. Twice he re- of her leader was following and dragging the world ceived offers from the Whigs to take office, once after her to its ruin. He fought the mischievous from Palmerstone himself, but he rejected the intrigues of Lord Stratford de Redcliffe at Con specious argument of the good which he might stantinople, the attempt to isolate Russia, the re accomplish in the Cabinet. In this respect of utter peated and, foolish war panics founded on the imag integrity his career offers a contrast, of which he inary danger of invasion by France and resulting was not unconscious, to the brilliant opportunism of always in increase of armament, the bullying of the Gladstone. United States, the disgraceful aggressions against Cobden's doctrines of non-intervention and paci- China and the border state of India. He recognized fism were the direct result of his faith in free trade this policy as one of cowardice as well as selfishness as the solvent of war. As early as 1842 he wrote and cruelty, and he did not hesitate to express his to Mr. Ashworth: condemnation of the imperial part which his country had played, and of which Palmerstone's activity Free trade by perfecting the intercourse and securing the dependence of countries one upon another must in- seemed to him the culmination. His comment on evitably snatch the power from governments to plunge their people into war. recent English history is worth quoting-indeed he thought so himself for he used practically the same With the example of free trade in England the language to two correspondents—o Mr. Thomassen Manchester School thought that it had provided the September 27, 1852 (quoted in M rley), and world with a solid basis of international peace, a to Mr. Richard two days later : basis of utilitarianism. Cobden saw clearly that the structure of international economic service and I wish we had a map, on Mercator's projection, with a red spot printed upon those places by land and sea advantage which he had planned would be wrecked where we have fought battles since 1688. It would be by tendencies already manifest to replace the legiti- seen at a glance that we have (unlike any other nation under the sun) been fighting foreign enemies upon every mate methods of gain by exchange of goods for the part of the earth's surface excepting o’r own territory get-rich-quick device of exporting capital, be- -thus showing that we have been the most warlike and cause, as Mr. Brailsford has pointed out, while aggressive people that ever existed. the exporter of goods has a natural interest in And again : the prosperity of his customer, the exporter of capital, like any other money lender, often finds We shall do no good until we can bring home to the conviction and consciences of men the fact that, as in his advantage in the bankruptcy of his client, the slave-trade we had surpassed in guilt the whole To the safety of this financial penetration of world, so in foreign wars we have been the most ag- gressive, quarrelsome, warlike, and bloody nation under weaker and undeveloped countries Palmerstone's Civis Romanus doctrine of protection to the Nor did he confine his opposition to private cor- property of British citizens in foreign lands, was essential. It appeared, a cloud not bigger than respondence. With the prestige which he had won a man's hand, in connection with the case of Don by the prosperity which followed the repeal of the Pacifico, a Levantine Jew naturalized Englishman , Corn Laws he addressed his countrymen fearlessly, even in times of actual warfare, defying the popular whose house was sacked by a mob in Athens and for whose avenging Palmerstone sent the British psychology, putting his reputation, his party, and fleet to blockade Greece—and Cobden denounced almost his life at stake. He won a signal triumph of reason in the House of Commons in carrying a him. Thirty years later when the cloud had grown vote of censure against the Palmerstone government to cover half the heavens with menacing blackness, Mr. Gladstone at the behest of the creditors of the for the outrageous bombardment of Canton because Khedive sent the English fleet to bombard Alexan- of the seizure by Chinese authorities of the lorcha dria and put down the Egyptian nationalists—and Arrow, but in the election which followed Palmer- Cobden's friend John Bright resigned from the stone set the country aflame with patriotism, Cob- Cabinet. den and Bright were defeated for Parliament, and the Manchester School was almost wiped out. Of the fact that in his war against war Cobden carried through to success the difficult negotiation He anticipated the experiences of present day statesman- of a commercial treaty with France, to the immense ship, Mr. Hobson's pages contain many reminders . Therein consists the timeliness of his volume. The advantage of both nations. Nothing speaks so ele dishonesty necessary to maintain the war spirit wat quently of the impressiveness of Cobden's character and the strength which sheer conviction gave him as the theme on which Cobden began his speech (at the fact that he brought Louis Napoleon and his Leeds) against the Crimean War: My first and greatest objection to the war, gentlemen, the sun. 1919 THE DIAL 401 has been the delusive, I had almost said fraudu- lent, pretences under which it has been made popular in this country. I mean that the feelings of the people have been roused into enthusiasm in favour of the war, by being led to entertain the belief that it was to effect objects which I know and felt, at all events, it never was intended to effect. The mischievous influence of the press on the public mind was a frequent subject of his .attack. He quotes Lord Aberdeen as saying: “ It was not the Parliament or the public, but the Press that forced the Government into the war. The public mind was not at first in an uncontrollable state, but it was made so by the Press.” In his arraignment of Palmerstone he declares: There is not the least doubt that Palmerstone has, as Disraeli said the first night of the session in reference to his use of the Press, made greater use of that means of creating an artificial public opinion than any other Minister since the time of Bolingbroke. He suggests a method of combatting this public enemy which Mr. Henry Ford has applied: My object in writing is more especially to suggest a plan which I have often thought of—that of going through The Times for about three years and taking out enough for a short pamphlet of its inconsistencies, false assumptions, unverified predictions, and bombastic appeals to the momentary passions and prejudices. Epher He recognized the difficulty of dealing with pre- paredness : The money power, created by the vast sums voted for the support of the standing armaments of Europe, is the greatest difficulty we have to encounter in trying to reduce those peace establishments. He was heartily in favor of the freedom of the seas, with limitation of the right of blockade and immunity of private property at sea. He repeatedly advocated a League of Nations. Except in the field of industrial relations there is scarcely a topic before the would-be makers of the new world today on which Cobden did not hold advanced views. Indeed it is with something like despair that one comes to see in our world only the realization of Cobden's antipathies and fears, and to recognize that he fought the battle for peace more honestly, bravely, and consistently than any successor has done, but in vain, while the diplomacy of Palmerstone was writing the death warrants of English boys at the Alma and Inkermann, and of American boys at Chateau-Thierry and in the Argonne. ROBERT Morss LOVETT. ole Living Down the Hyphen CAME TO AMERICA as I came into the world, molested. And together we hungered for the com- involuntarily. I have not always been able to re panionship of our fellows. Those who have not joice over the initial journey, but my gratitude for experienced it can have no conception of the isola- being taken on the second one when I was five years tion of an immigrant unsupported by a colony of his old has increased with the years. It is this gratitude kind. The situation should have drawn us to- which now prompts me to relate something of my gether but it did not. It did not because very dif- experience as an American of German birth. Per ferent emotions were aroused in us by these early haps my story may help a little toward a better experiences: in him, a feeling of bitter disappoint- understanding of one of the most serious and com ment; in me, an acute sense of shame. The wildest plicated problems brought on by the war. tales of conditions and opportunities in America had My first years in America were not happy. Un brought my father to this country, and he suffered like many foreigners, my parents settled among disillusions of which I then understood nothing. As American neighbors instead of in a district pre a result Germany, transformed by the magic of dominantly of their own nationality. As a result distance, had never seemed so fair. If going back I was the butt of ridicule and the object of petty to the country he came from were as simple a propo- persecution whenever I appeared in the street. sition to the immigrant as those assume who glibly Fights without number, in which I was almost suggest a return trip to the disappointed foreigner, invariably worsted and ignominiously chased home, I am sure my father would have died in the land of seem, as I look back, to have made up the record of his birth. I, on the other hand, had come with no my days. Sometimes my father took a hand, swoop illusions, and being a child, lived forward. I had ing down upon a gang of tormenters like a terrible but one wish: to be rid of every trace of German Nemesis , collaring some of the leaders and giving about me—in clothes, in manner, in speech; to be them.a ringing box on the ears. Then others would free from the guilt which made boys and girls call be drawn in-fathers or mothers or big brothers Sauerkraut," and yell after “Nix kom' and we had tumults on a larger scale. Once in 'rouse Von der Dutchman's house." deed shots were fired, though no one was hit. In my childish extremity I called upon my gods, Thus we fought side by side, my father and I, for the angels. They could manage it, I knew, so that the simple privilege of going about our business un I would be liked instead of tormented. Then one me me, 402 April 19 THE DIAL night I was awakened by cries of pain. I could Which was fortunate for me, but it intensified the tell it was my mother, and I faintly remember conflict between us. I had a keen appetite for quivering all over and drawing myself together in history and biography, and so devoured with avidity physical sympathy. But presently I was sound the romantic story of the settlement of America, asleep again, blissfully ignoring her agonies. And and the dramatic founding of our nation. My the next morning I had a new sister. mental furniture was soon as completely American My new sister brought an illumination. I still as my love of country was fervent and intense. remember how clear it all seemed. The way out And how I hated the English! The same process of my difficulty was to become a baby again. And which made me American made me anti-British. so I prayed to be started over as a baby, an Amer And of course I liked the French. They had helped ican baby like my sister, with the power to grow so us win the Revolution. As for all other nations, fast that before anyone would notice what had even Germany, they were names. My head knew of happened, I would be as big as I was before, only their existence, but not my heart. And what did it free from all trace of German. I had the most matter? There was one country transcendently fantastic ideas as to how it was to happen, and great and glorious, “the land of the free and the enjoyed ecstatic moments when it seemed to me home of the brave," my country! the change was beginning. And when the scheme of The crisis came when I was fourteen. For a becoming a baby again had to be recognized as a year my father had threatened to take me out of failure, I invented a variety of others, with always school and now he said the fatal word. And my the same objective to be an American, and con father did not change his mind in such matters. sequently to be liked, instead of tormented. Thus How vividly I recall the closing exercises of that while my father was looking wistfully back to the year. They were to be my last. In the midst of old country I was using what ingenuity I had to them, while the speaker of the occasion was urging become one with the new country. Such was the upon us the advantages of continuing in school, I beginning of the separation between us which was to burst into tears and rushed from the room. become in time a spiritual chasm. Going to work was easy enough. I had been Just when or how my father first became accustomed to working after school and in the sum- aware of my state of mind I do not know. mer. Indeed, my last year in school was purchased When he did, he took drastic measures to keep me German in soul. I was never permitted to by working in a restaurant nights, sleeping when there were no customers. But a dull dread of Sep- utter an English word in the house or in his tember grew upon me as the summer wore on. hearing outside, and if he discovered my dislike stood it well into August. Early in the morning for anything because of its German associations it of the sixteenth, however, they found my good immediately became his chief concern to see that I mother in a dead faint in the kitchen. She had was most punctilious in my loyalty to that thing, just learned that the secret confided to her was out; whatever it was. Not very good psychology, but I had left in the night gone to try myself out in he followed the method rigorously. To lose me too the world.” was the last straw of failure. He could not bear it. Consequently, as my Germanism came gradually to When I saw my father again much had happened. Instead of fourteen I was twenty-six, and he did be less of an occasion for annoyance out of doors, I began to be punished at home for signs of Amer- not know me as we met. I had intended to do him icanism. And my father did not punish psychically. the courtesy of talking in German, but my purpose Of that the scars I still bear are witness. When in to cut myself off from everything German had the grip of the passion which seized him at every worked too well. My attempts only called at- new sign of my defection, he lost all sense of justice tention to the thoroughness of my naturalization. Sentences begun in German were soon snarled and and all humanity. But why go into details of cruelty and brutality? He is locked away forever had to be unraveled in English. It was evident, too, from my praise or blame in the hillside he loved. that my loss of the German tongue was merely the where the unrivaled redbud blooms in May and the outward manifestation of a complete spiritual change within. He did not seem to mind. We pawpaw is heavy with strange fruit in October. Moreover, that miracle-woman, my mother, re- talked far into the night, seated in the old grape, arbor overlooking the river. Long streamers of deemed and glorified even those horrible experiences . dancing light—red, green, yellow—were Aungowe I remember them now without bitterness. My father was strongly opposed to church us from the dark bank across the stream. religion, and one consequence of this was that he and then the deep-toned whistle of a river packet favored public as against parochial school education. would announce that it was about to take "the Bend,” and bear down upon the city; and soon I 1919 403 THE DIAL to mc com- thereafter a puffing monster with two rows of echo. Quick to appreciate any sign of mental vigor, fiery teeth, and one red and one green eye, would but holding me to high standards of workmanship, glide out from behind the black hills, just as when generous in his endorsement, but straightforward I was a boy and could tell each steam-boat by its and penetrating in his criticism where he thought whistle. We talked far into the night, but not me wrong, what he did for me in the field of in- about those days, the days that were uppermost in tellect alone would be difficult to overemphasize. our minds. Somehow we could not manage it, or And his influence upon my mind only partly repre- else we thought the reestablished relationship too sents the spiritual tradition which came precious to risk. Nor did we talk as father and son, through him and which I have tried to pass on to but as men between whom some tragedy in the past others. For our association was not merely a matter has created a bond which holds them together while of brains. Together we enjoyed music, together we it keeps them apart. As I walked to the depot championed what we thought better ideals in edu- through the summer night, with the katydids dis cation, together we worried over the prospect of art puting in the willows along the river, and the in America. Moreover, his influence was suffused Pleiades just visible over the eastern hills, I was by a rare personal quality. I was welcomed to his conscious that I had experienced one of those ele family circle in town and by lake side, and we were mental moments of life that introduce men to a companions again and again in walking trips new level of being; and I learned afterwards that through some of the loveliest country my eyes have he continued to pace slowly back and forth in the ever looked upon. Uplands warmed by the first garden until daylight. And so it remained to the breath of spring, great valleys asleep in the embrace end. There was something big about our relation of Indian Summer, bonfires with their trails of blue ship, but also something somber. We approached, smoke, the smell of pine, the sound of waters, yellow but did not meet. That was the tribute we paid moons and red suns such are the first memories to the foe of compromise enshrined in the heart of my thought of him recalls. I have heard it said that father and son. the ideal relation between man and man is Well, as I was saying, much had happened in radeship in the achievement of glorious plans.” If those twelve years. For on thing, I had graduated that is true, we were headed in the right direction. from college, doing major work in American his So year was added on year until when the war tory. Lack of preparation and lack of funds made broke out in Europe I was myself a professor, proud college a rash adventure, but youth does not take of the privilege of calling my teacher my colleague. counsel of obstacles. I began to dream of it while And I was accepted for what I was—an American. still an office boy in New York, and in time the Few people, to be sure, knew that the two thinkers dream had its way, as dreams will. When the pre most intimate to my inner life were Emerson and paratory work was somehow accomplished, a far William James. Not many more were aware that seeing friend guided me to a college which was just I had returned from a stay abroad, where I had then in a period of creative glory. It was at once responded profoundly to the influence of the past, a shrine and a work-shop. Inspired by a new vision more alive than ever to the glory of a possible future of life and guided by new ideals of service, pro America. But I was also American by outward fessors, administrators, and students were cooperat- signs. The fact of the matter is that there was ing to make the institution a laboratory of social nothing about me to raise the question of nationality. reconstruction. It was just the environment needed My name, while German, was not obviously so, and to clarifiy and illuminate my intense but uninformed there was no trace of German accent or construction Americanism. Here, too, in one of the professors, I in my speech. I had no affiliation with German found the man who gave the intellectual tone to societies. My habitual associates, my intimate my life which will, I suspect, remain its dominant friends, my manner of life, everything marked me quality to the end. As my teacher he introduced as thoroughly American. Of the number who in me to spiritual treasure of which I had not even one way or another chanced to discover my German suspected the existence. It was as if he had raised extraction I do not recall a single person who was the blinds and opened the windows upon a new not greatly surprised, and many were even in- world. And if, looking out upon that world, I at credulous. There is absolutely nothing German first failed to see things which he thought it of about him but his name,' once said a German in most importance to see, and then gradually showed disapproval of me, and that's only half German.” an interest in things which in his judgment were The outbreak of the war brought a great change. to be ignored because they were of slight importance, All my speculative thinking had prepared me to he did not, like the typical professor, lose interest see in the European struggle the threat of destruc- in my career. He wanted me to be a voice, not an tion to Western civilization, and I became more and 404 April 19 THE DIAL It was ( more pacifistic in my convictions as the war increased in bitterness and brutality. Doubtless my early dis- like of the British was an influence too. not easy for me to accept the English statement of the case at its face value. And perhaps something was due to subconscious ties which bound me to the land of my birth. I examined myself repeatedly on this matter and always came to a negative con- clusion, but such influences may be very subtle. All that I am sure of is that I fervently hoped the strug- gle might soon come to a deadlock, and that our country might act as mediator in the interest of a better international arrangement. I found en- couragement in the writings of Bertrand Russell, G. Lowes Dickinson, and Norman Angell, and with their aid I was able to translate my faith into a program. To my surprise, though not at all unnaturally under the circumstances, my attitude was inter- preted by many of my colleagues as pro-German. At first I paid little attention to these suspicions. They seemed so absurd, so obviously without foun- dation. Moreover I discovered that some of my critics were satisfied with nothing less than absolute moral and intellectual surrender. The expression of the slightest difference of opinion as regards the correct policy for America, was branded by them as pro-Germanism, and any concession made in the I might have expected that under any circum- stances I should have been slow to apprehend his meaning. I fear, therefore, that I made some such silly reply as, Is that so ? That's interesting." * You seem to take it lightly,” said my colleague, turning upon me. “I assure you this is no time for joking. I was never more serious.” His frigid tone, rather than what he said, pene- trated my preoccupation. I felt as if ice-water had been poured down my back. What is the matter ?" I managed to say. What have I done?” It isn't anything you've done,” he replied, “ it's what you are. At last the crisis is upon us. From today on Germany and America will be at war. Unpleasant as it may be, no true American can any longer condone the divided allegiance of the Ger- man-Americans. a case of for us or against us." That afforded me a clue, of course, but only . a clue; for he had never given me the slightest in- dication that he suspected me of divided allegiance, and strange as it may seem, I had never thought of myself as German-American. At first I thought of myself as German, then as American. Never, as far as I know, did I represent that complex of mental preferences and attitudes properly called German- American. Not that I retained no admiration for It's now interest of harmony only led to their demanding anything German. What I mean is that my delica tion to American life and ideals was ardent, en- thusiastic, and whole-hearted. For a moment I thought my colleague was speaking in general and in the abstract; that he did not have reference to me at all. But his face, white and tense with sup- pressed emotion, recalled his first remark and I un- derstood it in all its tragic import. “You have known me now for ten or twelve years,” I ventured. 'If, as result of that ac- quaintance or because of something you have just learned, you have concluded to strike me from the list of those you care to associate with, I can only bow to your wish in the matter; hard as I shall find it. But it seems to me that I am at least entitled my to know what you are basing your action upon.” “I have already told you," he said, “ that it isn't anything you've done. It's your attitude, it's what you are, and that's what counts in a crisis like this. I have come to feel that just as a Jew is a Jew— an exception here and there doesn't matter—so a German is a German." I have not the art to describe the effect these words had upon me, There was a feeling in my of it (I had not yet heard the newsy, the thing through my brain and out into the roots operating head as if myriads of tiny arrows were shooting hair. My throat was dry; I could hardly speak; others. Moreover, some of these colleagues were outspokenly pro-British, and others actually Cana- dians or Englishmen who, although at home in the United States for years, had never felt it desirable to become American citizens. It was foolish, per- haps, but I resented their attempt to instruct me in Americanism. Instinctively I assumed an attitude of aloofness and thus made matters worse. Then came the explosion which aroused me to the seriousness of my situation and made it clear to me that I was once more called upon to fight for the privilege of being an American. The day on which the papers announced our entrance into the war is one I shall not forget. The morning sun was streaming in through the window as I reached the office at the university which I shared with teacher-colleague, and he was standing in the flood of it looking out over the campus. Apropos of my "good morning ” and without turning around he said, “I regret that hereafter our relations cannot be what they have been in the past.” My mind was preoccupied with the lecture I was about to deliver, so that I did not appreciate the real import of his remark. Besides, had I noticed his excited state of mind and had I known the cause was so completely out of harmony with anything 1919 405 THE DIAL - us and my whole body seemed rigid and cold. It was to me. But I failed to catch its significance. I re- a strange, hard voice that said: garded it as a personal matter, as a misunderstand- And what are we to do? If your words could ing between him and me. Since then, however, I. blast us into nothingness, or if you could spit us have become well aware that the clash between us out of the country as you might some nasty taste was symbolic of a national situation. And this is out of your mouth, well and good. But here we my justification for telling the story. For if the are, by the hundreds of thousands, even if you con public mind is such that a keen, judicially-minded, vince us that we have no right here. What are we cultured man is impelled to smother a whole class to do?” of his countrymen under one blanket of suspicion, “That is for you to decide,” was his reply. what can be expected of men as they run? And if I wish I had given free rein to the feelings which one so completely Americanized as I falls under surged within me. I wish I had spoken the words the common suspicion even in the mind of a friend, that were on my lips: that he had no right to ex what chance have those who are less Americanized, clude me or any other so-called German-American especially those who are at the mercy of enemies? from the us " for or against which every citizen Here is the seriousness of the situation. As far as was now called upon to take a stand; that until I a am concerned there has been nothing like per- we removed ourselves from that “ by un secution. Nor has anything that has happened suc- American sentiments or acts we were as vitally part ceeded in making me feel that I am German or even of it as he; that I resented his arrogating to him a German-American. I resented it, I confess, when self the right to decide my status. I wish I had told I found that my German birth closed the door to him that his Scotch antecedents no more made him service in a Red Cross unit, and that even the Y. M. an American than my German birth kept me from C. A., badly in need of men for France, could not being one; that we were what we were, regardless send me out if it would. But I scored it up against of origins-a doctrine which in better days he him- “military necessity,” and thus somehow—the psy- self had taught me. It would have cleared the air, chology of it is obscure—-escaped the feeling that and who knows what good might have come of it? I do not truly belong. As for the proposal (which One thing stood in the way, the same thing that we hear in our town as elsewhere) that all who is responsible for serious facial antagonisms now have German blood in their veins shall hereafter developing in our country. That one thing was regard themselves, unless specifically approved, as pride—a pride which in him assumed a holier than spectators of rather than participators in American thou attitude, and in me was too holy to defend life, although it still arouses a temporary bitterness itself. I said nothing at all. Looking back from I find it more and more possible to ignore, this distance, it is clear that my colleague's patriotic while I go on doing my work and planning to take self-righteousness was the element of dross in a deep a not unworthy part in the great task to which I love of country. He unfortunately confused it with believe my country to be dedicated. One cannot, I love of country itself, a confusion which, sad to say, know, set bounds to what a man may be persuaded is at present not uncommon. Only the most pro of: I remember that in preparatory school we found emotional upheaval can account for his action. formed a conspiracy to make a Freshman believe I have never met a man temperamentally more fair he had the measles, and that he finally took to bed, minded. Again and again I have marveled at his a very sick boy, while the panic-stricken conspirators ability to arrive at an objective judgment in situa hastened to find a doctor. But somehow I have no tions where most of us were twisted to one side by fear whatever of being convinced that I am not an an emotional bias. His performance in this case was American. It is acknowledged to be impossible for so fundamentally unlike him, so out of harmony a leopard to change his spots or an Ethiopian his with what for years he had shown himself to be, skin; how then shall a man change his personality that I should have paid' no attention to it. I didn't and be someone else? I am, however, afraid that and couldn't. I have but this to say for my conduct, many Americans of German ancestry who have not and that not at all by way of justification. My been as completely Americanized as I and who have reaction was essentially a struggle—random and thus been peculiarly open to suspicion and peculiarly unintelligent if you will , but sincere and vital -- liable to the unjust treatment which suspicion often against being de-Americanized. If a man has any breeds, will, unless we change our method of dealing spirit he cannot go through what I had gone through with them, be made in fact what we have already to become an American and then calmly suffer him- made them in our imagination—a group apart, a foreign substance in the body of our national life, It goes without saying that I deeply regretted the and so the germ of a new and stubborn social interruption of a relation which had meant so much disease. in me, self to be hyphenated. 406 THE DIAL April 19 Patriotism and Its Consequences The war, By The Law of its being, produced this was merely oratorical camouflage : no sensible 13 as in conse- articles which have no conceivable use in a civil officer would arrest such authentic “patriots community, and which could not be stored away by Henry W. Wood or W. H. Hobbs. During the such a community without grave menace to its ex war men were sent to jail for their convictions; they istence. In the case of poison gas the War De were asked to lecture upon patriotism for—their partment set an excellent example by dumping large suspicions. quantities of the noxious compound into the sea. It Now the war animus revealed in Professor is unfortunate that no administrative authority has Hobbs' work was one of the most important psy- power to deal with the fuscous states of mind which chological by-products of the war, and to those who were likewise manufactured for purely bellicose pur accept the liberal point of view it appears at long poses. A community that had an intelligent regard last the most dangerous. The virulence of this ani- for the hygiene of its mental processes would con mus was not sufficiently accounted for in the liberal sign vast quantities of its war books, pamphlets, prospectuses, and the difficulty of handling it proved newspapers, and judicial decisions to the ignomini so great that within the executive department itself ous depths of the ocean rather than let the rising the spirit of the President's first exhortation to fight generation run the danger of contamination through without rancor was broken within a few weeks contact on library shelves and bookstore counters. of the declaration. Perhaps the only writer who Foremost among books awaiting such disposal would be The World War and Its Consequences, by gauged this imponderable element at its full worth was the late Randolph Bourne. Whereas in Ger- Professor William Herbert Hobbs (Putnam). many "patriotism " helped provoke the war, This series of lectures on patriotism which Pro America the war succeeded in evoking an uncon- fessor Hobbs tardily publishes points to trollable quantity of patriotism." This patriot- quences of the war that the lecturer was hardly ism of blind faith must be distinguished boldly from introspective enough to explore. The doctrine of that genuine patriotism of good works whose other the single indivisible nation, the cult of the united name is public spirit. To practice real patriotism front, the operation of the “ patriotic” inquisition, is the first duty of a citizen; to inculcate an in- the imprisonment and torture of heretics, and the stinctive and servilé loyalty to the group, right of like, are all phenomena worthy of attention in any wrong, hell-bent or heaven-bent, is the first sub- exhaustive discussion of either the world war or terfuge of a commercial imperialist. Both varieties patriotism. Toward topics of this nature, however, were stimulated by the war. The problem before us Professor Hobbs is opaque, for the reason that it would lead to an examination of the state of mind is to do away with “patriotism ”—the blind habit of running with the pack and following the leader which he, and the late ex-President, and a number of other worthy and honorable gentlemen not mere- on predatory expeditions and to maintain public spirit. It is a sufficient comment ly accept but would like to perpetuate. The Hobbs' beautiful opacity that in the course of more "patriotism " complex has made the name of peace loathsome to Professor Hobbs: it literally passeth than four hundred pages he does not once attempt to make this elementary distinction. his understanding. His mind is at home only in Unless this war complex can be broken up the that fumy war atmosphere which destroyeth all prospects for a civil polity are not hopeful. The understanding, for it is in this element that all institutions of peacedom function freely only on a to be black traitors, and all “ patriots" shining heroes of chivalry. One of the basis of divided loyalties and dispersed interests. humors of the situation is that the wind which can Civil life means association, with the family, the trade union, the grange, the chamber of commerce, carry.the poison gas against the foe can also waft it back upon the friend. If the Industrial Work- the, professional institute, the church, the theater, and the forum intermediating between the life of ers are disloyal to the established government, what the individual as an individual and his life as the about the National Security League? Hence, it is amusing to see Professor Hobbs close his last lec- member of a political (military) state. The war ture with an unseemly attack upon the President brought the individual face to face with the state and divested him of all associative interests, and in whilst (with an eye that searches the audience for a Department of Justice agent) he invites the gov- order for a state to continue on a footing ready for ernment to make the most of it. But of course warlike emergency this intolerance of voluntary groups which refuse to merge themselves in the life on Professor pacifists appear 1919 THE DIAL 407 of the state will continue. In particular, the uni- products of the war into a realm where its presence versity, with its extensive criticism of the prevailing is not merely useless but dangerous. By sanction- order in the economic and political worlds, is threat ing this philosophy Professor Hobbs has done a ened with the same fate in this country as it met in dubious service as a citizen, and he has committed Germany if the military conditions which operated a traitorous act as a scholar, a member of that wider in Europe come into existence here. Dr. Claxton, republic of science and letters. He places himself the Federal Commissioner of Education, has ration- in that group of “hirelings in the camp, the court, alized the instinctive war complex by saying that and the university, who,” according to Blake, the government of the United States recognizes no would, if they could, forever depress mental and groups. It knows only individuals.” To accept his creed would be to carry one of the necessary prolong corporeal war." LEWIS MUMFORD. (6 to mean: A Vindication of Fielding IN N A CONVERSATION in Fielding's A Journey from tematizing the results of the researches of other re- This World to the Next, Shakespeare is seen shak cent scholars, he compared these data with the state- ing his sides” and exclaiming: “On my word, ments of earlier biographers, testing and reenforc- brother Milton, they have brought a noble set of ing his conclusions with the testimony in the writings poets together; they would have been hanged erst of Fielding himself. The result is the story of Field- have convened such a company at their table when ing's life year by year, often month by month and alive.” So Fielding himself might have enjoyed the day by day, from boyhood to his death in the forty- incongruous position of mannerly critics who have eighth year of his age, a record supplemented by nine- bestowed post mortem commendation upon his art teen photogravures of great beauty, and a bibliog- while they gave scant courtesy to his person. To raphy (in part the work of that indefatigable Field- the rescue of such uneasy persons, caught upon the ing student, Mr. Frederick S. Dickson), which not horns of a prudential dilemma, now comes Pro only adds new data concerning familiar works but fessor Wilbur L. Cross with a portrait of “ Field also contributes new items to the Fielding canon. ing as He Was " which reconciles art and the The angle of Professor Cross' approach to his sub- bourgeois concern with the artist's private life. To ject is as far as possible Fielding's own. In his Fielding's love of nature and truth, however, the title, like Fielding, he uses History mass of apocryphal legend which has accumulated a biography, either fictitious or real, that places in about the facts of his life history would be abhor the proper social background all the incidents in the rent; and welcome to his love of fair play would be life of a man essential to knowing him, in conjunc- Professor Cross' loyal labors to remove from the tion with a sufficient account of the persons who shadow of Arthur Murphy,” Fielding's personal bore upon that life for good or evil.” This placing reputation. of the man in his milieu in such a way that the two In this History of Henry Fielding (3 vols., Yale shall be mutually interpretative, requires that a mas- University Press, New Haven.) Professor Cross hás tery of the facts of both the physical and spiritual added another to the little group of great biographies life of an age shall be put at the disposal of a con- in English literature. He has reconstructed with structive imagination quickened by emotion. This much detail the life of a man who has left almost no vitalizing of scholarship by warm personal sympa- personal documents. Lockhart, Trevelyan, Mrs. thies is the source of the strength—and of certain Gaskell not only stood in intimate personal relation amiable weaknesses, I think—which Professor to the subjects of their studies but they had also the Cross' work displays. documentary aid of voluminous letters, journals, and What Viscount Morley's Recollections do for other records. Not so Professor Cross. Over a Victorian England, in its upper social reaches, what century and a half after the death of his hero, a the Letters of Charles Eliot Norton do for the Cam- period during which, unexplainably, nearly all Field- bridge group of the mid-century, revealing con- ing's letters had disappeared and other contemporary cretely the currents and eddies of political, social evidence had become scattered and blurred, he un and literary life as they are felt by a man who is a dertook the task whose patent difficulties had de- part of what he has seen, such service The History terred earlier biographers. Collecting laboriously of Henry Fielding renders to England, especially the contemporary records here and there in letters, London, from about 1730 to 1754. The inside his- memoirs, magazines, newspapers, and archives; sys- tories of the theaters managers, actors, play- 408 THE DIAL April 19 wrights, and critics of the Haymarket and Covent man playing in his day many parts. As Professor Garden and Grub Street close by; the personal and Cross writes in his final chapter: Fielding's “de- factional conflicts of the Walpole ministry waged invelopment under the stress of changing circum- pamphlet and journal and on the stage, until the stances was perfectly natural and logical, like the Licensing Act put an end to the activities of Field development of a great character in a great novel. ing and his fellows; the study and fellowship of the He had a mind most responsive to his immediate lawyers of the Middle Temple; the sordid, arduous, surroundings; and therein lay the prime element of and serviceable labors of the Bow Street Justice's his genius. court; murder and robbery in the dark city streets, This unity of effect, together with certain per- diseases, doctors and their nostrums, brothels and sonal qualities essential to the portrait, distinguish masquerades, prisons and constables and thief-takers, this from earlier biographies. Yet in the midst of lawbooks and lodgings, Salisbury, Bath, Lyme an admiring mood the reader pauses occasionally, as Regis, and London, all these items enter as naturally he reads through the volumes, to ask, at first hesi- and inevitably into this tale of real life as do the tantly and then with more assurance, whether now Flat-Iron Building and Montgomery Ward's Tower and then Professor Cross does not commit the very into pictures of New York or Chicago today. Such fault for which Frederick Lawrence and others landmarks of Fielding's physical world, like the stand condemned, that of letting “fixed preposses- inns and roads from Salisbury to Holborn which sion ” influence unwittingly his selection and inter- mark the stages of Tom Jones' progress, are at the pretation of facts. Frankly he tells us in his pre- same time the explanation of his inner life. For face that the work began with a prepossession, “a such a reconstructed world of eighteenth century surmise which soon grew into a conviction that the London many students will be grateful, for it is the author of Tom Jones could not have been the kind explanation not only of Harry Fielding and Tom of man described in innumerable books and essays." Jones but of other personages, historical or fictitious, The biography is surcharged with this thesis, which of those times. involves the destruction of that Fielding legend, Through this every-day world Professor Cross initiated in the rhetorical essay which the incom- follows Fielding; he portrays "the handsome boy who comes to London in 1727, perhaps, quickly win- petent Arthur Murphy prefixed to the 1762 edition of Fielding's works. Two items in the legend are ning his way in the theaters and also in the favor of the chief objects of attack: the charge that Fielding Lady Mary Wortley Montague his kinswoman; led a life of dissipation, to which was due his the student, not of law but of ancient letters, at Leyden in 1728-29; the anti-Walpole dramatist, and poverty, sickness, and premature death; and the statement that his works were written in haste in editor; the romantic lover and husband, the affec- the intervals between the riotous incidents of his tionate and anxious father of a family growing while the income seems to shrink; the faithful friend of rich and poor; the tireless and humane Justice of Led into paths of controversy here and there, Pro- the Peace laboring until sick unto. death for the fessor Cross gives short shrift to critics of his hero. reform of men and of laws; and finally, the social Of Richardson-always anathema to your true censor and lover of his kind, the same voice speak. Jones " set his shrunken heart boiling with rage and lover of Fielding—we hear that praise of Tom ing sentiments much the same in drama, journal, essay, pamphlet, and novel. envy"; Mrs. Barbauld's essay is "a thoroughly The last years of Fielding's life Professor Cross feminine production "; Leslie Stephen is "the last describes with a profound sympathy which dramatic- of the brilliant defamers,” after whom come " the ally foreshadows the end with feeling of Nemesis. twenty sane years from Dobson to Henley,” fol- He shows us a gallant spirit adventuring bravely lowed by a period of recent scientific research into through the Valley of the Shadow which closes about the facts of Fielding's life history, culminating in him with the inevitableness of a tragedy of fate. We the present work. finish the story of The Voyage to Lisbon in a sad Though Mr. Cross agrees in the main with the and exalted mood, which is our ultimate tribute conclusions of these later scholars, readers will be to Henry Fielding and to the art of his latest startled at times by the ease with which statements biographer. of Fielding's contemporaries are brushed aside when From this narrative Fielding's personality and incompatible with Professor Cross' thesis; puzzled a his work emerge with periking unity. There are no little too as to the exact basis of selection between violent or incredible transitions. H. Scriblerus Se- those facts in Fielding's novels which may justly be considered autobiographic, and those which are not Drawcansir, and Henry Fielding, Esq., are, one his art." In many cases readers will assume that career. cundus, Sir Hercules Vinegar," Sir Alexander autobiographic but *"essential dramatic elementshirt 1919 409 THE DIAL the biographer has at hand data not evident to them, justifying certain procedures and assertions in Field- ing's defense which appear captious or dogmatic. And they will conclude with the conviction that the truth about Henry Fielding lies perhaps far above the level of personal character Arthur Murphy de- scribed, yet—since God made man a little lower than the angels—just a bit below the amiable per- fection of the hero of Professor Cross. But after all the great value of The History of Henry Fielding lies not in its defense of Fielding's morals but in its realism in the presentation of the man and artist against the background of his times. As a rule it is the novel of manners, not the novel of purpose, which has the universal qualities which make for immortality. So it is often with bio- graphical writing, and especially is it true of the present work, that the qualities which give it charm and insure it permanence derive not from the author's thesis, not even from his personal analysis of his hero and his hero's works, discriminating and delightful as these are, but from the portrait of this hero playing a credible part in a fully peopled world reconstructed with the veracity and the imaginative sympathy of the creative scholar. Of such creative scholarship, remote from the genre of the average doctoral dissertation, American universities have hitherto given us too little. HELEN SARD HUGHES. Liberalism Invincible PER ERHAPS NO WORD has so diminished in prestige chafes at the artificiality of it all—apathetic and since the beginning of the war as the word liberal dull. Competent observers in Europe, even today, ism. This has been due not merely to the extraor months after the signing of the armistice, speak with dinarily facile collapse of supposedly liberal leaders growing concern of the atrophy of political minded- before the emotion-provoking shibboleths of bellig ness, the huddling back of the herd to smaller and erency, but also to the deliberate creation of a popu more understandable groups than the abstract State lar temper and attitude sharply hostile to all that for which they have already sacrificed almost beyond the adjective liberal connotes. Modern war invari any limit of human endurance. This apathy of bly brings to the fools and chauvinists of any social awareness in the individual is especially nota- country a glamour and prestige which they cannot ble in Germany and the half-starved, neurasthenic hope to achieve in the more rational atmosphere of small nationalities of south-eastern Europe; but it peace. Consequently they have a kind of vested has not left even the victors untouched. It is a type prestige interest in seeing to it that the mass of the of spiritual dullness before any other than immedi- people are kept at the same low intellectual level ate and material issuesma by-product of the bigotry which is their own customary habitation. It goes and intolerance (as truly as of the suffering) of the without saying that all the great instruments of war. It has brought the fact and the word, liberal- publicity—the press, the universities, the church, ism, into disrepute. the stage—are at their entire disposal, far from For the true definition of liberalism would be a unwilling to help them in their attempt to reduce definition of a temper and an attitude towards life the national atmosphere to the desired temperature as a whole rather than an explication of a program. of warm and unthinking animal emotion. The It would include the neglected virtues of candidness, independent and fearless mind is cowed into silence willingness to examine the unpopular view, toler- or twisted by the social pressure into mere erratic-. ance, intellectual detachment, the desire for social ism. The union sacrée tends irresistibly to become, experiment, humility before facts, historical back- so to speak, the union degradée, for when a nation ground. Liberalism is good-tempered and non- turns homogeneous in its thinking—as it has to in partisan. It despises the role of hired attorney for war-time-it must maintain its concepts at the any cause—however meritorious the cause may lowest common denominator. Political heresy (in intrinsically be. It is frankly au-dessus de la melée, normal times, a mere personal idiosyncrasy) becomes not through arrogance but through a pretty thor- a crime punishable by penalties more severe than ough conviction that perhaps the most valuable were visited upon the religious heretics of the in- social service. possible is the inculcation of the liberal Protest is greeted by savage and attitude of mind. It is less concerned with the summary repression; intolerance becomes the normal achievement of specific objects than with the crea- and accepted thing. Even a few months of this anti tion of that tolerant and intelligent social atmos- liberal nationalistic hysteria is usửally long enough phere without which the achievement of any object to shatter the thin resistances of the intellectuals, is valueless. Consequently the liberal temper is and to render the popular temper—which inwardly seldom encouraged and usually not even allowed by quisitorial age. 410 April 19 THE DIAL ܦ on to governments in time of war. It is subversive and time or to the apathy of peace. It puts the reader disturbing; it breaks up the national unity—and in the frame of mind where discussion is possible. seldom yet has a nation gone to war with its cause It really does induce in one the first act of intellect- so spotless that it could afford to be good-natured ual honesty—being fair to one's opponents. Tem- about its minority opposition. Certainly in this porarily at least, it makes the reader a liberal. present war, which seems to be transforming itself, Especially is this true of his latest book, The despite formal armistices, from nationalistic rivalry British Revolution and The American Democracy into a bleak class struggle, the suppression of all (Huebsch). The specific task of exposition which kinds of minority opinion has been especially ruth he attempts is not very pretentious. He merely tries less and far-reaching. It takes more than mere in to show how in Europe the war has raised questions tellectual conviction to withstand the passions of the which go far beyond those involved in merely politi- herd today; it takes more even than the sudden, defi cal democracy, and the relevancy of these new ques- ant courage of the irreconcilable. tions to our own immediate social and political It takes, in a word, what a genuine liberal like future in the United States. He gives an excellent Mr. Norman Angell has never relinquished, no analysis of the program of British Labor, showing matter what social pressure the war has focussed how beneath the formal demands runs a new note- him—the power of character remain the desire for an entirely novel social order. He rational, sensible, fair-minded. Mr. Angell is the shows how.industrial democracy has come to be the enduring, the Socratian type of liberal. He does real question in Europe; how the conscription of not allow the revelation of the appalling stupidity life has raised inevitably the moral issue of the con- and prejudice of the mob which the war has given scription of income and even the whole concept of us to shake his belief in the final ability of the aver private property. He points out that merely state age man to see the rational course of action. He socialism has come to be regarded with even more has a passion for reasonableness, “not," as he once suspicion by the workers desirous of a new status said to the present writer, “because I do not recog than the old capitalistic individualism. He explains nize the extent and massiveness of unconscious how the questions involved in state socialism cannot motives in the acts of people, but because the reason, be escaped by America after the drastic war legisla- slight and capricious though it is, is all that we tion. And finally he reveals how, as during the have.” He has been called the incomparable pam- Reformation it was the common man's feeling for phleteer, but this hardly does him justice. His writ ordinary justice and humanity which finally de- ing is all of a piece. It is one extended and detailed stroyed religious bigatry, so, in all likelihood, it will attempt to persuade the person of ordinary intelli be the common man's new feeling for the community gence to see the rational scheme of politics and of interest of all who labor and suffer that will affairs. What emotional drive it possesses comes finally destroy modern political bigotry. from his democratic faith in the ultimate good sense Mr. Angell's new book concludes with an essay of the common man and woman. It is sharply dif- which is of its kind a classic: Why Freedom Mat- ferentiated from either the incisive bitterness of so It is temperate and just and unanswerable. penetrating a critic as Bertrand Russell, or from Our author puts his case so that it cannot be chal- the fanatical and courageous doctrinairism of a lenged: human happiness ultimately depends upon leader like Liebknecht, or from the somewhat sneer- the quality of the society which men have made for ing petulance of a skeptic of war's values like themselves, and that quality depends upon the ideas Macdonald or Snowden. It is more akin to the of the individuals who compose it—those ideas, in quality of H. B. Brailsford's writing, although with less emotional intensity and likewise with less back- turn, upon freedom and independence of judgment. Without the latter a land Aowing with milk and ground of European history. For Mr. Angell's honey is spiritually a waste. Perhaps the one great method has the defect of its virtues: it is sometimes est evil resulting from this war, even counting all careless of minor facts, however sound may be the the physical and material suffering and loss, has main contentions; it has the somewhat thin and ratiocinative quality of all predominantly hortatory sanship, the willingness to kill and imprison because been its evocation of the spirit of intolerant parti- writing. But it is infinitely patient before stupidity; its feeling for justice and integrity is never once men could not agree with you. Men have been deflected by the plea of immediate expedients; it is taught to rely upon the wisdom of blind majorities. never bitter; it never descends to invective; it is Mr. Angell can look back with pride upon his record in this war. always lucid and simple and non-patronizing and He has done nothing to encourage straightforward. Almost any book of Mr. Angell's and much to destroy this ancient and most tragic is a fine corrective to either the passions of war- of human delusions. ters. HAROLD STEARNS. 1919 4II THE DIAL Labor Control of Government Industries 1, A MON MONG A NUMBER OF THINGS which we may lose native to state administration, no provision was through the general shuffle in international adjust- made for labor control. Control and management ment of affairs and exchange of thought, is the of railroad operations was vested in a board of direc- depressing idea which was gaining headway before tors which was to be elected with due precautions the war, that public utilities could be administered against power of rank and file. Management was by the state to the satisfaction of the common peo to be centralized, as it is commonly in the business ple; that by some hocus pocus this transfer from arrangement of affairs. The election of the direc- private to public operation would confer benefit on torate was divided between the federal government, the wage earners involved. The idea of state social the classified officials, and the employees as distin- ism gained friends and made progress as it began to guished from officers. Having given the rank and appear that the movement in that direction was not file a voice in the determination of the directorate, revolutionary, that it did not contemplate a greater ample provision was made for the overwhelming of control by labor or offer new opportunities for labor it. In this way the scheme of organization denied expression. It was essentially a revisionist proposi at the outset its cardinal and avowed principle, the tion, since it accepted the modern scheme of machine one that gave it validity, that operating rights production, the division of labor, and routine should be awarded on the basis of ability to operate. employment as unalterable, and offered nothing in If ability is in reality the asset of an operating its stead or supplementary which might open up the scheme, it follows that provision must be made for environment to the common people so that they its exercise. In the case of a business enterprise it could take part more freely in the reshaping of it. is necessary to show ability to pay and provision The spirit of the movement was to make the best for payment. In the case of a cooperative enter- of a bad thing and carry routine employment to its prise it is necessary to measure the capacity of indi- consummation by eliminating, further than had yet viduals and to give that capacity the best possible been done, the workers' responsibility through the conditions for expression and expansion. If the centralization of management of enterprise. The promoters of the railroad scheme should ever be idea seemed to be that if the direction of industry called on to submit their asset—that is their abil- could be vested in the state the tendency in modern ity—to appraisement, they would be obliged to enterprise to eliminate interest in the processes prove that their association was a well coordinated would be advanced, and energy and thought could organization composed of members who were techni- be saved for better things. cally equipped, conscious of their ability, their inter- The conspicuous loss of confidence of American dependence in the promotion of the enterprise; that socialists in state administration was occasioned by they were informed and intelligent as to the details the war against Germany and all that it represented. of administration and the purpose and the policy That loss of confidence was increased by the discus of the enterprise. Having shown so much it would sions which center around the Russian Revolu then follow, but not until then, that executive țion and the movement among the workers of Eng- officers could represent the ability of the member- land for status and control. As these events have ship and from this ability they would derive their emphasized the abortive results of state administra sanction. An enterprise could not be run by a board tion the workers of America have become more of directors, in fact, if the membership of the asso- conscious of the limitations which are inherent in ciation represented ability to any important extent, civil service. Up to the present time neither and if it had the chance to exercise it. American socialists nor trade unionists have offered Our national psychology at the moment is more any concrete working program which would replace favorable than it has ever been for the kind of bureaucratic management in public works. The reorganization which is implicit in the events. A syndicalist program of the Industrial Workers is year ago the proposition which I here submit would put forth in opposition to state-socialism, but that have appeared Utopian, but it will be recognized program has not been worked out along lines which at the present moment that it has its bearings on relate in practical application to actual problems of the current situation and its relation to institutional administration. I referred in a recent issue of The practices with which we have become familiar. I DIAL to the proposition of the railroad workers for submit the proposition to the special consideration of the administration of the roads. I alluded to the fact civil servants who are employed in public service. that while the proposition was presented as an alter To secure the maximum service from such public 4 1 2 April 19 THE DIAL utilities as railroads, telephones, telegraphs, mer charge for service such as the public schools, or in chant marine, street railways, gas, electric light the case of the post office which is run with a deficit, ing, power and water supply. The federal gov the franchise would be awarded the association to- ernment in respect to the federal utilities named, gether with a grant determined as now on the basis and the state government in respect to the state of approximate cost. utilities, and the municipal government in respect It is not possible to imagine a public service insti- to the municipal utilities, shall issue short term tution organized on these lines that would not radi- operating franchises to self-governing associations ate some of the warmth and human interest which which are made up of individuals technically com- is now so conspicuously absent from all public petent and necessary in the promotion of the utility employment. In the case, for instance, of the char- in question. These franchises shall: 1, fix charges tered post office association each local postmaster for service in consultation with the operating and local postal clerk would be responsible to his association, consistent with the costs of operation peers, as he would be elected by them and kept in and with the welfare of the association member his office on their sufferance instead of "holding ship and with the needs of the public; 2, require down his job ” through “ bluff" or "pull.” The from the association a rental based on the per bungling efforts of civil service reform, appoint- centage return of the net income, which repre ment by competitive examinations, political patron- sents in some approximate measure the value of age would fall by the way, for self-government the franchise which the community creates. (No would look after hiring and firing in the interest association could be forced to accept terms dis of the enterprise and the association. Such a advantageous to the enterprise or to the members, scheme of organization would offer local postmas- but the board granting the franchise could hold ters the chance to work out methods of economy open its offer until it was evident that no compe which would result to their own advantage and to tent association would accept the terms.) 3, fix the the advantage of their fellow workers in the saving minimum requirement for upkeep and extension. of time and expense. Under the present arrange- ment there is no inducement for a post office The association receiving the franchise would be employee ever to concern himself with efficiency. granted credit by a federal reserve or other public The public institutions which have been the most banking institution. It would be desirable for the seriously perverted by centralized administration franchise board to fix service charges, rent, and up- and quantative standardization are the public keep, not only to protect the public against extor- schools. A recent Superintendent of Schools of a tion, but so that the net income would revert in its large city was in the habit of observing that it was entirety to the membership in the shape of earned a matter of extreme satisfaction to be able at any income and not by wages arbitararily fixed. The income could be divided pro rata among the mem- time during school hours to consult his watch and bers as the association from time to time determined. to know at that particular moment that thousands of children were being drilled in some one lesson If an operating association holding a franchise on a certain page in some textbook to which he failed to give satisfactory service, the franchise would be renewed only on conditions of reorganiza- could at the moment refer. For this satisfaction tion. As the management of these organizations the thousands of teachers and the hundreds of thou- would be decentralized the temptation sands of children paid 'a colossal price in spiritual to play and intellectual vassalage. This example may illus- politics ” with the situation or within the organiza- tion could be largely avoided because under a trate bureaucracy gone mad or centralized admin- scheme of decentralized government the "plums istration carried to perfection. It is extreme but none the less it tells the story of bureaucratic management. of office holding would not exist as they do The responsibility and the consequent It indicates, in the varying degrees of its imposition, power would be diluted as it was divided and the inhibiting results for teachers and children. If shared. It would be to the advantage of the whole the schwols in any measure meet the needs of educa- membership to secure members on the basis of ability, tion they must represent conditions which are as on the basis of technical equipment, responsibility, changing as the conditions of growth. This can only experience, and general intelligence. Charges for be assured when the teachers coming in direct contact service would be fixed of necessity by the franchise with the individual children and their changing needs board, together with the association, as price is a are free to meet and take up the problems. Teachers matter of interest to consumers as well as to the will not experience this freedom until they are suf- workers. ficiently alive to the fact of their own enslavement In the case of public utilities which make no in the system, and until they are ready to assume the responsibility of promoting a school organiza- now. 1919 413 THE DIAL to tion which responds to the needs of the children and which translates their own present dull and thank- less job into a creative adventure. It would be unfortunate to leave the impression that bureaucratic management results exclusively from state administration. I have mentioned the proposition of the railroad brotherhoods which was opposed to state administration and in favor of an alternative which was no less bureaucratic in its promised results. The grave danger in England at the present moment is that the opposition to the movement of the rank and file of workers toward decentralized administration of all enterprise, will be able to convert the established trade unions into extra-legal organizations as much concerned retain centralized power as any state or business cor- poration. It is not necessary to remark in closing that the executive council of the American Federa- tion would assume such position, if the occasion of- fered, with a sense of their mission fulfilled and their efforts crowned in royal fashion, Will the rank and file in America take care? 39 Helen MAROT. 20 *71 Experimental Schools IN STRANGE CONTRAST to the turbulent efforts of control which they commonly do during babyhood, men to reorganize old institutions is the peace, if they are confronted with the organized world peace means quiescence, which continues without around them. But their natural method of experi- serious disturbance in the educational world below mentation with this organized material is constantly the university line. If some day the teachers of the inhibited, as their experimental handling of it inevi- lower schools are fired with a desire to experiment tably comes into conflict with some adult possessive they will discover that they must take the adminis interest. Their activities are curtailed and regu- tration of the schools as well as the formulation of lated at home and their experiments are supplanted policy and methods over into their own hands. and forestalled at school. Experimental schools, in - That is what has been done by a few teachers here opposition to this practice, undertake to protect the and there throughout the country who have realized environment of the children so that they may carry that the school systems and education are irreconcil on their experiments with confidence and freedom. able. The experimental schools which these teachers It is important to realize that the environment from have promoted may have their relation some day to babyhood to the sixth year must yield to the child's the general reorganization of the lower schools, as method of play, and that play is the child's applica- they show that if the method of growth of children tion of the trial and error method of science to peo- is discovered and followed a larger field in a shorter ple and to the things about him. The kindergarten period of time can be covered by the school. Such was founded on the play idea, but the kindergarten demonstrations will sow seeds of dissension in the is a system of teaching the children how to play. world of the lower schools and even now, if the The kindergarten acknowledges the play activities material which these 'experimental schools have of children in general, but not recognizing their brought to light could be assembled, something desire to experiment, it undertakes to socialize the might be done to disturb the peace. activities of a period which is distinctly individual. To begin with, the experimental method is pre The Montessori, distinguished from the kinder- eminently the method of little children. If we were garten method, is a system of training. "It gives the at all observant we should not have to be told that children more freedom to move about in their en- the method is in good working order among babies vironment and to choose what they will do, but the up to the age of four or before they are consigned material from which they have to choose is designed to some educational institution. Up to that time to train. The odium of teaching is transferred from they are occupied with growing. They have experi the teacher to blocks, to bits of fabric, to weights, mented with their own small bodies to such advan to sandpaper letters, and to figures. The children tage that they have acquired the art of walking, talk may not use this material to carry out purposes of ing, and the use of their hands. They have learned their own, but only for the purpose for which it these complicated operations more rapidly than they was originally designed. As the children's use of will be allowed to learn anything else in the future. material is limited, so is their development. Purpose Why is it that schools bent on getting children and purposefulness are the striking signs of growth over ground at a maximum pace reverse the lead in the period which follows babyhood. In the Mon- which the children themselves give? tessori schools the children's activities do not func- After children have acquired the degree of motor tion from their own point of view. The children 414 THE DIAL April 19 value of this academic matter as they experience its build a stair but they cannot put it to use. The to observe and are forming habits of work. The adult intention lying back of each of the Montes- pupils learn by living over in their play the experi- sori training sets is completed when the object is ences which their inquiries excited. In this play complete. Putting the object to use might become they need building material, carpenters' tools, and a practice and so the adult intention would be lost. toys which are representative. They require draw- Both the teaching system of the kindergarten and ing material, and outdoor space where they can dig the training system of the Montessori are opposed and build. - They will use all material, if they are to the method of the children's experimentation. given free access to it without suggestion, to try An experimental school, on the other hand, under out on their own scale of operation what they have takes to be a part of the children's environment, to seen going on in the world about them. watch the children while they grow, to discover and Somewhere between the seventh and eighth year meet their growth requirements as they appear. the interests of children and their methods of expres- Children cannot be taught to grow, but they can be sion undergo changes. Up to this time they have furnished with conditions which are conducive to reproduced adult existence by the method of play. growth. They cannot be trained to grow; our As they have made their acquaintance with material knowledge is necessarily insufficient, and always their desire play with it is modified; it does not must be. If we undertake to train some one of fully satisfy them as it did. They want in part to the senses we may be stultifying others. Normal turn the material or their activities to some real use. growth does not break up in this or the other direc This does not mean that children at this time have tion; it takes place as a whole. turned from the world of phantasy to a world of In the experimental schools the teachers and the reality; they have always been interested in reality, children are both the experimenters. The teachers but they have acquired a greater familiarity with it, are continuously trying out the value to the child of and with the familiarity comes the desire for better different kinds of materials and situations, and the workınanship. They want now for the first time children are continuously experimenting with the some training and some teaching. There has been materials which are available and learning through a general recognition that children were ready for these at first hand to make adjustments, generali- both at this time, and the formal schools have under- zations, and conclusions. The teacher directs the taken to meet this requirement by giving them child to sources of information as well as material academic material; but the acquisition of the three so that he may have the stimulating experience of R's is merely the acquisition of tools, and these are answering himself the questions the experience tools which fail to give children of this age the help excites. The questions and the answers point con- they want in their translation of the real world. stantly to new fields and opportunities. All this academic matter, which few children can The character of these opportunities is more or less dependent upon the location of the school. It visionary, less comprehensible and real; its tendency put to any use, has the tendency to make life more it is a country school the teacher's problems are sim- is to make adjustment to the actual environment plified. The environment is replete with raw mate- more difficult and the environment itself more remote. rial, that is, with matter which has not been made Many of the formal schools, in place of books The child's interests and processes in this and in place of hours of listening to the words of a environment naturally follow more or less physical teacher, are trying to meet the real needs of the laws of growth and are less complicated than those children through first-hand experience in different which he will meet in the city. But it is possible forms of handwork. Whether the real need is met in the city to give children under six years oppor- depends upon whether the applications are to things tunity to answer the queries which the actual prob- which are real to the children. Mere handwork lems of transportation turn up, and to follow with does not suffice. It must be handwork with a pur- intense interest, if they are given the chance, the transfer of material by rail, water, or through the pose which the children understand. Incidentally the children city streets. They will observe and inquire into cars , wagons, tug or river boats, trains, delivery schools , as they discover here and there that books which they are exclusively fed in the regular carts, with curiosity and with ability to understand the major part of the progression of such vehicles. and figures are helpful tools. They learn the actual Where are they going? what makes them go? what are they carrying and why? are questions which result in lessons in economics, geography, and As children advance toward adolescence the ex- physics. But the actual knowledge gained is less perimental method of dealing with environment has important than that the children are learning how the same significance. The indication of growth at this time is the shifting of the children's interest over. turn to the formalized material on use. 1919. 415 THE DIAL a cres- from the things which serve them individually, to what as well serves others, and particularly what serves the adult purpose. Through this period social desires and realization are advancing on cendo scale. Teachers have more to guide them in fórmulating their school work for this period, for they are more in sympathy with the children's minds. Having said so much for the experimental method, I must add that the contribution of the experimental schools is as yet negative rather than positive in character. They can, for instance, dem- onstrate that the regular school systems which handle children in the mass and standardize proce- dure on the factory principle dwarf as well as retard the children. The experimental schools hope to set up standards, but when they do they will not be standards which can be standardized. They repre- sent a never ending line of experiences to be pooled. and they indicate advances which have goals which are as various and as changing as the goals of in- dividuals whether those are adult or juvenile. CAROLINE PRATT. For peace A Perspective of Death D EATH IS THE LASTING aspect of a world at That he has made a communication of Lucretius peace no less than of the world at war. Mr. Leonard may be well assured. He has uttered, times, however, death is the contingency of the ad in his own measure, something of both the beat and venture of living, a sudden enemy springing from the passion of the Roman verse. His diction repro- the dark; while to men at war, death is the whole duces the Lucretian abbondanza, and his pieties and adventure—the hazard, and the purpose no less, of perhaps his temperament are not alien to the Lucre- both the slayer and the slain. There are casualty tian conspectus of life and death. Yet it is by no lists only in times of war. Then the eyes of death means certain that the excellences of his abound- stare all men in the face, its nearness hurts, and we ing verse make up for its limitations. Its metrical turn from it, and our poets and prophets extol the necessities have often stood in the way of clearness, vigor and the passion of the life of battle, and and have, perhaps more than anything else, caused orphans and widows and mothers are told to think us to miss that justness and adequacy of expres- only of the glories which their dead have saved, and sion with which Lucretius so many times captures not of the peace of the tomb. Rarely, in war time, the mind and which prose translation has managed do peoples look upon death undisguised. And in to set down. Pick at random one of the oft-quoted no other time, perhaps, have they greater need so passages, such as the rendering of is a true test- to observe it and so to know it. Only the remote say that at the close of the third book- in time and spirit appear able for this, able to desig- lam iam non domus accipiet te lacta, neque uxor ... nate its being and to find its right perspective. Four years of much war literature has brought us noth- Mr. Leonard renders it: ing out of the immediate worthy the dignity of Thee now no more death. So far as I know, there have been printed The joyful house and best of wives shall welcome, Nor little sons run up to snatch their kisses but two works adequate to the high call of the And touch with silent happiness thy heart, world's tragedy, and both are evocations from the Thou shalt not speed in undertakings more, past. One came, early in the war, from the hands Nor be the warder of thine own no more. “Poor wretch,” they say, one hostile hour hath ta'en of the poet laureate. It was an anthology of the Wretchedly from thee all life's many guerdons," serenities and high places of the soul, of its quietude But add not, “yet no longer unto thee and self-possession. Its collector called it The Remains a remnant of desire for them." If this they only well perceived with mind Spirit of Man. The other was an English version And followed up with maxims, they would free of the noblest confrontation of death that litera Their state of man from anguish and from fear. ture knows—the poem of Lucretius, called Of “O even as here thou art, aslumber in death, So shalt thou slumber down the rest of time, the Nature of Things (Dutton), done into Released from every harrowing pang. blank verse by William Ellery Leonard. “He has,” We have bewept thee with insatiate woe, says Mr. Leonard of himself, "loved Lucretius for Standing aside whilst in the awful pyre Thou wert made ashes; and no day shall take many years, and the mighty spirit of the Roman For us the eternal sorrow from the breast." has helped him, to sustain many of the burdens of But ask the mourner what's the bitterness life. He can but hope that he has not altogether That man should waste in an eternal grief, If, after all, the thing's but sleep and rest? failed to communicate him to English and American and set it beside this prose of Mackail's: readers ignorant of Latin. Lucretius is indeed a Now no more shall a glad home and a true wife wel. voice for these supreme times.” come thee, nor darling children race to snatch thy first But we, 416 THE DIAL April 19 selfhood for its period and its proper worth, and kisses and touch thy heart with a sweet and silent con the kindliness and simplicity of elemental living to tent; no more mayest thou be prosperous in thy doings and a defense to thine own; "alas and woe !" say they, the cruelties, the complexities, the wars, the enslave- one disastrous day has taken all these prizes of thy life ments, and the other inhumanities men call civiliza- away from thee,”—but thereat they do not add this, and tion. They drive and compel him because he is now no more does any longing for these things beset thee." This did their thought but clearly see and their speech ignorant of their nature and of his own powers follow, they would release themselves from great heart and limitations. Let him learn to know them, and ache and fear. “Thou, indeed, as thou art sunk in the he is set free of them. He sees them then in their sleep of death, wilt so be for the rest of the ages, severed from all weary pains; but we, while close by us thou didst true measure and proportion, incidents in the effec- turn ashen on the awful pyre, made unappeasable lament tuation of inexorable law; his mind identifies itself ation, and everlastingly shall time never rid our heart of anguish.” Ask we then this of him, what there is that is with this law, his love of life relaxes, and when his so very bitter, if sleep and peace be the conclusion of the love of life relaxes, the fear of death falls away. matter, to make one fade away in never-ending grief? For the fear of death is the greatest of all fears, Beside this, Mr. Leonard's verse gives one a sense, the ruling passion in the life of the sons of man, not altogether correct, of literalness without ac the energy of all the tragedies men infict upon curacy, of passion without elevation, of clamor. each other. Yet it rests upon ignorance and upon Mackail's key is too subdued for Lucretius, as illusion. The fear of death is the fear of nothing; Leonard's is too strident. Both miss the Lucretian the fear merely of the sleep and peace which are poignancy, that eager deliberation and passionate "the conclusion of the matter." The fear of death , quietude of his verse, which render it so truly the in a word, is the instinct toward living, against voice of his vision. which argument cannot prevail. Its follies and But such is the fate of translators anywhere. The absurdities may be exposed, its foundation laid bare , marvel is rather that they should at all, in Mr. and its setting discovered, and that is all. Once Leonard's suggestive analogy, have re-enacted any- this is done, however, as Epicurus has done it, the thing of their original's being and have caused it to intensities of life are weakened; the spirit has live in the new body they have given it. With changed its role from actor to spectator. It is fire Lucretius this is particularly difficult, so spiritual and at rest above the battle, serene and self- and uncustomary a thing is his vision. An almost sufficient. unknown poet, of a despised philosophic sect, with nought a courage about ultimacies men hate each other for, There is more goodly than to hold the high his one poem passed, preserved by a single manu- Serene plateaus, well fortressed by the wise, script, down the Christian ages, with a stigma upon Whence thou may'st look below on other men And see them ev'rywhere wand'ring, all dispersed its worth and the life of its author at the hands of a In their lone seeking for the road of life; sainted chronicler of a Christian church. Rivals in genius, or emulous in rank, Dante does not mention him, nor does he figure noticeably Pressing through days and nights with hugest toil For summits of power and mastery of the world! in the thoughts of men until the imaginings of philosophers have become the truths of science, and This is, of course, essentially asceticism. But it the face of the world has had stripped away the has nothing in it of the asceticism of tradition. No mask which the Church had drawn over it. Since medieval skeleton, with memento mori upon its lips. then his lovers have become myriads, but his temper No mortification of the true normalities of life. has It is a withdrawal rather of the mind's attention our Christian to the ardent indifferences, the dynamic im- ping revealed. It was, by and large, that which Lucretius had seen-a universe of atoms and space, are all one: "Nature for herself harks after noth- bound by inexorable law in a single process of ing.” It is the antipodes of Stoicism, for the Stoic alternate integration and dissolution; of worlds accepts everything, and this is a great rejection. It made and unmade under the alternate sway of is the antipodes of Christianity because to Christian Venus and Mars, poetic personifications of two materialism death is the gate to hell or paradise , .forces, really the flow and the ebb of the one cosmic and its memento mori is a minatory warning of a tide which is existence. world to come. To Lucretius and the purer Epi- Foam and spindrift of this tide, man shares its curean tradition death is a thing not to be remem- character and destiny. The Nature which breeds bered but, because of its very inevitability, to be him destroys him also, and all his life is a battle disregarded. A mind contemplative of Nature's with death. Indeed, the love of life and the fear eternal laws is a free mind. It accepts its span of of death are in him one and the same thing. They make his pieties, his patriotism, his acquisitiveness, when it ends, it ends. The rest is silence. his ambition, and his love. They drive him from tines. Why, may be gathered from what the strip- partialities of ra Nature to which living and define H. M. Kallen. 1919 417 THE DIAL London, February 20 LIFE IN LONDON HAS BEEN rather fiat during the admiration of men of letters, and particularly In 1912 . the past month. I judge this from the fact that of novelists, and with the certainty of enduring we are all inclined to buzz a little about the elec fame. These are not despicable rewards; but some tion of Sir Aston Webb to the Presidency of the fortunate writers manage to add to them others of Royal Academy. Sir Aston is the first architect a more physically satisfying character. who has ever received this distinction; and, what or 1913, however, a Civil List pension was granted ever may have been the motives which the electors to Mr. Conrad, a grant which does not usually imagined as persuading them, I assume that the come the way of the “best seller.” Then at the cosmic purpose in the matter was to assure us that end of 1913, or the beginning of 1914, he pub- the Royal Academy was as dead as architecture or lished Chance, and suddenly the scene was changed. that architecture was as dead as the Royal Academy I suppose the idea that Mr. Conrad was a great -it does not much matter which. Several painters novelist had been slowly germinating for years in of the modern school have raised a yelp of protest. the breasts of the persons who really sell novels; Apparently they were still hoping that the Academy and at this opportunity it burgeoned forth. The might earn their approval by electing Mr. Sargent. newspapers were filled with immense reviews, the If an architect must be elected, they said, why not book's name was on everyone's lips—you know Lutyens, who is a good and progressive architect? what I mean when I say "everyone”—and several But the Academy goes its own way without refer editions were printed. Now, Chance, though a ence to the modern school. It chose the man most fine book, is not in my judgment Mr. Conrad's representative of its own spirit—the man who de- best; but since its appearance he has been a popular, signed the Victoria Memorial and refronted Buck as well as a famous, novelist. He is not, if I esti- ingham Palace, a man who knows what is expected mate his character correctly from his writings, of an eminent architect and who invariably fulfills much moved by the change. It is an event which expectations. The correct attitude in the affair was will rejoice his colleagues more than himself; but observed by the Academy itself and by Mr. Jacob in years of doubt and depression it is an event which Epstein. Mr. Epstein, being questioned, replied rejoices his colleagues very considerably. that he had nothing to say, that the Academy was A little while ago I referred to the probability a business house and had no connection with art, that the old wearisome discussions about the Higher and that he had, therefore, no concern with its Drama would be revived with the end of the war. proceedings. It seems to me quite clear that the Now I am told that the Higher Drama is in for a younger artists who ostentatiously decline to have very bad time indeed. This is due to two facts. any dealings with the Academy are a little ridicu- In the first place, Western theaters have grown so lous when they betray a benevolent interest in the exceedingly costly that only a syndicate, and a very choice of its President. But young painters in re- wealthy syndicate at that, can possibly hope to volt always tend to be a little ridiculous. Mean undertake the risks involved in leasing them. In while the Academy is inviting the laughter of man the second place, two such syndicates have arisen kind by discussing the proposition that Academicians and are gradually swallowing up theater after shall retire at the age of seventy-five. theater. The old actor-manager, whose demand for Another event of interest is the appearance of a place—a permanent place in the limelight used the first pages of a new serial by Mr. Conrad. The so much to irritate the exponents of the Higher history of this writer's reputation is one of the Drama, has already almost disappeared; and the curiosities of modern literature. He has been "be- Higher Dramatists are beginning to miss him. He fore the public," I suppose, for more than twenty was, they say, a creature of strange tastes and years, and almost from his first book his reputation methods and preposterous vanities; but there was was assured with all the mighty persons whose a strain of idealism in his character. He did not He combined, moreover, a fine care wholly for loot, he cared something for artistic creative imagination and an exquisite prose style success and a good deal for his reputation. But with a choice of characters, incidents, and settings the new syndicates are mere caterers, on the same that would have made the fortune of a writer of level as the proprietors of multiple tea-shops. They "penny bloods.” Nevertheless, he proved to be a will find out what the public is prepared to pay for, delight only for the few; and, as time went on, it and they will give it precisely that, indifferent to seemed to be obvious that he must be content with any other qualities in the goods they handle. More. opinions count. 418 April 19 THE DIAL over, it is obvious that the more theaters the syndi to stir its blood. But, though you would not gather cates control, the more secure they will be against it from hearing the Higher Dramatists talk, these the chances and misfortunes that commonly assail genres do not really exhaust all the possibilities. theatrical enterprises. The Higher Dramatists do It is not a fact, as is often believed, that the public not look for much help from the syndicates, and dislikes a thing to be good. The public dislikes in- they are in consequence very unhappy. tensely to be bored; and it sometimes finds good art But I can see two possible mitigations of the so difficult to follow as to be boring. But a thing doom they anticipate. The greater the success of is not necessarily good art because it bores the pub- the syndicates the more powerful is likely to be lic. The gloomier works of the Higher Dramatists the inevitable reaction against it; and I can see that attracted nobody but a few persons desirous of ap- reaction taking the shape of a National Theater in pearing intellectual. The public were repelled by London, and numerous and enterprising municipal the dullness of the stuff, and persons of taste were theaters in the provinces. The theater is, in all repelled simply because it was not good art. But conscience, bad enough; and, perhaps, it must be I can see, if only faintly, a type of play that we worse before it can be better. On the other hand, shall all equally like and respect; and that type of it does seem to me possible that unity of control play, I dare to affirm, is the play in verse. The may involve greater diversity of production. At public, though it has had few recent opportunities present what happens is this: a manager makes of finding it out, likes good verse well spoken. It a hit with a farce containing a slightly risque scene in a bathroom; and promptly every other manager is at present immensely enjoying a production of Twelfth Night, which is particularly distinguished in London rushes on to the stage a new farce also by the beautiful elocution of some of the perform- containing a scene in a bathroom. But the syndi The Elizabethan drama sprang' out of this cate, when it makes a hit of this kind, will not, if I public appetite; if enough of our young poets will may so express myself, put all its eggs in one bath turn their attention to the stage and make up their It will find it more profitable to reserve minds to try and to fail and to keep on trying, they certain theaters for certain kinds of plays, and so may stimulate this appetite anew. Stephen Phillips tap all sections of the public at once. Thus the succeeded; but he was not good enough either as Higher Drama, which really has a following, if not a poet or as a dramatist for his success to last; and a large one, will get its innings after all. practically all the other poetic dramatists of recent And I am persuaded that the public which will times have been well intentioned, and sometimes pay to witness artistically serious drama is larger excellent, poets without the slightest notion how to than anyone has yet been able to demonstrate . The work on an audience. I suppose really that I am public was never enthusiastic about the gloomier the only person in London who looks on the pros- plays of Mr. Galsworthy and his followers—it had no great interest in tragic seductions in the country; pects of the Higher Drama with a cheerful eye. the darkness of life in the industrial districts failed The exponents of it do not, nor do those who have witnessed its performances. ers. room. EDWARD SHANKS. I Watch One Woman Knitting The lamplight rings her in a golden space, And isles her in from all the eager dark; She cannot see me where I sit and mark The disappearing pageant on her face: Those swiftest thoughts, and moods, and whims like lace, Impermanent as winds across the grass One after one they rise and change and pass, One after one, and leave no slightest trace. Her's is the peace of a cathedral close. The lamp's warm glow has walled her all about In deepest quiet from the world without- Until I cannot think how well she knows That just beyond this circle where she sits, They clash and curse and die, for whom she knits. DAVID MORTON. THE DIAL E- GEORGE DONLIN CLARENCE BRITTEN ROBERT MORss LOVETT, Editor In Charge of the Reconstruction Program: JOHN DEWEY THORSTEIN VEBLEN HELEN MAROT IN NO DEPARTMENT OF THE MODERN WORLD HAS leges by trustees, of state institutions and public the tendency toward democracy been more pro schools by regents and school boards, results in a nounced than in education. An analysis of the limitation of its natural democratic tendencies. In process into its factors clearly shows the change the direction of subject matter political have taken from the Renaissance to the modern school. These the place of literary or religious conventions. A factors are three—the subject matter, the teacher, conventional political economy, political science, and and the pupil. In respect to each the education of history have been imposed, and any attempt by the the Renaissance was aristocratic. The subject mat teacher or the pupil to break through this shell and ter was conventionally prescribed, a group of classics touch the core of human experience within is bitterly whose value was a matter of authority, not of ex- resented by those who represent the social control of perience. The teaching was autocratic; the posses vested interests. Similarly the method of experiment sion of the text in a dead language gave the teacher and testimony is ruled out as soon as it is applied an absolute control over his pupils. The fact that the to current political and social phenomena. The subject matter was remote from the immediate needs teacher is prevented from joining his pupils in a and interests of ordinary existence automatically search for truth, but is compelled to resume his restricted its followers to a special caste. Culture old papal seat of authority. Of all these types of was the concern of an institution—it was academic, limitation and impediment the relations of the New as religion was ecclesiastic. The appearance of York Board of Education with the teachers during Comenius, almost contemporary with that of Bacon the past year afford ample illustration. The in- and the scientific Renaissance, marked the beginning fluence of war psychology was a natural and reason- of the modern tendency; the exclusion of purely able excuse for the attitude shown by the Board and conventional learning, the use of the vernacular, the its superintendents while the country was at war, introduction of an objective method, above all the but it is significant that with the return to peace concept of a school system which should extend the feeling which was developed for nationalistic education to the people—these ideas projected by purposes has been transferred to social ends. In- the seventeenth century reformer are gradually being stead of Germany, Russia is the object of patriotic achieved. In the last few years the progress has animadversion. The investigations and trials of been notable. No longer is the teacher an autocrat. teachers held by the Board of Education are pitiful From the earliest experimental school to the univer spectacles. On the one hand is the teacher, ac- sity seminar the teacher works with his classes in cused of something which in most cases amounts to a spirit of cooperation. No longer is the subject making personal reservations of opinion in regard matter prescribed, conventional, remote from life. to the phenomena of the world instead of enforcing The defense of the study of the so-called classics is arbitrarily the official view, and of inviting his now based on their vital quality as a record of ex- pupils to make use of the method of experiment and perience. Practical study of the world, technical testimony. On the other hand there is the organi- study of the arts are part of every curriculum. In zation, aided by the officious zeal of its servants to method, experiment has replaced authority. These whom the espionage habit has become second nature. changes in subject matter and method have made Between them stands a flock of pupils, their minds education necessarily democratic in appeal. It has driven this way and that by examination and cross- become an initiation into life of which all men feel examination, victims of the war as certainly as if the need, and resent the lack—for themselves and they had been drafted and sent to the front. It is their children. nothing short of sabotage of education. Similar re- ports come from Washington where a teacher, ex- But in this triumphant movement of education in pressing the opinion that “ the Soviet Government the direction of democracy there is one point of in Russia was better for Russia than was the ab- friction. It is the point at which the system of solutism of the Czar” was charged with “unpatri- education is in contact with that of society and otic utterances " and suspended. The superintendent government. The control of education by persons has barred discussion of the League of Nations to- outside the system, of endowed universities and col gether with Bolshevism, in spite of the fact that the 420 April 19 THE DIAL teaching of current topics is required, and it is a literal impossibility to exclude these subjects from discussion in classes in modern history and eco- nomics. The remedy for this maladjustment is immediate and obvious. It is simply to give teachers control of education, to restrict the functions of school boards and trustees to business management. It is to be noted that this is the demand everywhere of labor that respects itself-responsibility for produc- tion. Responsibility is the only way of introducing that esprit de corps which has been defined as con- sisting in thinking in terms of the enterprise rather than of the job. It is characteristic of workers that under. a system of responsibility they make few mis- takes in choosing their leaders—men and women of initiative and originality. But the true analogy is not between teachers and labor, but between educa- tion and other professions. To quote Dr. Kallen (The Dial, Feb. 28, 1918): “To the discoverers and creators of Knowledge, and to its transmitters and distributors, to these and to no one else beside belongs the control of education. It is as absurd that any but teachers and investigators should gov- ern the art of education as that any but medical practitioners and investigators should govern the art of medicine." tively in that experience. At the same time it is clear that no merely passive attitude on the part of a people will stand against powerful forces working to subvert it, and a democratically organ- ized people is peculiarly liable to attack by such forces through the institution of representative government. It seems probable that the issue of universal military service will appear well to the front in the next presidential campaign, and mean- while the sponsors for it are active in the various states. In these the method is to make military training a part of the high school course, and the question thus becomes an educational one. A law to this effect, in New York, hastily conceived and irregularly enforced, is now undergoing scrutiny as to its educational value. Similar bills are pend- ing in the legislatures of Pennsylvania, Missouri , and California. In Oregon such a bill has failed; in New Jersey the adverse report of the legislative committee on military drill in high schools has probably proved decisive. The organizations which for one purpose or another are seeking to carry such bills in the several states, as the basis of a plan of national military service, have placed the question squarely on educational grounds. The Security League sent its most brilliant orator to the last meeting of the National Education Association to clamor for its endorsement. It is altogether proper that the opinion of teachers should be decisive on this phase of the matter. If teachers have little influence with local authorities in which control of education is specifically vested, at least they have the power of organized citizens to secure political action which shall be representative of the com- munity, and of themselves, in a matter on which they have a supreme right to be heard. IT IS CLEAR THAT ANY COVENANT OF PEACE among nations will depend for its validity upon the activity of its supporters in all countries in taking ad- vantage of the opportunity offered for international cooperation to remove the causes of war. No one need be told today that of these causes armament and military training are two of the most immediate. It is not too much to say that every country may test its will to end war by its readiness to disarm, and the weakness of this will is revealed by the feeble and uncertain character of the provisions of the Covenant in this matter. There is all the more reason, therefore, that believers in international peace should manifest their faith by national action. The principle is recognized by the Covenant of armament graduated according to the geographical circumstances of the contracting parties. Clearly the part is suggested to the United States of lead- ing the way in showing confidence in reason and good will instead of bayonets and iron-clads. And the part should not be a difficult one. The people of the United States are normally pacific and they have had enough experience of the spiritual rav- ages of war to recognize the symptoms of the dis- ease. They have never built the system of general military service into their social structure, or crowned the edifice with a military caste. The re- sult of the recent mobilization seems on the whole to have given the people a pronounced distaste for military experience, and this distaste is apparently strongest among those who participated most ac- THE HE VICTORY LOAN SHOULD BE THE OCCASION for the exhibition of a new spirit if the League of Nations is to be worth the paper on which it is drawn up. The Liberty Bonds were sold largely on hate. The appeal carried to the ear of the people by four-minute oratory, or to the eye of the people by posters and moving-pictures, was sup- ported by lavish representations of the malevolence of the enemy. That these were in part false was indicated by the action of General Pershing in with- drawing from active salesmanship a sergeant who was telling atrocity stories unwarranted by any. thing in the actual experience of the troops. At the same time this popular feeling was used as a measure of coercion against citizens who did not manifest the degree of financial patriotism demanded by the standards of the community. The Secretary of the Treasury fulminated against pacifists. The extent to which organized coercion was practiced under the direction of local managers is revealed in an article in The New Republic for March 29, enitled Bor- rowing with a Club. It is hardly necessary to point 1919 421 THE DIAL "- out that such methods, emphasizing division in pub their record show the full apprenticeship exacted by lic opinion, will not serve to advance the prospects an ancient and jealous guild, they have not yet- of the present loan. The government has been un except here and there, and in inconsiderable num- able to secure, so far as we know, the punishment bers—the opportunity to teach on equal terms with of a single person for illegal proceedings in connec men. They may clerk in libraries, drudge in ad- tion with the sale of Liberty Bonds. It is not to be ministrative offices, mark themes, correct exercises, expected that it will be able to mark its disapproval and aspire to infrequent instructorships; but—ex- of their methods by relieving these active patriots cept here and there, and in inconsiderable numbers from the management of the present loan. As in —they may not enter the faculty proper and achieve the case of leaders and inciters of mob violence, the the rewards, niggardly enough, that men finally re- energy and aggressiveness shown by such persons ceive for the apprentice years of overwork and are qualities with which the government will hesi underpay. Before the war this situation was an tate to dispense. But the spirit and method of their anachronism: today, when women have convinced the appeal must be totally different if the distinction world of their capacity to perform nearly all tasks between the Liberty Loans and the Victory Loan is that men perform, it is becoming a peril. Attracted to be maintained. The victory, which is properly by the current demand in other fields, with better to be celebrated by new sacrifices, was a victory wages and nearer approximation to sex equality, won for the whole world. The fruits of that' vic large numbers of the more independent (and by tory are to be found in a reunion of the world the same sign more valuable) women are being toward which nothing can contribute so much at drawn away from academic life. If the colleges find the present time as the feeding of the starving, the it difficult to retain the services of men of initiative, clothing of the naked, wherever they may be, among how can they hope to keep their women teachers our late enemies as among our allies. Is it too unless they level the humiliating and indefensible much to suggest emphasis upon this generous aspect barrier of sex discrimination ? There is a certain of the sacrifice? The victory was won for democ type of academic mind that professes indifference racy at home as well as abroad. The fruits of that to the breaches made in university personnel by the victory are to be found in a reunion of Americans greater attractiveness of secular pursuits. It finds on the basis of their freedom, toward which re something unworthy in the teacher who is swayed union nothing can contribute so much at the at all by considerations of wage or working hours. present time as the release of those in prison for But it is a mind that is increasingly incongruous in conscience' or opinion's sake. In many cases a re- the world for which our colleges are preparing our calcitrant attitude toward the Liberty Loans was youth. Sooner or later it must give way before one of the indictments brought against those con modern demands, just as sooner or later the col- victed under the Espionage Act. To what extent leges must accept the modern world's estimate of this attitude was engendered and reenforced by the women's sphere. But will it be so late that we illegal methods of the managers of the loans is a shall yet witness the spectacle of educators arguing matter deserving honest inquiry. The withholding before women legislators that woman's place is in of supply has been a time-honored weapon by which the home? the Anglo-Saxons have maintained their liberties, and to some citizens the Liberty Loans were doubt- less presented as a form of taxation, as unjust and UNDER THE ACID TEST OF EVERYDAY PSYCHOLOGY illegal as Ship Money or the Stamp Tax. The our pedagogy still shows a considerable blind-spot. government could manifest the spirit of victory and One of the minor evidences of its existence is the confidence in the results of the war in no way more eloquently than by opening the drive for a Victory prevailing practice of writing two distinct prefaces or "forewords” in our high school and collegiate Loan by a general amnesty to all victims of laws en- acted for the emergency of war. textbooks—one labeled To the Teacher, and the other To the Pupil. To the discerning student this bifocal adjustment is apt to appear in the THE nature of an implied condescension. It is like com- PROMISES TO ing to the branching of a road, with one fork citadel of sex privilege. The granddaughters of the winding upward to the instructor and the other women who won from prejudice the opportunity to sloping slightly down grade for the assumed mental study in college on equal terms with men have yet convenience of the student. With a modicum of to secure the same opportunity in the better pro ingenuity it ought to be possible for the author of a fessional schools. During most of these years, more- textbook to merge these separate messages—to start over, the public, and many of the private, colleges with a salutary "meeting of the minds” of teacher have been conferring degrees on women, admitting and pupil—and thus pave the way for a more unified them to the “ fellowship of educated men "—the approach to the stuff of his ensuing chapters. The fellowship, but not the profession. For though their innovation would certainly be more adroit—and scholarship carry the academic seal of approval and therefore better psychology. HE UNIVERSITY BE THE LAST 4.22 THE DIAL April 19 Foreign Comment sonality of the cadet Minister of Education, whom sists of the creation of a continuous school system, which was in the process of creation already in No- vember, as one may judge by copies of Russian news- The SovietS AND THE SCHOOLS papers which came to hand. To an American who always had a continuous school system this reform An editorial on Americanism and Bolshevism ap is not quite clear, for it is difficult for him to picturę peared in the Chicago Daily Tribune on February the Russian schools as they were during the Czar's .6. The whole of it shows how poorly informed the regime. Until the very outbreak of the revolution editors are on Russian affairs. I was especially the Russian statutes divided the Russian “subjects" astounded by the following passage: We build into two classes: the privileged (3 per cent), and schoolhouses. The Bolsheviki shoot school teachers. the tax-paying (97 per cent). For each of these The school teachers know too much." classes there were separate schools. For the former In reality, the first order of the Soviet power there were gymnasiums (high schools), universi- which reached the villages in November, 1917, was ties, and polytechnical institutes; for the latter, vil- a decree for the increase of the salaries of village lage and city schools. The completion of a course teachers almost fourfold. Further orders of the in these schools did not give the pupil the right to Soviet power abolished directors and inspectors of enter high school. Furthermore, the admission of public schools—those Czarist agents of public “ un- children of tax-paying “subjects” was prohibited enlightenment” who have through some misunder- altogether in some high schools. And those who, standing survived the Provisional Governments. In according to the law, had the right to enter high their places elected Soviets of People's Education schools were deprived of this right by all sorts of were organized in every county. And finally, on circulars of the Czar's ministers, who recommended August 26, 1918, an All-Russian Convention on the directors not to heed this right. Education was called in Moscow. When opening By a continuous school system we mean the right this convention the Commissar of People's Educa of the pupil, who has been graduated from grammar tion, Lunacharsky, thus characterized the problems school-city or village—to enter high school and of the Government in regard to schools: after that a university or a polytechnical institute. This reform involves the increase of the number of The revolution of October 25 (November 7] made the school problem one of the most important problems. The high schools and the revision of the program struggle of the people is carried on in three directions: grammar schools. (1) for state power, (2) for economic power, (3) for It is also worth while to say a few words about knowledge. . . Never was the work on this planet as fruitful as that of the past ten months. The same with this latter program under the old regime. The city the school. The people cannot direct the economy and schools with a six-year course and the zemsky vil- the life of the country if they are not educated. The lage schools with a three-year course were compara- school is subject to revolutionary reforms. tively good, although even there much time was de- be built anew, it must only be rebuilt radically. . . We want the maximum development of the schools. The voted to the memorizing of prayers and of all titles wish of the present power is to give greater and better not only of the Czar, but of his seventy relatives as educational opportunities. . . It is already possible to well. But the zemsky schools have long since been work more normally. We have not passed the danger looked upon suspiciously because of their liberal ten- yet; the military struggle is still on, but this period is comparatively normal and there is a possibility of get- dency, and they were being replaced therefore by ting to work in the rear. The Commissariat is almost church schools. The latter had the largest number complete; the pedagogues are with us and the school of pupils. Some of these schools had a one-year reform must be realized this year. course, others, a two-year course. What does this reform consist of? In spite of the in these was paid to choir singing and to the memo- opinion of the Chicago Daily Tribune it consists of rizing of prayers. Reading was taught in such a nothing more than the Americanization of the Rus- way that the reader should not understand what sian schools. The American schools are undoubtedly he reads." You will no doubt think that this is a the best and Free Russia makes great use of this ex- joke. But no, this is a quotation from one of the periment. At the present time the following has secret instructions of the Holy Synod to the prelates . already been accomplished: Such a state of affairs was quite natural under the (1) The schools have been taken out of the hands autocratic regime. No wonder that its ideologist of the clergy and religion as a compulsory sub- and inspirer, Pobiedonoszeff, said: “ Especially do we ject has been abolished. fear popular education." But it is an enigma to me (2) All schools are free. why both Provisional Governments overlooked the (3) Coeducation of boys and girls has been intro- school problem. Perhaps the fault lies in the per- duced in all schools, (4) The participation of the pupils in some school even Boublikoff calls “ absurd” in his book entitled affairs is permitted (school republics). The Russian Revolution. But the main reform of the Russian schools con- GEORGE V. LOMONOSSOFF. New York City. of the must not Most attention 1919 423 THE DIAL Communications with real people in an actual discussion of living is- sues. And this gives the book great and permanent value for intelligent readers everywhere. A NOBLE TRANSLATION The translation has an additional value however for those who know the circumstances of its creation. Sir: Yesterday was one of those golden days For it represents the dedicated labor of years on the that have been so unusually numerous this extraordi- part of a man who had not only retired after long nary winter. An accumulation of tasks kept my and honorable service at the University of Wiscon- rebellious body at my desk but my mind was for- sin, but who had reached a period of life when all ever tramping the frozen fields. And when a but the rarest spirits consider themselves out of the great wedge of honking wild geese pushed north- race. Indeed the last third of the translation, accom- ward over the housetops, even my body deserted. plished after the author was over eighty-five and But at the door I met the postman with a package practically blind, was done by ear and dictation. The from The Dial, which was just enough to send fact that in spite of this the freshness and clarity of me sneaking back to duty. style and the accuracy of scholarship are maintained I spare you any account of the pleasantries I in- to the end, so that it is quite impossible to discover dulged in at the expense of the editor who had thus any weakening of powers, to say nothing of detecting tripped up adventure. My animus all came to this: where the blindness set in, demonstrates the author's What were you thinking of to send me another book extraordinary physical and intellectual vigor. Those to review? Didn't you know that I was already acquainted with the book were not surprised at the hopelessly buried under other unfinished work? tribute recently paid in a speech at the Madison You should have the package back unopened. You Literary Club, by Chief Justice Winslow, himself a should be told, politely but firmly, to go hang. scholar, to the fine quality of the work and the fine Alas, curiosity! There could be no harm in just courage of the action. looking to see what the book was. Perhaps I might Please accept my thanks then for The Republic of even want to read a little of it. I could easily Plato, translated by Alexander Kerr, Litt. D., Emer- enough wrap it up again, and still tell you go hang itus Professor of Greek in the University of Wiscon- which, after all, was the important thing. But once sin, our sturdy Scotch townsman, now ninety years having seen the familiar and magni ent head of the old. It is not only a noble work of translation but author on the wrapper, the book was mine—mine by a translation of a noble work, one that should be the divine right of appreciation. Why, sir, I have better known by a people who have assumed the task lived with that work for years. As Professor Kerr of making the world safe for democracy. has issued, book by book, his translation of Plato's Republic, I have read and reread the immortal dis- Madison, Wisconsin. M. C. OTTO. cussion. All my favorite hilltops and glens and lake- retreats know Socrates and Glaucon and Adeiman- A CHANGE OF NAME. tus and Thrasymachus. I have had them debate in villages before audiences gathered about that great Sir: The Seventh Annual Report of the Na- American institution, the base-burner; in towns by tional League on Urban Conditions among Negroes the glow of the hospitable open fire; in cities when shows the universal hand of war affecting all its the reader's tremulo had to be reduced by a seat on activities. The spread of the work incident to these the radiator. These little booklets, now worn and extensive war activities has made it so well known soiled from much traveling in knapsacks, have short to the public, that it feels this a good time to ab- ened the hours of illness, have kept alive the hope breviate its rather cumbrous title, and wishes to of a better social order, have encouraged philosophic make its bow to its contributors and friends this temper and imaginative identification with alien year as the National Urban League. times and alien creeds. No, you shall not have The year's work shows the organization of four back the volume which now gathers them together new cities, so that a total of thirty cities now carry in durable, well printed form. Instead I send you on the work of community betterment among urban two words about it, or rather one about the book and Negroes. The national office has been chiefly con- one about the author. cerned with giving supervision and advice in these Of course there are other good translations of the cities and with visiting others asking for organiza- Republic. Professor Kerr's work excels in the clear tion; with attendance at the many national con- ness, strength, and limpid flow of his style. He has ferences held this year, especially those interested in assimilated the Platonic diction and movement. The social welfare; with placing welfare workers in in- translation is agreed to be impeccable in accu dustrial centers and with securing and training wel. racy, and it is colored all through by a wide acquaint fare workers for the various kinds of social work ance with the scholarly queries and cruxes pertain- needed in the community development which the ing to the subject. But the striking quality of the Urban League is constantly seeking to enlarge. achievement is the absence of all academic Aavor. One carries away the impression of having engaged New York City. LILLIAN A. TURNER. 424 THE DIAL April 19 time required under ordinary business conditions. Since the educatiön of the pupil is the first considera- tion, his training follows a logical progression from unfortunate that the attitude of patronage char- Notes on New Books of an alien Prussian ancestry is that the most genial character in The Flail is the rough old THE FLAIL. By Newton A. Fuessle. Mof- unlettered peasant, Biltmeier, who without palter- fat, Yard. ing lends the hero a thousand dollars for his college tuition. Where American associations and Ameri- In computing the damages inflicted by Germany can ideals are set forth, on the contrary, they do during the war, the transformation of sound lit- not come out very creditably, and the reader is led erary materials into the "timely” propagandist impiously to question whether the white napery of nonsense of The Flail should doubtless be taken middle-class reputability, the liveried coaches on into account. Before the Hun gave Mr. Fuessle Dearborn Avenue, and the gaudy delicacies of the strabismus he had recorded in his sharp, unsmiling cabaret are very potent elements in conveying to way the realities of lower middle-class adolescence the unassimilated foreigner the qualities of that in the backwaters of Chicago, of business enterprise traditional ideal of America that one associates with on LaSalle Street, and of the forced and furtive Jefferson, Paine, Walt Whitman, and Lincoln . An dissipations that ran below the surface of life at author who sets out to prove the putative virtues the University. In the transition from the timid, of our civilization in relation to a fictitious national dreaming public-school boy to the successful man problem ought to be able to stack the evidence of business the author had the opportunity to show more competently. how the demands of contemporary business tech- nique may develop a personality whose native endowments run to softness and sentimentalism, THE VOCATIONAL RE-EDUCATION OF MAIMED into the triumphant, self-assertive model of the SOLDIÉRS. By Leon de Paeuw, translated by Economic Man. However well Mr. Fuessle's ob- The Baronne Moncheur and Elizabeth Kemper servation had provided him with the details of such Barrott. Princeton University Press. a novel, his psychology was not sensitive enough, The VOCATIONAL EDUCATION OF GIRLS AND nor his humor keen enough, to grasp the possibili- WOMEN. By Albert H. Leake. Macmillan. ties of a realistic criticism of life. Lacking insight into Rudolph Dohmer, his hero, as an individual, The suddenly increased interest in vocational ed- the author falls back upon his hero's ancestors; and ucation, responding to the demand for training war- since hịs squalid and embittered parents happen to crippled soldiers, has brought this subject out of the be of German stock, every bit of theft, rapine, ruth- field of academic discussion into the open immed- lessness, and lack of principle that Rudolph shows iately practical policies. is fastened extenuatingly upon his hateful forbears. M. de Paeuw is Inspector General of primary Thus the interesting exploration of a new social education in Belgium and pedagogic inspector in the milieu is makeshifted into an excursion into the institutes for vocational re-education of wounded realms of quack anthropology and quack social soldiers. His book gives an account of what Bel- psychology for the purpose of raising the question gium, in spite of her upset condition, has accom; of alleged pertinence during the period of recon- plished in vocational re-education since 1915, and struction: "Is it Rudolph Dohmer's power to sub- presents an object lesson in what can be done when merge through American association and American the state whole-heartedly stands behind an educa- ideals the hereditary instincts of the German? It tional project. The Belgian National School for is this warped mirror of pseudoscience which Mr. Maimed Soldiers at Port-Villez includes courses of Fuessle holds up to life, and the consequence is a training with apprenticeship in forty-eight trades, an systematic perversion of values and a distortion of Auxiliary School for assistants in commerce, trade, images. That there is any distinction between the and administration, and an Agricultural School . racial inheritance common to all Western Euro- peans and the cultural heritage peculiar to a region The apprenticeship system, through which pupils or to a technology, the author simply does not grasp. get their training in work on actual orders, secures an added value from the war-time shortage in pro- Whenever the results of the American milieu be- come a little too painful for candid appraisal, his duction; and the profit on these orders, which are defense reaction is to vapor murkily about the Hun chiefly for the state, reduces the cost of the training in Rudolph. The Hun is the scapegoat upon which course. To secure the pupil's best allround develop- the sins of the American business regime are fas- ment the work is organized under three departments -the medical, the pedagogic, and the technical. It thesis, is noteworthy apprentice- strategists whose habits of masterly chicane Ru- dolph successfully acquires, are not tainted Teu- tons, but patriotic, liberty-loaning, dyed-in-the-wool Americans. What pushes Rudolph forward in his career is not that he is by accident a Hun, but by one completed process to another, while the work accident a human being. The saddest commentary produced is of merely incidental importance. It is upon this drastic exposure of the terrible handicap acteristic of the French military mind in relation to Nesseth and Stone and Shattucky the advertising ship in the trades proves to be much less than 1919 THE DIAL 425 - New Spring Publications of the Yale University Press AUTHORITY IN THE MODERN STATE By Harold J. Laski Author of “Studies in the Problem of Sovereignty" Political obedience is the ground of Mr. Laski's discussion. He examines the main theories of the state in the light of certain famous personalities, emphasizing the unsatisfactory character of any political attitude which does not consider the rela- tion of obedience to freedom. Cloth, $3.00. WORLD-POWER AND EVOLUTION By Ellsworth Huntington, Ph.D. Author of "Civilization and Climate," etc. Dr. Huntington's interesting theory of the in- fluence of climate upon human affairs is here applied to present-day world problems. Features of the discussion are a study of the health of 60,000,000 people in America, Europe and Asia; a new inter- pretation of business cycles and financial depression based on health; and an explanation of Germany's power of resistance. Cloth, illustrated, $2.50. IDEALISM AND THE MODERN AGE By George Plimpton Adams, Ph.D. Of the University of California The underlying mental structures which have found expression in the characteristic social struc- tures of civilization, such as nationalism, capitalism, and democracy, are here analyzed and discussed in their relation to each other. Cloth, $2.50. courses MORALE AND ITS ENEMIES By William Ernest Hocking, Ph.D. Author of "Human Nature and Its Remaking,” etc. “Professor Hocking presents a significant picture, not hardened in detail, but broadly suggestive."- The Nation. Cloth, $1.50. WAR AIMS AND PEACE IDEALS Edited by Tucker Brooke, B.Litt. (Oxon.), and Henry Seidel Canby, Ph.D. Selections in prose and verse illustrating the as- pirations of the modern world, as voiced by their foremost spokesmen. Suitable for in political science, history, English, etc. Paper boards, $1.80. LES TRAITS ÉTERNELS DE LA FRANCE By Maurice Barrès. With an Introduction and Notes by Fernand Baldensperger, Litt.D. of the Sorbonne and Columbia University "In these few pages M. Barrès gives us a sense we can never lose of French patriotism and heroic devotion to an ideal which is national, and more than national. A little book of compact feeling, the heart-beat of a nation."- Reedy's Mirror. Cloth, $1.00. THE YALE SHAKESPEARE Edited by Members of the Department of English, Yale University Volumes now ready: Much Ado About Nothing, King Henry the Fourth (Part I.), Romeo and Ju- liet, Hamlet, King Lear, Othello, The Winter's Tale, Macbeth, The Tempest, King Henry the Fifth, A Midsummer Night's Dream, King Henry the Sixth (Part I.). To be issued this spring: Julius Caesar, As You Like It, Love's Labour's Lost, Antony and Cleopatra. Text-Book Edition, 50 cents, Interleaved copies, 75 cents. Library Edition, $1.00. DANTE By Henry Dwight Sedgwick An eloquent exposition of the spiritual guidance which the Divine Comedy has for us, emphasizing its great popular appeal. Bound in black with gold lettering, frontispiece, $1.50. GEOGRAPHY OF EUROPE: A SYLLABUS Edited by Ellsworth Huntington, Ph.D., and Herbert E. Gregory, Ph.D. A study of the physical geography of Europe and of the customs, industries and relationships of the various countries, prepared under the direction of the National Research Council. Paper, 50 cents. YALE UNIVERSITY PRESS 120 College Street, New Haven, Connecticut 280 Madison Avenue, New York City When writing to advertisers please mention THE DIAL. 426 THE DIAL April 19 10 practice and precepts of the ancients. Mr. Hill. the workingman is so obvious in M. de Pauew's dis The TRAGEDY OF TRAGEDIES; or, The Life cussion. Nevertheless, as a report of work actually and Death of Tom Thumb the Great, With being done, the book has an immediate interest to the Annotations of H. Scriblerus Secundus. advocates of vocational education in general. By Henry Fielding. Edited by James T. Hill- Mr. Leake opens up in stimulating fashion the house. Yale University Press. whole question of education in its relation to recon- struction. We seem gradually to have accepted the We may speculate as to Fielding's own emotions idea that after the war we are to have a reform in could he perceive the scholarly attention lavished education as an essential element in the whole scheme upon his life and works in handsome -volumes of economic readjustment. For a number of years emanating recently from New Haven. In his Mod- in disconnected situations we have been making ex- ern Glossary Fielding makes “ Pedantry a syn- periments and trying our methods urged by one or onym for “ Learning”; “self-taught commentators another specialist seeking a scheme of education are objects of his ridicule; text editing and emenda- which would bridge the constantly widening gulf be- tions he satirizes more than once in the Covent tween the academic methods of the school and the Garden Journal and elsewhere. In his Journey immediate attractions of industry. That so many from This World to the Next (published in 1743) children prefer to go to work at the end of the com- he lets Shakespeare announce the critical doctrine pulsory school period must be charged against the which is apparently Fielding's own—a doctrine bred school, which has failed to take advantage of the of his scorn of the Shakespearean scholarship of spirit of restlessness of children at this age and their Rowe, Theobald, Warburton, et al: growing demand for independent expression. In our "I marvel nothing so much as that men will gird American environment, and in the particular indus- themselves at discovering obscure beauties in an author. trial state in which we find ourselves, the “motor- Certes the greatest and most pregnant beauties are ever minded ” child who learns by doing things is pre- the plainest and most evidently striking; and when two dominant, and the successful school will reckon with meanings of a passage can in the least balance our judg- his needs and taste no less than with those of his ment which to prefer, I hold it matter of unuestionable certainty that neither of them is worth a farthing." studious-minded brother. We want a scheme of ed- ucation which shall recognize the industrial regime So on turning to Mr. Hillhouse's competent edi- in which we live and cooperate with it without being tion of The Tragedy of Tragedies one is inevitably dominated by it. We do not want our children, in bound, despite his appreciation of the uses of the Prussian fashion, assigned and trained to some form work, to imagine Fielding's honest mirth could he of industry which will turn them out skilled workers behold his own burlesque of scholarly editing sol- without consulting their individual inclinations or emnly treated to preface and notes replete with abilities. Neither do we want them put through a parallel passages and editorial opinions, with dis- course of book knowledge unrelated to the world of cussions of date and edition, of sources and imita- work in which a large part of their lives will be tions and altered versions. There seems, then, a spent. The schools must decide whether they will humorous premonition in the concluding sentence adapt themselves to the needs and taste of the child to H. Scriblerus Secundus' mock preface: and so hold him a few years longer, or will hand I have a young Commentator from the University, who him over to industry. Raising the compulsory school is reading over all the modern Tragedies, at Five Shill- age to sixteen years, it is true, will do much, and ings a Dozen, and collecting all that they have stole from enforcing compulsory attendance will do more; but our Author, which shall shortly be added in an Ap- pendix to this work. neither method is a substitute for the sort of school which will appeal to the parent as too valuable, and The Commentator in the present case however, to the child as too attractive, to give up for a few besides reading many tragedies of the species Field- early dollars in industry. ing burlesqued and culling apt parallels for his notes, As inspector in the government service for the has set forth in initial chapters the complicated stage Province of Ontario, Mr. Leake has made a study history of the play in its earlier and later versions, of school conditions on the Continent, in Great and of the interpolations and adaptations to which Britain, and in the United States. His book is a it was subjected. He expounds the nature of Field- report, authoritative but condensed, of the present ing's burlesque of the heroic play—a type of trag- state of women's education for homemaking and in- edy still popular with the playgoers at that time, dustrial pursuits, excluding the professional field. though discarded by the playwrights in favor of the His treatment of homemaking as an industry, but classical play. In the mock critical preface and the still women's chief industry, is entirely sound, and burlesqued annotations of the longer version of the his analysis of the domestic-servant problem is play, as he shows, Fielding attacks the critics for illuminating. The book contains a harvest of well their mechanical application to tragedy of established selected information that will be of special value to rules, in justification of which they resort to the anyone who has been so busy digging in one corner of the field that he has lost perspective and needs house points out that in such attacks on Dennis, to recover his view of the whole field. Theobald, Bentley, and other critics, Fielding was following the fashion set by Pope in the Dunciad, 1919 THE DIAL 427 DOM MINA TIO MEA UNIVERSITY OXFORD PRESS A M E R I CAN B R A N c H THIRTY-FIVE WEST THIRTY-SECOND STREET. NEW YORK JONA DOM MINA INVS TIO ILLY MEA The Pronunciation of Standard English in America By GEORGE PHILIP KRAPP, Professor of English in Columbia University. Crown 8vo, (742 x 5), pp. XV + 235... ..$1.50 “It is the purpose of this book to provide a ra- tional method of examining pronunciation, the most important of the practical aspects of speech in order that those who have a conscience in the matter may exercise it with justice both to themselves and to others."-From the Preface. Oxford French Series By American scholars. General editor, RAYMOND WEEKS, Ph.D. Crown 8vo (742 x 5), cloth. With introduction and notes. La Tartuffe A comedy by MOLIÈRE. Edited with an introduc- tion and notes by BERT EDWARD YOUNG. Intro- duction pp. lxvi, Bibliography Ixvii-lxxv, Preface lxxvii-xcii, Text 1-114, Notes 117-172. ..$1.00 Particular attention is directed to the extensive in- troduction in which among other things the editor deals with the historical setting of the play, the con- troversy over its early performances, its purpose, and its literary importance. Modern Punctuation Its Utilities and Conventions. By GEORGE SUM- MEY, JR. Crown 8vo (7449 x 5), pp. xli +265...$1.50 This book is an attempt to set forth the essential facts of contemporary usage in punctuation, together with the considerations applicable in the choice and management of points. English Prose from Bacon to Hardy a Selected and edited by E. K. BROADUS and R. K. GORDON. Crown 8vo (74 x 5), pp. xii + 612...$2.70 Selected passages, of which each is characteristic of an author or period, with summaries of parts omitted and a few nɔtes such as would not be found in ordi- nary books of reference. Each group of selections is headed by a quotation from the author stating his aims and method. La Chancun De Willame An Edition of the Unique Manuscript of the Poem with Vocabulary and Table of Proper Nouns. Edited by ELIZABETH STEARNS TYLER, M.A., Ph.D. Introduction 1-xvil, Text 1-146, Table of As- sonance 149-150, Vocabulary 153-160, Proper Nouns 165-173 90c. This edition of the Chancun de Willame will be welcomed by folk-lorists, by historians seeking a pic- ture of the Middle Ages, and by literary amateurs seeking beautiful poetry. It is a storehouse for any- one interested in the history or literature of medieval France. Theory and Practice of Language Teaching with special reference to French and German, by E. C. KITTSON. Crown 8vo, (7142 x 544), pp. xiv + 186, $1.80 Written not only for the practical teacher and stu- dent in training for whom it is primarily intended, but also for those in positions of educational responsi- bility, who are sometimes called upon to decide ques- tions relating to the teaching of living languages. Le Francais des Francais de France Conversations en cours d'année, by JEHANNE DE LA VILLÈSBRUNNE. Crown 8vo, pp. 152......$1.00 French as it is spoken in ordinary life. The con- versations are arranged according to the seasons, with characteristic scenes in each. Excellently suited to a conversational course. L'Anglais pour les Français A manual for rapid sell-tultion in English, by A. J. DE HAVILLAND BUSHNELL. Crown 8vo, pp. 236 $1.20 Oxford Spanish Plain Texts Fcap 8vo (642 x 44), limp cloth. Iriarte's Fabulas Literarlas, pp. 78.. 40c. Samaniego's Fabulas en Verso, pp. 146... 60c. Poesias Varias de Garcilaso de la Vega Edicion arreglada por JAIME FITZMAURICE- KELLY Pp. 56. 70c. Eglogas de Garcilaso de la Vega Edición arreglada por JAIME FITZMAURICE- KELLY Pp. 78... 70c. La Victoire par les couleurs, et Autres Saynètes By LADY FRAZER. Crown 8vo, pp. 93..... .80c. Original plays of imagination, prepared with special regard to the needs of class-teaching. On the same lines as the author's Je sais un conte. La Patrie Echos de l'Histoire de France pour les Commen- cants, by JULIA TITTERTON. Crown 8vo (744 * 4%), pp. 78, with twelve illustrations, historical, table, and vocabulary ..80c. Scenes from French History from Cæsar's Conquest of Gaul to the Franco-Prussian War. Oxford Spanish Series Elementary Spanish Grammar By B. SANIN CANO. viii + 342, limp cloth. Crown 8vo (7% x 5), pp. $2.00 Oxford Junior Latin Series Virgil Aeneid 'V., edited with introduction notes and vocabulary, by C. E. FREEMAN. Fcap 8vo (64 x 444), pp. 144, cloth. 70c. The fifth of the series, of which Virgil, Aeneid IV and VI, selections from Ovid, and Livy I are already published Oxford Russian Plain. Texts General editor, NEVILL FORBES. Lermontov Select Poems. Crown 8vo (74 x 5), limp cloth, pp. 64 ..55c. Fourth Russian Book Exercises on First and Second Russian Books, by NEVILL FORBES, M.A. Part I, English-Russian Ex- ercises. Crown 8vo (74 x 5), pp. 4 + 118........900. 2 AT ALL BOOKSELLERS OR FROM THE PUBLISHERS. POSTAGE EXTRA When writing to advertisers please mention THE DIAL. 428 April 19 THE DIAL estimate of Whittier's essential influence on his day ganism comes to orient itself in symmetrical rela- the muscles connected with the more strongly illumin- in the symmetrical muscles, but a stronger one in the muscles turning the head and body of the animal to the a work which—together with the earlier satire on a distinctly American development, is presented in heroic plays, The Rehearsal, and an anonymous its early and middle stages by Professor Pattee; and pamphlet entitled A Comment upon the History the volume closes with an entertaining chapter on of Tom Thumb (1711)-probably served as his Books for Children, which runs the gamut from model. Spiritual Milk for Boston Babes to Huckleberry Like Professor Cross, Mr. Hillhouse is interested Finn. in demolishing the legend of the dissipated Fielding and finds in the careful workmanship of this play evidence “in refutation of the commonly accepted FORCED MOVEMENTS, TROPISM AND ANI- theory that Fielding's youth was woefully misspent MAL CONDUCT. By Jacques Loeb. Lippincott; in an uninterrupted sowing of wild oats, and that Philadelphia. his plays were dashed off over night on stray tobacco wrappers. In the case of this play, at any rate, This is the first of a series of Monographs on Ex- such a theory cannot stand.” The composition of perimental Biology under the editorship of Dr. J. the play meant time and drudgery: “the citations Loeb, Dr. T. H. Morgan, and Dr. W. J. V. Oster- and references with which the notes are thickly vestigations in a number of subjects now in the foret hout. The aim is to present the results of recent in- scattered are practically all correct.” Such accuracy, together with the “careful burlesque of the char- ground of interest among students of biological acters, situations, and diction of tragedy give ground science. Dr. Loeb's book offers a cypical illustration for the assumption that he lavished a great deal of of the application to animal behavior of the methods attention on the Tragedy of Tragedies.” of investigation employed by modern students of experimental embryology, genetics, and the psysio- The CAMBRIDGE HISTORY OF AMERICAN logical activities of the body, and these are essen- LITERATURE. Vol. II. Putnam. tially the methods of the physicist and the chemist. The author says: This volume enjoys, like its predecessor, a pre- ponderance of bibliography—some two hundred Animal conduct is known to many through the romantic tales of popularizers, through the descriptive work of pages out of a little over six hundred. It is this biological observers, or through the attempts of vitalists elaborate feature which has led to publication in to show the inadequacy of physical laws for the explana- three volumes rather than in the two originally de- tion of life. Since none of these contributions are based signed, and which now brings from the editors an upon quantitative experiments, they have led only to explanation to the effect that the division into vol- speculations, which are generally of an anthropomorphic or of a purely verbalistic character. umes is " fortuitous ” and not to be taken as offering this monograph to show that the subject of animal con- a “classification of the subject.” Book III, thus, duct can be treated by the quantitative methods of the begins somewhat past the middle of the present vol- physicist, and that these methods lead to the forced move- ment or tropism theory of animal conduct. ume, and the line is drawn between Lowell and Whitman, though they were exact contemporaries- For the analysis of animal behavior much im- Lowell closing the earlier day and Whitman open- portance is attached to this phenomenon of forced ing the later one. Animals with certain unilateral in- bia, on the former , is one of the high successes of the juries to the brain are no longer able to proceed in present volume. Antecedent to Lowell we find, a straight line and are compelled to travel toward among other items, a sharp and clear-seeing chapter one side. This is explained as a result of the un- on Thoreau; one on Hawthorne, with especial refer- equal tension or tonus of the symmetrical muscles ence to his relations to Emerson; a restrained chapter on the two sides of the body. on Poe; a grateful one on Daniel Webster as a lit- animals with asymmetrical brain injuries suggests erary man, treated with breadth and simplicity by that the movements classed as tropisms are also Senator Lodge, and studies of those two diminish- forced, although in the latter case the turning is ing lights, Longfellow and Whittier. The latter, temporary, lasting only so long as the two sides by Dr. William Morton Payne, is a judicious blend of the body are unequally affected by the external of biography and criticism; it is judicious too in its stimulus. The term tropism covers a variety of of animals and plants the and in its observance of the pieties that the of the elder generation looks for and likes. Pro- tions to some cuter stimulating agency. For the fessor Trent, on Longfellow, takes, though with less explanation of tropisms the symmetry of the body decisiveness, a not unrelated tone. Among the his- is an important feature. In an insect illuminated torians, Prescott and Motley are well represented; more on one side than on the other Bancroft too, and in a rather better piece of writing. In the field of verse, chapters on the poets of the Civil War, both Northern and Southern, will catch ated eye are thrown into a stronger tension, and if now the eye and reward the attention in days when war impulses for locomotion originate in the central nervous system, they will no longer produce an equal response poetry is strikingly to the fore. The short story, as It is the aim of movements. The behavior of 1919 429 THE DIAL The Spirit of Reconstruction in the teaching of history means original inquiry into the ultimate purposes of historical instruction and concentration on those ends. THE HISTORY OF THE AMERICAN PEOPLE by Beard and Bagley sets a new standard and lives up to it. The great masses of the people rather than a few shadowy names; movements and problems and adjustments rather than petty politics and forgotten wars; the twentieth century instead of the eighteenth: —these topics deserve stress and receive it. (For seventh and eighth grades.) " It gives that interest in American progress that makes for intelligent pa- triotism, genuine loyalty, and willingness to accept responsibility.” (John C. Almack, University of Oregon.) Write for our biographical booklet on the authors of this new text. EARLY EUROPEAN CIVILIZATION MODERN EUROPEAN CIVILIZATION by R. L. Ashley, Pasadena High School This series, now winning wide recognition, is the fruit of many years of class-room experience. Mr. Ashley is a pioneer in the newer type of high school history course-a course in which history is made the background for an under- standing of world problems of today rather than a handmaid to the study of ancient languages. Mr. Ashley's style is always within the grasp of the high school student. He is fearless in his elimination of traditional detail, broadly constructive in his correlation and interpretation, thoroughgoing in his subordination of the mili- tary and the political to the social and the economic. SUPERVISED STUDY IN AMERICAN HISTORY by Mabel E. Simpson is as important a contribution in the pedagogy of history as the above texts are in its subject-matter. Supervised study is one of the most widely discussed themes in the entire field of modern education. For the first time, Miss Simpson has formulated, concretely, the application of generally accepted theories to detailed practice in one definite department of the curriculum. Miss Simpson's oral demonstrations of supervised study in this field are exciting nation-wide interest. This book covers the same ground, and is indis- pensable to teachers of history. THE MACMILLAN COMPANY 64-66 Fifth Ave., New York Chicago Boston Dallas Atlanta San Francisco When writing to advertisers please mention THE DIAL. 430 THE DIAL April 19 ing on the excellence of the anthology as a whole. source of light. The animal will thus be compelled to The last chapter, Memory Images and Tropisms, change the direction of its motion and to turn to the sets fórth a mechanistic interpretation of associative scource of light. As soon as the plane of symmetry goes through the source of light, both eyes receive again equal memory and describes the modifications of tropisms illumination, the tension (or tonus) of symmetrical mus by memory images. Only a brief excursion is made cles becomes equal again, and the impulses for locomo into the field of the psychology of higher animals and tion will now produce equal activity in the symmetrical human beings, and that with the purpose of showing muscles. As a consequence, the animal will move in a straight line to the source of light until some other the possible application of the tropism theory to asymmetrical disturbance once more changes the direction human psychology of motion. This statement embodies the essential features of THE ENGLISH POETS. Edited by Thomas Loeb's theory of tropisms. With certain modifica- Humphrey Ward. Vol. V. Browning to tions the explanation of the orientation of an in- Rupert Brooke. Macmillan. sect to light may be extended to the phototropism of other animals, and to the tropic responses of or- When the four volumes of Ward's English Poets ganisms to gravity, contact, the electric current, and were published in 1880, one might have predicted many other sources of stimuli. Tropisms are thus that a fifth would at some time be necessary; for resolved into reflex acts, or actions essentially re- Tennyson and Browning, Swinburne and Morris , flex in character, which take place as involuntarily not to mention Matthew Arnold, though they had as the reaction of a nerve-muscle preparation of done almost all the work by which they were to be an isolated frog's leg. remembered, were alive and therefore not to be One of the most important features of the trop- included, and without them the representation of isms theory is that it affords a mechanistic explana- the nineteenth century verse was almost absurdly tion of many so-called instincts. Dr. Loeb appears inadequate. Now, almost forty years later, this not to be daunted by the wonderful complexity and necessary volume appears, with every mark of being perfection which instinctive performances sometimes meant to conclude the series. One may congratulate exhibit. In the short chapter on instinct he shows Mr. Ward on surviving to complete his now classic how some relatively simple activities which are com- anthology. He has chosen a fitting point at which monly described as instinctive may plausibly be re- to close it; for by the death of Rupert Brooke in solved into tropisms. But anyone who attempts to 1915 nearly all those who had helped to shape the prove that instincts in general are tropistic reac- character of the previous century were available , -tions” has undertaken a large contract, and the and Brooke himself, as one complex of the forces reader of the chapter on instinct can scarcely fail to that set in with the turn of the new century, was be impressed with the intrepidity with which the happily qualified to carry on without suggesting any author enters upon his task. Dr. Loeb is in the habit necessary venture into the later field. A great of thinking of phenomena in terms of their simplest period was rounded out and its sequel hinted at manifestations, and he has an especial fondness for As you look down the table of contents you miss simple explanations. Despite its apparent shortcom- few names that you would care greatly ings, his method of procedure may be justified in included, and those mostly of Nestors like Austin that it has so often led to significant discoveries; yet Dobson. One gap there is however which is start: one cannot but think that in his unduly simplified ling. By any fair estimate Oscar Wilde should treatment of the problem of instinct he has been be- have his place in the list, if only for the Ballad trayed into an inadequate analysis by his habitual of Reading Gaol. One hopes that his exclusion was assumption of the irrelevancy of the complex. Many due to copyright difficulties and not, as one suspects , instincts such as nest building, comb making, cocoon to a British sense of decorum, unwilling to revive spinning, or orb weaving, are not resolvable into disquieting memories. acts which may properly be termed tropisms. Often As for the selections by which the various poets complex instincts may be analyzed in terms of re- are represented, one has to remember that no an- flexes to outer stimuli, but in other cases the prompt- thology has ever entirely satisfied readers who have ings to action arise from within instead of from with- opinions of their own. In the present volume many out the organism. In either case the behavior may will be surprised that Stevenson should be allotted tion quite as much as if it were a mere Cartesian more than three times as much as Fitzgerald, who automaton. Doubtless tropisms afford important gets less than Thomas Gordon Hale or any one of component factors of instinctive behavior, and they half a dozen respectables. Many others will feel may constitute the phylogenic roots of elaborate and that to represent Calverley without either The specialized reactions; but this in no wise justifies us Cock and the Bull or Forever or the Ode to Top in the conclusion that instincts are properly describ- bacco is a mockery, as also to print eleven pages of able as merely “tropistic responses.” They may be Christina Rossetti with never a one of her thrilling mechanistically explicable, but tropisms, are not the only types of response into which they may be Criticism of this kind however is always construed. inevitable and, in this case, has only incidental bear- to have bio the expression of the creature's inherited organizar nearly twice as much space as George Meredith who sonnets. II 3771 THE DIAL 1919 431 I BOOKS OF IMMEDIATE INTEREST L. Bolshevism by John Spargo What Bolshevism is and what it has done. The theoretical and practical principles of Bolshevism. Revelations in Bolshevist documents (never before trans- lated) of democratic shortcomings. With the astonishing conclusion, and a parallel between the ideas of Lenine and Treitschke, that Bolshevism and Prussian militarism are alike in effect. $1.50 The Society of Free States League of Nations Committee , of which President Wilson by Dwight W. Morrow as is Chairman. With the historic background of former proj- ects for world peace, previous ventures in International co- operation, the principle of nationality and the abiding con- flict between National Liberty and World order. $1.35 This new book contains all the speeches and addresses by the President during his stay in Europe, coming down to the final one delivered when he presented the League of Nations covenant to the Peace Congress February 14th, 1919. $1.00 International Ideals by Woodrow Wilson HARPER & BROTHERS Established 1817 NEW YORK The BS Home and Country Readers Book pa The Day Home and Country Readers Book II Rasa The EHYA Home and Country Readers Book II The X2 Home and Country Readers Book IV he nail POK THE HOME and COUNTRY READERS By MARY A. LASELLE Textbooks in Patriotism, Civics and Literature for the Grammar Grades Here is your chance to teach patriotism by distributing the subject-matter over four years and not giving too much at one time. A patriotic reader" that is nothing else produces patriotic indigestion- the pupils tire of the subject. "The Home and Country's books are all-around grammar school readers, as well as textbooks in patriotism. Four columes, each with colored frontispiece and sixteen full page pictures Books I, II, III, IV (for 5th, 6th, 7th and 8th school years), each 65 cents LITTLE, BROWN & COMPANY 4 Beacon Strost, BOSTON 623 So. Wabash Ave., CHICAGO When writing to advertisers please mention THE DIAL. 432 THE DIAL April 19 cessors. The Spanish Conquerors, by Irving Berdine Besides, one does not turn to this work solely for Italian model—and one ode to Spring, the latter cor- the poetical extracts. One great value of the original rect enough to have been written by Grey or Collins. four volumes was in the introductions to the separate For the rest, the verse is loose rather than free. The parts, themselves an anthology of the most judicious good workmanship to which Swinburne and Tenny- criticism of that day. In this matter the present son devoted their lives seems to be an ideal either volume may fairly court comparison with its prede above or below the majority of these our younger Most of the names, of course, are new; poets. for the forty years that have brought so many poets The blame for a volume of such low standards into the collection have also eliminated many critics. must rest either with our colleges or with the anthol- Mr. Ward has survived to continue the tradition, ogist. As far as the students go, one can allege the and so has Mr. Gosse; in place of the others we war. Yet the war had little effect outside of the have a new set, among whom may be noted Sir sentimental—on the young women of our univer- Richard Jebb for Tennyson, Sir Henry Newbolt sities, who have always played a large part in the for Brooke, Professor Mackail for Morris, Thomas junior poetic movement. One suspects the much- Hardy for Barnes, Canon Beeching for Dixon, advertised renaissance of poetry. On the other hand, Charles Whibley for Henley, and John Drinkwater although one has no way of checking up Mr. Schnitt- and Aldous Huxley for various poets each. One kind, and although he is perhaps the only man who regrets that some of these should not have been has read the magazines of all the 96 colleges repre- given more scope. No one however is likely to sented, one does come to question his work through regret the prominence of John Drinkwater, whose a knowledge of a few of the student periodicals. critical introductions are among the pleasures of this The basis of selection is much fairer than in the past excellent volume. two anthologies, yet the anthologist persists in his Braithwaitian love of the sentimental. And there are THE POETS OF THE FUTURE. Edited by still curious lacunae. Though the one poem he chose Henry T. Schnittkind. The Stratford Co. from Yale is excellent, there was much other good verse in the Yale Literary Monthly. The best work When President Wilson said that young people, represented. At the same time there is much atelia of Princeton and Williams and Harvard is hardly instead of being radical in their views, are inclined to be very conservative, he enlisted what had once cious poetry from the University of Southern Cali- been a daring paradox into the ranks of our favor- fornia and Agnes Scott College. Perhaps Mr. ite platitudes. If the statement needed any further Schnittkind's choice was geographical rather than proof, one could find plenty in Mr. Schnittkind's literary. If he was hard put to it to make up a book, latest anthology of our college poets. The 108 he might have taken 108 poems by Stephen Vincent poems he has chosen from 96 colleges are old-fash- Benét and arrived at a much better result than he ioned almost without exception. Modernity, with did. At any rate, one can see little use for the the exception of a good piece of imagism by Royall anthology he has published. It is either a libel.com Snow, is represented solely by an odd two-score of the poetry of the American college, or else the poetry poems about the war. These however incline to of the American college does not deserve an be Mid-Victorian and sentimental. The lyrical anthology. realism of Conrad Aiken and the whimsical realism of T. S. Eliot are represented only by one poem of Books of the Fortnight Stephen Vincent Benét's; the starker realism of Mr. Masters is reflected through a romantic prism. The following list comprises The Dial's selec- There is hardly anything in the whole volume that tion of books recommended among the publications could not have appeared—the doubtful assent of the received during the last two weeks: editors being granted—in the first issue of the Har- vard Monthly, back in the eighties. The Chronicles of America: Dutch and English on Along with the almost universal conservatism the Hudson, by Maud Wilder Goodwin; The goes a certain technical carelessness. The theory so Old Northwest, by Frederic Austin Ogg; assiduously spread abroad by Sara Teasdale and The Anti-Slavery Crusade, by Jesse Macy; The H. L. Mencken—that poets are best when young, Cotton Kingdom, by William E. Dodd; and require almost no training—has evidently been bearing fruit. One symptom of it is the quantity of free verse written by people who have apparently no drik; The Fathers of New England, by idea of the difference between free verse and the sort Charles M. Andrews; The Day of the Con- of stuff that Professor Patterson calls prose.” Another symptom is the number of nursery spaced federacy, by Nathaniel W. Stephenson; The quatrains. Yet another, the quantity of poems Old Merchant Marine, by Ralph D. Paine; rhymed sloppily. There are two or three sonnets in the collection—sonnets very far from the strict Richman. vols. ready. Yale University Press. The Boss and the Machine, by Samuel P. Orth; The Age of Big Business, by Burton J. Hen- To be complete in 50 vols. 20 1919 THE DIAL 433 The Chicago School of Civics and Philanthropy Annoanco AN “ALL-SUMMER” SUMMER SESSION JUNE 16 - AUGUST 29 蓝​冠​」是​這​员​員​导​盘​員​窩​宣言​真是​高​层叠​言​,导 ​| First Term, June 16-July 23 Second Term, July 24-August 29 New Students admitted at the beginning of each term General Course for Social Workers Special Course in Industrial Service Special Recreation Course with Technical Classes at Hull-House UNIVERSITY OF WISCONSIN STUDIES STUDIES IN LANGUAGE AND LITERATURE No. 1. British Criticisms of American Writings: 1783-1815 By WILLIAM B. CAIRNS. Price 50c. No. 2. Studies by Members of the De- partment of English (Dedicated to FRANK GAYLORD HUB- BARD). Price $1.00 THEOLOGY IN PARADISE LOST R. E. Neil Dodge THE PROSE STYLE OF JOHNSON Warner Taylor THE PROSE STYLE OF SIR PHILIP SIDNEY Stanley Harkness UNITY, COHERENCE AND EMPHASIS H. B. Lathrop BEOWULF AND THE NIEBELUNGEN COUPLET William Ellery Leonard NOTES ON A MIDDLE ENGLISH SCRIBE'S METHODS Muriel Bothwell Carr THE ORIENTAL IN RESTORATION DRAMA Louis Wann A HISTORY OF COSTUMING ON THE ENGLISH STAGE BETWEEN 1660 AND 1825 Lily B. Campbell JOSEPH FAWCETT: THE ART OF WAR Arthur Beatty RUSKIN AND THE SENSE OF BEAUTY F. W. Roe AN AMERICAN'S INFLUENCE ON JOHN RUSKIN William F. De Moss CHARACTER PORTRAYAL IN THE WORK OF HENRY JAMES William B. Cairns SOME INFLUENCES OF MEREDITH'S PHILOSOPHY ON HIS FICTION 0. J. Campbell THE FOWLS IN CHAUCER'S PARLEMENT Willard Edward Farnham ASPECTS OF THE STORY OF TROILUS AND CBISEYDE Karl Young Orders should be sent to The Secretary, Board of Regents UNIVERSITY OF WISCONSIN Madison, Wisconsin Special Courses for Public Health Nurses For information, address the Dean, 2559 Michigan Avenue, Chicago New War Words Boche Escadrille Petain Camouflage Blighty Bolsheviki Ace Tank Anzac Air Hole Zeebrugge Barrage and hundreds more have been added to Webster's NEW INTERNATIONAL 부 ​3 Dictionary. For the first time you can find authori- tative answers to your questions about the new terms. CICES Facts are demanded as never before. Exact infor- mation is indispensable. Never before was the New International so urgently needed and never before was it procurable at a price 80 relatively low. Authors ROMEIKE VLOSTILES NLY PATERNARGA WIADOMY Regular and India-Paper Editions. WRITE for Speci- men Pages. FREE Pocket Maps if you name The Dial. operates a special literary department as complete in every detail as an entire PRESS CLIPPING BUREAU Having the use of our international facilities this depart- ment is known and patronized by as many authors and publishers as make up the entire clientele of an ordinary bureau. With our exceedingly large patronage it is necessary for us to maintain a standard of efficiency and service which cannot be approached by bureaux that devote their efforts to the acquiring of new sub- scribers without thought for RO MEIKE those they have. An ineffi- 108-110 Seventh Avenue cient press clipping service will prove irritating. so don't NEW YORK experiment. Use the reliable ESTABLISHED 1881 G. & C.MERRIAM CO., Springfield, Mass., U. S. A. When writing to advertisers please mention THE DIAL. 434 THE DIAL April 19 Spring Educational List Religion and Culture, by Frederick Schleiter. (Columbia The Second Coming of Christ, by James M. Campbell. A Short History of Rome. Vol. II: The Empire The American Language. By H. L. Mencken. from the Death of Cacsar to the Fall of the 8vo, 374 pages. Alfred A. Knopf (New Western Empire, 44 B.C.-476 A.D. By Gug York). lielmo Ferrero and Corrado Barbagallo. 12mo, Convention and Revolt in Poetry. By John Liv- 516 pages. G. P. Putnam's Sons. ingston Lowes. 12mo, 346 pages. Houghton The Grand Fleet, 1914-1916: Its Creation, Devel Mifflin Co. (Boston). opment and Work. By Admiral Viscount Jel- . Dramatic Technique. By George Pierce Baker. licoe. Illustrated, 8vo, 510 pages. George H. Doran Co. 12mo, 531 pages. Houghton Mifflin Co. Last and First: Being Two Essays—The New (Boston). Spirit, and Arthur Hugh Clough. By John The Living Corpse (Redemption). A drama. By Addington Symonds. 12mo, 137 Leo Tolstoi. Translated by Anna Monosso- pages. Nicholas L. Brown (New York). wich Evarts. 12mo, 98 pages. Nicholas L. Field and Study. By John Burroughs. Illustrated, Brown (New York). 12mo, 337 pages. Houghton Mifflin Co. Martin Schüler. A novel. By Romer Wilson. (Boston). 12mo, 313 pages. Henry Holt & Co. The following is The Dial's selected list of the Psychological Principles, by James Ward. (G. P. Put- most notable spring issues and announcements in nam's Sons.) the theory and practice of education, in science, and Studies in Electro-Physiology: Animal and Vegetable , in philosophy and religion. Reprints, new editions, by Arthur E. Baines, illus.-Studies in Electro-Pathol- new translations, textbooks not of general interest, ogy, by A. White Robertson, illus. (E. P. Dutton & Co.) very technical books, and works of reference have War Neurosis, by John T. MacCurdy. (Cambridge Uni- been omitted. The list is compiled from data sub- versity Press.) mitted by the publishers. A Source Book of Biological Nature-Study, by Elliot R. Downing. (University of Chicago Press.) Education The Elementary Nervous System, by G. H. Parker. (J. B. Lippincott Co.) Historical Papers of the Late Henry Adams: A Letter Aircraft: Its Origin and Its Development in War and to Teachers; Phase, edited by Brooks Adams.-Edu- cational Psychology, by Daniel Starch.—Modern Ele- Peace, by Evan John David, illus. (Charles Scrib- ner's Sons.) mentary School Practice, by George E. Freeland.- Management of the City School, by A. C. Perry-Va- The Secrets of Animal Life, by J. Arthur Thompson, illus. (Henry Holt & Co.) cational Agricultural Education, by Rufus W. Stimson. (Macmillan Co.) The Mason-Wasps, by J. Henri Fabre. (Dodd, Mead The Pronunciation of Standard English in America, by Co.) George Philip Krapp.—Modern Punctuation: Its Utili- Outlines of Economic Zoology, by Albert M. Reese. (P. Blakiston's Son & Co.) ties and Conventions, by George Summey, Jr. (Ox- ford University Press.). Philosophy and Religion Psychology of the Normal and Subnormal, by Henry H. Goddard, illus.—The Child's Unconscious Mind, by Christian Internationalism, by William Pierson Merrill. Wilfred Lay. (Dodd, Mead & Co.) Prophecy and Authority, by Kemper Fullerton.- Lewis Theobald: His Contribution to English Scholar- The Coming of the Lord: Will It Be Premillenial? by ship, with some unpublished letters, by Richard Foster James H. Snowden. ---Our Immortality, by Daniel P. Jones. (Columbia University Press.) Rhodes. (Macmillan Co.) Educational Experiments, by Evelyn Dewey. (E. P. Dut- History of Religions, by George F. Moore, vol. II.-Al- ton & Co.) truism: Its Nature and Varieties, by George Herbert History of Education, by Charles C. Boyer. Palmer.-Mind and Conduct, by Henry Rutgers Mar- Scribner's Sons.) (Charles shall. (Charles Scribner's Sons.) The Colleges in War Time and After, by Parke Rexford Animism, by George William Gilmore. -The Mythology Kolbe, illus. (D. Appleton & Co.) of, All Races, vol. XI.—by Hartley Burr Alexander. The University of Pennsylvania: Franklin's College, by Horace Mather Lippincott, illus. (J. B. Lippincott Co.) Moral Values and the Ídea of God, by William R. Sorley. Mental Hygiene in Childhood, by William A. White. (G. P. Putnam's Sons.) (Little, Brown & Co.) Naturalistic Ethics and Sociology, by Edward Gary Hayes. (D. Appleton & Co.) Science Neo-Platonists , by Thomas Whittaker. (Cambridge Uni- Medical Contributions to the Study of Evolution, by J. G. versity Press.) Adami, illus.—Pellagra: A Study of Its Etiology, Path- ology and Treatment, by H. F. Harris, illus.-Hysteri- University Press.) cal Disorders of Warfare, by Lewis R. Yealland. Redemption: Hindu and Christian, by Sydney Cave. (Macmillan Co.) (Oxford University Press.) A Century of Science in America: With Especial Refer- The Modern Expansion of Christianity, by Edward Cald- ence to the American Journal of Science, 1818-1918, well Moore. (University of Chicago Press.) illus. (Yale University Press.) (Methodist Book Concern.) 1919 THE DIAL . 435 B ooks in small or large lots can be secured to the best advantage from NATIONAL PROSPERITY BRINGS GREATER RESPONSIBILITY BOOKS WITH THE BAKER & TAYLOR CO. Wholesale Dealers in tho Books of All Publishers 854 Fourth Ave. New York At Twenty-Sixth St. PURPOSE Some NEW Books AP With Fresh Statements Whatever book you want francenelen has it, or will get it. We buy old, rare books, and sets of books NEW YORK and PHILADELPHIA Business Man and FOR THE BUSINESS His Overflow MAN WILLIAM E. SWEET A successful business man's presenta- tion of how to spend the margin of one's time and energy in activities which make for world progress. Cloth, 75c Christianity's Unifying FOR THOUGHTFUL Fundamental LAYMEN HENRY F. WARING Reveals the reality of Christ and points the way to the acceptance of that reality in the fullest measure, Cloth, $1.25 rentano B NEW YORK Ave at 23 Booksellers to the World FOR THE Hearth and Altar HOME OSCAR L. JOSEPH A five minute family devotional service is built around a theme for each of thirteen weeks, of great value individ- ually and socially. Cloth, $1.25 ALL ALT BOOKS LANGUAGES The Religion of a Man of Letters a By Gilbort Murray “We can imagine no better kind of spiritual forti- fication for these times.”—Chicago Evening Post. $1.00 net. HOUGHTON MIFFLIN COMPANY, BOSTON FOR BOYS Heroes AND PARENTS HUGH A. MORAN Twelve great lives are studied in a way which helps a hero-loving boy. to apply the principles of Christian living to his own life. Cloth, 75c At your Book Store or from us Write for Folder: Reconstruction Books ASSOCIATION PRESS LUTHER BURBANK'S WORKS 12 handsome, 8vo. volumes—1,260 colored plates. Published at $90.00. Our price delivered, $35.00. McDEVITT-WILSON'S, Inc. Send for new Spring Bargain Catalog. 30 Church St. NEW YORK CITY Hadson Terminal Publication Department International Committee Y. M. C. A. 347 MADISON AVENUE NEW YORK REMINININMISIUNIISHITIMINIMISSE When writing to advertisers please mention Tue Dial. 436 THE DIAL April 19 Sinclair well known there. As a matter of fact, the list of very admirable English translations, with the Current News The Macmillans have recently added three titles to their Rural Manuals: a Manual of Home-Mak- Appleton's Annual American Year Book: A ing, compiled by Martha van Rensselaer, Flora Record of Events and Progress for 1918, edited by Rose, and Helen Canon; a Manual of Tree Dis- Francis G. Wickware, is now ready. eases, by W. Howard Rankin; and a Manual of The Holts are to bring out on April 10 Walter Vegetable Garden Insects, by Cyrus Richard Crosby - Lippman's The Political Scene: An Essay on the and Mortimer Demarest Leonard. Victory of 1918. The Scribners have now issued the tenth volume Charles Edward Russell's Bolshevism and Our (Picts—Sacraments) of their Encyclopaedia of Re- United States is announced for early issue by the ligion and Ethics, edited by James Hastings , and Bobbs-Merrill Co. the second and final volume of the same editor's Dic- Boni and Liveright have ready for immediate pub- lication Upton Sinclair's Jimmie Higgins, an tionary of the Apostolic Church. An evaluation of American novel of the war period. the Encyclopaedia, based on Volumes II and VIII, Don Seitz has written introductory comment on was published in The Dial of December 28, 1916. The Putnams have republished, in one volume the text of The Tryal of William Penn and Wil- liam Mead, for Causing a Tumult, a reprint of each, Letters of Washington Irving to Henry Bre- which is soon to be put out by Marshall Jones. voort, and Letters of Henry Brevoort to Washing- ton Irving (together with other unpublished Bre- The Prang Co. publishes in The Theory and Practice of Color, by Bonnie E. Snow and Hugo B. voort papers), both edited by George S. Hellman. Froehlich, a valuable handbook copiously illus- The original appearance of these books, in 1915 and trated with color charts and diagrams. 1916 respectively, was in limited editions of two volumes each. The Kiltartan Poetry Book: Prose Translations A Trade Union College has been inaugurated in from the Irish, by Lady Gregory, of which the Irish edition was reviewed by Ernest Boyd in the previ- Boston under the auspices of the Central Labor Union. For its first term, April 7 to June 14 of ous issue of The Dial, has just been imported by G. P. Putnam's Sons. this year, it offers courses in English, Labor Organi- Clarence C. Dill is editor and publisher of a new zation, Law, Government, Economics, and Science . The faculty includes Roscoe Pound, Irving Fisher , monthly called Let the People Vote on War, of first is William Z. Ripley, Felix Frankfurter, R. F. Alfred lished from 1311 G Street, N. W., Washington, George Nasmyth , Francis Bowes Sayre, Harold J. Hoernle, Horace M. Kallen, Henry W. L. Dana, D. C. Laski, and others. An autographed edition of Woodrow Wilson's A History of the American People has just been The American Branch of the Oxford University issued by Harpers . The edition is in ten volumes , ful works of reference. Modern Punctuation: Irs Press has just published two authoritative and use- printed on Japanese vellum, illustrated in photo- gravure, and limited to 400 sets. Utilities and Conventions, by George Summey, JT, The University of Chicago has published, as is exhaustive without being pedantic or impractical , Number 11 of its Supplementary Educational Mon- and is generously illustrated from contemporary ographs, Educational Legislation and Administra- usage. The Pronunciation of Standard English in tion in the State of New York from 1777 to 1850, exacting set of symbols, which however make possible America, by George Philip Krapp, employs a rather by Elsie Garland Hobson. a valuable exactitude of transcription. The mate- School has just issued a pamphlet of Bibliographica rulings is neither dogmatic on the one hand not too terial is conveniently arranged; the spirit of the Notes on Some Books About Reconstruction, by catholic on the other. Aksel G. S. Josephson, of the John Crerar Library, Chicago. Those of us who enjoy seeing ourselves as others see us can find much of interest in Regis Michaud's Richard Aldington, T. S. Eliot, Wyndham Lewis, Mystiques et Realistes Anglo-Saxons (Colin, Paris); Lytton Strachey, Siegfried Sassoon, and some others propose, if properly encouraged, to publish Art and for of the nine, authors considered, only two-Pater Letters as a new and larger quarterly. They ask and Bernard Shaw-are not American. Naturally for 5,000 subscribers at 10/6 a year. The address the French are interested in Emerson and Whitman; is 9 , one is pleased to learn that the fame of Henry James The Newark Free Public Library has prepared as perhaps surprised to find Jack London and Uptere and Mark Twain is secure on the Continent; one the fourth revision of its pamphlet, A Thousand of the Best Novels. The criterion of the list is a simple one—“those things which have pleased the most people for the longest time are the better "- comments are always engaging, often-as here- and, in full harmony with the vagaries of popular valuable. taste, choice ranges from Robert W. Chambers and The Loeb Classical Library has added to its Myrtle Reed to Galsworthy and Barrie. original text on parallel pages, new volumes in each 1919 THE DIAL 437 NEWSPAPER POISON The Mythology of All Races is explained-newspaper lies exposed-suppressed facts published, in THE PANSY PAMPHLETS. I write only when I have facts to reveal; and I set forth the facts plainly, in few words. Latest issues are: No. 6. “The Subsidized Press " 1-Greek and Roman. 11—Teu- No. 7. " The Food Trust" No. 8. “Danger of Autocracy" tonic. III—Celtic, Slavic. IV- No. 9. “ The Red Specter " Price 50c. each and if you do not agree that informa- Finno-Ugric, Siberian. V-Semitic. tion revealed is worth it, your money will be refunded. JACK PANSY, D-422 Selden Ave., Detroit, Mich. VI—Indian, Iranian. VII—Armen- ian, African. VIII--Chinese, Japa- WANTED FOR IMMEDIATE CASH PURCHASE Particularly 11th ed. 200 sets; fine bindings preferred. nese, IX-Oceanic. 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BROWN 80 Lexington Ava Marshall Jones Company 212 Summer Street, Boston, Mass. STATEMENT OF THE OWNERSHIP, MANAGEMENT, CIRCULA- TION, ETC., REQUIRED BY THE ACT OF CONGRESS OF AUGUST 24, 1912, THE MODERN LIBRARY Of The Dial, published fortnightly at New York, N. Y., for April 1, 1919 State of New York, County of New York, 19. Before me, a notary in and for the State and county aforesald, personally OF THE WORLD'S BEST BOOKS appeared Martyn Johnson, who, having been duly sworn according to law, deposes and says that he is the publisher of The Dial, and that the following Sixty-four titles now published-14 new volumes just issued. 18, to the best of his knowledge and belief, a true statement of the owner The Dial says "There is scarcely a title that fails to ship, management (and If a daily paper, the circulation), etc., of the afore sald publication for the date shown in the above caption, required by the awaken interest. 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That the owners are: (Glve names and addresses of individual owners, of Ecclesiastes or, 11 & corporation, give its name and the names and addresses of stock By MORRIS JASTROW, JR., Ph.D., LL.D., Author of "The holders owning or holding 1 per cent or more of the total amount of stock War and the Bagdad Railway," etc. Small 4to. $2.00 set The Dial Publishing Company, Inc., 152 W. 13th St., New York, N. Y.; A delightfully human book on the Omar Khayyam of the Bible Martyn Johnson, 152 W. 13th St., New York, N. Y.; Willard C. Kitchell, with an exact translation of the original text. How It came to be 140 S. Dearborn St., Chicago, Ill.; Scofield Thayer, 80 Washington Square, written and who wrote it (and It was not Solomon) ,why additions New York, N. Y.; Marion C. Ingersoll, 149 S. Oxford St., Brooklyn, N. Y.; were made to the original textfand the whole Interesting story is Agnes Brown Leach, 25 W. 45th St., New York, N. Y.; Frederick Lynch, here given. 70 Fifth Avenue, New York, N. 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Published by THE CENTURY CO., New York [Seal.] (My commission expires March 30, 1921 When writing to advertisers please mention THE DIAL. A GENTLE CYNIC Being the Book THE MODERN NOVEL 438 April 19 THE DIAL bonds to be used as bail for the thirty-seven men twenty years. Some of these men are seriously ill and most of them have families. The granting of of the following editions of classical writers: Contributors Pausanias' Description of Greece, six volumes, trans- lated by W. H. S. Jones; The Theological Tract- John S. Codman was born in Boston, and was graduated from Harvard in 1890 and from the ates of Boethius, translated by H. F. Stewart and Massachusetts Institute of Technology in 1893. In E. K. Rand, together with I. T.'s" translation of the Consolation of Philosophy, revised by H. F. connection with his work in engineering he has pub- Stewart; a three-volume edition of Cicero's Letters lished numerous technical articles, and he has also to Atticus, translated by E. O. Winstedt; Virgil's contributed to various periodicals articles on eco- Aeneid, and the Minor Poems, translated by H. nomic subjects, especially taxation. Rushton Fairclough, two volumes; and Bernadotte Herbert J. Davenport is a specialist in political Perrin's translation of Plutarch's Lives, in eleven economy who has pursued his study in the Univer- books. This notable series is published in this coun- sity of Leipzig and the Ecole des Sciences Politiques. try by G. P. Putnam's Sons. He has been Professor of Economics at Cornell since The J. B. Lippincott Co. has just published the 1916, and is the author of a number of volumes. second Monograph on Experimental Biology- Royal Case Nemiah (Yale: B.A., 1912; Ph.D., The Elementary Nervous System, by G. H. Parker, 1916) studied at Göttingen in 1913-1914, was In- Professor of Zoology at Harvard. The first volume structor in Greek and Latin at Yale from 1915 to of this series—Forced Movements, Tropisms, and 1918, and is now teaching the classics at the Rox- Animal Conduct, by Jacques Loeb—is reviewed in bury School, Cheshire, Connecticut. this issue of The Dial (page 428). To the series Helen Sard Hughes (Ph.D., University of Chica- the publishers are preparing to add the following go) was formerly an instructor in English at volumes: The Nature of Animal Light, by E. New- Wellesley College and is now an Assistant Profes- ton Harvey; The Chromosome Theory of Heredity, sor at the University of Montana. by T. H. Morgan; Inbreeding and Outbreeding: Caroline Pratt founded and has charge of The Their Genetic and Sociological Significance, by E. Play School, New York City. She is a member of M. East and D. F. Jones; Pure Line Inheritance, the executive council of the Bureau of Municipal by H. S. Jennings; The Experimental Modification Experiments and has done pioneer work on toys as of the Process of Inheritance, by R. Pearl; Locali- educational material. Miss Pratt is a graduate of zation of Morphogenetic Substances in the Egg, by Teachers' College of Columbia University, and was E. G. Conklin; Tissue Culture, by R. G. Harri- formerly a member of the faculty of the Philadel- son; Permeability and Electrical Conductivity of phia Normal School. Living Tissue, by W. J. V. Osterhout; The Equi- Allen Tucker is a painter who has recently been librium Between Acids and Bases in Organism and writing prose and verse for the magazines. Environment, by L. J. Henderson; Chemical Basis David Morton (Vanderbilt University, 1909) of Growth, by T. B. Robertson; and Coordination teaches history and English in the Morristown, in Locomotion, by A. R. Moore. New Jersey, High School. In their Handbook Series the H. W. Wilson Co., In compliance with the ruling of the post office League of Nations, compiled by Edith M. Phelps. Prices Of bookis mentioned in the text matterof the The Dial will henceforth be unable to indicate the Structure of Lasting Peace, by H. M. "Kallenjoblishers, whose addresses, unless otherwise spring which originally appeared in The Dial (October hired, may be assumed to be New York. In making 25, 1917 to February 18, 1918) and was subse- quently published by the Marshall Jones Co. There inquiries concerning volumes issued by several pub- is a list of organizations devoted to the furtherance lishers the reader will probably find it more con- of the League idea and a valuable bibliography. venient to write to any of the following booksellers: Paul Elder, San Francisco; A. C. McClurg & Co., been edited by Sir Augustus Cakes Fanden Sie u Chicago, and Wanamaker's, Brentano's dei put Erle Richards the Great European Treaties of names and Baker and Taylor, New York Times the Nineteenth Century (Oxford University Press). Here the editors have assembled the texts of Arrangements have been made at The Dial of- the important European treaties since the Napo- fice for Helen Marot to receive real-estate or other in Leavenworth who have just been granted the of each, and a number of maps are included. The Atlantic Monthly Press has imported the Oxford University Press pamphlet The Idea of a League of Nations, by H. G. Wells, and collaborators, who the appeal implies a reasonable doubt and is the firs include Viscounts Grey and Bryce, Gilbert Murray, sign that the prejudice against these men is giving and William Archer. way. Everyone who can help in giving them liberty with help break through that prejudice. - 1919 439 THE DIAL Bertrand Russell ... 1 1 . has chosen THE DIAL as the medium through which he will present to American readers a series of articles discussing current phases of industrial and po- litical readjustment. The first of these articles Direct Action and Democracy will be published in the issue of May 3rd Warning! THE DIAL is non-returnable on the newsstands. This means that unless you are a subscriber you may find is “sold out.” The only way to make certain of receiving all Ber-- trand Russell's articles as well as the timely discussions from Thor- stein Veblen, Helen Marot and a dozen others, is to subscribe! your dealer 99 SPECIAL OFFER Norman Angell's new book, “ The British Revolution and the American Democracy (Huebsch, $1.50, re- viewed in this issue) and THE DIAL for one year ($3.00) will be sent to new subscribers on receipt of $3.50. PUBLISHER, THE DIAL, 152 West 13th Street, New York City. Enclosed find $3.50, for which please send me Norman Angel's “The British Revolution and the American Democracy” and one year's subscription to THE DIAL. 1/4/19 When writing to advertisers please mention Tux DIAL. 440 April 19 THE DIAL UONGER MINNET DINING ROOM SET (stained), 45-inch oak-top table and four chairs, the latter cushioned with plain rep or igured cretonne, $67.50 ; Buffet, $41; Serving Table, $24; Tray Wagon, $22.50; Fern Basket, $5.25. 'Express prepaid 100 miles; freight 500. Upholstery samples and catalog on request. Modern Willow Minnet Willow is a modern wicker furni- ture for the modern interior. Skillfully woven of fine French willow, reinforced as sturdily as the good wooden furniture, Min- net Willow finds a ready place in the best type of country residences, smart city apart- ments and clubs. An infinite variety of decorative schemes are suggested by the ultra modern tints and the rich, luxurious cretonnes. You are invited to inspect the new Minnet designs for Spring and Summer. Ship- ments can be made immediately, or de- ferred, at your convenience. illustrated Catalogue on request. MINNET & CO. Manufacturers of High Grade Willow Furniture 365 Lexington Avenue Between Fortieth and Forty-first Streets, NEW YORK CITY When writing to advertisers please mention THE DIAL. THE DIAL Bertrand Russell on Direct Action A FORTNIGHTLY VOL. LXVI NEW YORK NO. 789 MAY 3, 1919 DEMOCRACY AND DIRECT ACTION Bertrand Russell 445 SEA-HOARDINGS. Verse Cale Young Rice 448 FACTUALIST VERSUS IMPRESSIONIST Wilson Follett 449 PAUL CARUS William Ellery Leonard 452 The IMPENDING REVOLUTION IN ITALY . Flavio Venanzi 455 THE MONTAGU-CHELMSFORD REFORM PROPOSALS Sailendra nath Ghose 457 The PASSING OF CLASSICISM Richard Offner 460 The ARMY AND THE LAW Charles Recht 461 MARY IN WONDERLAND Robert Morss Lovett 463 LONDON, APRIL 10 EDITORIALS Robert Dell 465 467 COMMUNICATIONS: German Indemnity. Withdraw from Russia.—Military Training as Education.—The 470 Notes On New BOOKS: Civilization.—The Power of Dante.—The Early Years of the Saturday Club.—The Salmagundi Club.—Government and the War.-The Valley of Vision.— The Valley of Vision.—Domus Doloris.—The Gilded Man. 472 CURRENT News 478 THE DIAL (founded in 1880 by Francis F. Browne) is published every other Saturday by The Dial Publishing Com- pany, Inc.-Martyn Johoson, President-at 152 West Thirteenth Street, New York, N. Y. Entered as Second Class matter at the Post Office at New York, N. Y., August 3, 1918, under the act of March 3, 1897. Copyright, 1919, by The Dial Publishing Company, Inc. Foreign Postage, 50 cents. $3.00 a Year 15 Cents a Copy 442 May 3 THE DIAL Others Say Notable Spring Books THE NATION: A sheaf of sketches-vignettes of character, little glimpses of the human background to that vast organized madness called war- which, though cast in the form of fiction, yet bear upon every page the impress of undubitable veracity. They are pitched in various keys; but whether the prevailing note be that of tragedy or humor or satire, there throbs through all of them a ground- tone of intense, tender pity and limitless admiration for the humble and heroic men whom he has come to know in the dressing stations and hospitals of France. And the knowledge thus gained he conveys to us, as far as the printed word is capable of conveying it, in a book which is literature of a fine and enduring sort. NEW YORK TIMES: It is a fine, a noble book. ... Pathos, tenderness, irony, vivid description and stinging satire are all in this book. The Goncourt prize for 1918 was well and worthily bestowed. BOSTON HERALD: What better evidence of the serene in- telligence of France than award of the Goncourt prize to Dr. Duhamel's war sketches called “ Civilization." NEW YORK SUN: Each chapter is a story in itself. Sil- houettes of hell. Cameos of beauty. Etched ironies. Always the right word in the right place the word that is vascular, to use Emerson's phrase; the word that leaps at you; the word that coins a terrible image; the word that drops like a sun into your mind; the word that haunts you. NEW YORK TRIBUNE: No man can read this book without weep- ing for utter pity. But we should pity him who could read it without feeling a mighty inspiration and a joy that the human soul can SO tire and torture time,” and can triumph over the very powers that were put forth to overthrow true civilization. CHICAGO DAILY NEWS: Dr. Duhamel reaches the heart of tragedy and brings before his readers some of the most poignant incidents I have yet come across. They are described as personal en- counters by a man of obviously great sym- pathies and perceptions. It is so human, so real, so tragically beautiful. . A Frenchman'. View of PRESIDENT WILSON By DANIEL HALÉVY Translated by Hugh Stokes. Cloth, $1.50 net. “ Within the limits of a volume inevitably destined for an immediate interpretation of Mr. Wilson to the people of France, Mr. Halevy has bere produced wbat is little less, in its way, than a masterplece."--The New Republic. THE LETTERS OF ALGERNON C. SWINBURNE Edited and with an Introduction by EDMUND GOSSE, C.B., and T. J. WISE Two Volumes. Cloth, $5.00 net. This is the first comprehensive collection of the noble poet's letters to be made, and they cover practically the whole period of his adult life from February, 1858, to January, 190 DOMUS DOLORIS By W. COMPTON LEITH Author of " Sirenica," “ Apologia Difidentis," etc. Cloth, $1.50 net. new volume by the eminent essayist, whose beauty and style of language the critics have frequently com- pared to the golden prose of Walter Pater. America's Miracle in France S. O. S. (Servicos of Supply) By ISAAC F. MARCOSSON Author of “ The Busines8 of War," “ The Rebirth of Russia." Illustrated Cloth, $1.50 net. This book, written under the special authority of Gen. eral Pershing, is a piece of permanent history and dis- closes for the first time the romance the Services of Supply, which red, equipped and transported the Ameri- can Expeditionary Force, Brothers in Arms LIVING BAYONETS A Record of the Last Push By LIEUT. CONINGSBY DAWSON Author of "Carry On," "Out to win,” “The Glory of the Tronches,” etc. Third Edition. Cloth, $1.25 mol “ Lieutenant Dawson's writings have been among the great consolations and inspirations of the war, and this latest of them, written at the climax of the great strug. gle, is the best of all." -New York Tribune. The Epic of the Poilu THE “CHARMED AMERICAN” A Story of the Iron Division of France By GEORGES LEWYS Frontispiece. Cloth, $1.50 net. “We have seen no more vivid war scenes than these, and none more instinct with all the mingled horrors and glories of the truth. It is tremendously dramatic, too, this epic of the trenches." -New York Tribune. PRINTS AND DRAWINGS By FRANK BRANGWYN With Some Other Phases of His Art By WALTER SHAW SPARROW Author of “A Book of Bridges, trated, with colored collotypes, full color plates, engrat inge, wood-outs, etc. achievements in etching. Wood-engraving. Iltbography, A worthy and comprebensive record of Mr. Brangwyn's water-color drawing and pastel. Leacock Soldes the Kaiser Problem THE HOHENZOLLERNS IN AMERICA And Othor Impossibilitios By STEPHEN LEACOCK Author of "Nonsense Novels," "Frenated Fiction," etc. This new book of satires on the vanity of autocratic monarchy and other timels toples is written in Mr. Leacock's characteristic vein of humor and good spirits. eto. Profusely illus Oloth, $15.00 net. CIVILIZATION By Dr. Georges Duhamel Price $1.50 " Literary Lapsos," Cloth, $1.16 net. OF ALL BOOKSELLERS ale nel senso The Century Co. No 353 Fourth Are JOHN LANE COMPANY - NEW YORK When writing to advertisers please mention The DIAL. 1919 THE DIAL 443 宣 ​g Labor and Reconstruction in Europe By ELISHA M. FRIEDMAN, Editor of “Problems of American Reconstruction" With an Introduction by Hon. W. B. WILSON, Secretary of Labor, who says: “ The great value of such a work as Mr. Elisha M. Friedman has undertaken is tbat he brings together, in consecutive order, a vast amount of useful information at an opportune time, when those who most desire to avail themselves of it would be too busy to assemble it themselves. He has arranged historical fact and commentary with rare skill and judgment. He sets forth his subject matter after a plan that has these great merits : It is,-notwithstanding the wide range of considerations dealt with, --compact, brief, co- herent, and clear." MR. FRIEDMAN'S book describes impartially the means undertaken or proposed in sixteen countries, belligerent and neutral, to deal with reconstruction in labor matters. It is of value to employment man- agers, directors of corporations, and students of labor problems and of the effects of the war. Cloth, 8vo, $2.50 net, postage extra Russia's Agony By ROBERT WILTON, Correspondent for many years of the London Times in Russia There is probably no term of equally recent origin so often in print as Bolshevik_and its derivatives. Readers of the London Times do not need to be told that Mr. Wilton's knowledge of Russia is equalled by that of very few persons. "No such comprehensive and straight-forward account has yet been given," says the New York Times, " of the conditions in Russia which led to the outbreak of the revolution and the emergence of Bolshevism.” No definition of that term, by the way, is more clear-cut and definite than Mr. Wilton's. Net, $5.00 Russian Revolution Aspects By ROBERT CROZIER, Correspondent for the Associated Press Familiar with the country, and speaking Russian fluently, Mr. Long in Russia during 1917, had oppor- tunities for first-hand observation of events and persons, which make his acute criticisms and intimate portraits unusually interesting. Net, $2.50 The Economics of Progress By J. M. ROBERTSON, M.P. TEMPLE SCOTT says this book "should be in the hands of every statesman and every business man in the country. It is, to my mind, the sanest elucidation of economics I have read in many a day, and I have read not a few. The chapter on Capital' sbould be learned by rote by our Treasury Depart- ment; and the chapter on Population should be printed separately as a pamphlet and sent to every citizen, married or about to marry. Books on economics are, as a rule, dull and discouragingly technical. This book is pever dull and most encouragingly expla natory. It is one of the few books produced by the war for wbich I, for one, am deeply grateful." Net, $5.00 France Facing Germany By GEORGES CLEMENCEAU, Premier of France The North American Review says: " In order to understand the spirit of a people, the shortest way, and one of the best ways, is to study the minds of the men who lead that people and the nature of the elo- quence that really moves them. And so without under-valuing the many excellent interpretations of the French fighting spirit, of French unanimity, and of French loftỉness of motive one may say that no work of more lasting significance as atřording insight into the soul of the nation' bas appeared than this." Net $2.00 A Society of States By W. T. S. STALLYBRASS, M.A. (Oxon.) A study of sovereignty, independence, and equality in a League of Nations, by an eminent international lawyer. Fellow and Vice-Principal of Brasenose College, Oxford, of the Inner Temple, Barrister-at-Law. Net, $2.00 The Clash A Study in Nationalities By WILLIAM H. MOORE A study of the Canadian Government's conflict with French-Canadians and of the rights of an alien minor- ity in any country, a timely subject. Net, $2.50 Creative Impulse in Industry By HELEN MAROT A forward-looking and stimulating book which shows that productive force really, depends (among free workers) on satisfaction of the creative impulse, and that this impulse in the worker must be recognized and educated. $1.50 Comparative Education A Survey of the Educational System in each of Six Representative Countries. Edited by PETER SANDIFORD, Associate Professor of Education, University of Toronto. The Surveys included are: The United States, by WM. F. RUSSELL, University of Iowa ; Germany, by I. L. KANDEL, Ph.D., Teachers' College, Columbia University ; England, by the Editor; France, by ARTHUR H. HOPE, Headmaster of the Roan Scbool for Boys, Greenwich, England; Canada, by the Editor; Denmark, by HAROLD W. FOGHT, Ph.D., Specialist In Rural Education, ú. S. Bureau of Education. Net, $4.00 FOR SALE BY ANY BOOKSTORE OR E. P. DUTTON & COMPANY PUBLISHERS, 681 5th AVE., NEW YORK When writing to advertisers please mention THE DIAL. 444 May 3 THE DIAL NEW MACMILLAN BOOKS 7 THE JERVAISE COMEDY JIM: THE STORY OF A BACKWOODS POLICE DOG By J. D. Beresford. * A well told novel with ingenuity and charm, and a sensitive and decisive touch on character." $1.50 By Charles G. D. Roberts. In addition to the story of Jim, there are three other animal stories, all in Mr. Roberts' best vein : Stripes, The Unconcerned, The Mule, and The Eagle. nii, $1.50 MILDRED CARVER, U. S. A. By Martha Bensley Bruère. " Full of life, full of youth, full of incident, of eager- ness, of love. offers much philosophy along with romance." $1.50 THE RISING OF THE TIDE THE BLIND By Ida M. Tarbell. The story of Sabinsport and the American spirit during the war. $1.50 By Harry Best. A comprehensive study of the condition of the blind and the work being done for them in the United States, $4.00 THE HILLS OF DESIRE EDUCATION BY VIOLENCE By Henry S. Canby. The racial and spiritual differences and agreements between the Allies and the prospects of a lasting peace. $1.50 By Richard Aumerle Maher. A delightful novel of Jimmy and Augusta and their countryside wanderings and adventures. $1.50 PROBLEMS OF RECONSTRUCTION EFFICIENT RAILWAY OPERATION By Isaac Lippincott. The problems arising out of the war and the re, adjustment of industry and commerce to the normal order. $1.60 By H. S. Haines. Traces the growth of the railway, clearly defining the principle of efficiency in the various departments, and outlining railway strategy in time of war. Ready April 29. CHOSEN PEOPLES INDIA'S SILENT REVOLUTION By Fred B. Fisher and Gertrude M. Williams. 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A vivid play, telling the love story of a Jewish maiden and à Roman soldier at the time of the Crucifixion. $1.40 THE MACMILLAN COMPANY, Publishers, NEW YORK When writing to advertisers please mention The Dial, THE DIAL 1 A FORTNIGHTLY OK OG Democracy and Direct Action The battle for political democracy has been settled policy, embody nothing but the momentary won: white men everywhere are to live under the balance of forces and the compromise most likely to regime of parliamentary government. Russia, which secure temporary peace. The weapon of labor in for the present is trying a new form of constitution, these contests is no longer the vote, but the threat will probably be led by internal or external pressure of a strike“ direct action.” It was the leaders of to adopt the system favored by the Western powers. the Confédération Générale du Travail during the But even before this contest was decided a new twenty years preceding the war who first developed one was seen to be beginning. The form of govern this theory of the best tactics for labor. But it is ment in the United States, Britain, and France is experience rather than' theory that has led to its capitalistic or plutocratic democracy: the democracy widespread adoption—the experience largely of the which exists in the political sphere finds no counter untrustworthiness of parliamentary Socialist leaders part in the economic world. The struggle for eco and of the reactionary social forces to which they nomic democracy seems likely to dominate politics are exposed. for many years to come. The Russian government, To the traditional doctrine of democracy there is which cares nothing for the forms of political democ- something repugnant in this whole method. Put racy, stands for a very extreme form of economic crudely and nakedly the position is this: the organ- democracy. A strong and apparently growing party ized workers in a key industry can inflict so much in Germany has similar aims. Of opinion in France hardship upon the community by a strike that the I know nothing, but in this country the workers community is willing to yield to their demands who desire to obtain control of industries subject things which it would never yield except under the to state ownership, though not sufficiently strong threat of force. This may be represented as the numerically to have much influence on the personnel substitution of the private force of a minority in of Parliament, are nevertheless able through organi- place of law as embodying the will of the majority. zation in key industries to exert a powerful pressure On this basis a very formidable indictment of direct on the government and to cause fear of industrial action can be built up. upheavals to become widespread throughout the There is no denying that direct action involves middle and upper classes. We have thus the spec grave dangers, and if abused may theoretically lead tacle of opposition between a new democratically to very bad results. In this country, when (in 1917) elected Parliament and the sections of the nation organized labor wished to send delegates to Stock- which consider themselves the most democratic. In holm, the Seamen's and Firemen's Union prevented such circumstances many friends of democracy be them from doing so, with the enthusiastic approval come bewildered and grow perplexed as to the aims of the capitalist press. Such interferences of minor- they ought to pursue or the party with which they ities with the freedom of action of majorities are ought to sympathize. possible; it is also possible for majorities to interfere The time was when the idea of parliamentary with the legitimate freedom of minorities . Like all government inspired enthusiasm, but that time is use of force, whether inside or outside the law, past. Already before the war legislation had come direct action makes tyranny possible. And if one to be more and more determined by contests between were anxious to draw a gloomy picture of terrors interests outside the legislature, bringing pressure ahead one might prophesy that certain well-organ- to bear directly upon the government. This ten ized vital industries—say the Triple Alliance of dency has been much accelerated. The view which Miners, Railwaymen, and Transport Workers- prevails in the ranks of organized labor—and not would learn to combine, not only against the em- only there—is that Parliament exists merely to give ployers, but against the community as a whole. We effect to the decision of the government, while those shall be told that this will happen unless a firm decisions themselves, so far from representing any stand is made now. We shall be told that, if it 446 THE DIAL May 3 This brings us to the second of the two questions does happen, the indignant public will have, sooner of the produce that we choose to allow to the land- or later, to devote itself to the organization of owners and capitalists who at present own and blacklegs, in spite of the danger of civil disturbance manage the collieries, all these are internal concerns and industrial chaos that such a course would in of the coal trade, in which the general public has volve. No doubt such dangers would be real if it no right to interfere. For these purposes we de- could be assumed that organized labor is wholly mand an internal parliament, in which those who destitute of common sense and public spirit. But are interested as owners and capitalists may have such an assumption could never be made except to one vote each, but no more." If such a demand flatter the fears of property-owners. Let us leave were put forward it would be as impossible to resist nightmares on one side and come to the considera on democratic grounds as the demand for autonomy tion of the good and harm that are actually likely on the part of a small nation. Yet it is perfectly to result in practice from the increasing resort to clear that the coal trade could not induce the com- direct action as a means of influencing government. munity to agree to such a proposal, especially where Many people speak and write as though the be- it infringes the “ rights of property," unless it were ginning and end of democracy were the rule of the sufficiently well organized to be able to do grave majority. This, for example, is the view of Pro injury to the community in the event of its proposal's fessor Hearnshaw in his recent book Democracy at being rejected—just as no small nation except Nor- the Cross-Ways. But this is far too mechanical a way, so far as my memory serves me, has ever view. It leaves out of account two questions of obtained independence from a large one to which it great importance, namely: (1) What should be the was subject, except by war or the threat of war. group of which the majority is to prevail? (2) The fact is that democracies, as soon as they are What are the matters with which the majority has well established, are just as jealous of power as a right to interfere? Right answers to these ques- other forms of government. It is therefore neces- tions are essential if nominal democracy is not to develop into a new and more stable form of tyranny, sary, if subordinate groups are to obtain their rights, for minorities and subordinate groups have the right that they shall have some means of bringing pressure to live, and must not be internally subject to the to bear upon the government. The Benthamite the- malice of hostile masses. ory, upon which democracy is still defended by some doctrinaires, was that each voter would look after The first question is familiar in one form, namely that of nationality. It is recognized as contrary to his own interest, and in the resultant each man's interest would receive its proportionate share of the theory of democracy to combine into one state a attention. But human nature is neither so rational big nation and a small one, when the small nation so self-centered as Bentham imagined. In desires to be independent. To allow votes to the citizens of the small nation is no remedy, since they practice it is easier, by arousing hatred and jeal- can always be outvoted by the citizens of the large of others than to persuade them to vote for their ousies, to induce men to vote against the interests nation. The popularly elected legislature, if it is own interests. to be genuinely democratic, must represent one nation; or, if more are to be represented, it must be this country very few electors remembered their by a federal arrangement which safeguards the own interests at all. They voted for the man who smaller units. A legislature should exist for defined showed the loudest zeal for hanging the Kaiser, not purposes, and should cover a larger or smaller arca because they imagined they would be richer if he according to the nature of those purposes. At this were hanged but as an expression of disinterested hatred. This is one of the reasons why autonomy is moment, when an attempt is being made to create a League of Nations for certain objects, this point important: in order that, as far as possible, no group does not need emphasizing.' shall have its internal concerns determined for it by But it is not only geographical units, such as those who hate it. And this result is not secured nations, that have a right, according to the true by the mere form of democracy; it can only be theory of democracy, to autonomy for certain pur- secured by careful devolution of special powers to poses. Just the same principle applies to any group special groups, so as to secure, as far as possible, which has important internal concerns that affect that legislation shall be inspired by the self-interest the members of the group enormously more than of those concerned, not by the hostility of those not they affect outsiders. The coal trade, for example, concerned. might legitimately say: "What concerns the com- munity is the quantity and price of the coal that we mentioned above a question which is, in fact, close- supply. But our conditions and hours of work, the ly bound up with the first. Our second question technical methods of our production, and the share was: What are the matters with which the democ- racy has a right to interfere? It is now generally nor In the recent General Election in 1919 447 THE DIAL AN recognized that religion, for example, is a question rent to those who invoke majority-rule against direct- with which no government should interfere. If a actionists; yet it is absolutely in accordance with Mahometan comes to live in England we do not the principles of democracy. It must at best be a think it right to force him to profess Christianity. long and difficult process to procure formal self- This is a comparatively recent change; three cen government for industries. Meanwhile they have the turies ago, no state recognized the right of the indi same right that belongs to oppressed national vidual to choose his own religion. (Some other groups, the right of securing the substance of auton- personal rights have been longer recognized: a man omy by making it difficult and painful to go against may choose his own wife, though in Christian their wishes in matters primarily concerning countries he must not choose more than one.) themselves. So long as they confine themselves to When it ceased to be illegal to hold that the earth such matters, their action is justified by the strictest goes round the sun, it was not made illegal to principles of theoretical democracy, and those who believe that the sun goes round the earth. In such decry it have been led by prejudice to mistake the matters it has been found, with intense surprise, empty form of democracy for its substance. that personal liberty does not entail anarchy. Even Certain practical limitations, however, are impor- the sternest supporters of the rule of the majority tant to remember. In the first place, it is unwise would not hold that the Archbishop of Canterbury for a section to set out to extort concessions from ought to turn Buddhist if Parliament ordered him the government by force, if in the long run public to do so. And Parliament does not, as a rule, issue opinion will be on the side of the government. For orders of this kind, largely because it is known that a government backed by public opinion will be able, the resistance would be formidable and that it would in a prolonged struggle, to defeat any subordinate have support in public opinion. section. In the second place, it is important to In theory, the formula as to legitimate interfer render every struggle of this kind, when it does ences is simple. A democracy has a right to inter occur, a means of educating the public opinion by fere with those of the affairs of'a group which inti- making facts known which would otherwise remain mately concern people outside the group, but not more or less hidden. In a large community most with those which have comparatively slight effects people know very little about the affairs of other outside the group. In practice, this formula may groups than their own. The only way in which a sometimes be difficult to apply, but often its appli group can get its concerns widely known is by afford- cation is clear. If, for example, the Welsh wish to ing “copy ” for the newspapers, and by showing have their elementary education conducted in Welsh, itself sufficiently strong and determined to command that is a matter which concerns them so much more respect. When these conditions are fulfilled, even intimately than anyone else that there can be no if it is force that is brought to bear upon the gov- good reason why the rest of the United Kingdom ernment, it is persuasion that is brought to bear should interfere. Thus the theory of democracy upon the community. And in the long run no vic- demands a good deal more than the mere mechani tory is secure unless it rests upon persuasion, and cal supremacy of the majority. It demands: (1) employs force at most as a means to persuasion. division of the community into more or less auton- The mention of the press and its effect on public omous groups; (2) delimitation of the powers of opinion suggests a direction in which direct action the autonomous groups by determining which of has sometimes been advocated, namely to counteract their concerns are so much more important to them the capitalist bias of almost all great newspapers. selves than to others that others had better have no One can imagine compositors refusing to set up some say in them. Direct action may, in most cases, be statement about trade-union action which they judged by these tests. In an ideal democracy 'in know to be directly contrary to the truth. Or they dustries or groups of industries would be self might insist on setting up side by side a statement governing as regards almost everything except the of the case from the trade-union standpoint. Such price and quantity of their product, and their self a weapon, if it were used sparingly and judiciously, government would be democratic. Measures which might do much to counteract the influence of the they would then be able to adopt autonomously they newspapers in misleading public opinion. So long are now justified in extorting from the government as the capitalist system persists, most newspapers by direct action. At present the extreme limit of are bound to be capitalist ventures and to present imaginable official concession is a conference in ' facts,” in the main, in the way that suits capital- which the men and the employers are represented istic interests. A strong case can be made out for equally, but this is very far from democracy, since the use of direct action to counteract this tendency. the men are much more numerous than the em But it is obvious that very grave dangers would ployers. This application of majority-rule is abhor attend such a practice if it became common. А 448 May 3 THE DIAL as censorship of the press by trade unionists would, in certain cases, for example where there has been the long run, be just as harmful as any other censor infringement of some important right such as free ship. It is improbable, however, that the method speech, it may be justifiable. The second of the could be carried to such extremes, since if it were, above uses of the strike, for the fundamental change a special set of blackleg compositors would be of the economic system, has been made familiar by trained up, and no others would gain admission to the French Syndicalists. It seems fairly certain the offices of capitalist newspapers. In this case, that, for a considerable time to come, the main in others, the dangers supposed to belong to the struggle in Europe will be between capitalism and method of direct action are largely illusory, owing some form of Socialism, and it is highly probable to the natural limitations of its effectiveness. that in this struggle the strike will play a great Direct action may be employed: (1) for ameliora part. To introduce democracy into industry by any tion of trade conditions within the present economic other method would be very difficult. And the system; (2) for economic reconstruction, including principle of group autonomy justifies this method the partial or complete abolition of the capitalist so long as the rest of the community opposes self- system; (3) for political ends, such as altering the government for industries which desire it. Direct form of government, extension of the suffrage, or action has its dangers, but so has every vigorous amnesty for political prisoners. Of these three no one nowadays would deny the legitimacy of the first, form of activity. And in our recent realization of except in exceptional circumstances. the importance of law we must not forget that the The third, except for purposes of establishing democracy where greatest of all dangers to a civilization is to become it does not yet exist, seems a dubious expedient if least , industrial unrest is likely to save us. stereotyped and stagnant. From this danger, at democracy, in spite of its faults, is recognized as the best practicable form of government; but in BERTRAND RUSSELL. Sea-Hoardings My heart is open again and the sea flows in; It shall fill with a summer of mists and winds and clouds and waves breaking, Of gull-wings over the green tide, of the surf's drenching din, Of sudden horizon-sails that come and vanish, phantom-thin, Of arching sapphire skies, deep and unaching. I shall lie on the rocks just over the weeds that drape The clear sea-pools, where birth and death in the sunny ooze are teeming. Where the crab in quest of booty sidles about a surly shape,, Where the snail creeps and the muscle sleeps with wary valves agape, Where life is too grotesque to be but seeming. And the swallow shall weave my dreams with threads of fight, A shuttle with silver breast across the warp of the waves gliding; And an isle far out shall be a beam in the loom of my delight, And the pattern of every dream shall be a rapture bathed in light- Its evanescence a beauty most abiding. And the sunsets shall give sadness all its due; They shall stain the sands and trouble the tides with all the ache of sorrow. They shall bleed and die with a beauty of meaning old yet ever new; They shall burn with all the hunger for things that hearts have failed to do, They shall whisper of a gold that none can borrow. And the stars shall come and build a bridge of fire For the moon to cross the shoreless sky, with never a fear of sinking. They shall teach me of the magic things of life never to tire, And how to renew, when it is low, the lamp of my desire- And how to hope, in the darkest deeps of thinking. CALE YOUNG RICE. 1919 449 THE DIAL Factualist Versus Impressionist 2 Ś (G war N A CERTAIN prodigious year of beginnings and speculation that the multitude must have changed endings, now unspeakably remote, the novel read overnight-graduated from its mere occasional will- ers of this country might have discovered them- ingness to receive a grain of wheat along with selves to be the richer by a simple romance called bushels of chaff, and joined the cults and the coteries The Lay Anthony. No great multitude appears to in their preference for that which is nothing if not have performed the exploit. By a recent calcula "art.” Preposterous, of course, yet a more nearly tion of Mr. Joseph Hergesheimer, the author of tenable theory than that Mr. Hergesheimer has by that romance —who seems to have a modest im- intention or accident sought the multitude where it pression that his first book was not, perhaps, the is customarily at home. signal event of 1914—the copy now open at the title-page on this desk is one solid nine-hundredth It is not my wish to represent The Lay Anthony of all that were sold. Beside it there lies, in as in itself a masterpiece, or even a strikingly this the month of its appearance, a copy of Java eminent piece of fiction. But it is promissory of Head (Knopf) inscribed : “First and second masterpieces, and in kind if not in degree it claims printings before publication. Published January, kinship with the most eminent work its author has 1919.” Moreover, the conservative novel reader done. This is a judgment which can derive its sanc- who prefers to take his pleasure from between tion only from some general view of what Mr. covers—seemingly he still exists—was not vouch Hergesheimer is about. Even for the reader who safed a glimpse of this particular delight until the has not yet discovered this author, or who, having tale, serialized in a weekly of circulation so stag blundered upon him, is not aware of having scaled gering that the actual figures sound like those of a any very notable peak in Darien, I can give the drive” by some organization of immense argument significance and scope by saying that what prestige, had unfolded itself to eyes countable only Hergesheimer is about is precisely what the art of in hundreds of thousands of pairs. fiction itself has been about during the thirty years It is a screaming contrast, that here denoted. If past, whenever its manifestations have been most one has the cynicism of experience, the first effect arresting and distinguished. However sweeping his of such a contrast is to set one hunting for clues claims to blissful ignorance about the technicalities in the author himself. There must have gone on in of his art, it is clear that he has read the right things him, one figures, some process analogous to that very understandingly, and kept himself sensitive to which went on in Mr. Robert Chambers between currents and eddies in the air round him. He is of The King in Yellow and, say, The Danger Mark the moderns; and without any elaborate and self- -some conscious or unconscious adulteration of the conscious repudiations of the past—without, for in- genuine with the spurious. The author of The stance, having to go through the process of audibly Lay Anthony, like the hero thereof, was good and, despising the Victorians just because he is quite duly, lonesome: it is simple to conclude, then, that unlike them—he avails himself, in a quite natural the author of Java. Head, to whom crowds flock and urbane and effortless way, of the most impor- and profits accrue, must have turned meretrix. tant structural and tonal changes that have made Well, cynicism hunts in vain. Java Head is in fiction a finer art now than it ever was. the same straight line with The Lay Anthony, and What are the chief of these changes ? All of it is the line of an almost prohibitively austere ideal them, I think, can be grouped under the spacious pursued with inflexible fidelity. Search as you word “impressionism.” The difference between will the two volumes which delimit his career the more and the less distinguished in present fic- thus far, you find no increase in the recognized tion is the difference between impressionistic real- marks of that commercially potent thing, popu ism and factualistic realism. A factual realist is a larity. You find, if anything, a decrease: it is the narrator who adopts life itself as his selective prin- austerity that increases. For the austerity of The ciple and, on the assumption that whatever is is Lay Anthony is merely that of the remote ideal artistic, determines the material of his tale solely proposed, sought, clutched at, honestly missed, per by its accord with what actually does, or easily haps despaired of for the moment; whereas the could happen. But the impressionistic realist austerity of Java Head is that of the same elusive chooses his material in accordance with the inherent ideal attained, captured, crystallized in a lovely need of his subject to be developed in a particular form of words. It is almost enough to provoke a way, and while remaining faithful to the general 450 THE DIAL May 3 art; and Taou Yuen is the natural symbol of the making motions they hardly know the sense of. duct of the next, exactly like a realistic novel; whereas Taou Yuen is living, at every moment, as for eternity. This is why the fine gesture with which she chooses death, being the ultimate affirm- cating non-essentials, has in itself immortal love behind that, to this day, there does not exist in print incompletion, unfulfillment, because the others are be cut off. But her life is always complete from the sense of his theme. Even Meredith approached, actly expresses Hergesheimer's ideal for his own laws of how things occur in human nature, and wrote Feverel under the influence of Dickens, but perhaps even to the specific details of how they he wrote Lord Ormont and His Aminta under the occur in human civilization, he regulates the shape same Zeitgeist that wrought The Spoils of Poyn- and size and color of his product by requirements ton and The Red Badge of Courage and Conrad in which exist rather in his theme than outside it. Quest of His Youth and Heart of Darkness. The The difference in result is like that between a para critics, some of them, seem still not to know which sitic vine which follows slavishly the contour of way the wind blows—but a few artists know, and whatever happens to support it, and a bud which the author of Java Head is clearly one of them. follows simply an inner compulsion to unfold into a particular kind of flower, and must be either that The title-page of Java Head quotes: " It is only flower or nothing. To make the long story short, the path of pure simplicity which guards and pre- it is the difference between Mr. Howells and serves the spirit.” The direct literal application of Henry James; between J. D. Beresford or Gilbert the proverb is presumably to the moral life of Taou Cannan and Mr. Galsworthy; between Arnold Yuen, the wondrous Manchu lady whom Gerrit Bennett and Conrad. It is also the difference be- Ammidon, a hot-tempered individualist, marries tween Alice Brown or Zona Gale or Rupert and brings into the staid New England Salem of Hughes or Isabel Paterson-conscientious factual the days when Mr. Polk was President and clippers ists mainly-and Joseph Hergesheimer, impres- were brand new in the China trade. Taou Yuen, sionist. by uttermost simplicity of spirit, finds her way un- There are two chief symptoms of this difference. erringly–her way to beauty and to the preserva- One of them is the presence or absence of unity in tion of her own exquisite serenity-first through all the point of view, either throughout the whole or the deviousness of social Salem, against the back- throughout each chapter. Henry James reached, ground of the Ammidons' commercial greatness by 1890, the point where this kind of unity be- and general prestige; then through the complica- came an indispensable canon of his art; Mr. Gals- tions of an astounding intrigue of which she be- worthy in nearly all his work, and Conrad in, the comes, innocently, the center. Clinging faithfully best of his, have followed him. The other symp- in her bewilderment to the few simple ideals of tom is the presence or absence of absolute single- conduct which scores of generations have bred into ness or centrality in the whole work—singleness of her blood as well as her mind, maintaining to the situation, of purpose, of accent, of impression; end the poise of her own fatalistic philosophy, she such singleness as belongs to the ideal short-story. The first of these developments puts the stress, not gives a sense of living exclusively with fundamen- tals and essentials, in the midst of a society preoc- on what happens in the story, but on the signifi- cupied with trivial externals. cance of the happenings to some sympathetic ob- who lives at the center of the life she has entered, serving consciousness. The second fuses action, working her way with a patient simplicity to the character, setting, dialogue, all the physical in- gredients of the tale, into the same unity of effect core of its realities, while the others, the indigenes -even Gerrit the individualist and rebel-live, by which Poe demanded in ballad or lyric, and which even pundits now clamor for in the short tale. The comparison, unreally and at the fringe of things, short tale has had that singleness for fifty years; what is significant is that, in the last twenty-five, They exist, as it were, from hand to mouth, letting the novel has discovered that it cannot live up to the effect achieved in one moment supply the con- its privileges without exactly the same totality. Years ago Henry James wrote, in The Sacred Fount, a parable of this necessity, in the form of a crucial instance of the war between factualism and impressionism—that is to say, between raw “life” ation of her pure serenity and disregard of compli- and fictional composition. Criticism is still so far liness. The death of any other character would be an intelligible analysis of The Sacred Fount, one of the great documents of esthetic theory. living in a more or less straight line, and a line can Henry James began, obviously, as an externalist, a fac- tualist, saturating himself with life; he came out an moment to moment: she is living in a sphere, and impressionist, saturating himself with nothing but a sphere is always as round as it can be. Now the Chinese proverb about It is she, the alien, less understandingly, the same consummation: he 1919 THE DIAL 451 . ito, il Ti 66 goal toward which his writing has progressed since fascination for him—the nature and effects of re- he began to publish it. Taou Yuen is a simple im ligious fanaticism. pressionist forced into a society of complicated These are, I think, the only serious aberrations. factualists, and emerging from it without im In The Three Black Pennys (1917) he binds to- pairment to the inner principle of her being. gether into fundamental unity the parts of a story Hergesheimer's career thus far shows a similar as disjointed, from the merely factualist point of contention of elements and a similar culmination view, as a story could be, with three protagonists in the logical completion of a natural bent toward three quite separate generations: He is able to impressionism. accomplish this because his real protagonist is not One evidence that his art has indeed found the a person at all, but a recrudescent family trait and path of pure simplicity is his present instinct to its modifications over a century and a half. It 'is interpret into his earlier work an impressionistic for the sake of that trait, a sort of creative indi- unity which is not completely there, through simple vidualism and rebellion which crops out at inter- inability to tolerate the thought that he was ever vals in the Penny family, against its wonted back- actuated by any impulse except the only one now ground of sober rectitude, that the whole spectacle possible to him. He summarizes the theme of The is conjured into existence, an impressive documenta- Lay Anthony (1914) as “a boy's purity—in a tion of the social and economic history of America. world where that quality is a cause for excruciat Wild Oranges, the first tale of Gold and Iron, is ing jest;" and that of Mountain Blood (1915) as a piece of atmosphere entirely appropriate to a the failure of an aged man to repair a spiritual writer who had once gone out of his way to make wrong with gold.” The Lay Anthony is indeed a a character remark that Heart of Darkness is winning and faithful likeness of youth as it is, with the most beautiful story of our time;" Tubal its queer fits and starts of quixotism, the tremors Cain, the second story of the volume, is unified by of its response to beauty, its oscillation between a a trait of character, an idée fixe, as Wild Oranges fantastic idealism and a still more fantastic prac is by its atmosphere; and there is an exquisite felic- ticality. The physical purity of Anthony Ball is ity in the title which brackets the three stories to- preserved by a combination of forces; sheer acci- gether into an idea. And now, - Java Head, a dent wearing at times the aspect of sheer fate, and thing so consummate of its kind as almost to make also something boyish, inhibiting, and virginal in one tremble for the author of it, in the wonder how himself. But through the theme, because it was he can either excel it or endure failure to excel it. imperfectly grasped as an idea which should have Here at last is the matchless integrity once glimpsed engendered the details making up its own and missed by ever so little in The Lay Anthony, phere, there stick the most oddly irrelevent and almost lost sight of in Mountain Blood, recovered jarring minutiae—baseball, chewing gum, differ in the spirit but obscured by the amorphous body entials, fashions in collars, thirty-one dollars and of The Three Black Pennys. In Java Head the seventy cents—put in, not because they are true to spirit creates the body after its kind. There is both the theme, but because they are locally and tem singleness of esthetic effect and singleness of con- porally true, because the author knows them, be crete situation. The ten chapters, each from the cause the artist distrusts the creator in himself and point of view of one of the chief personae, succeed leans on the copyist. In Mountain Blood, a story one another like a string of delicately tinted pearls of a primitive community in the West Virginia clasped round the neck of Taou Yuen in her mountains, this tyranny of actuality over imagina- strange situation; and for her exist too the ma- tion is carried to a point which means the practical chinery and the scholarship, the re-created Sa