that nearly seventeen per cent. of the whole number were wholly inex- perienced, that the average length of service was between seven and eight years, and that only fifteen per cent. of the teachers in the schools of the country had passed through a normal school. While much has been said and written upon the two defects in our system that we are con- sidering—the ill preparation of teachers when they enter the schools, and the frequent chan- ges within the body—not much has been said, so far as I am aware, upon their relative mag- nitude or seriousness. How do they compare? Probably most persons would lay emphasis, and perhaps heavy emphasis, upon ill preparation. This may be the true view, but I am not fully pursuaded that it is so. Let us look into the matter more closely. Mr. William E. Anderson, when Superin- tendent of the Schools of Milwaukee, ten or twelve years ago, found the changes in the personnel of the teaching corps of that city to be from ten to twelve per cent. annually. A well-known Michigan superintendent found the ratio to be about the same in his city. Applying this ratio to such cities as Chicago, Philadelphia, and New York, what an appall- ing result we have! But this is not all : changes in the personnel of the force necesitate changes in the assignment of the remaining teachers to schools and grades, and these changes are probably equal in number to those resulting from the other cause. It is easy to say that some of these changes are for the good of the schools; that some of the teachers who come are better than some who go, and that inter-school and inter-grade changes are often beneficial. This is true enough, but it is no proper offset to the evil that flows from unnecessary or un- desirable changes. It is undeniable that changes in the corps is one of the great sour- ces of waste in our public schools. No one knows this better than the experienced super- intendent. He labors hard to get his force in good working order, to effect the necessary adjustments upon which the success of the schools so closely depends,-and only to see the whole organism broken up, or seriously deranged, at the end of the year. This is in the cities. In the rural districts the case is still worse. In 1886 a competent authority found that the schools in Calhoun County, Michigan, required 158 teachers, and that 342 different ones were employed in the course of the year; also that the average length of the school year in the county was 8.4 months, while the average time for which the teachers served was but 3.8 months. He found also that the ratio of the teachers required to the teachers employed was about the same through- out the state, the tenure being longer in the newer counties than in the older ones. Since that time there has been a considerable, if not a marked, improvement in the mode of employ- ing teachers in Michigan, as well as in other states; but the reform should go still farther. Why should not people change their bankers, lawyers, ministers, dentists, physicians, once in three or six months as well as their teachers ? We may scrutinize still more closely the loss that unnecessary changes entail upon the pupils of schools. We may justly say that a large majority of the inexperienced teachers wish to do their duty, and make an effort to do it; they try to overcome in some measure their limitations arising out of their lack of prepar- 144 [March 1, THE DIAL ation, for which they are by no means fully responsible; and, as the result of wish and effort, they make some commendable progress in mastering their art. But by the time they, or many of them, come to be really useful to their employers, they retire from the work, making room for new teachers who are as inex- perienced as they were at the beginning, and thus the Sysyphian labor is renewed. At what cost to pupils is the progress made by these successive relays of teachers earned Some years ago, a Kentucky court, seeking to cut off some of the circumventions by which teachers strive to evade the law in regard to certificates, made these very pertinent remarks: “The purpose of requiring a certificate is to be as- sured of the qualifications of the teacher in advance. He is not to practice on his pupils, keep one day ahead of his class, and thus, by going to school to himself, fit himself to stand the ordeal of an examination which he could not have stood at the beginning. Such a pro- cedure is a fraud on the district.” The principle here involved would bear much wider application. The procedure described is not only “a fraud on the district,” but it is a crime on the children. How many teachers in the United States at the present time learn to teach, so far as they do learn, by “practicing on their pupils,” and thus “going to school to themselves” In view of all the premises, what should be done? What is the demand of the hour? The comprehensive answer to this question is, Raise the teacher's calling in the estimation of teach- ers and of the whole people. How shall this be done? Of the numerous points that a full answer to this second question would involve, I mention only three, and these as briefly as possible. 1. The character of the teaching function, and especially the teacher's calling, must be made the subject of constant direct appeal to the public. There is urgent need of an educa- tional campaign on the subject of education under its theoretical, practical, and historical aspects. 2. The preparation of teachers must be im- proved by direct efforts to that end. It is an undeniable fact, and a cheering one, that as a rule the better the work the teacher does, the longer his term of service. There can be no doubt that one reason why the tenure of city teachers is longer than country teachers is the fact that, as a class, they represent a much higher grade of preparation. 3. The folly of the incessant changes occur- ring in our corps of teachers must be dealt with directly and effectively, as far as possible. This will conduce to better preparation and to bet- ter teaching. It is true, of course, that the teaching body as a whole will undergo, and ought to undergo, constant changes, since changes are incident to human life and society; but this is no defence of the wretched system that prevails at present. In this struggle there is much to encourage the friends of education. Dr. Harris has shown that from 1880 to 1897 the enrollment in public normal schools increased from about 10,000 to over 40,000 pupils, or fourfold; and that in the same period private normal schools increased from 2,000 to 24,000, or twelvefold. In 1880 there were 240 normal students in each million of inhabitants; in 1897 there were 976 in each million. We may take courage from the un- doubted fact that education in the United States, inferior as it may be in many respects, is still on the rising grade. B. A. HINSDALE. BYRON'S INFLUENCE UPON GOETHE.” “I have simply run through the world. I have clutched everything by the hair. . . . I have longed and attained, and then longed again, and thus with might have stormed through life.” These words of the aged Faust, who, nearing his end, casts a retrospective glance over his past life, might well be taken to characterize Byron. But only so far as we quote is the passage applicable: of the development hinted at in the following lines, he was utterly incapable. Flaring up like some strange meteor before the gaze of his astonished contempo- raries, his sudden plunge from the highest heights into death was far more favorable for his fame than a gradual decline and a lingering setting would have been. It was not without reason that Goethe said: “Although Byron died so young, yet literature has not lost materially by him, so far as a more extended range of writing is concerned. He had reached the height of his creative power, and, whatever he might have written afterward, he could not have passed the natural boundaries of his talent.” The last stage of the development of Byron is that of his “Cain,” who goes into exile uttering the despairing cry, “And I?” The answer to this pessimism is to be found in the Second Part of “Faust.” The date of Goethe's first acquaintance with Byron's works cannot be exactly determined. It must have been, however, sometime between 1812 (the date of the publication of the first two cantos *See note on page 161 of this issue. — [EDR.] 1900.] THE DIAL 145 of “Childe Harold”) and 1816. On May 4 of the latter year he wrote to Eichstädt, “I have just learned of the English poet Lord Byron, who de- serves our interest,” and inquires after a life of the poet. Corresponding to this is an entry in the “Tag—und Jahresheften,” 1816: “My interestin foreign literature centred actively upon the poems of Byron, who became ever more prominent and attracted me to him more and more, notwithstanding the fact that at first he had repelled me by his hypochondriacal pas- sion and by his bitter self-hatred, and that it was only with difficulty that I could approach his great personality. I read the ‘Corsair' and ‘Lara' not without sympathy and admira- tion.” From this statement we perceive that at first the fully-rounded nature of the German Altmeister found great difficulty in befriending itself with the skeptical, one-sided, misanthropic poet. In the fol- lowing year, however, his interest was not less active. “English poetry and literature occupied a most prominent place this year. The more the public acquainted itself with the peculiarities of Lord Byron's wonderful spirit, the more sympathy he gained, so that men and women, youths and maidens, appeared to forget their German nationality. As it became easier to obtain his works, I also formed the habit of busying myself with him more and more. He became to me a valued contemporary, and I followed him eagerly upon the wandering paths of his life.” From this time on we find repeatedly in Goethe's journals, letters, and conversations references to this or that work of Byron. His interest is especially excited by the publication of “Manfred,” in 1817. On the 13th of October of that year he writes to Knebel: “The most noteworthy publication of recent date was the tragedy “Manfred,” by Byron. This remarkable poet has absorbed my “Faust,” and has drawn out from it the strangest food for his hypochondria. He has used every motive in his own way, so that not one of them is identical [with mine], and just for this very reason I cannot sufficiently admire his genius. . . . Yet withal I do not deny that the sullen glow of an unbounded despair becomes wearisome after a time. And still the vexation which one feels is always coupled with re- spect and admiration.” To Boissérée he writes, on the first of May, 1818, that “an extraordinary spirit, great talent, insight into the world, and self-consciousness reign therein” (i.e., in “Manfred’); and in “Kanst und. Alter- tum” he devotes a detailed discussion to it, part of which runs as follows: “We find, then, here the real quintessence of the opinions and passions of this most wonderful talent, born to self- torment. . . . He has often enough confessed what tortures him; he has presented it repeatedly, until hardly anyone has sympathy longer with that unendurable suffering of his.” These strictures show that Goethe's admiration was tempered by a healthy scorn of Byron's unwhole- some melancholy. Goethe's assertion that Byron had imitated “Faust,” and his assumption that “Manfred” had for its foundation a double murder caused by the poet's passion for a married woman in Florence, were sufficient to touch the sensitive Englishman to the quick. He decided to revenge himself on Goethe by an ironical dedication to him of his “Marino Falieri.” The dedication was written, and sent to his publisher, Murray; but the latter had the good sense to suppress it. Ten years later, Goethe learned of this dedication through the younger Murray. From “Manfred” Goethe translated the “Curse” (I. 1), and the “Monologue’ (II. 2), of which latter he said, “Hamlet's Soliloquy appears here intensified.” It is not without interest to compare these two translations with the original. The “Curse” is translated into the original metre, but without rhyme. The sense of the “Monologue” is given for the most part excellently, but one notes a few minor errors. ByRoN. GoFTHE. “Days “Tage Steal on us and steal from | Bestehlend, stehlen sie sich us.” weg.” BYRoN. GoFTHE. “In all the days of this de- || “In all' den Tagen der ver- tested yoke.” wunschten Posse.” Goethe has evidently read joke for yoke, and it is possible that the edition which he used contained this misprint, although I have not found it in any edition accessible to me. Again we read: BYRON. “What is she now?—a suf- ferer for my sins- A thing Idare not think upon — or nothing.” GoFTHE. “Was ist sie jetzt? Für meine Sündenbüsst sie– Ein Wesen” Denk’es nicht –Weilleicht ein Nichts.” Here Goethe has entirely missed the meaning. BYRON. - GoFTHE. “And champion human || “Der Erde Schrecken ruf' fears.” ich auf.” It is praise rather than blame to say that Goethe was not a good translator. His translations lack entirely the Byronic tone, and are no longer Byron, but Goethe. The transmutation is so complete as to be striking in the highest degree. For “ Kunst und. Altertum,” Goethe wrote a notice of the first two cantos of “Don Juan.” (1821), and translated the first five stanzas of this work. “Cain’” also received a full discussion from his pen. In spite of noteworthy waverings of opinion, Goethe's admiration for Byron grew with his years, but from the very first he had estimated the poet's character correctly. From the oft-quoted passages in his letters and conversations we need not again adduce examples as evidence. Byron, for his part, seems to have been flattered by so much attention from the older master, and sent him in 1821 a proposed dedication to “Sardanapalus,” inscribed to him in the most flattering terms, and attended by a request for permission to print it at the beginning of the drama. The dedication was accepted, but, through the carelessness of Murray, was omitted in printing. “Notwithstanding this,” says Goethe, “the noble Lord did not give up his intention of showing a signal evidence of friendly feeling to his German contemporary and literary comrade; and 146 [March 1, THE DIAL consequently the Tragedy ‘Werner' bears on its front a highly-prized memorial.” In the spring of 1823 an English traveller brought a letter from Byron to Weimar, which Goethe an- swered by the well-known poem, “Ein freundlich Wort kommt eines mach dem Andern,” mingling friendly admonition with cordial appre- ciation. Byron had already set sail for Greece, but was detained by a storm in the harbor of Leghorn, and here Goethe's answer reached him. He replied by a written greeting. So much for the personal and literary relations of the two during Byron's lifetime. It is not within the limits of our task to consider Goethe's influence on Byron, however interesting the investigation might prove. Byron owes the form at least of his “Manfred ” and “Deformed Transformed ” to Goethe, as well as the opening lines of the “Bride of Abydos,” which he imitated from Mignon's song, as translated by Madame de Staël into French. All of Byron's knowledge of German authors was through translations or through the kind offices of Shelley and of “Monk” Lewis. On the other hand, the youthful and erratic genius of Byron had worked as a mighty inspiration upon Goethe, bearing as its fruit the character of Euphorion in the Second Part of “Faust.” Yet even at this late stage the ten- dency to blame.as well as praise the English poet was manifest, for we know that Goethe had at one time intended to satirize Byron as one of the throng of poets introduced into the Second Part of “Faust.” - Besides the traces of Byron which we have just mentioned, Goethe has adapted one of Byron's epi- grams, a fact which seems to have been overlooked up to this time. We quote first Goethe's rendition: “Nein, für den Poeten ist's zu viel, Dieses entsetzliche Strafgericht. Werdammtist mein Trauerspiel, Und die alte Tante nicht!” This is first published in 1833. The original is not found in Byron's collected works, but in Medwin's “Conversations with Byron.” “Behold the blessings of a happy lot! My play is damned, and Lady — is not l” Medwin explains the epigram as an allusion to two letters received by Byron in the same mail, the one containing the news that “Marino Falieri" had failed at Drury Lane Theatre; and the other, that an old woman [Lady Milbanke?], from whom he had expected to inherit money, would probably sur- vive her hundredth birthday. Without this explana- tion, Goethe's epigram, as well as that of Byron, is sheer nonsense. A satirical stanza, beginning, “Lord Byron ohne Scham und Schein,” may be referred to here, merely for the sake of completeness. The introduction of the poet's name alone connects the verse with him. In Goethe's posthumous writings occurs another poem referring to Byron, i.e., “Stark von Faust, gewandt im Rat.” Eckermann would have us believe that the Ma- rienbad Elegy was influenced by Byron, because greater strength of feeling is expressed in it than in other of Goethe's poems written at this time ! It is true that Goethe told the Chancellor von Müller that everybody in Marienbad was talking about Byron and Scott, but is not Goethe's ardor to be ascribed rather to his sudden and passionate admiration for Ulrike von Levezow than to so remote a cause? This absurd proposition is an excellent example of the lengths to which a would-be literateur will go when out on a Quellenjagd. In the third act of the Second Part of “Faust” is Byron's real memorial at the hands of Goethe. This third act appeared for the first time in 1827, under the title “Helena.” The son of Faust the exponent of Romanticism, and of Helena the expo- nent of the classic spirit, appears here as Euphorion- Byron, the exponent of the modern subjective age. Goethe himself has given us the key to his charac- terization. “As representative of the most recent poetic period, I could use no one except him who is to be regarded as without ques- tion the greatest talent of the century. And then, Byron is not antique, neither is he romantic, but he is like the present day itself. I had to have such a character. He suited also perfectly because of his discontented nature, and of his com- bative tendency, which brought him to destruction at Misso- lunghi. . . . I had planned the catastrophe formerly in quite another manner—and once quite well. Then time brought me this matter of Byron and Missolunghi, and I let every- thing else go.” And how was Euphorion to be conceived? Let us read a few sentences from Goethe's own charac- terization of Byron, one of the most shrewd analyses of the poet existent. “One may very well say that his uncontrolled nature was his ruin. . . . He lived passionately for each day, without thought of the morrow, nor did he consider what he did. . . . Everywhere the bounds were too narrow for him, and even with the most unlimited personal liberty he felt himself rest- ive. . . . He felt ever the poetic impulse, and all that ema- nated from the man, especially from his heart, was excellent.” Goethe said this to Eckermann in 1825, that is, just at the time when he had resumed work on the “Helena” and was vigorously pushing it forward. And all that he expresses here as a critic, he repeats in “Faust” as a poet. Let us examine the conception of Euphorion in detail. Soon after his miraculous birth the heavenly boy seizes the lyre, “already announcing himself as the future master of all beauty, in whose members eternal harmonies are stirring.” At once Phorkyas proclaims that the time of the old gods is past, and that the time of the new subjective song has come. “List! the fairest harmonies! Quickly free yourself from fables. Away with the old multitude of your gods, - their day is past. No one will understand you longer: we demand a higher tribute; for that must come from the heart which is to work upon the heart.” Compare with this the last sentence in the quota- tion above: “And all which emanated from the man, especially from his heart, was excellent.” Euphorion's restless nature, ever striving upward 1900.] THE TXIAL 147 and onward, and forgetting itself only for the mo- ment even in love's dalliance, now finds its ade- quate expression. This same unrestrained, restless longing in the real prototype Goethe excellently characterizes as his tendency toward the limitless. It is Byron himself, the Byron of “Cain" and of “Manfred,” who says: “That which is easily gained is repulsive to me. Only that which is won by force really delights me.” The all-ruling love of nature, so evident through- out Byron's poems, finds beautiful expression in Goethe's verses. “A crowding of rocks here, between the forest thickets. Why these bounds for me, –me who am young and strong? The winds are rushing there, the waves are roaring there, I hear both from afar, -fain were I near.” “It was too narrow for him everywhere,” says Goethe. Then follows the allusion to his revolu- tionary spirit: - “Will you bring in the day of peace by dreaming? Dream he who may. War is the watchword.” And upon this follows the last flight, the fall: “Icarus ! Icarus! Sorrow enough l’’ Goethe is not the only German who has composed a dirge upon Byron. We recall those of Alfred Meissner, of Heine, of Wilhelm Müller; but none has equalled his in quiet, sorrowful majesty. “Not alone, wheresoe'er thou tarriest.” Goethe says himself: “The chorus falls entirely out of its rôle in this elegy; it suddenly becomes earnest and highly reflective, and utters that of which it never thought and never could think.” This is a true statement, not, however, a true criti- cism. Lovingly, with almost womanly idealization, Goethe has set Byron a memorial such as his own nation never dreamed of. Banned from his own country during his lifetime, wilfully misunderstood and misrepresented after his death, he found else- where universally recognition and acceptance. In conclusion, we venture to assert that what really influenced Goethe was Byron's brilliant per- sonality and romantic life, to which the fact of his being a “noble Lord” undoubtedly lent additional charm. Of a distinct literary influence there is no trace. But that the greatest German of his age was so quick to recognize in Byron a poetic spirit of high order, perhaps of the highest order, ought not be forgotten at the moment of our somewhat tardy Byron-revival. ANNA M. BowFN. COMMUNICATIONS. A QUESTION OF PROPRIETY. (To the Editor of THE DIAL.) In his excellent articles on Henrik Ibsen, published in THE DIAL during recent years (the last one being in the issue for February 16), Mr. William Morton Payne seems to delight in referring to the poet as Dr. Ibsen. To be sure, it is perfectly correct to do so, as Ibsen has received the degree from a university of recognized standing, but is it necessary and desirable to call a great poet doctor? Suppose Oxford or Cam- bridge had conferred the same degree upon Shakes- peare, Milton, Byron, or Shelley : would it not offend us to hear the critics speak of Dr. Shakespeare, Dr. Milton, Dr. Byron, or Dr. Shelley? It is true we refer to Samuel Johnson as Dr. Johnson, but his case is dif- ferent. He courted the title and was flattered by it. I have heard many intelligent admirers of the great Norwegian dramatist offer protests against Mr. Payne's practice of calling him Dr. Ibsen. A great poet needs no honorary degree : he is great enough without it, and, instead of adding dignity to his name, it seems to detract. Ibsen did not court any degree ; his countrymen never call him Dr. Ibsen, and are inclined to ridicule those who do as pedantic. MARTIN ODLAND. University of Wisconsin, Madison, Feb. 23, 1900. [The writer referred to in the above communica- tion simply follows the uniform practice of THE DIAL in mentioning the names of living men and women. We believe it to be a matter of the merest good manners to speak of people in print as we should speak to them in private conversation. If we were addressing Dr. Ibsen personally, we cer- tainly should not call him “Ibsen,” and are unwill- ing to offer him that discourtesy when writing about him. If we did not call him “Dr.” we should be obliged to call him “Herr,” which our critic would probably think equally pedantic. Thus the cases of Shakespeare and Byron, who are not among the living, have no bearing upon the question. Our practice in this matter illustrates one of those “little touches”— to use Professor Peck's phrase—that mean so much to persons of refined taste. The habit which Germans and Scandinavians have of denying in print to their living fellow-countrymen the titles whereby gentlemen designate one another is a thing which — as far as it goes — indicates an imperfect civilization, and it is one of the minor de- pravities of the American newspaper that it so encourages this form of rudeness that we should now be taken to task for observing the ordinary ameni- ties of social intercourse.—EDR. THE DIAL.] “JANE AUSTEN AND THACKERAY.” (To the Editor of THE DIAL.) In regard to the question (if question it be) raised in Mr. Matthews's letter on “Jane Austen and Thack- eray” in your current number, let me suggest that a reference to Mrs. Ritchie's “Chapters from Some Un- written Memoirs” will clear up the matter. Mrs. Ritchie tells a story there, if I remember aright, of a meeting between her father and Miss Bronté that may well have been floating vaguely in the mind of the New York newspaper writer when he described, on Mrs. Ritchie's authority, Thackeray's wonderful encounter with Miss Austen. The substitution of Jane Austen for the author of “Jane Eyre" was an easy matter for a trained journalist. W. R. K. Pittsfield, Mass., Feb. 19, 1900. 148 [March 1, THE DIAL Čbe tº $ochs. THE EVOLUTION OF THE BRITISH ARMY.” Mr. Fortescue is a civilian, but his scholarly “History of the British Army” cannot fail to win the respect of the intelligent military read- er. Mr. Fortescue's valuable book is con- ceived and thus far carried out in the spirit of the scientific historian. The more romantic and picturesque side of his theme has for him but a secondary interest; and this we must consider a fortunate characteristic, since, while the exploits in the field of the British Army have been more than sufficiently celebrated in sounding prose by competent pens, the not less important record of its growth or evolution ab ovo as a national establishment has hitherto been strangely neglected. It is to this comparatively unworked field of research that Mr. Fortescue mainly applies him. self. In thus stating what appears to us to be the essential or distinctive feature of the work it is not intended to imply that the author has neglected the military aspect of his subject. It would be impossible to write even what may be called the bare natural history of the British Army without depicting in some detail the great battles and campaigns which materi- ally affected its development and character by instituting more or less radical changes in organization, tactics, or equipments. Mr. For- tescue's account of the political and adminis- trative side of British military history thus runs concurrently with the judiciously com- pressed and selective recital of the British soldier's achievements in the field, the reader being constantly reminded that it is primarily the evolution of the Army as a national estab- lishment that the author is aiming to trace out and illustrate. Mr. Fortescue's powers of picturesque descrip- tion are moderate; his analysis of military oper- ations is concise and clear; and the fact that he is a civilian has not deterred him from exercis- ing a considerable degree of independence of judgment. The average reader, accustomed to the conventional view of General Wolfe, will be surprised at Mr. Fortescue's estimate of the much vaunted victory on the plains of Abraham, which was due more to good luck and the virtual mental collapse of the French commander than to good generalship, and was *A History of THE BRITIsh ARMY. By the Hon. J. W. Fortescue. In two volumes, with maps. New York: The Macmillan Co. essentially a gambler's throw of a general who had failed to see his real strategical opportu- nity. Says Mr. Fortescue: “. . . It is quite incontestible that the credit for the fall of Quebec belongs rather to the Navy than to the Army. . . . It still remains for enquiry why Wolfe did not take earlier advantage of the opportunities opened to him by the fleet; and even after allowance is made for his constant illness, the answer is not readily found. The measures which led to the decisive action were, as has been told, taken on the advice of his brigadiers, and, if Montcalm had not succumbed to positive infa- tuation, would very likely have brought Wolfe to a court-martial.” It is easy, as the author observes, to be wise after the event; but a careful analysis of the whole record of the operations at Quebec goes to show that Wolfe's reputation as a soldier has been somewhat unduly enhanced by the tradition of his virtues as a man and of his heroic death in the hour of victory. Mr. Fortescue's design is to write, in four volumes of about six hundred pages each, the history of the British Army down to the year 1870. The two volumes now ready carry the story down to the Peace of Paris in 1763, and the two forthcoming volumes will bring it forward to the great reforms which virtually closed the life of the old Army and opened that of the new. The common assumption, as Mr. Fortescue notes, that the history of the Army begins with the 14th of February, 1661, is inaccurate, since the continuity of the ex- istence of the Coldstream Guards, a regiment of the New Model, was practically unbroken by the ceremony of Saint Valentine's day. This famous corps therefore forms a link which binds the New Model army of the Long Par- liament to the army of Queen Victoria. But as the very name New Model indicates that there was an earlier and older model, the his- torian of the Army is not justified in begin- ning with the Long Parliament's Ordinance of Feb. 15, 1645, but is thrown back to the out- break of the Civil War. It is found that at that period King and Parliament had avail- able for purposes of military organization a body of trained and experienced officers who had learnt their trade abroad, and mainly in the Low Countries. The historian is thus led back to the Thirty Years' War, to the tens and even hundreds of thousands of English and Scots who fought for pay and Protestantism under Gustavus and Maurice of Nassau. But, having gone back two generations before the Civil War for the germ of the New Model, it is found to be impossible to pause there. For in 1900.] THE TXIAL 149 the earlier years of Elizabeth's reign we are con- fronted with an important period in English military history, with a break in old traditions, with concessions to foreign ideas and adoption of foreign practices—albeit such concessions were then as always distasteful to the nation: “For there were memories to which the English clung with pathetic tenacity, not in Elizabeth's day only but even to the midst of the Civil War, the mem- ories of King Harry the Fifth, of the Black Prince, of Edward the Third, and of the unconquerable infantry that had won the day at Agincourt, Pontiers, and Crecy. The passion of English sentiment over the change is mirrored to us for all time in the pages of Shakespeare; for no nation loves military reform so little as our own, and we shrink from the thought that if military glory is not to pass from a possession into a legend, it must be eternally renewed with strange weapons and by unfa- miliar methods. This was the trouble which afflicted England under the Tudors, and she comforted herself with the immortal prejudice that is still her main-stay in all times of doubt, “I tell thee, herald, I thought upon one pair of English legs Did march Three Frenchmen.’” This “immortal prejudice” is proving just now anything but a “mainstay,” and seems at last in a fair way of extinction. The origin of England's Elizabethan new departures in warfare are to be traced back by the historian through the Spaniards, the Lands- knechts, and the Swiss, and the old English practice and tradition must be followed to its source. It is not found at Crecy, for Edward III.'s time was one of military reform. Revert- ing to the Battle of Falkirk, the Statute of Winchester, the Assize of Arms, the essentially English tradition still recedes, till at last at the Conquest we can discern a great English principle which forced itself on the conquering Normans, and eventually on all Europe — namely, the rule that all men-at-arms must dis- mount when in action and as a preparatory step for action. The primitive national army of Teutonic England consisted of the mass of free landowners between the ages of sixteen and sixty, and was known as the fyrd. Custom fixed its term of service at two months in the year. Alfred reorganized this force of Land. wehr by dividing the country into military dis- tricts, and requiring every five hides of land, at the king's summons, to furnish, maintain, and pay an armed man. Each owner of five hides of land was furthermore required to do thane's service, that is, to appear in the field heavily armed and to serve throughout the campaign. Canute later added a new and more distinctly military element in the form of a royal body-guard, originally a picked force of from three to six thousand Danish troops, known as the house-carles. “It was with an army framed on this model — the raw levies of the fyrd and the better trained men of the body-guard — that King Harold, flushed with the vic- tory of Stamford Bridge, marched down to meet the invasion of William of Normandy. . . . Yet the force was homogenous in virtue of a single custom wherein lies the secret of the rise of England's prowess as a military nation. Though the wealthy thanes might ride horses on the march, they dismounted one and all for action, and fought, even to the king himself, on their own feet.” Mr. Fortescue's opening chapters, then, are devoted to a sketch of the growth of England's military power to the time of its first manifesta- tion at Creºy, and thence to Agincourt; then through its decay under the blight of the Wars of the Roses to its revival under the Tudors, and to the training of English contingents and adventurers under foreign schools and in for- eign wars which prepared the way for the New Model and the Standing Army. The six hun- dred years of English military history from Hastings to Naseby have been compressed into some two hundred pages, all details being omitted save those essential to a coherent ac- count of the growth of the national military system. The New Model army was voted in February, 1645; and with the opening chapter of Book III., which nearly completes the first half of Vol. I., the author proceeds to give an interesting and somewhat detailed account of the organization of this famous body and its exploits in the field. Mr. Fortescue has some- thing to say of the common tendency to regard the New Model army as primarily a body of zealots whose religious enthusiasm made them irresistible in battle, without taking into ac- count the vital fact that they were disciplined soldiers trained under a military code of almost unexampled severity. “Cromwell's system is generally summed up in the word fanaticism; but this is less than half the truth. . . . Simple fanaticism is in its nature undisciplined; it is strong because it assumes its superiority, it is weak because it is content with the assumption; only when bound under a yoke such as that of a Zizka or of a Cromwell is it irresistible. Cromwell's great work was the same as Zizka's, to subject the fanaticism that he saw around him to discipline. He did not go out of his way to find fanatics. “Sir,’ he once wrote, “the State in choosing men for its service takes no notice of their opinions; if they be willing to faithfully serve it, that satisfies.” In forming his original regiment of horse he undoubtedly selected men of good character, just as any colonel would endeavor to do to-day. But Fairfax's was by no means an army of saints. One regiment of the New Model mutinied when its colonel opened his com- mand with a sermon. It is time to have done with all misconceptions as to the work that Cromwell did for 150 [March 1, THE DIAL the military service of England, for it is summed up in the one word discipline. It was the work not of a preacher but of a soldier.” In fact, the contempt with which the Royalist soldiers came latterly to be regarded by the Parliamentarians seems to have savored rather of professional than spiritual pride. The king's troopers were despised not so much as profane and loose-living “malignants,” as ill-furnished and ill-disciplined soldiers. This is indicated in the satirical accounts in the Parliamentary newspapers of the prisoners captured at Bristol, one of which says: “First came half-a-dozen of carbines in their leathern coats and starved weather-beaten jades, just like so many brewers in their jerkins made of old boots, riding to fetch in old casks; and after them as many light horse- men with great saddles and old broken pistols, and scarce a sword among them, just like so many fiddlers with their fiddles in cases by their horses' sides. . . . In the works at Bristol was a company of footmen with knapsacks and half-pikes, like so many tinkers with budgets at their backs, and some musketeers with ban- doliers about their necks like a company of sow-gelders.” The two chapters comprising Book IV. of Mr. Fortescue's opening volume recount briefly the military events of the unsettled and transi- tional period between the Restoration and the accession of William of Orange; and the clos- ing half of the volume is occupied mainly with reforms and campaigns of Marlborough's time. The Anglo-French struggle for empire in India and the New World forms the central theme of Volume II. Mr. Fortescue's valuable work will be read with avidity by English military men, and his- torical students generally will find it a most convenient repository of the special class of facts it deals with. Ample references to the authorities consulted are given, for the most part at the foot of the page. The volumes are elegantly and substantially made, and are pro- vided with the necessary maps and plans. E. G. J. IDEAN MERIVALE.” Writing in a playful mood to his sister, in the year 1851, Dean Merivale charged Louis Napoleon with bribing one of Spottiswoode's printers for the advance sheets of the third volume of “The History of the Romans under the Empire”; and accused him farther of turn- ing to account, in planning his own coup d'état, *AUTOBIOGRAPHY OF DEAN MERIVALE, with Selections from his Correspondence. Edited by his Daughter, Judith Anne Merivale. With a Portrait. London: Edward Arnold. the fourth chapter of that volume, wherein a somewhat similar movement on the part of Octavius is described. The letter also ex- pressed the confident hope that the Emperor would order a thousand copies of the “His- tory” for his regimental libraries, and would bestow upon its author the Cross of the Legion of Honor. Curiously enough, this bit of pleas- antry was taken by some in serious earnest— which perhaps may go to prove the high repute enjoyed by the book in question from its first appearance. That the gap between Dr. Ar- nold's unfinished work and Gibbon’s “Decline and Fall” had been filled by a worthy successor to those great historians, seems to have been very generally acknowledged. The main events in Dean Merivale's life may be briefly stated. Born in London in 1808, he was educated at Harrow and Cam- bridge; held a fellowship at that university from 1833 to 1848; was settled over the parish of Lawford from 1848 to 1869; and was then appointed dean of Ely, a post which he held until his death in 1898. In his youth the offer of a writership in India led to his spending eighteen months of his school life at Hailey- bury, preparing for the civil service examina- tions and studying Bengali, Hindustani, Per- sian, political economy (under Malthus), and general history; but he and his family then wisely decided that he should follow his inclina- tion for a life of letters, and soon afterward he entered St. John's College, Cambridge. The “Autobiography,” edited by the Dean's daughter closes with the attainment of the fel- lowship at St. John's, the remaining two-thirds of the volume being devoted to correspondence. The whole forms a good record of a life filled with high aims steadily and successfully pur- sued from the beginning. It is worthy of note that when Charles Merivale was but six years old he took delight in playing with his brother Herman, aged seven, a game which they called “Roman history.” It was played in Queen's Square, the northern end of which they named “Italy,” and the northeast corner “Rome.” The trundling of hoops was a leading feature of the game, the career of each consul being typified by the course which the player's hoop chanced to take. “The straight line of pub- lic virture was the narrow path of the kerb- stone, and few magistrates kept it to the end.” In his school days at Harrow the future his- torian of the Roman Empire committed to memory, for his own amusement, all but a few hundred lines of Lucan's “Pharsalia,” when 1900.] THE DIAL 151 his sudden removal to Haileybury interrupted the task. That largeness of view and generosity of sentiment which characterize Merivale's writ- ings may, it seems not improbably, be largely owing to the variety of scene and of personal intercourse which he enjoyed in his youth. His paternal grandparents were dissenters, Presby- terians of pronounced Unitarian convictions; and there is something admirable in honest John Merivale's sturdy refusal to enter the ministry or, indeed, to embrace any profes- sion, even when an uncle's fortune was offered him as an inducement. He preferred to be left to his books and his flute. On his moth- er's side Merivale's family was more orthodox, but the boy was free to follow his own inclina- tion in matters of religion, and he went to hear Dr. Belsham in Essex Street fully as often as to Dr. Martin's church in Queen's Square. The liberality of his faith is well expressed in this sentence from his pen: “I am well pleased to have had the opportunity of testing by my own observation how slight, how shadowy, is the pretended difference between the Episcopalian and the Presbyterian as such; and how little even far wider divergence in speculative opinion on points of dogma may affect the graces of the true Christian character.” The names of those eminent men with whom Dean Merivale was more or less intimately acquainted would make a long list. In his college days we find him enjoying the society of the Tennysons and the Wordsworths — Charles and Christopher, — of Trench, Kem- ble, Milnes, Hallam, William Bodham Donne, William Hepworth Thompson, Arthur Helps, and many more besides. He had the honor of reciting Tennyson's prize poem, “Timbuctoo,” at the request of the young poet, who was “too shy or too proud to exhibit himself on such an occasion.” His letters to and from and about persons of whom one likes to hear, are well worth reading. The genesis and growth of the “History of the Romans,” so far as re- corded in these letters, lend them an additional interest. Genial humor pervades both the au- tobiography and the correspondence. (Among his other virtues the Dean's epitaph credits him with having been “caustic in wit,” as if causticity were likewise a virtue.) In a letter to Christopher Wordsworth he refers to Lem- prière as “A man of the highest imagination, which by a pe- culiar idiosyncrasy fell into an alphabetical form, in which the advantage of reference is more than counter- balanced by the constant dislocation of continuity. He was an index-maker of a higher order of beings, a vocabulist of the moon, of which he could probably have written a most veritable and entertaining history, including all the scandal about her paramour, the man in the moon.” The chief fault of the “Autobiography” is its brevity: it ends abruptly, although design- edly, at the most interesting period of the writer's life. A less generous selection from his letters, on the other hand, might have proved equally acceptable to the general reader. The care with which Miss Merivale has edited the volume is apparent—perhaps almost pain- fully so—in the abundant foot-notes, which deal with matters even of the minutest detail. On the very first page, however, an error— probably a misprint—has crept into one of these notes and assigned a wrong date as the year of Merivale's birth. Two short passages, culled at random from this book in closing, will give a glimpse of Dean Merivale's conservatism on the subject of education and on the “woman question.” The first is from the “Autobiography.” “It is sad, and perhaps perplexing, to think that there should be no room at the University for combining the old-world studies with modern accomplishments; but so experience seems to teach us; and if a choice is to be allowed between the two, as is the tendency of the present day, I would say from my own observation, by all means stick to the Old in preference to the New. There is no training, I feel sure, equal to that of clas- sics and mathematics.” It should be noted that the above was written at least twenty years ago. The next passage is from a letter written by Merivale to his sister Louisa in 1866. “About the comparative opportunities of men and women I have this to observe. Looking in the sphere of literary occupation most appropriate to the male genius, men have the advantage. In matters of wide research which lead to and require large inductions, men have the advantage not from education and oppor- tunities only, but from the natural structure of their minds. With the same advantages few, if any, women could compete with them. No woman could have written the histories of Tacitus or Gibbon, with the highest university education and the run of the Bodleian. On the other hand, there are other matters in which women are unrivaled, from their tact and observation of character and clearness of view generally in a narrow compass; and for these you have fair opportunities.” PERCY FAVOR BICKNELL. Two of the minor dramatic works of Goethe, “The Fisher Maiden” and “The Lover's Caprice,” have been translated in the original metres by Miss Martha Ridg- way Barnum, and are published in a well-made volume, with illustrations, by the John C. Yorston Publishing Co. of Philadelphia. 152 [March 1, THE DIAL A NEW BIBLICAL ENCYCLOPAEDIA.* These closing years of the nineteenth cen- tury are full of promise for students of the sacred Scriptures. The appearance within two successive years of the initial volumes of two great four-volume Dictionaries of the Bible, marks an era in biblical study and research. These two comprehensive works place in the hands of Bible students, in concise and clear form, the best results of all previous critical study in this line. They promise to be small libraries on all the essential and interesting questions of biblical criticism and interpreta- tion. And both are edited and issued by en- ergetic and aggressive Britons, – Hastings' “Dictionary of the Bible” in Edinburgh (T. & T. Clark), and Cheyne's in London (A. & C. Black). The raison d'être of the issuance simultane- ously of two such works is found in the fact that critically they occupy practically different positions. While Hastings' work is progres- sive, Cheyne's is described in the Preface in the following terms (p. ix.): “The sympathies of the editors are, upon the whole, with what is commonly known as ‘advanced’ criticism, not simply because it is advanced, but because such a criticism, in the hands of a circumspect and experienced scholar, takes account of facts and phenomena which the criticism of a former generation overlooked or treated superficially. They have no desire, however, to ‘boycott’ moderate criticism, when applied by a critic who, either in the form or in the substance of his criticism, has something original to say.” The Preface is devoted largely to a eulogy upon the late Professor W. Robertson Smith, editor of the ninth edition of the “Encyclo- paedia Britannica,” to whom credit is given for the origination, twelve years ago, of the plan according to which this work has been executed. Some of the best contributions of Professor Smith to the Britannica have been brought down to date and embodied in this work. Other material prepared by him has also been used so far as consistent with latest research. The chief features of this work, in addition to its “advanced ” critical position, are: (1) the presentation in full, under each word, of readings of the Versions, extending in the case of the Septuagint, to several of the most im- portant MSS.; (2) larger emphasis upon the *ENCYCLoPAEDIA BIBLICA: A Critical Dictionary of the Literary, Political, and Religious History, the Archaeology, Geography, and Natural History, of the Bible. Edited by the Rev. T. K. Cheyne, M.A., D.D., and J. Sutherland Black, M.A., LL.D. Vol. I., A to D. New York: The Macmillan Co. - Old than upon the New Testament, especially in the lines of textual criticism and biblical archae- ology; (3) the omission of articles which treat of biblical theology proper, based on the state- ment that we are not as yet sufficiently ad- vanced in some other lines of research to venture on this field. The emphasis of the philological, the technical, and purely critical treatment of the themes is everywhere appar- ent. Every proper name in the Old and New Testament and the Old Testament Apocrypha is discussed with as much fulness as the data allow. The purely scientific and scholarly character of the work has brought along with it a for- midable array of abbreviations, symbols, and bibliographical notes. These together with their explanations cover nine double-columned pages, and are an enormous space-saving de- vice, though they may be a hardship on the reader until he has made himself their master. This first volume has a distinguished roll of fifty-three contributors. Of these thirty-two are British, fifteen are German, Dutch, and Swiss, and six are Americans. We find in the whole number twenty-two men in the Old Testament department, including all the six Americans, and only six in the New Testament, and of these latter four are Germans. The heaviest contributor is, of course, Professor Cheyne, the editor-in-chief, whose reputation is a guarantee for critical and scientific re- search. Prof. George Adam Smith's service is especially noteworthy in articles on the biblical geography of Palestine. Some of the most conspicuous articles in this volume are “Apoc- alyptic Literature” by Professor R. H. Charles, “Apocrypha” by M. R. James, “Assyria” and “Babylonia” by L. W. King, of the British Museum, “Canon” by Karl Budde, “Canticles” by the Editor, “Chronology" by Karl Marti and H. von Soden, “The Book of Daniel ” by A. Kamphausen, and “Deuter- onomy” by George F. Moore. Upon an exam- ination of the articles we find that the editors have stood by their principle announced in the Preface, though there is not everywhere, as might, of course, be expected, full agreement on critical questions. Professor Cheyne is quite in the van on most points, while a goodly number of his contributors are not far behind him. Together they give us in this volume the fin de siècle position of the advanced school, if such it may be called, of biblical criticism. As the pronouncement of this school it is the best up-to-date compendium, and for many 1900.] THE DIAL 153 other purposes will be of real service to biblical scholars. The arrangement of the matter is admirable. The heading of each article is in full-face Clar- endon type, and if it is long, it is subdivided into sections, and the section-theme is inset in dark-faced type. This plan, and a method of cross-references from one article to a given section of another where the same theme is treated, is both a space-saving device and an invaluable convenience to the user. The clean, clear type, and the use of different sizes for matters of minor importance, and a small type for notes, make up a solid, substantial, yet inviting page to the careful student of biblical problems. IRA. M. PRICE. BUILDING THE SHIP OF STATE.” The proposition, novel not many decades ago, has come to be accepted as axiomatic, that the written Constitutions of America are the result of a process of gradual development; and now it is the details of that process which largely engage the attention of constitutional students. Landon, Taylor, Stevens, and Coxe have shown the origin of many of the funda- mental principles of our system; Dicey and Macy have explained how principles of iden- tical origin have experienced distinctive evo- lutions in the politics of Britain and America; and Fisher has traced the American appli- cations of these principles, through their several stages of use in the charters and con- stitutions of various colonies, to their present accepted form. The terse and succinct provis- ions of the United States Constitution, permit- ting an elastic application to changing condi- tions and varying necessities, have proved fa- vorable also to disputes concerning its proper construction. What did the framers of that instrument intend? is a question frequently asked, and often with much pertinence. The recently published essay on “The Growth of the Constitution in the Federal Convention,” by Mr. William M. Meigs, contributes to the subject of constitutional evolution, by throwing light upon the extent of the application of par- ticular principles which was in the minds of the Framers. Knowing the objects at which they were aiming, and the reasons why certain forms * THE GRowTH of THE Constitution IN THE FEDERAL Convention of 1787. By William M. Meigs. Philadelphia: J. B. Lippincott Company. of expression were selected, we can understand better the scope of the changes in our govern- ment which followed the adoption of the work of that convention. Mr. Meigs has furnished a convenient summary, clause by clause, of the debates waged in the convention and the action finally taken. “Elliott's Debates” of course show all this; but Mr. Meigs has summarized these “Debates” topically; and with him we can, without personal delving, follow from week to week, the presentation of diverse views on the same subject, and often trace the changes of sentiment leading to the unanimous selection of propositions which had previously been seri- ously questioned in debate. To illustrate fully Mr. Meigs's method would be to repeat pages of his book. It will serve as an instance, to refer to the subjects of “laws impairing the obligation of contracts,” and “ex post facto laws,” the prohibitions concern- ing which were presented for consideration late in the deliberations of the convention; and per contra, to the proposition which was pre- sented but rejected, to apply the “obligation clause” to congressional legislation. The de- bates disclose a growth of opinion on these and other subjects, in the convention. An important feature of this work is a fac- simile copy of Randolph's draft, in his own hand, of a proposed constitution, with notes and additions by Rutledge. Both the original draft and the emendations are shown to have been made while the convention was sitting; and they throw light of their own upon the devel- opment of opinion among the delegates. Mr. Meigs's Index is brief and simple, as he thought an exhaustive one unnecessary; so he has indexed the names of eleven only of the delegates. But the present reviewer believes that many readers would liberally use an index in which the name of every debater in the con- vention should be given, and referring to every page where his share in the deliberations ap- pears. JAMEs OSCAR PIERCE. The “Philobiblon” of Richard de Bury has long held a secure place among the classics, but it is a surprising fact that in this country at least the chronicles of this quaint old bibliomaniac have hitherto been practically inaccessible to the general book-buyer. Messrs. Meyer Brothers & Co. are therefore to be heartily thanked for issuing the work in handsome and inexpensive form, as the first volume in a projected series of book lovers' classics. The text followed in this new reprint is that of Inglis's translation of 1832, and the volume is supplied with an Introduction and Notes by Mr. Charles Orr, of the Case Library, Cleveland. 154 THE DIAL [March 1, RECENT BOOKS OF TRAVEL.” That redoubtable and indefatigable traveller and writer, Mrs. Bird-Bishop, has been touring up the Yangzte Walley for “recreation and interest” only, but on returning has presented us with two large volumes, entitled “The Yangtze Valley and Be- yond,” packed with geographical, commercial, po- litical, and religious information, and well provided with map and illustrations and appendices. Mrs. Bishop, for the most part alone save for a few na- tives, traversed twelve hundred miles in regions little visited by Europeans, and in large part un- noticed in travel literature. The hardships she endured from the curious crowds she thus describes. “I sat in my chair in the village street the unwilling center of a large and very dirty crowd, which had leisure to stand around me for an hour, staring, making remarks, laughing at my peculiarities, pressing closer and closer till there was hardly air to breathe, taking out my hair pins, and passing my gloves round and put- ting them on their dirty hands, and on two occasions abstracting my spoon and slipping it into their sleeves, being in no way abashed when they were detected. . . . The crowd which always gathered during my passage down the street rolled in at the doorway, blocking up the yard, shouting, often timeshooting, and fighting each other for a look at the foreigner. Fortunately, doors in Chinese inns have strong wooden bolts, and when my baggage and I were once ensconced I was secure from intrusion, unless a few men and boys ran on ahead to take possession of the room before I entered it, or forced themselves in behind Be-dien when he brought in my dinner. If it were merely a boarded wall, a row of patient eyes usually watched me for an hour, and with much gratification, for these rooms are dark with the door shut, and my candle revealed my barbarian proceedings. But worse than this was the slow scraping of holes in the plaster partition, when there was one, *THE YANGtzE WALLEY AND BEYond. By Mrs. J. F. Bishop. New York: G. P. Putnam's Sons. IN Dwarf LAND AND CANNIBAL Country. By Albert B. Lloyd. Illustrated. New York: Imported by Charles Scribner's Sons. THRough UNExPLoRED Asia. By William Jameson Reid. Illustrated. Boston: Dana Estes & Co. THE REAL MALAY. By Sir Frank Athelstane Swettenham, K.C.M.G. New York: John Lane. sº INDIA. By G. W. Steevens. New York: Dodd, Mead o. SIBERIA AND CENTRAL Asia. By John W. Bookwalter. Illustrated from photographs. New York: F. A. Stokes Co. Two YEARs 1N PALESTINE AND SYRIA. By Margaret Thomas. Illustrated. New York: Imported by Charles Scribner's Sons. THE AMERICAN IN Holi,AND. By William Elliot Griffis, LL.D. Boston: Houghton, Mifflin & Co. PEAKs AND PINEs. By J. A. Lees. Illustrated. New York: Longmans, Green, & Co. By-Gone Tourist DAYs. By Laura G. Collins. Illus- trated. Cincinnati: The Robert Clarke Co. Mexican Wistas. By Harriott Wight Sherratt. Illustrated. Chicago: Rand, McNally & Co. HAwami AND ITs PEoPLE. By Alexander S. Twombly. Illustrated. Boston: Silver, Burdett & Co. Holy LAND. By William Bement Lent. Illustrated. New York: Bonnell, Silver & Co. between my room and the next, accompanied by the peculiarly irritating sound of whispering, and eventu- ally by the application of a succession of eyes to the hole, more whispering, and some giggling.” Mrs. Bishop's chapters on Chinese Charities, on Protestant Missions, and on Opium, and the Intro- ductory and Concluding chapters, show large and judicious views founded on full knowledge; and the work as a whole is an extremely sane contribu- tion to books on China, giving us a definite and reliable impression of the most populous river valley on the globe, and a glimpse of the Tibetan border land beyond. “In Dwarf Land and Cannibal Country,” by A.B. Lloyd, is a record by an enterprising young En- glish missionary of a journey across Central Africa by the Uganda-Congo route, and includes some notes of residence in Uganda and Toro. The title is quite misleading, as “Dwarf Land” and “Can- nibal Country” play but a small part in these pages. The first seven chapters might well be compressed into one; but from Chapter VIII. on the book is concisely written and of decided interest as well as of considerable value. The author has many ad- ventures with wild beasts and men, which he nar- rates modestly and well, in some of which a bicycle figures prominently. “A bicycle which had been sent to me during my stay in Uganda was constantly used by me in taking my journeys abroad, and often I have had most exciting times when on the wheel. One morning I started off to visit a village some few miles away from the mission station. The road was well cultivated and about 5 feet wide. It was, in fact, the main road leading to Uganda. I had reached the top of a long hill, and on the other side was a gentle slope into the valley beyond; I knew the road well, having often passed that way, and I therefore prepared myself for a ‘coast.' . Near the foot of the hill was a slight turn in the road, and as I approached it I put my feet again on the pedals. I was going at a great speed, and as I rounded the cor- ner an awful sight met my gaze; not twenty yards in front there lay in the centre of the path a huge lion, with head down upon his paws, facing the direction from which I was coming. It was impossible for me to stop the machine, the speed was too great. To the left of the path was a high wall of rock towering some twenty feet above my head; on the right was a steep incline down, down, down, for 100 feet to a river. I had scarcely a second to take in the situation, and to make up my mind as to what course of action to pursue. It was a critical moment. What could I do? To turn to the right down the steep incline would have meant almost certain destruction; to attempt to stop, even if success- ful, would have meant pulling up at the entrance to the jaws of the King of the Forest. I therefore did the only thing that was possible,_I rang my bell, and shouted at the top of my voice, then let the ‘bike' go at its topmost speed. As I shot into view, the lion raised his huge shaggy head, and seeing this unearthly creature come racing towards him making so strange a cry, lifted up his voice and gave forth a most blood- curdling yelp. The apparition was too much even for him, and when I was about five yards from him he leapt onto the right side of the path, and I had just 1900.] THE DIAL 155 room to scramble past him. Once beyond, I pedalled away as I never had before, not even looking round to see what next happened to the startled lion. But such an experience, if it happen once, is quite enough, and I learned the lesson not to ‘scorch,” even in Africa, where there are no policemen.” He traverses the great primeval forest and catches sight of pigmies, and has some intercourse with them, and on his way down the Aruwimi River he has some adventures with cannibals, perhaps the finest race of men he met. “Sometimes one would see part of a limb roasting over the fire, or else in a cooking pot, boiling, while the warriors sat around watching eagerly until it was cooked. But still, notwithstanding the fact of there being a superstitious idea in connection with this cannibalism, there is no doubt a depraved appetite. I have seen the wild, exciting feast, where spirit dances and invo- cations have been the principal items, and I have seen the warriors in all soberness sit down to a “joint of man’ in exactly the same way as they would do to a piece of forest antelope.” The book is well illustrated and has useful maps. “Through Unexplored Asia,” by Mr. William Jameson Reid, – whose veracity has been sharply questioned in some quarters—is a narrative of the first half of a journey made in 1894 through un- known parts of Western China and Eastern Thibet, and contains interesting accounts of adventures with savage beasts and men. He thus describes a curious custom of the Su-Chu natives: “On our arrival we discovered that we had come at a most inauspicious time of the year in which to hope to secure hospitable entertainment, as the native popu- lation was given up to the enormous undertaking of washing the bones of their ancestors. When we first saw this operation it struck us as being remarkably funny; but it is an exceedingly serious matter to the natives themselves, and is a custom pretty generally existing among the tribes of Western China and Thibet. For many centuries it has been an established rule among them once a year to exhume the bones of their ancestors and wash them. This annual washing usually lasts for a period of two or three weeks, or even a month, and is a function attended with much ceremo- nious pomp and religious devotion. Huge pots of water are placed beside the graves, and one by one the bones are taken out, and carefully scoured, and then tenderly consigned to their resting-place once more. These bones are also looked upon as having a high market- value, it being considered a mark of great esteem among the members of the tribe to be the proud possessor of the largest “bonery,” so that the trading and bartering of them for other objects forms a considerable industry. They are frequently seized upon by creditors for debt, when at once the unfortunate debtor is shunned by the rest of the tribe, and is suffered to remain in disgrace until he shall have redeemed them.” Mr. Reid claims to have been the first to explore the remains of an ancient civilization near Hissik Karpo, Thibet, but his report is very meagre. The author's style is simple, direct, and forcible, though we miss the romantic touch which gives glamour to travels. The work is furnished with a number of illustrations and several maps. “The Real Malay,” by Sir F. A. Swettenham, is an intimate study by a British resident of native life in the Malay Peninsula. The atmosphere and color of the semi-barbaric country are well depicted. We have a series of realistic etchings of the land and its inhabitants, animal and human, and the episodes are clearly and vividly drawn. He thus remarks on the difficulty of understanding the Ori- ental character, and on the lack of individuality in the inhabitants of the Far East. “One who is the outcome of Western civilization and Christian teaching, could hardly expect to understand the peculiarities of an Eastern character, the product of generations of Muhammadan or Hindu ancestors. But if you live in the East for years—if you make yourself perfectly familiar with the language, litera- ture, customs, prejudices, and superstitions of the peo- ple; if you lie on the same floor with them, eat out of the same dish, fight with them and against them, join in their sorrows and their joys, and at last win their regard — then the reading of their characters is no longer an impossible task, and you will find that be- tween one Eastern and another there is a much greater similarity than there is between two Westerns, even though they be of the same nationality. There are good and bad, energetic and lazy, but you will hardly ever meet those complex products of Western civiliza- tion whose characters are subordinated to the state of their nerves, and those to the season of the year, the surroundings of the moment, politics, the money market, and a thousand things of which the Eastern is blissfully unconscious.” The introductory chapter on the English method of expansion in the Peninsula ought to be of interest to Americans. The book has no map, illustrations, or index. The latest book from the prolific pen of the late Mr. G. W. Steevens is entitled “In India.” In this volume he writes with his usual vigor and as- surance, and gives in his brisk and vivid way an impressionist sketch of India, political, social, and industrial. Mr. Steevens draws often with too hard and heavy a stroke; however in this picture of ele- phant travel we see him at his best: “The elephant knows. When the mahout wants to get on her neck, she takes him on her trunk and bends it till he can walk up her forehead. When you want to get on to her back, she lets down a hind-foot to make one step, and curls up her tail to make another. She knows that a branch she can walk under will sweep you off her back; therefore she goes round, or, if that is not possible, pushes down the tree with her trunk as gently as you put down a teacup. At every ford she tries the bottom, at every bridge she tries the planks: she knows better than you do how much she weighs and what will bear her. Jerk, jerk, jerk—she see-saws you at every step, for you are sitting on a blanket just atop of her shoulder. Now and again the mahout ad- dresses her in a language, handed down from father to children, that only mahouts and elephants understand, or smites her over the head with a heavy, iron-hooked ankus. It falls with a dull thud on her hairy forehead; it would crack your skull like an egg-shell, but it hurts the elephant as a dead leaf would hurt you. Behind her ear you see a crevasse of raw flesh in the armour- 156 [March 1, THE TOLAL plating of hide: that wound is kept open, and through it only can she be made to feel. She just tramples on, now tilted almost onto her head, now all but standing on her tail; over the shallow rivers, along the rutted cart-tracks, till the sun begins to bake and the line of hills in front changes from a wash of blue to a clearcut saw-edge of shaded greens and browns.” Mr. John W. Bookwalter, in “Siberia and Cen- tral Asia,” gives us some modest letters of travel profusely illustrated from admirable photographs. He journeys into Siberia as far as Tomsk by the Trans-Siberian Railway, and into Central Asia as far as Samarkand by the Trans-Caspian railway. “Great as will be the effect upon the world of the opening of the Trans-Siberian railway system — a fact that is generally recognized,—the Trans-Caspian rail- way system, when completed, will be productive of re- sults even far more important in their political and commercial consequences. There is a branch of the Trans-Caspian railway now completed, some 250 miles in length and running southward to Mervand to Kushk, on the very borders of Afghanistan. It is being quietly extended to Herat, and it will, when completed, give Russia practical control of Northwestern Afghanistan, as Herat is the key to that country. These lines, when in operation, will thus obviously give Russia a control- ing influence in Persia and Northwestern Afghanistan. A branch also of the main stem of the Trans-Caspian line is being built from Samarkand through Ferghan, in the direction of Kokand and Kashgar, in the Pamirs, almost in sight of the northern border of India. This line in time will, no doubt, be extended into Chinese Turkestan, and perhaps into the very center of China itself, bringing thus this great and populous country into communication with Europe, even more directly than by the way of the Trans-Siberian railway line.” The author gives a very glowing account of the de- velopment of Northern and Central Asia under Rus- sian auspices, and the account seems as accurate as we ought to expect from the passing traveller. “Two Years in Palestine and Syria,” by Mar- garet Thomas, is a fresh and pleasantly written de- scription, to which the colored illustrations add much embellishment. The account of Jerusalem and its environs is specially full and good. “Jerusalem has neither street lamps, policemen, post- men, nor newspapers; people who go out at night are ordered to carry lanterns under a heavy penalty. The keeping of three successive Sundays — Mohammedan, Jewish, Christian — leads to much loss of time, for the lazily-disposed observe all three. . . . Night in the Holy Land is a thing to be remembered. The air is soft and balmy, neither hot nor cold; the sun, setting like a globe of amber, tinges the top of the blue vapor which ever hangs over the Moabite Mountains and Dead Sea with iridiscent tints. The sky is literally powdered with stars, not gleaming as they do on a frosty night in the North, but soft and dreamy.” “The American in Holland,” by the Rev. W. E. Griffis, is a fairly readable description of various trips in all parts of the Netherlands. He visits American friends who have spent years in Holland, living at the Hague in winter and in summer at Nunspeet “ or some other rural paradise.” He is in love with Dutch civilization. It is delightful to his eyes “to find no spoiling of scenery by advertise- ments. The study of the people of beauty as a per- manent force to life is commendable. The country in general induces a spirit of quiet restfulness so grateful to the overwrought American.” American Colonies in Holland may yet be fashionable. His- torical associations are enlarged upon, and there is an account of the inauguration of Queen Wilhel- mina, to which the author was an American dele- gate. Mr. Griffis is genial and almost fulsome in his appreciation of the land and people. Though rather slight and superficial, this volume will serve as a popular and pleasant book, and the illustrations are of interest. “Peaks and Pines,” by Mr. J. H. Lees, is a jolly narrative of a summer's sport in Norway with rod and gun. The book is entertaining and instructive, closing with some practical directions which will be useful to sportsmen everywhere. “By-Gone Tourist Days,” by Miss Laura G. Col- lins, is a sprightly series of familiar, sometimes rather too familiar, letters of travel, mostly from contin- ental Europe. The black-letter printing of this book is very refreshing to the eye. There is no excuse for the iniquity of thin type on highly glazed paper, for though illustrations may be on plate paper, they should be, as in this book, on separate pages, and so not interfere with a continuous text. “Mexican Wistas,” by Mrs. H. W. Sherratt, is an agreeably written description of recent tours not personally conducted. The book has a number of clear illustrations and may be commended to the general reader and tourist. “Hawaii and its People,” by Mr. A. S. Twombly, is a general description and historical account de- signed for younger readers and popular use. It is fairly illustrated and seems carefully prepared. “The Holy Land, from Landau, Saddle, and Palanquin,” by Mr. W. B. Lent, is thoroughly re- ligious and biblical; but the sentiment is often com- monplace and the description quite cursory. While the material might serve as letters to a religious paper, it is rather light for putting into book form. HIRAM. M. STANLEY. BRIEFS ON NEW BOOKS. Mr. James Wycliffe Headlam's new Bismarck - - and his . life of Bismarck (Putnam) adds a king theories. somewhat belated volume to the “Heroes of the Nations” series. The delay has been well utilized, however, for this volume is a much more valuable monograph than is ordinarily furnished by the series. The history of Bismarck's earlier life, and of his labors in the formation of the German Empire, up to the close of the Franco- Prussian war, brings out nothing new, so that any criticism must occupy itself with the style rather than the matter of this portion. Briefly, the author has done his work exceedingly well. Bismarck's 1900.] THE DIAL 157 purposes, and the means by which they were exe- cuted, are stated simply and clearly, without any attempt at detailed analysis of diplomatic manoeu- vres, and notably without any wearisome effort at character painting. Yet the character of Bismarck is made manifest in his official acts and in the mo- tives which inspired them. The novelty of Mr. Headlam's work lies in his treatment of the career of Bismarck in his later labors as Chancellor of the German Empire, for here the author rejects in a measure the opinions held by Von Sybel and other authors and follows more nearly modern German criticism; a criticism which is becoming more schol- arly as it becomes less contemporary. Bismarck's refusal to identify himself with any political party, and his constant shifting for support from one to another of the parties of the Reichstag, is attributed by the author to the earnest conviction that, as Chancellor, he could not become a party leader. To him the Emperor was still ruler “by grace of God,” limited in some degree in the exercise of his kingly power, but still the centre and sun of all governmental activity. He, Bismarck, was merely the Emperor's representative, chosen personally by the Emperor, and not in any way responsible to the authority of votes. The wisdom or unwisdom of measures was, in the end, purely a matter for exec- utive decision, and freedom of decision could not be guaranteed if the Chancellor should ever become a party leader. Mr. Headlam maintains in fact that it was neither love of power, nor disdain of political parties, nor lack of principle that kept Bis- marck from adopting a partisan position, but pri- marily rather the desire to preserve for the mon- archy the right, always strongly manifested in the Prussian state, of exercising a controlling influence in legislation and in government. Possibly this is more didactically stated than is warranted by the author's language, but the impression is given, nev- ertheless, and as such, furnishes a clearer thread of central purpose for Bismarck's political activities than is customarily credited to him. The book con- tains many excellent illustrations and a map of Germany showing the changes made in 1866. There has been of recent years a tendency to substitute the study of economic history, correlated with the general facts of political and social development, for the older-fashioned study of theoretical economics in our secondary schools. We have doubted the wis- dom of this tendency, for elementary economic the- ory has always seemed to us to offer an almost ideal form of mental discipline for young people from sixteen to twenty years of age. In the hands of the right sort of teachers it is equal in value to geometry, the mechanical section of physics, and the structural study of a foreign language. We have feared that the substitution in question might mean a substitution of mnemonic cram for enforced intellectual self-activity. But we are bound to say that this fear is almost dispelled in the presence of The new method of teaching Economics. such a book as Mr. Henry W. Thurston's recent “Economics and Industrial History for Secondary Schools” (Scott, Foresman & Co.). There is no lack of facts in Mr. Thurston's presentation of the subject, but there is also no lack of stimulus for the best type of intellectual exertion. The exercises planned by the author are so ingenious, and the questions he sets the students so searching, that it would be difficult to devise a more valuable disci- pline than a student would gain from the conscien- tious following of the plan of work here prescribed. It means, however, a good reference library to- gether with freedom in its use, an enthusiastic instructor, and a body of students willing to depart widely from their ordinary methods of learning school lessons. Given these conditions, we know of no other text book as good for its purpose as the one now before us. It is clear in its exposition, yet does not smooth away all the difficulties; it pre- sents many facts of industrial history, yet does not preclude the necessity of digging out many more. It is, moreover, up to date, and based upon the best authorities. In fact, we are acquainted with no other elementary book which thus brings within the reach of beginners the conclusions of Seebohm and Cunningham, of Rogers and Ashley, of Weeden and Wright. The work has three parts. The first of these offers a series of inductive exercises in the economic life that surrounds us. The second and most considerable recounts the economic history of England and America. The third deals with the elements of economic theory, and for this the other two sections afford admirable preparation. We rec- ommend the book most cordially to all who are seeking this particular sort of solution of the prob- lem of teaching economics, while those who still adhere to the more orthodox method will at least find in the book a valuable adjunct to their work. “The Redemption of Africa,” a rather ambitious work, in two vol- umes (F. H. Revell Co.), is another one of the ripened fruits of the Chicago Congress of Religions in 1893, Mr. F. P. Noble, Secretary of the Congress on Africa, set before himself the task of preparing “A Story of Civilization” in Africa. The entire work is broken into three books. The first discusses “The Ancient and Mediaeval Preparation,” the second “The Religious Partition,” and the third book, “The Expansion of Missions.” The author begins with Abraham's sojourn in the land of the Nile, and attempts to follow every re- ligious influence on that continent of any import- ance from that day down to modern times. The first book is the least satisfactory of all, especially in its earlier chapters, in that it involves too many assumptions. “The Religious Partition” is a well- considered and tersely-stated estimate of the part which each of the great religious bodies of the church has had in the evangelization of that dark continent. This estimate is based on the works of the best and most recent writers on the various The religious redemption of Africa. 158 [March 1, THE DIAL phases of the civilizing and evangelizing forces at work in Africa. The third book is a still broader view of the whole question. It presents a condensed yet very readable description of the re- ligious and educational work carried on by all bodies of Christians among the negroes of the South and in the Antilles, and the part which they must take sooner or later in the evangelization of the home-land of their ancestors. The importance of educational, medical, and literary training is also emphasized by the results already achieved on these lines, particularly in South Africa. One of the most useful features of this work is the large body of maps, charts, and tables. The educational sta- tistics include colleges and universities, theolog- ical seminaries and training-schools, boarding and high schools, industrial and medical schools and kindergartens. The literary table presents the name of the language and the location where the whole or a part of the Bible is now in circulation; also statistics of African languages and peoples possess- ing Bible-versions. Among the numerous remaining statistics we note especially the “Directory of Agen- cies for the Christianization of African Peoples in Africa, America, the Antilles, and Madagascar,” the authorities used in the compilation of the work, also indexes of persons, places, societies, and sub- jects. This work is and for some time must be a valuable birds-eye view of all modern attempts to civilize and evangelize the untold millions of the Dark Continent. A Frenchman writing from personal knowledge of Lamartine, George Sand, Victor Hugo, Musset, Chopin, and others known to French letters, art, and politics, could hardly fail to be entertaining. In the volume entitled “The Literary Reminiscences of Edward Grenier" (Macmillan), translated by Mrs. Abel Ram, there is the glowing enthusiasm of one who remembers with a sort of reverent fidelity, the looks and accents of the deities of his youth. M. Grenier, has written with an easy abandon to the impres- sions that are now but memories, and very much of the fervor of his personal devotions or his personal dislike gives color to the pages. The ready gar- rulity that should flow without reserve in such reminiscences is natural to him, and the reader can not question either his veracity or his sincerity. M. Grenier had some successes as a poet himself, and the naïveté with which he tells of them gives a piquant relish to his account of the doings and say- ings of others whose larger success gave him no rankling jealousy, but only the warm appreciation of a kindred spirit in love with art, humanity, and the world. A broad, genial charity sweetens every unpleasant incident to which his pen must make record, and the tone of intellectual and moral health and soundness is finely unmistakable. The pleasure with which he told Mérimée of Goethe's praise of him is charmingly fresh in his memory of it, and the same happiness beams again in his telling of a French celebrities of fifty years. like pleasure in quoting Ary Sheffer's praise to Delacroix, and in telling him of what Goethe had written of his lithographs for Stappfer's translation of “Faust.” Altogether the book is a pleasing intro- duction to a sort of personal acquaintance with a host of writers, artists, and politicians, who pass before the reader in splendid procession. M. Grenier does not attempt to fix the rank of any of them, merely telling his little stories of them as he knew them, bidding us share Mussett's passion, lament the “subtle harmony in the three words, fame, genius, misfortune,” with Lamartine, and pass on to wait for a casual word from George Sand. One or two of the later volumes of the “Famous Scots” series (im- ported by Scribner) are less inter- esting than their predecessors, sometimes because the best subjects have been already handled, and sometimes for another reason. In the case of the volume on Robert Bruce, the necessity of detailing many matters of history makes the biography of the thinnest. There is no more famous Scot than Robert Bruce: he is the knightly hero of Scotland, even more than Sir William Wallace. But he lived centuries ago, at a time of which the history is not clearly understood in all details. Mr. Murison, then, here as in his volume on Wallace, has to spend a good part of his book in explanation and contro- versy. The result is not entertaining although it has value for purposes of information.— The vol- ume on Alexander Melville, by Mr. William Mor- ison, has something of the same drawback. Mel- ville was a typical figure, if not a man of remark- able character; and it is proper that he should be represented in any general group of Scotch worthies. On the other hand, his life is hard to write and not very easy to read. He had so much to do with the public affairs of his time, that one must spend too much space in recounting the stages in a struggle of which the results only are clearly remembered. Melville was the representative of Scottish Presby- terianism as against King James the Sixth of Scot- land and the First of England. He was beaten in the great cause to which he devoted his life, but it was through him and many lesser men like him that the cause itself was victorious. Bruce, and other Jamous Scots. Two new volumes in the “Masters masters of of Medicine” (Longmans, Green, & medicine. Co.) will be welcome, – “Claude Bernard,” by Mr. Michael Foster, M.A., and “Hermann von Helmholtz,” by Mr. John Gray M'Kendrick, M.D. Of the great French physiol- ogist to whom we owe our present knowledge of the pancreatic functions, the facts concerning his pro- fessional life are made sufficiently clear, and in so far his life is to be followed with interest; but after a brief insight into his private and personal affairs granted at the outset of the book, the rest is per- mitted to remain undisclosed. If it is interesting to read the man in his work, it is no less interesting Two notable 1900.] THE DIAL 159 to read the work through the man, and the book leaves a sense of incompleteness. Of the German whose investigations in optics and acoustics were epoch-making, there is here the opportunity to read of what it was he stood for, to his friends as well as to the seientific world. But we miss all reference to the attack upon Darwinism which is still a matter of surprise to those who think with Haeckel, and are hardly to be consoled by such a phrase as “ . . . the Darwinian hypothesis, with which Helmholtz often expressed his general agreement.” Both books give portraits of the men of whom they treat, as frontispieces, and the serene majesty of their countenances brings forth the reflection that no- where has man found the expression of intellectual development more complete than in the faces of the modern men of science. It is because they are in constant pursuit of nothing less than Truth? There is much diversity of interest in Mr. Richard Burton’s “Literary Likings” (Small, Maynard & Co.), of which our notice has been too long delayed. The dozen or more papers that make up the volume are mostly reprinted from the literary periodicals (THE DIAL among others), although two of them did their previous public duty as lectures. These two are discussions of “Washington Irving's Services to American History” and “Renaissance Pictures in Browning's Poetry.” One paper is a study in “the literary time-spirit,” as illustrated by Herr Björnson, M. Daudet, Mr. Henry James — three writers who assuredly were never before grouped together, yet who have enough in common to jus- tify the present classification. Mr. Burton ventures, in another paper, to discuss the perilous subject of “The Democratic and Aristocratic in Literature,” and escapes the extravagance which usually over- takes those who essay this theme. A group of three short papers on aspects of “Old English Poetry” betrays both the scholarly student and the appre- ciative reader. “Phases of Fiction” affords a col- lective title for four brief essays. Brownell and Stevenson are made the subjects of special studies. Altogether, there is much vigorous and sensible criticism, expressed in admirable English, in this volume. Barring the occasional allusions to books that are fast sinking into forgetfulness, the matter which Mr. Burton offers is worth preservation, and speaks well for the critical intelligence of the writer. Some appreciative literary essays. an authoritative That compendium of ancient and work on old curious learning concerning silver- *** ware, “Old English Plate,” has reached a sixth edition (Francis P. Harper), afford- ing, it is to be hoped, some recompense to its author, Mr. Wilfrid Joseph Cripps, C.B., F.S.A., for his untiring labors in this minor department of history. “Sixth edition” in this case means a careful and thorough revision in the light of the most recent learning, of the entire subject, and the additions are both many and noteworthy. First published in 1878, the work was a pioneer of its kind and it re- mains to-day the most authoritative and most inclu- sive, covering the plate of churches, colleges, and private owners alike. Considerations of the marks of many guilds of silversmiths, situated in many towns widely removed, are followed by lists of year marks, hall marks of all kinds, and the various stamps set in the finished work from the beginning of the practice in the early fifteenth century. The vexed question of the statutory origin of the year marks is not yet settled, though the hope is still strong among antiquaries that archival researches now going on will cast light upon the problem. The illustrations are excellent and profuse, and the vol- ume, a crown octavo, is an excellent specimen of book making. An earlier edition of the same book has appeared in America, somewhat abridged, and without authorization. In “Great Britain and Hanover * (Oxford University Press), Mr. A. W. Ward presents the Ford lectures delivered by him last year in the University of Ox- ford. While Mr. Ward's attention is chiefly devoted to the international action of Great Britain as affected by Hanoverian interests, he does not fail to consider also the effect of the personal union on the home policy of the two countries. His analysis of the situation leads him to conclude that, in some instances, the popular outcry against the use of the union for dynastic ends, was justified, notably when, at the expense of England's true policy, Bremen and Verden were transferred from Sweden to Han- over. Taken all in all, however, British interests were well conserved by British statesmen, and, in the light of those duties of friendship really owed to Hanover, there was small ground for the prevailing dissatisfaction with the “Hanoverian policy.” In Hanover, on the other hand, the Union, regarded with extreme favor at first, “came very slowly, but very surely, to be recognized as having retarded an enduring association with the fortunes of the Ger- man people, and with the future to which it was looking forward.” While the author disclaims any profound investigation of documentary evidence, the book is essentially the work of a scholar, written only after careful study, and distinguished by its fairness of view. Great Britain and Hanover. Mr. Le Roy Hooker expresses the English in general American feeling in respect ** of the war now waging, in his “The Africanders: A Century of Dutch-English Feud in South Africa” (Rand, McNally & Co.). He began the enquiry necessary for his work with strong pre- possessions in favor of England, from which he has drawn all his blood. But as his investigation deep- ened and broadened he lost all his admiration for the achievements of the mother country in wonder over her tergiversations, broken promises, and wild mismanagements. His book is inclusive, and pre- sents the British side of the controversy with mueh Dutch and 160 [March 1, THE DIAL impartiality, nor does he ever descend into mere par- tisanship. A brief statement of his concerning the question of civilization involved deserves to be sup- plemented by the observation that with some persons of intelligence who would shudder at the thought of “doing ill that good may come” in religious matters, the same doctrine finds easy acceptance when the ends which justify the means are those of patriotism or “civilization.” The issue of “The Day's Work” and “From Sea to Sea,” each in two volumes of the “Outward Bound" edition of the works of Rudyard Kipling (Scribner), offers an opportunity, of which we cannot avail our- selves at this moment, for a consideration of some of the aspects of Mr. Kipling's later work. Since “Captains Courageous,” which was the last of the original twelve volumes of this edition, Mr. Kipling has written a good deal that has been variously criti- cised. There have been those who thought that Mr. Kipling had reached a parting of the ways, and had chosen the wrong road. We think ourselves that Mr. Kipling's later work has the same funda- mental qualities that his earlier work had, that it lacks some of the characteristics that were apt to mar his first stories, and has gained other charac- teristics, some of which are not entirely admirable. Really far more interesting (or extraordinary) than an understanding of Mr. Kipling is the way in which Mr. Kipling has been understood, especially in this country. This is one of the most instructive things in the history of literature in America. It may be remarked that “From Sea to Sea” is not illustrated from the models of Mr. Lockwood Kip- ling, but from photographs of the places in question. Had Mr. George C. Musgrave pub- lished his “Under Three Flags in Cuba’ (Little, Brown, & Co.) a year earlier, it is safe to say that it would have been regarded as a work of the first importance. Even now, with its appearance sadly belated through the author's continued illness after the hardships of his life in Cuba, it is not a book to be lightly read or disregarded. Mr. Musgrave was an Englishman holding Spain in high favor when he went to the island as a correspondent for a British journal, and the knowledge gained on the ground saw him within a few months fighting in the insurgent ranks. He bears the testimony of an eye-witness to the disinterested valor of the Cuban patriots, but he makes little prophecy for the future. Later labors of Mr. Kipling. An Englishman with the Cuban insurgents. Such an enquiry into the facts which with Spain and are of mutual interest to Cuba and *** the United States as “Cuba and International Relations” (The Johns Hopkins Press), reflects no little credit upon its author, Dr. James Morton Callahan, Ph.D., the Albert Shaw lecturer in diplomatic history in the Johns Hopkins Univer- sity. Carefully threading his way between the devious diplomacy of Spain and the confused par- Cuba's Relations tisan politics of the United States, he fairly ex- hausts his subject within the compass of five hundred octavo pages. It is safe to conclude that no future historian of Spain, Cuba, or the United States, can afford to neglect Dr. Callahan in any of his state- ments or conclusions, which appear to be as well considered as his researches have been thorough. BRIEFER MENTION. It is not often that a scholar of Professor Paul Shorey's rank is found willing to perform the drudgery incident to the annotation of an elementary English text, and teachers who come into possession of his edition of four selected books of Pope's “Iliad” (Heath) have much reason to be grateful. The introduction and notes supplied by the editor, and the pictures provided by the publisher, combine to make this edition one of un- usual value. In a general way, the editorial apparatus embodies the same ideas that are found in Professor Shorey's edition of Horace, which we had occasion to praise about a year ago. “A Primer of French Verse for Upper Forms” (Macmillan), edited by Mr. Frederic Spencer, has for its aim “to associate with interesting extracts from the work of numerous French poets such hints as to the structure of French verse as may tend to secure cor- rect and intelligent reading of these extracts themselves and adequate appreciation of the distinctive qualities of French poetry as therein represented.” The ex- tracts are usually of some length, and are so happily cho- sen as literature (aside from their illustrative function), that the book has claimed more of our attention than we should ordinarily have given such a manual. In fact, the didactic part of the work has been reduced to a bare minimum, a feature which will recommend the Primer to judicious teachers and serious students. The third volume of “The Anglo-Saxon Review,” dated December, 1899, has just been published in this country by Mr. John Lane. The binding is cop- ied from an example made for Charles I., and covering the “Bavaria Pia” of 1628. The portraits are of Napoleon, Canning, Mr. and Mrs. Shelley, Mr. Pad- erewski, and Marie de Guise-Lorraine. The text in- cludes the following contributions, among others: “War Memories,” by Mr. Stephen Crane; “Our Sea- fights with the Dutch,” by Mr. David Hannay; “Notes on the Venezuelan Arbitration,” by Mr. G. R. Askwith; a review of “Paolo and Francesca,” by Dr. Garnett; “The Unflinching Realist,” by Mr. H. D. Traill; “Past and Future in South Africa,” by Mr. Lionel Phillips; and “Some Battlepieces,” by Mr. Sidney Low. “A General Survey of American Literature” (Mc- Clurg), by Miss Mary Fisher, is an attempt to make real the personalities of our authors and to estimate their works according to recognized canons of sound criticism. Both objects seem to have been attained so far as the limits of the book allow. The conventional biographical material is treated in a pleasing style and with discriminating sympathy. An occasional anec- dote adds flavor. There is no unmerited praise of American letters, no hero-worship. Handsomely made up, and provided with an Index, the volume is a wel- come addition to the educational force that is empha- sizing things American. 1900.] THE DIAL 161 NOTES. Mr. W. R. Jenkins publishes a pamphlet called “The Poet as Teacher,” being an address recently given by Dr. Lewis F. Mott. “The Tears of the Heliades; or, Amber as a Gem,” by Mr. W. Arnold Buffum, is published in an American edition by Messrs. G. P. Putnam's Sons. “Madame Dreyfus,” a small volume just published by Brentano's, is an “appreciation” of that devoted wife and noble woman by Miss Josephine Lazarus. The authorized American edition of Count Tolstoy's novel “Resurrection,” upon which he has been so long at work, will be issued by Messrs. Dodd, Mead & Co. on the first of this month. “Orestes A. Brownson's Middle Life,” covering the period from 1845 to 1855, being a continuation of “Brownson's Early Life,” is published at Detroit by Mr. H. F. Brownson, the author. Richard Hovey, poet, educator, and lecturer, died in New York City, Feb. 26. Mr. Hovey was but thirty- five years of age at the time of his death, and had given much promise of strong poetic powers. Messrs. Small, Maynard & Co. publish a meat edition of the “Letters of Thomas Gray,” in a selection edited, with a biographical notice, by Mr. Henry Milnor Rideout. The volume has an etched portrait. Volume III. of Mr. Thomas Mackay's “History of the English Poor Law” covers the period from 1834 to the present time, and completes this important histor- ical work. The Messrs. Putnam are the publishers. “The Makers of Modern Prose,” by Mr. W. J. Dawson (Whittaker), is a series of essays upon writers ranging from Johnson and Goldsmith to Ruskin and Newman. It is a companion to the earlier volume upon English poets, and will be followed by a third upon English novelists. The American Book Co. issue “Our Country in Poem and Prose,” a book of supplementary reading edited by Miss Eleanor A. Persons. “Four Famous American Writers” (Irving, Poe, Lowell, Taylor), by Mr. Sher- win Cody, is a volume of similar intent issued by the Werner School Book Co. Messrs. Dodd, Mead & Co. announce their removal to their new building at 35th St. and 5th Ave., where they will occupy greatly enlarged quarters. Upper Fifth avenue is steadily growing in favor with the New York book trade, and many of the leading houses are now located in that section of the city. “The Rise of Formal Satire in England under Class- ical Influence,” by Mr. Raymond Macdonald Alden, is a doctoral dissertation expanded for publication by the University of Pennsylvania. It adds one more to the list of scholarly monographs by which our universities are doing so much for the scientific study of English literature. “Kant and Spencer,” by Dr. Paul Carus, is published by the Open Court Publishing Co. It is a reprint of matter from “The Open Court” and “The Monist,” and the author is essentially right in the controversy, although he seems to inject into his comments more acerbity than is strictly necessary for the sustaining of his position. What is likely to prove the definitive and standard library edition of Tennyson has been published in ten volumes by the Macmillan Co. It includes the “Life,” by the present Lord Tennyson, which fills four volumes out of the ten. Chaste simplicity and dignity are the characteristics of this set of volumes from the mechan- ical point of view. The illustrations, of which each volume has at least one, are nearly all portraits in pho- togravure, and include all the familiar examples, besides some of the less familiar ones made by the camera of Mrs. Cameron. “Publishing a Book” (Heath), by Mr. Charles Welsh, is one of those small manuals put forth from time to time for the practical guidance of inexperienced writers for the press. It is a small volume, containing only the bare essentials. The directions are clearly given, and young writers who follow them will save themselves much annoyance. Mr. Goldwin Smith's “Shakespeare: The Man” (Doubleday) is a rather slight essay which seeks to do what Mr. Frank Harris attempted a few years ago upon a more elaborate scale, and what Dr. Brandes makes the essential thesis of his great critical work on Shakespeare — namely, to find indications of the poet's personality in the text of his plays. That the essay has both critical value and charm of expression may be taken for granted. The article on “Byron's Influence upon Goethe,” in this issue of THE DIAL, derives a sad interest from the death of its author, which occurred at Evanston, Illi- nois, the 28th of January. Miss Anna M. Bowen, a woman of rare qualities of character and scholarship, held, at the age of twenty-seven, the responsible posi- tion of Dean of the Woman's College of Northwestern University, at which institution she was graduated in 1893, afterwards studying at Cornell University, and later at Leipsic and Munich. Some of the results of her German studies she had planned to embody in a series of articles on Byron's influence on German lit- erature, of which series, now interrupted by her death, the article in this number was intended as the beginning. TOPICS IN LEADING PERIODICALS. March, 1900. Air Flight, Early Experiments in. Popular Science. America's First and Latest Colony. J. G. Leigh. Forum. Asia, The Problem of. A. T. Mahan. Harper. Benares. Julian Ralph. Harper. Berea, Educational Opportunity at. Review of Reviews. Brook Farm, A Girl at. Ora G. Sedgwick. Atlantic. China, Germany's First Colony in. Poultney Bigelow. Harper. China's Development, Western Benefits through. Forum. City Government, Unofficial. E. P. Wheeler. Atlantic. City Roadways, Modern. N. P. Lewis. Popular Science. Criminals, Typical. S. G. Smith. Popular Science. Cross-Education. E. W. Scripture. Popular Science. Customs Court, A. W. A. Robertson. Forum. Englishmen in the United States. F. Cunliffe-Owen. Forum. Foreign Policy, Growth of our. Richard Olney. Atlantic. French Literature, Place of. G. McL. Harper. Atlantic. Geology, A Century of. Joseph Le Conte. Popular Science. Germany in 1899. William C. Dreher. Atlantic. Government Deposits in Banks. G. E. Roberts. Forum. Hampton Roads Conference, The. John Goode. Forum. Indian Teacher among Indians. Zitkala Sa. Atlantic. International University, An. Angelo Heilprin. Forum. Landscape Architecture, Renaissance of. Scribner. Mediaeval Credulity, A Survival of. E. P. Evans. Pop. Sci. Merchant Marine, American. W. L. Marvin. Rev. of Rev. Methuen's Division, Fighting with. H. J. Whigham. Scribner. Mohammedan Wards, Our. Henry O. Dwight. Forum. Moose-Hunting with the Tro-Chu-Tin. T. Adney. Harper. New York at Night. James B. Carrington. Scribner. 162 [March 1, THE DIAL New York “Colony of Mercy.” Sidney Brooks. Rev. of Rev. Opera Libretti. Andrew Lang. Forum. Political Horizon, The. H. L. Nelson. Atlantic. Pretoria before the War. Howard C. Hillegas. Harper. Race, Transplantation of a. N. S. Shaler. Popular Science. “Ribbon Lightning.” Orange Cook. Popular Science. Ruskin, John. Lucking Tavener. Review of Reviews. Russian Advance in Central Asia. A. R. Colquhoun. Harper. “Salamanders” and “Salamander Cats.” Popular Science, School to College, Transition from. L. B. R. Briggs. Atlantic. Sculpture and Architecture. W. O. Partridge. Forum. “Sense of Injury,” Morbid. W. F. Becker. Popular Science. Shipping Subsidies, British. J. W. Root. Atlantic, Slaves, Emancipation of, under Moslem Law. Rev. of Rev. South Africa, Rights and Wrongs in. G. F. Becker. Forum. Southern Mountaineer, The. W. G. Frost. Rev. of Reviews. Steamship Subsidies, Policy of. A.T. Hadley. Rev. of Rev. Trolley-Car Mechanism. Wm. Baxter, Jr. Popular Science. LIST OF NEW BOOKS. [The following list, containing 71 titles, includes books received by THE DIAL since its last issue.] BIOGRAPHY AND MEMOIRS. The Life of Abraham Lincoln. Drawn from original sources and containing man eches, letters, and tele- grams now first published. By Ida M. Tarbell. In 2 vols., Alº 8vo, gilt tops, uncut. Doubleday & McClure o. $5. The Early Married Life of Maria Josepha, Lady Stanley. With extracts from Sir John Stanley's “Praeterita.” Ed- ited by one of their Grandchildren, Jane H. Adeane. Illus. in photogravure, large 8vo, gilt top, uncut, pp. 461. Long- mans, Green, & Co. $5. Shakespeare the Man: An Attempt to Find Traces of the Dramatist's Character in his Dramas. By Goldwin Smith. With portrait, 16mo, pp. 60. Doubleday & McClure Co. 75c. net. Thomas Paine. By Ellery Sedgwick. With portrait, 24mo, gilt top, uncut, pp. 150. “Beacon Biographies.” Small, Maynard & Co. 75 cts. Madame Dreyfus: An Appreciation. By Josephine Lazurus. 18mo, gilt top, uncut, pp. 54. Brentano's. 50 cts. GENERAL LITERATURE. The Anglo-Saxon Review: A Quarterly Miscellany. Ed- ited by Lady Randolph Spencer Churchill. Vol III., De- cember, 1899. With photogravure portraits, 4to, gilt top, uncut, pp. 256. John Lane. $6. net. Brook Farm: Its Members, Scholars, and Visitors. By Lindsay Swift. 12mo, gilt top, uncut, pp. 303. “National Studies in American Letters.” Macmillan Co. $1.25. The Makers of Modern Prose: A Popular Handbook to the Greater Prose Writers of the Century. By W. J. Dawson. 8vo, uncut, pp. 302. Thos. Whitaker. $2. Historical Tales from Shakespeare. By A. T. Quiller- Couch. 12mo, gilt top, uncut, pp. 435. Charles Scribner's Sons. $1.50. Malentendus. Par Th, Bentzon. Paris: Calmann Lévy. Paper. Indian Story and Song from North America. By Alice C. Fletcher. 12mo, gilt top, uncut, pp. 126. Small, Maynard & Co. $1.50 The Age of Johnson (1748–1798). By Thomas Seccombe. 16mo, pp. 366. “Handbooks of English Literature.” Macmillan Co. $1. net. The Fisher Maiden, and The Lover's Caprice. By J. Wolf- ang von Goethe ; trans, for the first time by Martha #. Bannan; with Introduction by W. Clarke Rob- inson, B.Sc. Illus, in photogravure, 12mo, gilt top, uncut, pp. 116. Philadelphia: John C. Yorston Pub’g Co. The Rise of Formal Satire in England under Classical Influence. By Raymond Macdonald Alden. 8vo, pp. 264. jºis of Pennsylvania Publications.” inn & o. 1. Letters of Thomas Gray. Selected, with a Bibliographical Notice, by Henry Milnor Rideout. With portrait, 16mo, uncut, pp. 222. Small, Maynard & Co. $1. 16mo, uncut, pp. 325. The Story of English Kings according to Shakespeare. By J. J. Burns, M.A. Illus., 12mo, pp. 272. "Home Read- ing Books.” D. Appleton & Co. 65c, net. Stories from the Arabian Nights. Selected by Adam Singleton. Illus., 12mo, pp.248. “Home Reading Books.” D. Appleton & Co. 65c. net. Briar Blossoms: Being a Collection of a Few Verses and Some Prose. By Howard Llewellyn Swisher. With por- trait, 8vo, pp. 109. Morgantown, W. Wa.: Acme Pub- lishing Co. $1. HISTORY. The Passing of the Empires, 850 B.C. to 330 B.C. By G. Maspero; edited by A. H. Sayce; trans. by M. L. Me- Clure, illus, with colored photogravures, etc., 4to, gilt top, uncut, pp. 824. D. Appleton & Co. $7.50. How England Saved Europe: The Story of the Great War, 1793–1815. By William H. Fitchett. Wols. II. and III. Each illus., 8vo. Charles Seribner's Sons. Per vol., $2. The Anglo-Boer Conflict: Its History and Causes. By * Ireland. 16mo, pp. 134. Small, Maynard & Co. 5 cts. NEW EDITIONS OF STANDARD LITERATURE. CEuvres Complètes de Molière. Miniature edition, on Oxford India paper. In 4 vols., 32mo, gilt edges. Oxford University Press. $3.50. Library of English Classics. First vols.: Bacon's Essays and Advancement of Learning, and The Plays of Richard Brinsley Sheridan. Each 8vo, uncut. Macmillan Co. Per vol., $1.50. The Compleat Angler. By Izaak Walton. Miniature edi- tion, on Oxford India paper. Size 2% X1% inches, gilt edges, pp. 587. Oxford University Press. 75 cts. Cassell's National Library, New Series. New vols.: º: den's Poems, Milton's Areopagitica, etc., Sir Philip Sid- ney's A Defense of Poesie, and Thomas Lodge's Rosalind. Each 24mo. Cassell & Co. Per vol., paper, 10cts. POETRY. Taliesin: A Masque. By Richard Hovey. 16mo, gilt edges, pp. 58. Small, Maynard & Co. $1. - Folk Songs from the Spanish. By Helen Huntington. 16mo, gilt top, uncut, pp. 75. G. P. Putnam's Sons. $1.25 net. - FICTION. To Have and to Hold. By Mary Johnston. Illus., 12mo, pp. 403. Houghton, Mifflin & Co. $1.50. Yeoman Fleetwood. By M. E. Francis (Mrs. Francis Blundell). $ 12mo, pp. 403. Longmans, Green. & Co. 1 50. One Queen Triumphant. By Frank Mathew. top, uncut, pp. 308. John Lane. $1.50. Mary Paget: A Romance of Old Bermuda. By Minna Car- oline Smith. 12mo, gilt top, pp. 326. Macmillan Co. $1.50 The Judgment of Helen. By Thomas Cobb. 12mo, gilt top, uncut, pp. 320. John Lane. $1.50. With Sword and Crucifix. By Edward S. Van Zile. Illus., 12mo, pp. 299. Harper & Bros. $1.50. The Golden Horseshoe. Edited by Stephen Bonsal. 12mo, pp. 316. Macmillan Co. $1.50. By the Marshes of Minas. By Charles G. D. Roberts. With frontispiece, 12mo, gilt top, uncut, pp. 285. Silver, Burdett Co. $1.25. A Man's Woman. By Frank Norris, 12mo, pp. 286. Double- day & McClure Co. $1.50. The Gentleman Pensioner: A Romance of the Year 1569. By Albert Lee. 12mo, pp. 351. D. Appleton & Co. $1.; paper, 50 cts. Terence. By Mrs. B. M. Croker. 12mo, pp. 320. F. M. Buckles & Co. $1.25. High Stakes. By Lawrence I. Lynch. Illus., 12mo, pp. 368. Laird & Lee. 75 cts.; paper, 25 cts. The Fate of Madame La Tour: A Tale of Great Salt Lake. By Mrs. A. G. Paddock, 12mo, pp. 310. Fords, Howard & Hulbert. $1. Aboard “The American Duchess.” By George L. Myers. 12mo, pp. 341. G. P. Putnam's Sons. $1.; paper, 50 cts. Thro' Fire to Fortune. By Mrs. Alexander. 12mo, pp. 320. R. F. Fenno & Co. $1.25. 12mo, gilt 1900.] THE DIAL 168 THEOLOGY AND RELIGION. Exploratio Evangelica: A Brief Examination of the Basis and Origin of Christian Belief. By Percy Gardner, Litt.D. Large 8vo, pp. 521. G. P. Putnam's Sons. $4.50 net. History of the Christian Church, A. D., 1517–1648. Vol. III., Reformation and Counter-Reformation. By the late Dr. Wilhelm Moeller; edited by Dr. G. Kawerau; trans. from the German by J. H. Freese, M.A. Large 8vo, uncut, pp. 476. Macmillan Co. $3.75. The Apostolic Age: Its Life, Doctrine, Worship, and Polity. By James Vernon Bartlet. 12mo, pp.542. “Ten Epochs of Church History.” Charles Scribner's Sons. $2. net. The Christian Use of the Psalms. With Essays on the Proper Psalms in the Anglican Prayer Book. º, Rev. T. K. Cheyne, M.A. 12mo, gilt top, pp. 273. E. P. Dutton & Co. $2. Theism in the Light of Present Science and Philosophy. By James Iverach, M.A. 12mo, uncut, pp. 330. acmillan Co. $1.50. The English Church from its Foundation to the Norman Conquest (597–1066). By William Hunt, M.A. 12mo, gilt top, uncut, pp. 444. Mºjº: Co. $1.50. Social Meaning of Modern Religious Movements in England: Being the Ely Lectures for 1899. By Thomas C. Hall, D.D. 12mo, pp. 283. Charles Scribner's Sons. $1.50 net. Puritan Preaching in England: A Study of Past and Present. By John Brown, D.D. 12mo, pp. 290. Charles Scribner's Sons. $1.50. An Ethical Sunday School: A Scheme for the Moral Instruction of the Young. By Walter L. Sheldon. 12mo, pp. 206. Macmillan Co. $1.25 met. Christian and Civic Economy of Large Towns. By Thomas Chalmers, D.D.; abridged and with Introduction by C. R. Henderson, 12mo, pp. 350. Charles Scribner's Sons. $1.25 net. Sunday Afternoons for the Children: A Mother Book. By E. Francis Soule. 16mo, pp. 162. Fords, Howard & Hulbert. 75 cts. Legalized Wrong: A Comment on the Tragedy of Jesus. §: Rºº. Clowry Chapman. 12mo, pp. 31. F. H. Revell - cts. POLITICAL AND SOCIAL STUDIES. A History of the English Poor Law. Vol. III., From 1834 to the Present Time. By Thomas Mackay. 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Gardens, Ancient and Modern: An Epitome of the Litera- ture of the Garden-Art. With an Historical Epilogue by Albert Forbes Sieveking, F.S.A. Illus, in photogravure, etc., 8vo, gilt top, uncut, pp. 423. Macmillan Co. $3. Outside the Garden. By Helen Milman (Mrs. Caldwell Crofton); illus. by Edmund H. New. 12mo, uncut, pp. 234. John Lane. $1.50. Popular Studies in Mythology, Romance, and Folklore. First vols.: Celtic and Mediaeval Romance, by Alfred Nutt; Folklore: What is It and What is the Good of It, by E.S. Hartland, F.S.A.; Ossian and the Ossianic Litera- ture, by Alfred Nutt; King Arthur and his Knights, by #. ... Weston. Each, 18mo. London: David Nutt. aper. Kant and Spencer. By Dr. Paul Carus. 12mo, º 150. “Religion of Science łº Open Court Publishing Co. Paper, 20 cts. EDUCATION.—BOOKS FOR SCHOOL AND COLLEGE. The Nervous System of the Child: Its Growth and Health in Education. By Francis Warner, M.D. 12mo, pp. 233. Macmillan Co. $1. A Manual of Zoology. By T. 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Adventisng RATEs furnished on application. All communications should be addressed to THE DIAL, Fine Arts Building, Chicago. No. 330. MARCH 16, 1900. Vol. XXVIII. CONTENTS. page THE HOUSE OF MOLIERE . . . . . . . . . 189 THE REALITY OF THE IDEAL. Henry C. Payne . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 191 NEW LIGHT ON LINCOLN'S LIFE. E. G. J. . 192 THE ENGLISH RADICALS. E. D. Adams . 194 MORE LETTERS OF THE MASTER OF BALLIOL. Josiah Renick Smith . . 195 THE HUDSON'S BAY COMPANY. B. A. - Hinsdale . . . . . . ... 197 SOME CURRENT FALLACIES OF CAPTAIN MAHAN. Wallace Rice . . . . . . . . . 198 STATISTICS AND CENSUS TAKING. Mar West . . . 200 THE RACES OF EUROPE. Frederick Starr . 202 BRIEFS ON NEW BOOKS . . . . . 203 An admirable account of the English novel.— Recol- lections, by Mr. Gladstone's private secretary.—The troubadours and their world. — A stimulation to the study of Milton.—The real Ettrick Shepherd.-The peasants' war.—The stage as a career.—Estimates of Tennyson, Ruskin, and other men of thought.— Francis Lieber, publicist and scholar.—A record and review of Sir Henry Irving. — Reminiscences of an anti-slavery reformer. — A myth-crop from our “new possessions.”— Experiences of an Irish magistrate.-Pepys's ghost in modern Gotham and elsewhere. BRIEFER MENTION . . 207 NOTES . 208 ANNOUNCEMENTS OF SPRING BOOKS . . 209 A classified list of over seven hundred titles of books to be issued by American publishers during the Spring of 1900. THE HOUSE OF MOLIERE. The destruction by fire of the Théâtre-Fran- çais, on the eighth of this month, is one of those calamities which appeal with overwhelm- ing force to the sympathies of the small but world-wide public of cultivated people. To the large general public, no doubt, which weighs disasters chiefly by the number of human lives concerned, such an event is merely the loss of an interesting building, to be deplored for a brief space and then forgotten. But to the comparative few who know for what the Maison de Molière has stood in the development of dramatic art and the history of human intelli- gence, the thought of its destruction, together with that of its priceless historical and artistic contents, is one of those intolerable oppressions that the mind refuses to bear all at once, that have to be gradually realized as one detail after another, whether derived from closet-study or from intimate personal association, comes back to the memory, to be reviewed in the new light of the knowledge that all these things are now of the past indeed. It seems that the exterior of the building may yet be preserved; it seems also that some of the treasures of painting and sculpture were rescued from the flames; but no reconstruction of the famous edifice, no recon- stitution of its collections, can ever again make it what it was, or offer to the twentieth-century pilgrim of culture such a shrine, hallowed by such relics, as the old building offered to the pilgrim of the nineteenth. The precursors of the Théâtre-Français are to be found in the Hôtel de Bourgogne of 1548, the Hôtel du Petit-Bourbon of 1577, the early seventeenth century Théâtre du Marais and salles de spectacle of the Palais-Royal. Two or three other theatres had a brief vogue dur- ing the seventeenth century, but it was not until the year 1680 that the action was taken which determines the beginnings of the Thé- âtre-Français in the strict sense. In that year the actors of the Marais and the Bourgogne joined forces, and were united by royal decree into the company of the Comédie-Française, which still survives, after a corporate existence of over two centuries, almost the only institu- tion of the Ancien Régime that was not swept away by the Revolution. It is to be noted that 190 [March 16, THE DIAL Molière and his fellow-players, after the period of their strolling apprenticeship to the stage, came to Paris in 1658, and played at the Petit- Bourbon and the Palais-Royal. Molière died in 1673, and after his death his companions united with the Marais troupe, thus joining the tradi- tion of Molière with the tradition of Corneille. The tradition of Racine was added by the fusion with the Bourgogne troupe, and thus, in 1680, the Comédie-Française came into its inherit- ance of the three great dramatists, their tradi- tions, their prestige, and their fame. How that inheritance has been handed down to our own time may be illustrated by the following quo- tation from M. Sarcey: “Do you know that between Got and Molière there are only seven or eight names of great actors? We have, so to speak, only to stretch out our hand to be able, across several generations, to find the first Mascarille. Got played a long time with Mon- rose, who had seen Dazincourt. Dazincourt appeared young by the side of Préville, already old. Préville had known Poisson, who is the last link of the chain up to Molière. In this way the tradition has been preserved alive from one great actor to another.” Now and then an innovation has been made in the interpretation of some character of the classical drama; when such an innovation has won the approval of the judicious, it has been adopted, and has fur- nished the starting-point for a new tradition. During the century or more that followed its foundation, the Comédie-Française occupied many homes — the Palais-Royal, the Tuileries, the Odéon, and others. It was at the Odéon that the Revolution overtook the players, inter- rupted their activities, and threw them for a time into prison. When they were released, they took possession of the building in the Rue Richelieu that they have occupied ever since, and assumed the name of Théâtre-Français— changed temporarily, in order to follow the fashion of the hour, to Théâtre de la Répub- lique. Into the building thus occupied, the lares and penates of the historical organization were gathered, and the collection of works of art and historical records has continued to accumu- late ever since. It is this collection, together with the venerable building which housed it, which was in great measure destroyed the other day, to the irreparable loss of mankind. It is only when one thinks of all that the Comédie-Française has meant for the history of dramatic art that one can realize what is . meant by the destruction of the material em- bodiments of that history. With this institu- tion are inseparably interwoven the seventeenth- century glories of Molière, Corneille, and Ra- cine, the eighteenth-century triumphs of Mari- vaux, Woltaire, and Beaumarchais, the nine- teenth-century renown of Hugo, Dumas, and Augier. Nor does the roll of its great actors — evanescent though the fame of the player be, as compared with that of the writer — sound in our modern ears with a greatly inferior rever- beration. Talma, Mars, and Rachel are still names with which to conjure, and we doubt not that a century hence such names as Got, Coquelin, and Bernhardt will be something more than dead memories of a forgotten past. Mr. Brander Matthews, in the following ima- ginary comparison, gives us some notion of what an institution like the Comédie-Française must mean to the national consciousness of a people: “To find any parallel for the career of the Comédie-Française in our language and literature we should have to rely on the imag- ination. If the Globe Theatre had been worth- ily maintained from Shakespeare's death until now ; if the best works of Shirley and Congreve and Farquhar and Sheridan and Goldsmith had been written for it; if Barton Booth and Gar- rick and Siddons and Kemble and Kean had appeared on its stage; if our memory connected it with every masterpiece of dramatic writing and acting — then we might form some idea of the position held in Paris by the Comédie- Française.” Some idea, yes, but even then a very inadequate one, for the drama, in spite of the great Elizabethans, is not nearly as import- ant a part of our literature as it is of the French, and by just that difference would our imaginary Comédie-Anglaise fall short of being what its real French prototype has been and will continue to be, even amid its strange new twentieth-century surroundings. The foreign sojourner in Paris, if possessed of the capacity for enjoying the finer sort of art, has always found his way upon an early occasion to the House of Molière in the Rue de Richelieu. He may have gone to other play-houses as a matter of curiosity, but for steady enjoyment he has soon settled down to the Français, and, however few his Parisian evenings, he has, if well-advised, spent the greater number of them at the one place where the fine fleur of French civilization is at its best. Mr. Henry James has written charm- ingly of the charm of the place, “the charm that one never ceases to feel, however often one may sit beneath the classic, dusky dome.” What he writes is so exactly expressive of the 1900.] THE DIAL 191 feelings of everyone who is susceptible to the more subtle forms of artistic appeal that we may fitly reproduce his further reflections upon the subject: “The Théâtre-Français has had the good fortune to be able to allow its tradi- tions to accumulate. They have been pre- served, transmitted, respected, cherished, un- til at last they form the very atmosphere, the vital air, of the establishment. A stranger feels their superior influence the first time he sees the great curtain go up; he feels that he is in a theatre that is not as other theatres are. It is not only better, it is different. It has a peculiar affection —something consecrated, historical, academic. This impression is deli- cious, and he watches the performance in a sort of tranquil ecstasy. Never has he seen anything so smooth and harmonious, so artis- tic and complete. He has heard all his life of attention to detail, and now, for the first time, he sees something that deserves that name. He sees dramatic effort refined to a point with which the English stage is unac- quainted. . . . He is in an ideal and exem- plary world — a world that has managed to attain all the felicities that the world we live in misses. The people do the things that we should like to do; they are gifted as we should like to be ; they have mastered the accom- plishments that we have had to give up.” The contrast offered by this exhibition of dramatic art taken seriously to the best that the En- glishman or American sees upon the stage at home is very startling, and is, considered merely as an object lesson, of prime importance. The sensational devices of our own theatres, their tawdry decorations and their crude stage management, the poses and affectations of our actors, the reliance of our actresses upon the gowns which distract an audience from proper attention to the action — all these things ap- pear in their true light after one has seen half a dozen performances in the famous French theatre. One used to think them highly ef. fective, knowing nothing better; one now dis- covers that they appertain to a primitive form of art, and contemplates with dismay the pros- pect of returning home, and having to fall back upon them for theatrical entertainment. The experience is nothing less than a revela- tion, an opening of eyes hitherto blind, and we may at least hope that when the revelation shall have come to a sufficient number of Americans, they may be able to create the de- mand requisite for the production and support of genuine dramatic art. Nor will this inspira- tion be lacking, despite the loss of the histori- cal play-house, for the spirit which made it what it has been must still survive, and we have no fear that the Comédie-Française, in whatever new home it may select for itself, will fail to carry on into the coming century the high artistic ideals that it has upheld dur- ing the century now so nearly at an end. THE REALITY OF THE IDEAL. It seems paradoxical, yet it is true, that life shows wholly life-like only in the interpretations of art. Nor is it the forms and the manner, inaptly styled realistic, but rather the less circumstantial reports of ideal art, that reveal it thus fully. Let us select from this art any group of people, either from a novel, a dramatic poem, or a painting, and we shall find that they awaken a consciousness of life in us that is much wider than their own range of time and action. Suppose we take two perfectly familiar figures from the art which stands midway between the painting and the novel. What is it in the fig- ures of Iago and Othello that makes them stand out in such splendid relief from the background of life and of the art that circumstantially repeats it 2 No real people could give so full a report of the ener- gies that gather and play around these storm-centres of life, not even those whose measure would most nearly correspond to these heroic proportions. But would not the real people have the expression that belonged to the emotions and thoughts that were active within, and should we not be able to read what was going on there as well as, or better than, we can read it in the poem, or in any art expression that might be given it? Certainly not. No doubt the real people would show something of what they thought and felt, but not enough to overcome and dominate the impression of what was external and mere scenic effect. Even if by some altogether unlikely chance the circumstance should so perfectly fit the thoughts and feelings that were active, as to show all that they were, the natures which gave them exercise would be too limited in their capaci- ties to make them a revelation of life at large. It is only when art arranges and selects and shapes life, to make it fit some ideal conception thereof, that it shows thus complete and whole. Our ideas of what life is are formed of many ex- periences and impressions. Memory saves from each some essential expression, and the rest becomes mere shadowy background or is quite forgotten. Out of the sum of these “survivals of the fittest” we get a general notion of how life would look if we could see it complete in any one of its expres- sions; that is, if the imperfect, badly shaped, and fragmentary forms in which love and envy and de- sire and hate have appeared to us in life could be shown in forms that would compass all that they 192 - THE T)IAL [March 16, are. The art, then, whose forms are such as com- prehend fully, to its potential limits, the life that is its subject, will be more life-like than life itself, an interpreter and revealer of it even to those who know it best. But life-likeness in a work of art not only de- pends upon a conception and terms that comprehend the whole range of its kind of experiences, the work must be the expression as well of a mind working in a correspondingly comprehensive way. Its terms must not only release life from the narrow bounds of the actual, but they must also be the expression of artistic perceptions as wide in their range as that of the life out of which the conception has been formed. Now, perception and feeling reach both ways, and every state of mind and every act is de- termined by negative as well as by positive compul- sions. This needs not to be proved, for experience everywhere witnesses to it. It is shown in the equally imperative “do” and “do not ” of every civil, moral, and religious code, in the divergent percep- tions and sentiments of good and evil that determine all conduct, in every fear that waits upon every hope, in every hope that waits upon every fear. A work of art, then, must be the product of the artist's perceptions and feelings, on both sides of his subject, if it is to be a full expression of his mind about it. In Iago, evil shows all real and human, without a single incompetence or failure, as of pointed ear or cloven hoof, because a great ap- preciation of what he is not, worked together and equally with a great hatred and a clear intellectual perception of what he is, in creating him. Othello is thus completely convincing, because the mind that conceived his joy had an equal perception of the anguish that waited upon it, and the mind that conceived “the pity of it” conceived it in such moving terms because it realized the opposite po- tentialities of the soul with the same full and pas- sionate appreciation. The artist has here confessed himself, and in large, from limit to limit, disclosing the whole vast reach of his thought and feeling from the Olympian peak of his desire to the black depth which limits his perception of related evil. The ideal is thus the only real art, because it alone disengages life from its encumbrances, its ac- cidents of time and place and scene; because it alone joins together the broken pieces that show in its single incidents and events, and presents them in an intelligible and organic whole. And not only by its fuller revelation of life is it more real than the art that is miscalled so, or even than life itself, but also because the spirit that has created it has infused a full measure of its own life into the ex- pression it has given the other. And, after all, it is this that has entered into it, this virtue, this pas- sion of the heart and brain that have conceived it, that makes it moving. This it is that, like the quiver in a voice, plays on the heart-strings. This is the breath of life, to its cold and perfect forms. HENRY C. PAYNE. Čbe #tº $ooks. NEW LIGHT ON IIINCOLN'S LIFE." The distinctive value of Miss Tarbell's Life of Lincoln lies in the fact that it is to some extent based on independent research, and con- tains a considerable amount of new and inter- esting information. This information is the fruit of the systematic and extensive inquiries instituted in 1894 by the proprietors of “Mc- Clure's Magazine,” with a view to securing, ere it was too late, such reminiscences of Lin- coln's then surviving contemporaries as were worth preserving. As the enterprise, aside from its commercial character, was rightly felt to be of a quasi-public nature, the public was asked to coöperate in it; and the invitation was freely responded to. Hundreds of replies from all parts of the country were received, and a good deal of new and useful matter was se- cured. This matter was largely embodied in the two series of articles by Miss Tarbell which appeared in “McClure's Magazine” during the past five years, the first one covering Lincoln's life up to 1858, and the second one dealing with the later and more strictly historical phase of his career. Both series, in a revised and sup- plemented form, are published in the present volumes. Miss Tarbell's work has thus been largely one of compilation, and she has done it for the most part in a thorough and workmanlike way. She has given us a straightforward, plain nar- rative, copiously strewn with extracts and an- ecdotes, and free from rhetorical flourish or attributions of the Parson Weems variety. An appendix of some two hundred pages is devoted to a miscellaneous collection of hitherto unpub- lished speeches, letters, and telegrams, some of which are worth preservation, others, in our opinion, not. Let us hasten to say, however, that the new material presented by Miss Tarbell is, as she claims, of considerable value, and adds much to our knowledge of Lincoln's life. It is not a mere new budget of Lincoln stories tending to vulgarize one of the noblest figures in our history. It is time to have done with the no- tion that Abraham Lincoln was in the main a wag, a dry joker with an uncommon fund of “ horse-sense,” and a backwoodsman's boorish *THE LIFE of ABRAHAM LINcolN. Drawn from origi- nal sources, and containing many speeches, letters, and tele- grams now first published. By Ida M. Tarbell. In two volumes, illustrated. New York: Doubleday & McClure Co. y 1900.] 193 THE DIAL contempt of learning and good manners. With all his humor, his not always delicate drollery, there was a vein of the profoundest melan- choly in Lincoln's nature. He loved mourn- ful poetry, and was haunted by mournful fan- cies. The pathos of life touched him deeply, the more so because his own days were full of it. He thirsted for learning, and prized it not alone as a means, but as an end in itself. How ardently he had pursued it his later mastery of language, of a singularly pure and impres- sive style, attests. Miss Tarbell endeavors to show that Lin- coln's mother was “not the nameless girl that she has been so generally believed,” and that his father was in reality something more than a shiftless “poor white.” Lincoln's biog- raphers, eager to enhance the in any case re- markable story of his rise from the log cabin to the White House, have perhaps overdrawn his humble parentage and early privations. Later researches tend to show that some in- justice has in this way been done to Thomas Lincoln, and especially to Nancy Hanks, who is now known to have come of good Massachu- setts stock, her more immediate ancestors pass- ing into Virginia (where the records show that they owned nearly a thousand acres of land), and thence into Kentucky, where they were useful and thrifty members of the young com- munity. On the death of her parents a home was found for Nancy Hanks, then nine years of age, with an uncle and aunt who had a farm near Springfield, where a number of her Vir- ginia relatives were living. Dr. Graham, an entertaining Kentucky cen- tenarian now living, describes the wedding of Thomas Lincoln and Nancy Hanks, and also the “infare” that followed it — a Homeric marriage feast to which everybody was bidden, and of which Dr. Graham has, very naturally, a distinct remembrance. The “infare” was giv- en by the bride's guardian, John H. Parrott; and, says Dr. Graham, “only girls with money had guardians appointed by the court.” Mr. Parrott's notions of an “infare” menu were liberal : “We had,” says Dr. Graham, “bearmeat; . . . ven- ison; wild turkey and ducks; eggs, wild and tame, so common that you could buy them at two bits a bushel ; maple sugar, swung on a string, to bite off for coffee or whiskey; syrup in big gourds; peach-and-honey; a sheep that the two families barbecued whole over coals of wood burned in a pit, and covered with green boughs to keep the juice in; and a race for the whiskey bottle.” The home to which Thomas Lincoln took his bride was a log cabin; but at that date few families in Kentucky had anything better. That Lincoln's “credit was good,” in a finan- cial sense, we have evidence, descendants of two of the early store-keepers of Hardin county still remembering charges against him in their grandfathers' account-books. Tools and gro- ceries were the chief purchases made, and on one of the ledgers the amazing item of “a pair of silk suspenders, worth one dollar and fifty cents” was entered. In 1816 Lincoln was ap- pointed a road surveyor, or supervisor; and on the whole his position in Hardin county seems to have been better than he is usually credited with. In 1803 he moved to La Rue county; and here his second child, Abraham Lincoln, was born. The new home, into which the well- starred little stranger came, was indeed the rude dwelling of the western pioneer—a one- roomed cabin with a huge outside chimney, a single window, and a rough door; but the stock descriptions of its comfortless squalor are over- drawn. The Lincolns lived roughly, but they lived happily, and as comfortably as most of their neighbors. In 1816 the Lincolns emigrated to Indiana; and here their home seems to have been much more primitive than it had been in Kentucky. The country was a wilderness, and land had to be cleared for the planting of the first crop. For a year the family lived in a “half-face camp.” “The cabin which took the place of the “half-face camp’ had but one room, with a loft above. For a long time there was no window, door, or floor; not even the traditional deer-skin hung before the exit; there was no oiled paper over the opening for light; there was no puncheon covering on the ground. The furniture was of their own manufacture. The table and chairs were of the rudest sort—rough slabs of wood in which holes were bored and legs fitted in. . . . Little Abraham's bed was even more primitive. He slept on a heap of dry leaves in the corner of the loft, to which he mount- ed by means of pegs driven into the wall.” Those early pioneering days in Indiana were indeed, as Lincoln said, “pretty pinching times,” darkened, too, by his first great sorrow; for in 1818 Nancy Hanks Lincoln, “infare” doings and rose-hued “infare” prospects far enough behind her, laid down the burdens of her rough life; and the boy saw his father nail together a green pine box and put his dead mother into it, and bury her not far from the cabin, “almost without a prayer.” In the year following Thomas Lincoln went back to Kentucky, and presently returned with a new wife — Sally Bush Johnston, a woman of energy, thrift, and gentleness, who took the motherless boy at once under her wing, and 194 THE DIAL [March 16, did her best to foster the gifts she saw were in him. “The new mother came well provided with household furniture, bringing many things unfamiliar to little Abraham—“one fine bureau, one table, one set of chairs, one large clothes-chest, cooking utensils, knives, forks, bedding, etc.” . . . In his habits of reading and study the boy had little encouragement from his father, but his stepmother did all she could for him. Indeed, be- tween the two there soon grew up a relation of touching gentleness and confidence.” The books that we know Lincoln read at this period were, the Bible, Pilgrim's Progress, AEsop's Fables, a History of the United States, Weems's Life of Washington, and, later, the Statutes of Indiana. Blackstone, too, came later, as did Burns and Shakespeare. There is a story that he read Plutarch; but this he denied. Besides these works there were many others whose titles we do not know; for Lin- coln used to say that he “read through every book he had ever heard of in that country for a circuit of fifty miles.” As he read, he made extracts, sometimes on a smooth board in lieu of paper, with his turkey-buzzard quill and brier-root ink. “By night he read and worked as long as there was light, and he kept a book in the crack of the logs in his loft, to have it at hand at peep of day. . . . Every lull in his daily labor he used for reading, rarely going to his work without a book. When ploughing the fields of Spencer county, he found frequently a half hour for reading, for at the end of every long row the horse was allowed to rest, and Lincoln had his book out and was perched on a stump or fence, almost as soon as the horse had come to rest.” Thus Abraham Lincoln began,-through sheer force and probity of character, and over a path perhaps as rough as ever climbed by man, to work his way upward. But to say that he was a “self-made man,” a man that “owed everything to himself,” is to tell only half the truth; for he was most richly en- dowed by Nature. Her gifts to him were lav- ish; and he made the most of them. Much has been said, too, and with a certain truth, of Lincoln’s “great simplicity of character"; but it must not be forgotten, on the other hand, that his homely ways and quaint ex- terior were mated with a political ambition and a political shrewdness almost unmatched in our history. But as man, as advocate, and as politician, he was, first, last, and always, “honest Abe.” His right to that fine title can never be questioned. Of all American states- men his life best deserves to be read and laid to heart by American youth. It forms a story in which mirth and pathos are strangely mingled — a story full of interest and golden lessons, and saturated with the distinctive spirit and character of our national life. Miss Tarbell has told it, on the whole, satisfactorily. Her book contains something that is new, and the essentials of the old. It aims to be biog- raphy rather than history—to set before the reader as clearly as possibly the real Lincoln. The style is plain, and savors of journalism, as the origin of the work would lead one to ex- pect; but it is clear and pithy. Evidences of hurried proof-reading there are, for example a curious omission at the foot of page 20, Vol. I. The volumes are well made and ac- ceptably illustrated; but why, in the name of common sense and rational book-making, was that essential feature, an Index, omitted? E. G. J. THE ENGLISH RADICALS.* No more readable historical monograph has appeared of late than Mr. Roylance Kent's “The English Radicals.” The author is aston- ishingly fertile in his characterization of the radical political leaders of varying periods, calling attention to and emphasizing differences not heretofore noted in their activities. This, with a keen analysis of radical platforms and principles, all excellently stated, makes the book exceedingly interesting, while the impres- sion of scholarship and research is maintained throughout. Mr. Kent traces the radical movement from its inception in 1761 to the present time. Un- usual fairness distinguishes the accounts of the earlier radicals, even when they were, like Wilkes, really inspired by sordid motives and given to disreputable political manoeuvres. Though individuals may have been sordid, the radical party as a whole, according to Mr. Kent, possessed great intellectual ability and an honest fervor for democratic government, though somewhat lacking in political common sense and in practicality, and in these days of historical adulation for the men of action in details of government, it is refreshing to find an author who is not afraid to emphasize and eulogize the influence of great ideas, and of the men who consistently labored in their propaga- tion. The early radical was essentially an agitator and as such naturally devoted more attention to the benefits of an ideally perfect system than *THE ENGLISH RADICALs. An Historical Sketch. By C. B. Roylance Kent. New York: Longmans, Green, & Co. 1900.] THE DIAL 195 to its practical workings. Yet the effort of the agitator in arousing the nation to a sense of danger is quite as essential as that of his more fortunate successor, the practical politician, who suffers none of the hardships and social disbarments of his forerunner, and commonly receives all the applause. Mr. Kent gives full credit to the men of ideas, for their honesty of purpose, their enthusiasm, and their sincere belief in the healing virtues of their plans. If the author is anywhere harsh it is in the comparison made, in the final chapter, between the purpose and attitude of the early radicals and the radicals of to-day. The early radical was a believer in the theory of “delegated " government, the modern rejects the theory though acting in indirect subservience to it; Cobden and Bright deified individualism in government and in commerce, while the mod- ern radical is an adherent of socialistic pro- grammes in both. James Mill expressed the radical doctrine of his time very well when he observed that “the desire so often expressed that we should interfere to establish good gov- ernment all over the world is most alarming, and, if asserted to any degree, would lead to the worst of consequences. . . . The business of a nation is with its own affairs.” The rad- icals of -to-day, like their conservative oppo- nents, seem fully agreed that this an “outworn and unfashionable creed and that the white man has a burden which it is his duty to take up.” But it is especially in the spirit of the old and new that the difference is most strik- ing. Of this Mr. Kent says: “It is rather in their traits, their character, their temperament and disposition that the new radicals con- trast so strongly with the old. The latter had at least some well-defined ideas. . . . They knew exactly what they wanted, and, knowing it, they pursued it with un- conquerable zeal. . . . They were no light half believ- ers of their casual creeds; the principles they held, they grasped with hooks of steel. They were men who sig- nified somewhat, as Cromwell would have said. If they held unpopular opinions they had the courage to avow them; . . . such firmness of conviction, such disinter- ested zeal, such limitless philanthropy, and such optim- ism, are at present far to seek. . . . Upon what princi- ple the new radicalism is now based, or what unity underlies the various items of its programme, it is dif- ficult to see. . . . Never before have the Radicals pre- sented so disorganized, so undisciplined a body.” Whatever may be the opinion of the reader as to the justice of the author's conclusion, the book everywhere attracts and hold the interest. It has a good Index and abounds with foot- note references to authoritative sources. E. D. ADAMs. MORE LETTERS OF THE MASTER OF BALLIOL.* The “Life and Letters of Benjamin Jowett,” by Evelyn Abbott and Lewis Campbell, pub- lished in 1897, was widely welcomed by schol- ars and all thoughtful people who had come under the peculiar spell of the Master of Balliol. It was inevitable that a man who had lived at one of the centres of English thought and scholarship for the greater part of the nineteenth century, who had been on terms of intimate friendship with many of the leading men of his time, and who had pre- served an attitude of serene and fearless independence under some pretty sharp tests of this quality, should have left a fascinating accumulation of correspondence. And though Jowett, shortly before his death, burned all or nearly all of the letters he had received, the more precious half — his own letters— was found to be largely at the disposal of the editors. None knew better than Dr. Abbott and Dr. Campbell that they had not exhausted their treasure; and they have now given us the present volume, containing, to quote the Pre- face,— “A number of letters, partly on special subjects, and partly of more general interest, which could not be in- cluded in the previous volumes, and yet seemed to be worth preserving; and also some documents of a more public nature, which throw light on important features of Jowett's career.” The letters are divided topically under five heads, as follows:–I., Church Reform and the Abolition of Religious Tests; II., Educational; III., European Politics; IV., Letters on India; W., Miscellaneous. The arrangement under each head is of course chronological; and a sixth division contains many of the Master's dated and undated notes and sayings which “live in the memory of his friends.” The mere titles of these divisions forcibly suggest the varied intellectual powers of the man and the extraordinary range of his sym- pathies. In the battle for the abolition of religious tests at the universities, the smoke of which has now blown away, Jowett took an advanced and decided stand, which is too well known to need description here. When he was examined, in 1871, before a committee of * LETTERs of BENJAMIN Jowett, M.A., Master of Balliol College, Oxford. Arranged and edited by Evelyn Abbott, M.A., LL.D., and Lewis Campbell, M.A., LL.D. New York: E. P. Dutton & Co. 196 THE DIAL [March 16, the House of Lords, he comprehensively said: “I should not bind a person by the obligation of a test. I should like to put before the Committee this consideration. Supposing you had one class of profes- sors bound by tests; for instance, supposing the Church of England Divinity professors were bound by tests, and other Divinity professors were not bound by tests, which do you suppose would have the greater authority and weight — the persons who were free to speak what they thought, or the persons who were obliged to speak within a certain limit 7” In a précis which he drew up in 1874 for Lord Sherbrooke, he sums up the Non-con- formist situation with pungent equity: “The relation of the Church to the Dissenters, and of the Dissenters to the Church, is the greatest and worst schism in the Christian world. They divide the nation: these divisions affect all our politics, education, Church reform, etc. This division affects society, upper and middle classes, gentlemen and tradesmen — ‘See how these Christians’ look down upon one another or hate one another. The sense of injustice has passed into the blood and bone of one half of the people of England. They were driven out in 1661, and have never been restored.” Jowett kept a watchful eye on European politics; and his views are freely expressed in his letters to Sir R. B. D. Morier, attaché at Berlin, and subsequently Ambassador to Rus- sia. From his position near the Prussian court Morier naturally reflected — at any rate he quite understood — the distrust which Prus- sia then (1861) felt toward Louis Napoleon; and it is interesting and even amusing to note Jowett's attempts to convert his friend to his own strange admiration for “the man of des- tiny” and his “missions.” In 1861 he writes to Morier: “How I should like to have a good talk about for- eign politics with you ! You know I was always a Napoleonist, as far as is consistent with being an Englishman. The way I come to it is this; the map of Europe is badly settled at present in accordance with traditions of Vienna, rights of petty German princes, etc. In the next twenty years it must be re- settled, and the only person who can lend a guiding hand in the resettlement is N. I have been very much struck with his Idées, which I read lately, and also with what one of the librarians of the British Museum told me, that for years he used to read there daily. He is not scrupulous, and perhaps his Court may be a mass of immorality and his Ministers dishonest jobbers, but he is the only man who sees the end many moves on, and understands not only France, but Europe and the times. . . . He will not fall into the error of his uncle of doing things too rapidly. And he has the best plan of all — to have no plan.” In July, 1870, the rush of events drew from Jowett this plaint, with “something of pro- phetic strain”: “The Emperor seems to have lost his head. I fear that this will be the end of his dynasty and the ruin of France. And I don't want to see him ruined, for he has been the best friend of England, and though on the whole my sympathies go with the Protestant power, yet we have need of both France and Prussia in Europe. These wars tend to make other wars, for although France may be too much weakened to continue, she will fight again as soon as she recovers her strength. The hatred of France to England from 1815 to 1855 will be as nothing compared with her abiding hatred of Prussia.” The letters on India are largely concerned with the educational requirements for the Civil Service. They are addressed to Lord Lans- downe (Viceroy from 1888 to 1893), Lord Salisbury, Sir M. E. Grant Duff (the governor of Madras) and others; and deserve a more attentive reading than they will probably get in America: for they are marked by Jowett's best qualities — perspicacity of statement, sound reasoning, and an ardent desire for the improvement of the service. The personal traits which made the Master of Balliol so beloved of his friends shine with special brightness in the miscellaneous letters to Tennyson, Stanley, Frances Power Cobbe, Professor Abbott, Professor Campbell, and others. From one of these it may be well to quote his opinion of Matthew Arnold : “No one ever united so much kindness and light- heartedness with so much strength. He was the most sensible man of genius whom I have ever known and the most free from personality, and his mind was very far from being exhausted.” The collection of aphoristic sayings with which the volume concludes is a mine from which various minds will dig out their own treasures; here are a few we have taken at ran- dom: (Memory). —“A man should make a compact with his memory, not to remember everything. Great memories, like that of Sir William Hamilton, are apt to disable judgment.” (Rank). — “I do not doubt that one day such dis- tinctions will vanish. While they remain, I wonder at any one not taking advantage of them.” (Youth and Age). —“I hope our young men will not grow into such dodgers as these old men are. I believe everything a young man says to me.” (Christian Evidences). —“The man who asks for demonstration must be either very ignorant or an utter sceptic.” (The Limit of Scepticism). — There must come a reaction towards religion again; the void will be too great.” The book is, as intended, a welcome and almost necessary supplement to the “Life and Letters”; and those who have the one will want the other. Josiah RENICK SMITH. 1900.] THE DIAL 197 THE HUDSON’s BAY COMPANY.” How engaging a subject he has found for his pen in his “The Great Company,” Mr. Beckles Willson shows in the very paragraph, the last of his first chapter, in which he defines the aim and purpose of his book. “To narrate the causes which first led to the forma- tion of this Company, the contemporary interest it ex- cited, the thrilling adventures of its early servants, of the wars it waged with the French, and drove so valiantly to a victorious end; its vicissitudes and grad- ual growth; the fierce and bloody rivalries it combated and eventually overbore; its notable expeditions of research by land and sea; the character of the vast country it ruled and the Indians inhabiting it; and last but not least, the stirring and romantic experiences con- tained in the letters and journals of the Great Com- pany's factors and traders for a period of above two centuries, such will be the aim and purpose of this work.” It is to be regretted that Mr. Willson has not done better justice to the importance and interest of a subject that he so well under- stands. He shows commendable diligence and application in the accumulation and pre- sentation of material that is at once interest- ing and valuable, but he does not show literary art, or even a good book-maker's skill. He does not handle his matter to good advan- tage. Sometimes he seems to miss the con- nection of events, and his narrative becomes confused and vexing to the reader. Some- times long quotations are introduced where a sentence or two of summary would answer a better purpose. Sometimes he goes into too much detail, and then again not into enough. Sometimes the sources of the narrative are given, and sometimes they are not. We do not blame him for not being a Parkman; we do not say that his narrative is always heavy and slow; but it does seem a pity that he should not have made a more effective use of the picturesque and romantic elements of his story. As to grammar and style, it would be easy to select from the 541 octavo pages enough bad examples to stock a couple of common school text-books, although we must admit that they would fall considerably short of the required variety. We cannot attempt to epitomize the long story that Mr. Willson tells, beginning with the schemes of the promoters — those undaunted *THE GREAT ComPANY. Being a history of the honourable company of merchant-adventurers trading into Hudson's Bay. By Beckles Willson. With an Introduction by Lord Strath- cona and Mount Royal, present governor of the Hudson's Bay Company, and Original Drawings by Arthur Heming. New York: Dodd, Mead & Co. adventurers Groselliers and Radisson, grace- less scamps, who were equally ready to ply their trade under the French and the English flags, – and closing with the Great Com- pany's far more extensive but prosaic busi- ness of the present time. How much chro- nological territory is included is seen when we recall that the story fills the period from Prince Rupert, the dashing cavalry officer of the royal army in the civil war, who was the first President of the Company, to his present successor, Lord Strathcona and Mount Royal, who is engaged just at present in fitting out in Canada a command of four hundred mounted men to fight the Boers in South Africa, all to be paid out of his share of the profits that the Company has made. Or, again, the scene opens with a single feeble trading post clinging to the shore of the great inland sea, then little known, which gives the Company its name; it closes with the great and powerful organization that counts its well-established and well-furnished posts by scores, spread over the vast regions of the North, to which the picturesque name The Great Fur Land was once applied. Within the field of the Company's operations in the North there has been a great change since the latter part of the seventeenth century, but how small it is compared with the corresponding change in the outer world! We shall quote three or four passages that will show the quality of the book at its best. Our first selections reveal the awful waste at- tending the maintenance of savage life in the far North. “The Indians were ruthless slaughterers of animals at the earliest period at which they were known to the servants of the Company. Whether they happened to be under the pinch of necessity or enjoying themselves in all the happiness of wealth and plenty, it was their custom to slay all they could. They boasted a maxim that “the more they killed, the more they had to kill.” Such an opinion, although opposed to reason and to common sense, was clung to with great pertinacity by them. The results of this indiscrimate slaughter were obvious; and to such a pitch of destitution were the tribes often brought that cannibalism was not infrequent amongst them.” “Throughout their progress [down the streams to the factories] the Indians were obliged to go ashore for several hours daily, which caused great delay in their progress. Their canoes were small, holding only two men and a pack of one hundred beaver skins, with not much room for provisions. Had their canoes been larger, their voyages would undoubtedly have been less protracted, and they would have been able to transport a greater cargo. Often great numbers of skins were left behind.” “A good hunter of these nations could kill six hun- 198 [March 16, THE DIAL dred beavers in the course of a season; he could carry down to the factory rarely more than one hundred, using the remainder at home in various ways. Sometimes he hung them upon branches of trees by way of votive offering upon the death of a child or near relation; often they were utilized as bedding and bed coverings; occasionally the fur was burnt off, and the beast roasted whole for food at banquets.” What the poor savages got for the furs that they brought down to the shore in those times, this paragraph shows: “It was reported that in the year 1742 the natives were so discouraged in their trade with the Company that many found the peltry hardly worth the carriage, and the finest furs sold for very little. When the tribes came to the factory in June they found the goods much higher in price, and much in excess of the standard they were accustomed to. According to Joseph la France, a French-Canadian voyageur, they gave but a pound of gunpowder for four beavers, a fathom of tobacco for seven beavers, a pound of shot for one, an ell of coarse cloth for fifteen, a blanket for twelve, two fish-hooks or three flints for one, a gun for twenty-five, a pistol for ten; a common hat with white lace cost seven beavers, an ax four, a bill-hook one, a gallon of brandy four, a checkered shirt seven, all of which sold at a monstrous profit, even to two thousand per cent.” First and last it is slight exaggeration to say that the fur trade in America, while conducted on a far smaller scale than the quest for gold, was marked by a selfishness and cruelty equally great. Here is our author's description of the mot- ley throng of humanity that the motives which carried on the fur trade in the palmy days of the Northwest Company brought together in the season on the farther shore of Lake Supe- rior, around the walls of Fort William. “But if the scene within was noisy and animated, that without beggared description. Hundreds of voy- ageurs, soldiers, Indians, and half-breeds were encamped together in the open, holding high revel. They hailed from all over the globe, England, Ireland, Scotland, France, Germany, Italy, Denmark, Sweden, Holland, Switzerland, America, the African Gold Coast, the Sandwich Islands, Bengal, Canada, with Creoles, vari- ous tribes of Indians, and a mixed progeny of Bois Brulés or half-breeds. ‘Here,' cries one trader, “were congregated on the shores of the inland sea, within the walls of Fort William, Episcopalians, Presbyterians, Methodists, Sun-worshippers, men from all parts of the world whose creeds were wide as poles asunder, united in one common object, and bowing down before the same idol.’” Among the interesting portions of the book are the accounts of the exploring expeditions conducted by Hearne and Mackenzie to the Arctic and to the Pacific oceans, and the Lord Selkirk episode. Mr. Willson's account of Mackenzie's expedition from Fort Chippewan to the Pacific in 1792–93 well illustrates that lack of definiteness which is one of the most serious blemishes of his book. He does not tell us where Mackenzie crossed the Rocky Moun- tains, or, having done so, by what route he made his way to the ocean. This is his account of the close of the expedition: “The navigation of the river, although interrupted by rapids and cascades, was continued until the 23d, when the party reached its mouth. Here the river was found to discharge itself by various smaller channels into the Pacific. “The memorable journey was now finished, and its purpose completed. In large characters, upon the sur- face of a rock under whose shelter the party had slept, their leader painted this simple memorial — “‘Alexander Mackenzie, from Canada by land the 22d of July, one thousand seven hundred and ninety-three.’” We are left wholly in the dark as to the name of this river and as to the spot where the intrepid explorer painted his vermillion- colored memorial. Such indefiniteness as this in a work of this description is inexcusable. Still the author is entitled to the praise of having brought together in an accessible and readable form a vast amount of important in- formation relative to a great subject. B. A. HINSDALE. SOME CURRENT FALLACIES OF CAPTAIN MAHAN.” The proverbial failure of the sailor as an equestrian seems nowhere more lamentably ap- parent than in Captain Alfred T. Mahan's present pose as “the man on horseback.” Colonel Thomas Wentworth Higginson has had recent occasion to characterize his views as “the naval board of prize-money theory,” and the recent collection of his papers in the volume called “Lessons of the War with Spain, and Other Articles” fails to show any higher notion of right than is held in the word might. Within the limits of his profession, which is the art of killing his fellows, Captain Mahan speaks with a certain authority; upon matters of more general interest, he is performing at the present time an even more useful function as the outspoken advocate of — “The good old rule, the simple plan: That those should take who have the power, And those should keep who can.” Of “The Lessons of the War with Spain,” accordingly, there is little to be said so far as the naval aspect of the case is concerned; though such statements as this, “If we lost *LEssons of THE WAR witH SPAIN, and Other Articles. By Captain Alfred T. Mahan, D.C.L. Boston: Little, Brown, & Co. 1900.] THE DIAL 199 ten thousand men, the country could replace them; if we lost a battleship, it could not be replaced,” ought to serve in illustrating the difference in morals between times of war and times of peace. . But when we come to “The Moral Aspect of War,” the second paper of the book, we find ourselves in the midst of an argument against peace so far as peace is bound up in the idea of arbitration, which shows that the writer is unable to think in any terms but those of war. He illustrates the injustice of arbitration, for example, by the admission, on disinterested authority, that the United States had no doctrine of international law behind its intervention in Cuba, and that a board of ar- bitration would have denied its right so to inter- vene. This is the preliminary statement he makes concerning the status ante bellum : “In the island of Cuba, a powerful military force, — government it scarcely could be called,—foreign to the island, was holding a small portion of it in enforced subjection, and was endeavoring, unsuccessfully, to re- duce the remainder. In pursuance of this attempt, measures were adopted that inflicted immense misery and death upon great numbers of the population. Such suffering is indeed attendant upon war; but it may be stated as a fundamental principle of civilized war- fare that useless suffering is condemned.” Captain Mahan proceeds to ask, “Under such circumstances, does any moral obligation lie upon a powerful neighboring state?” It is useless, perhaps, to point out that he begs the entire question when he introduces the word “powerful.” For “Cuba" in the quo- tation substitute “Luzon,” and ask, what is Japan's duty in the premises? Evidently, if there is a principle behind Captain Mahan's doctrine, it is a mere question of Japan's ability to take Luzon away from us; and on such principle as he here discloses, if Japan can, she ought. But regard this in the ser- ious light of being an argument against arbi- tration: that, rather than arbitrate, being powerful enough, we are to stop the slaughter of Cubans in order to place our citizens in a position where the lives of ten thousand of them are of less value than a battleship; our army in the position of performing much such a service for the Filipinos as Spain had pre- viously been performing, and finally, to fly in the face of all international law, which has expressly reserved to nations the right to mind their own business in their own way. And all, as Captain Mahan points out, undisguis- edly, in the ultimate analysis for no better reason than because we had the power. What becomes of moral force in the face of the Captain's thirteen-inch guns? From this he passes to “The Relations of the United States to their New Dependencies.” Here we are to learn from England how to rule. Learn what from England? For one thing, “administration from without" in trop- ical regions. What have we learned from England in respect of the North American Indian 2 “Since she lost what is now the United States, Great Britain has become be- nevolent and beneficent to her colonies,” Cap- tain Mahan says in one place, and in another, “The task is novel to us; we may make blund- ers.” What, then are we to “lose ’’ in order to become as benevolent and beneficent as, for example, England has been in South Africa or the Soudan 2 We are not told; but we may discover why it is that we should govern from without in the British manner, and the answer is worth recording, for Captain Mahan forgets the appeal to the national conscience and the God he has been invoking and says, baldly: “It is our interest. . . . Enlightened self-interest demands of us to recognize not merely, and in general, the imminence of the great question of the farther East, which is rising so rapidly before us, but also, specifically, the importance to us of a strong and bene- ficent occupation of adjacent territory.” What do we gain? The answer is ready: “The inhabitants may not return love for their bene- fits, comprehension or gratitude may fail them; but the sense of duty achieved, and the security of the ten- ure, are the reward of the ruler.” And what do we lose? Every principle dear to us: liberty, equality, taxation with representation, the consent of the governed, democracy, and the Constitution itself The book concludes with a paper upon “Current Fallacies upon Naval Subjects.” Those whose memory goes back a few years will remember that it is upon Captain Mahan more than any other single person that the nation relied in its annexation of Hawaii. In 1893 he began calling our attention to the fact that we must decide “Whether the Sand- wich Islands . . . shall in the future be an outpost of European civilization, or of the comparative barbarism in China,” the Flowery Kingdom being about to send forth another Mongol horde armed with weapons of precis- ion and battleships galore for the purposes of his argument. Later we were informed of “The importance of the Hawaiian Islands as a position powerfully influencing the commercial and military 200 THE DIAL [March 16, control of the Pacific, and especially of the northern Pacific, in which the United States, geographically, has the strongest right to assert herself.” And to this was added the following significant Sentence: “These are the main advantages, which can be termed positive: those, namely, which directly advance commer- cial security and naval control.” With still later and stronger statements to the same end the naval historian buttressed his position, and to secure the naval control of the Pacific Hawaii was annexed,— and our legis- lators are now devising some limitation of the franchise which shall not throw the islands into the hands of the Kanakas, or rightful owners thereof. But almost to our dismay, in this last paper, Americans are told that this was a current fallacy upon naval subjects in the following unmistakable language (p. 801): “We now come to the assertion that if the United States takes to itself interests beyond the sea—of which Hawaii is an instance,—it not only adds to its liabilities, which is true, but incurs an unnecessary exposure, to guard against which we need no less than the greatest navy in the world.” Since Admiral Mahan will not permit it, let us not forget, as is said above, that his pro- fession is the art of killing his fellows, and that he is far too eager professionally to dis- cern any of the possibilities of peace. WALLACE RICE. STATISTICS AND CENSUS-TAKING." Professor Mayo-Smith’s “Science of Sta- tistics,” of which the volume entitled “Statis- tics and Sociology” appeared some four years ago, has now been completed by the publication of a second volume on “Statistics and Eco- nomics.” The plan of this volume, though similar to that of the earlier one, is otherwise unique; and it suggests a doubt whether there is after all a distinct science of statistics, or whether the so-called science is not simply a method of studying economics or sociology or some other division of knowledge. After an introductory chapter on “Statis- tics in the Service of Economics,” various eco- nomic questions are treated under headings *STATISTICS AND EconoMICs. By Richmond Mayo-Smith, Ph.D. (Science of Statistics, Part II). New York: Pub- lished for the Columbia University Press by The Macmillan Company. THE FEDERAL CENsus. Critical Essays by members of the American Economic Association, collected and edited by a special committee. New York: Published for the Amer- ican Economic Association by The Macmillan Company. which would serve equally well for a theoretical treatise in economics—“Consumption and Production,” “Exchange,” and “Distribu- tion” for the main divisions, and such titles as “Money and Credit,” “Wages,” “Rent, In- terest, and Profits,” for the chapter-headings. Each chapter begins with a brief statement of the economic theory of the topic to be con- sidered, and of the usefulness of the statis- tical method in that particular field; then fol- lows an exhibition and critical examination of the more important statistical data pertinent thereto, with a bibliographical note telling where additional figures may be found. The methods of gathering and using the statistics of the subject are next subjected to certain “scientific tests” for the purpose of determin- ing which are the best methods; and finally, there is a “reflective analysis” in which gen- eral conclusions are stated. This method of treatment makes the book valuable for several distinct purposes: it is a systematic treatise in descriptive economics, so far as the subject is capable of numerical treatment; it deals in a judicious and scientific manner with statistical methods; and the convenient arrangement and full index make it useful as a book of refer- ence, in which the leading facts on almost any economic topic may be found, not only for the United States, but also for some at least of the European countries. It will be helpful to many students to find how many economic problems there are to the solution of which the statistical method may be made to contribute. Among these there is none of more general interest than the problem of the distribution of wealth, which is, how- ever, one of the most difficult for the statisti- cian. In the study of this problem, use may be made of statistics of wages, rent, interest, and profits, and also of tax returns and other data indicating the distribution of incomes or of property. In all these ways Professor Mayo-Smith tests the assertion that the rich are growing richer and the poor poorer, and finds that the latter part of the statement at least seems to be unwarranted by the figures, which agree in showing that wages have been advancing during the past thirty to fifty years, while the cost of subsistence has been declin- ing; but he adds the caution that certain other things must be taken into consideration, such as regularity of employment, duration and in- tensity of labor, the conditions under which it is carried on, and the method of payment. The available data on the distribution of in- } 1900.] 201 THE DIAL comes and property are even less conclusive; the author decides that they fail to show any marked concentration of income in the hands of a few, though there is undoubtedly very great inequality, now as in the past. But he argues that the concentration of wealth, either by the growth of private fortunes or by combination, is not altogether an evil, but on the contrary is absolutely necessary for the purpose of pro- duction on a large scale. The division of a large income among a number of persons would probably result in greater present enjoy- ment, but at the expense of future production, because less would be saved. “The institution of millionaires in the modern com- munity works somewhat like the institution of slavery in former times. It is a method by which all members of the community are, to a certain extent, compelled to save and economize and lay up capital.” Finally, it is pointed out that remedies for too great concentration of power lie at hand in the formation of trades unions, benefit and coöperative societies, and other forms of asso- ciation which enable the laboring class to assert its power; in factory, educational, and sanitary laws; in the exercise of political power by the many; and in the furtherance of public opinion and Christian sympathy. The American Economic Association, at its meeting at Cleveland in 1897, authorized the appointment of a committee on the national census. The members appointed on this com- mittee were Professor Mayo-Smith, Professor Walter F. Willcox, Hon. Carroll D. Wright, Professor Roland P. Falkner, and Professor Davis R. Dewey. The committee called upon all the members of the Association for sugges- tions, and also invited a number of experts to prepare critical articles on particular parts of the Eleventh Census, for the purpose of sug- gesting possible improvements in the Twelfth. These papers have been collected and printed as one of the publications of the Association. They are twenty in number, not counting two letters which are printed at length among the briefer suggestions received from members. Various phases of population statistics are treated by Professor Willcox, Professor W. Z. Ripley, Professor Franz Boas, and Mr. George K. Holmes; illiteracy and educational statistics, by Professor Dewey; occupations, by Professor Mayo-Smith; mortality statistics, by Mr. Cressy L. Wilbur and Professor Irving Fisher; crime, by Professor Falkner; pauper- ism and benevolence, by Professor Samuel M. Lindsay: agriculture, by Mr. N. I. Stone; farm and home proprietorship and mortgage indebtedness, by Professor David Kinley; trans- portation, by Professor Emory R. Johnson and Dr. Walter E. Weyl; manufactures, by Mr. S. N. D. North, Mr. William M. Steuart, and Mr. Worthington C. Ford; wage statistics, by Professor Charles J. Bullock; valuation and taxation, by Professor Carl C. Plehn; muni- cipal finance, by Professor Henry B. Gardner; while a general article on the scope and method of the census is contributed by Mr. William C. Hunt. The various papers are of very unequal merit, as is apt to be the case in a compilation of this kind; but it is hardly necessary to say, after naming the contributors, that the volume contains much that is of value, not only to the Census Office, but to statistical workers every- where. The university professors may not in all cases fully recognize the practical difficul- ties confronting the census-taker, but they are able to point out defects from the standpoint of the consumers of statistics, and to suggest remedies. While their attitude toward the Eleventh Census is decidedly critical for the most part, they are not slow to recognize a particularly good piece of work, such as the inquiry concerning farms, homes, and mort. gages. In the report of the committee the opinion is expressed that the main defects of the census have been due to lack of sufficient time for preparation; and the establishment of a permanent census bureau under civil service rules is proposed as the remedy. It should be a happy augury for the success of the Twelfth Census that several of the ex- perts who contributed to this critical volume are now connected with the Census Office in important capacities, so that they are in a posi- tion to prevent the repetition of the mistakes which have come to their notice. The inten- tion seems to be to have the work of the next census criticized before the results are pub- lished, and so far as possible even before the census is taken. For this purpose Professor Willcox has been put in charge of a Division of Methods and Results, and has gathered about him half a dozen student-clerks—young men who have had university training in the use of statistics, and who are enabled to devote all their time to the careful study of statistical problems. In several of the government de- partments there is observable a similar tendency to put the statistical work more and more into the hands either of university men or of others who combine the scientific attitude and breadth of view with practical experience in statistical 202 [March 16, THE DIAL offices. If an improvement in the character of official statistics should follow, the credit will be due partly to the work of the Civil Service Commission, partly to the appointment of student-clerks, and partly to the publication of such works as the two which have just been reviewed. MAx WEST. THE RACES OF EUROPE.” Dr. Ripley has done a great service, both to general readers and anthropologists, in prepar- ing his work, “The Races of Europe.” No- where are there more difficult ethnological questions than in Europe: nowhere is it more desirable to have clear ideas than in that field. True, much has been written regarding the physical anthropology of the Continent; the mass of literature on the subject is really appal- ling. But what has been written has been from the local standpoint. The race types of a state or governmental district have, in many cases, been worked out with wonderful care and pa- tience. But their relation to the types of other districts, the race types of the continent as a whole, these were questions which were but 'badly, if at all, answered. It was to present a general view, to combine and correlate the local data so as to arrive at grander results, that our author has labored. Race is but one of the elements which has made European populations what they are to- day. Dr. Ripley states this plainly. Still the title of his book itself warrants our confining our review to that single element. “A type is a combination of characters.” A race type should be a definite combination of characters, frequently recurring and persistent in time. To define types, characters must first be studied. Dr. Ripley bases his European race types upon three characters—head form, color, stature. Heads are long and narrow or short and broad —dolichocephalic or brachycephalic. Persons are blond or brunette—light or dark in com- plexion, hair color, and eye color. They are tall or short. Having studied the range of va- riation within each of these three characters and investigated their distribution, our author works out three race types to which he gives the names Teutonic, Alpine, and Mediterra- nean. The Teutonic is dolichocephalic, blond, *THE RACEs of EUROPE. By William Z. Ripley. With supplementary volume — A Selected Bibliography of the An- thropology and Ethnology of Europe. New York: D. Appleton & Co. and tall; the Alpine is brachycephalic, bru- nette, and medium; the Mediterranean is do- lichocephalic, dark, and short. In a general way the three types are geographically located, from North to. South in the order named. Careful study of the populations of every part of Europe shows that any one of these types rarely exists alone. Usually two, sometimes all three, are found together—sometimes sep- arate and approximately pure, but generally more or less mixed. Parts of Scandinavia are almost purely Teutonic; most of Italy is Med- iterranean. In France all three of the types assist in making up the population. We cannot follow Professor Ripley's inter- esting discussion in detail. He investigates a variety of important historical, political, and sociological questions. Even from this brief review, it will be seen that his book is of great importance. It will greatly advance study. A pioneer work (from the present standpoint of science), it can hardly reach final conclu- sions on all points. To indicate the possible divergence from its conclusions, we may men- tion the work of Deniker, of Paris. This deals with the same subject and practically by the same method. Yet Deniker defines ten — and not three — European types. Later students will probably come to an agreement upon some intermediate number. Ripley considers his Mediterranean Race of African origin. He suggests that the Teu- tonic Race may have developed from it under the influence of a peculiar environment. The Alpine, he appears to think, is an Asiatic im- migrant which has wedged in between the other two. Whatever their origin, three such different physical types must differ in mental and moral characters. Each must affect, with its own peculiar color, the communities of which it forms a part or to which it has contributed by mixture. While, of necessity, Dr. Ripley's book is a compilation and claims to be no more, it is a compilation into which personality has so en- tered as to make it new matter. The author is especially to be praised for three important helps, which multiply many times the value of the simple text. These are the maps, the por- traits, and the bibliography. A series of inter- esting and instructive maps of Europe and the different countries of Europe show the geo- graphical distribution of race characters and race types. A collection of more than two hundred portraits present (a) typical charac- ters, (b) race types, (c) the types: of each 1900.] THE DIAL 203. country. A notable “selected bibliography.” of about two thousand titles directs the student to a vast, little known, and widely scattered literature. In remembering the excellence of his gen- eral idea, his diligence in carrying it into exe- cution, his ingenuity in devising and securing illustrative and graphic material, and his schol- arship in bibliographic work, we must forgive the author for frequently unhappy forms of statement and obscure expressions. FREDERICK STARR. BRIEFS ON NEW BOOKS. Of recent text-books dealing with English fiction, by far the most ser- viceable we have seen is Mr. Wilbur L. Cross's “The Development of the English Novel” (Macmillan). This book should prove of interest and value to the general reader as well as to the student in this department of literature, for there is little to suggest the school-room in its plan or An admirable account of the English novel. style. The headings of its eight chapters are: “From Arthurian Romance to Richardson,” “The Eighteenth Century Realists,” “From “Humphrey Clinker’ to “Waverley,’” “Nineteenth Century Romance,” “The Realistic Reaction,” “The Re- turn to Realism,” “The Psychological Novel,” “The Contemporary Novel.” An appendix contains a list of twenty-five prose fictions designed to show in outline the development of the English novel and fourteen pages of useful bibliographical notes. There is an Index. In the details of his work, Mr. Cross puts forth no plea for any particular writer or school: “We are by nature both realists and idealists,” he declares, “delighting in the long run about equally in the representation of life somewhat as it is and as it is dreamed to be. . . . Idealism in course of time falls into unendurable exorbitances; realism likewise offends by its brutality and cyn- icism. And in either case there is a recoil.” This is eminently sane, for it is true both in reason and in fact. The clash of rival schools in fiction, the petulance of their respective champions — how ex- asperating ! Yet this absurdity is also natural and would better be regarded in humor than in anger. The analysis and classification of English fiction is no simple matter; the diversities and the similari- ties are often so perplexingly contradictory that one finds his material capricious. The pigeon-holes are duly labeled, but some of the stories apparently be- long in half-a-dozen at once. The author of this book, however, approves himself a master of his subject, subservient to no theories of arbitrary as- sortment; his frequent repetition of names and titles previously localized, in connection with groups which in some respects overlap the others, con- tributes directly to the clearness of the classifica- t tion and supplies a series of links that emphasize the inter-relations and points of connection in the material as a whole. Among the many excellent features of the essay we note the occasional para- graphs upon the influences, social and political, for- eign as well as domestic, which always affect public taste and often account for the literary fashions of the day. In the characterization of the novelists we have been especially pleased with the sections upon Sterne, Jane Austen, Scott (“the greatest force that has yet appeared in English fiction”), George Eliot, and Meredith. In his treatment of contemporary writers, Mr. Cross does Mrs. Hum- phry Ward scant courtesy, sparing never a word in comment upon her fine character creations and her excellent technique. It occurs to us that in a text- book of this nature, there should be included a section on technique; a discussion of this topic treated historically would be of great service to the student of fiction. The pages of Sir Algernon West's chatty volume of “Recollections: 1832-1886” (Harper) are thickly strewn with the names of men well known in En- glish political and official life during the period cov- ered. Sir Algernon's long career in the fiscal branch of the public service has kept him constantly in touch with public men, and furnished him with an un- usually large budget of stories about them, and these form the staple of his book. He was chosen Pri- vate Secretary to Mr. Gladstone on the latter's re- turn to power in 1868, and naturally has some rather interesting recollections of his old chief – not a few of them comically tinged with the Private Secretary's proverbial self-importance. For exam- ple, he records: “ . . . After the ceremony we all adjourned to luncheon at Mr. Gladstone's, who asked me whom I should propose as Chancellor of the Exchequer. I suggested Chamberlain, but he thought that the city would be terrified at his views of “ransom,’ while I maintained that a few weeks of official experience would soften the crudeness of his views.” Sir William W. Harcourt received the appointment, and the ex-Secretary goes on to say: “On the 11th I had my first interview with my new master (Sir William), who received me aua, bras ouverts as his “guide, philosopher, and friend.’” Lest the foregoing extracts should seem to argue a general lack of the sense of humor in Sir Algernon, we hasten to say that in point of fact his mind is on the contrary of a somewhat Joe Millerish cast, if we are to accept his book as a fair reflection of it. His stories are largely of the jocular order, and pleasantly reflect the foibles and humors of old official colleagues—those of Mr. Alfred Montgom- ery, for instance, a witty but punctilious gentleman of the old school of manners, long Chairman of the Board of Inland Revenue. One baking hot day, Sir Algernon relates, the Chairman's private secre- tary rashly came into the board-room with his coat off. “Montgomery was much shocked, and as the Recollections, by Mr. Gladstone's private secretary. 204 THE DIAL [March 16, secretary was leaving the room he called him back and said: ‘Mr. , if you should find it con- venient in this hot weather to take off your trousers, pray do not let any feeling of respect for the Board stand in your way.’” There is a touch of pathos, and an illustration of the ways of royalty, in the last recorded jest of this old public servant. As he lay on his death-bed the Prince of Wales called on him, and shortly afterwards the Princess. On her departure he said to his servant: “Should the Queen call, say that I am too tired to see her Maj- esty.” “He once told me,” Sir Algernon signifi- cantly adds, “that though he had been in the Queen's household since her Majesty's accession, she had never once spoken to him.” To an Englishman, of course, the oversight was tragic. Sir Algernon's book makes pleasant reading, but it lacks pith, and conveys the impression that its author is a good deal of a trifler — which of course he is not, outside literature. There are some good illustrations, mainly portraits, and the volume is attractively made. There was abundant room for a work in English on the troubadours. The reader who is confined to En- glish works has had nothing outside the encyclo- paedias that was not untrustworthy and antiquated. He may now turn to the two large and sumptuous volumes that Professor Justin H. Smith has just devoted to “The Troubadours at Home” (Putnam), which are certainly neither meagre nor ill-informed. Indeed they present a vast mass of facts gleaned from a wide study of the best and most recent in- vestigations and from a considerable acquaintance at first hand with the poetry of the troubadours themselves. Something may be found here con- cerning more than a hundred of the upwards of four hundred singers known to us, and very full information concerning all the most important ones. Emphasis is justly laid on the interest that the lit- erature of the troubadours should have for us as containing the beginnings of our own culture, and the attempt is made to present the social and intellect- ual movement of which it is the expression, and to make more intelligible to the modern reader the spirit, the ideas, and the ideals of that forgotten world. To that end attention is also given to the exterior aspects and customs of the time. The troubadour country has been carefully studied, and the character of its scenery and the appearance of its towns impressed upon the reader, not only by highly colored word-pictures, but also by a great wealth of fine illustrations from the author's own photographs. This is frankly an aeuvre de vulga- risation, and even the method of historical fiction is not disdained in order “to constitute an environ- ment and an atmosphere for the poets,” and to in- duce with regard to “the life, the events, the local- ities and the personalities” of the time “a sense of actuality.” But in spite of these painstaking efforts and these elaborate means, we lay down the vol- The troubadours and their world. umes with a measure of disappointment. The world of the troubadours has not risen clear, firm, coherent, and substantial in our minds. Somehow it still remains shadowy, distant, and unreal. Its parts are left too scattered, our gaze is too often distracted from it to this world of modernity, and the rising illusion of reality is too often rudely dis. pelled by the instrusion of the author with his Baedeker and his camera. Perhaps, as so often happens, he would have succeeded in doing more if he had been content to attempt less. We really have three works here: a beautifully illustrated book of travel, a historical novel, or rather a score of them, and a work of literary history. Each one would gain immensely by being cut loose from the others. However, the author's failure to achieve all the ends that he proposed to himself by no means robs his work of its solid value; it pre- sents by far the most ample and trustworthy store of information about the troubadours and their world to be found in English. The fulness of its bibliographical references will make it of service even to special students. A stimulation “Literature is largely made in the to the schools a Knowledge subject. The *** great function of literature, namely to bring into play the spiritual faculties, is very inadequately recognized, and the study of En- glish literature is made too much an objective job—the fault of teachers, not students.” There are many readers who would promptly assign these words to Professor Hiram Corson without being explicitly informed of their source, so fre- quently and so insistently has this veteran cham- pion of the true interests of literary instruction ex- pressed the idea which they embody. As a matter of fact, they are taken from the preface to Dr. Corson's latest work, “An Introduction to the Prose and Poetical Works of John Milton” (Mac- millan). Nor are the following words any less distinctively characteristic of the author's controll- ing ideas upon the subject of literature-study: “Notes are a necessary evil, and should not be read until after a requisite general impression has been received from an independent reading; often two or more independent readings should precede any attention to explanatory notes. . . . A special attention to the details should be given only after the reader has, in a general way, taken in the articulating thought and the informing life of the poem.” Such words as these cannot be said too often, and deserve to be printed in letters of gold. The aim of the work before us is to en- courage students in such a study of Milton as shall bring them into vivifying spiritual contact with the loftiest of English poets. It has two main sec- tions. The first, called “Milton's Autobiography,” consists of about a hundred pages of text, “made up of all the more important autobiographical passages contained in his prose and poetical works,” and arranged chronologically with reference to his * 1900.] THE DIAL 205 life. The second section consists of “passages in Milton's prose and poetical works in which his idea of true liberty, individual, domestic, civil, pol- itical, and religious, is explicitly set forth.” Here we have the whole of “Comus,” “Lycidas,” and “Samson Agonistes,” besides some score of pages of brief extracts. To state the plan of this work, together with the name of its editor, is to commend it to all who love English literature, and believe in its enormous possibilities as an educative influence. Of Milton, particularly, in these days of the glo- rification of brute force and the wide departure of the English peoples from the ideals that have made them great, we may well repeat the familiar cry of Wordsworth's sonnet, and welcome any attempt to create a renewed interest in one whose only care was “To stand approved in sight of God, though worlds judged [him] perverse.” The life of James Hogg offers to its biographers one difficulty—or, per- haps better, an opportunity — that is unique in the history of literature. Hogg became widely known, not merely by his own writings or his own personality, but also by the character given him by others in a work of fiction. Indeed, we rather think that Hogg was even in his life-time known as the Ettrick Shepherd of the “Noctes Ambrosianae" more widely than as the author of “Kilmeny.” Or, in other words, Hogg even in his lifetime was known, not merely as he could present himself to the public but as the none too scrupulous Wilson, or sometimes Lockhart, chose to present him. This is certainly a strange predicament. We think of no analogy save that of Socrates, and he was in his lifetime known personally and not as he appears in the Dialogues of Plato. This curious double character of Hogg is fully appreciated by Sir George Douglas, who has just written the vol- ume devoted to him in the “Famous Scots” series (imported by Scribner). Professor Ferrier, who edited the “Noctes,” was of the opinion that Hogg would be better known to posterity in the character given him by Wilson than in his own. Sir George naturally holds to the facts; he decidedly prefers “the simple, kindly, unsophisticated farmer of Yarrow—as he stands “in his rights of a man,’ ow- ing nothing to art, his imperfections on his head” — to “the sham Arcadian, the fatuous amorist of his own eloquence, the maudlin retailer of tirades ad libitum over whisky-punch at a tavern.” We incline to agree with him, and to differ with Pro- fessor Ferrier as to posterity, which now does not know much or care much about the “Noctes Am- brosianae.” Whether it knows or cares much more for the work of James Hogg may be a question. But those who read this sketch of the poet's life will probably feel some desire to turn for a moment to the work of one of the most typical of Scotch poets. It should be added that the volume includes also short sketches of Tannahill, Motherwell, and Thom. The real Ettrick Shepherd. In “The Peasant's War in Germany” The Peasant's War. (Macmillan), Mr. E. Belfast Bax furnishes the second of his series of three volumes on the social side of the German reformation. The period is a difficult one to cover owing to the lack of unity in the various separated revolutionary movements, and to their having oc- curred at nearly the same time. The details of each rising are narrated with careful discrimination between fact and tradition. Occasional digressions, suggested by the events of his period, on the phil- osophy of socialistic movements in general, and on the scope of modern socialism in particular, seem rather forced, and mar the general excellence of the author's work. A sharp contrast is justly drawn between the essential spirit of the reformation, and the objects sought by the peasant's war. The re- formation was wholly individualistic and modern in its tendency, while the material purposes of the peasants were communistic and mediaeval, and were therefore doomed to failure in the end. Yet the wrongs of the peasants were not to be borne quietly, and whatever their mistaken remedies, the peasant's war, per se, says Mr. Bax, was a laudable effort against unjust conditions. The author's impartial- ity in treating of the relations of peasants and princes, both before and during the war, is note- worthy, even when emphasizing the inherent right- fulness of the peasant's cause. Unfortunately this same equitable balance is not consistently main- tained in the references made to the position of the Lutheran theologians toward the peasant move- ment. The bare mention of their names brings with it epithets of bitterness and scorn, while Melancthon in particular is designated successively as “malig- nant toady,” “Luther's little dog,” and “Luther's jackal.” Whatever Mr. Bax's opinion of these men, the use of such terms is certainly not dignified, and most sensibly detracts from the impression of scholarly impartiality otherwise received. A minor criticism from the scholar's point of view is that while we find in the preface a list of authorities, no specific references to them are anywhere made. Nor is there an index, though it may be the inten- tion to supply this for the entire series, in the third and concluding volume, on the Anabaptists, now in preparation. An excellent map of Germany during the reformation (from Spruner-Menke's Historischer Atlos) has been included. Such a fascination has theatrical life for youthful aspirants, that “The Stage as a Career” (Putnam), by Mr. Philip G. Hubert, Jr., will find a large and eager audience. Much specious doctrine on this subject has been promulgated, first and last, by those connected in various capacities with the stage, but this is the first time that we have had gathered together opinions from such valuable au- thorities as Sir Henry Irving, Lawrence Barrett, Joseph Jefferson, Dion Boucicault, Helen Mod- jeska, Mary Anderson, and Maggie Mitchell. The The stage as a career. 206 THE DIAL [March 16, author considers, in a chapter apiece, the social status of the stage, the stage as an artistic career, the necessary qualifications, the best training, dra- matic schools and teachers, and the lights and shad- ows of the life. His experience as a dramatic critic has brought him into close relations with the stage, and it is by no means a rose-hued picture he has drawn of the qualifications and training essen- tial to success. The question of dramatic art— that is to say, of movement in a play and of com- petent execution and acting of it—is, of course, distinct from the question of morals; but, since morality, either positive or negative, is inherently present in everything, moral quality never permits itself to be ignored. As a corollary Mr. Hubert maintains that the actor or actress cannot hold his or her own in society—that the stage leaves its mark. There is a light vein of animosity in this broad statement. The question of character should enter more fully into the discussion —“it is the root of the flower, and the flower is as the root makes it.” Estimate, a ren. Mr. “Frederic Harrison's latest vol- nyson, Ruskin, and ume of essays is entitled “Tenny- ***** son, Ruskin, Mill, and Other Liter- ary Estimates” (Macmillan). He describes it as “a series of systematic estimates of some leading influences on the thought of our time.” Be- sides the three men named in the title, Arnold, Symonds, Lamb, Keats, Gibbon, Froude, and Free- man are made the subjects of Mr. Harrison's crit- ical examination. We have, besides, a paper on “English Prose,” and a semi-satirical dialogue called “The Book-Trotter.” To those familiar with Mr. Harrison's literary characteristics and phil- osophical method these titles alone will convey a fair idea of what the book contains. Such readers, at least, will know beforehand that the discussion will be animated and interesting, filled with fine enthusiasm, and couched in a style burly rather than delicate, yet expressive of much good sense and warm sympathy with most worthy matters. The touchstone of Comte is applied now and then, as a matter of course, and the author's familiar habit is practiced of massing his praise and dispraise in separate formations. The essay on Tennyson is probably more imperfect in its sympathies than any of the others, while the three papers on Ruskin exhibit Mr. Harrison's temper and acumen at their best. The book as a whole, which is well worth reading, seems to occupy a sort of half-way station between criticism of the kind that endures and criticism that is of the day and year only. The time has not yet come to write a history of the obligations America owes to her adopted citizens, but when it is finally done no name will take higher rank than Francis Lieber's. How manifold his activities were, and how thoroughly he earned the title of publicist, Dr. Lewis R. Harley, a steadfast Francis Lieber, publicist and scholar. but discriminating admirer, reminds us in his “Francis Lieber: His Life and Political Philoso- phy” (Macmillan). Brought to the United States by the working of a political system which excites our wonder at its selection of its victims, he proved his country's loss in advocating the cause of good government with a zeal that has left all Americans his debtors. Like all Germans of his time, he attached himself to the party of Hamilton and Marshall—in itself a sufficient answer to those who had detected signs of revolution in him, - and the interesting development of his mind toward the more popular forms of American political philoso- phy in later years is almost the only omission in the present volume of which complaint can be made. To the American legist and jurist he stands in the light of a pioneer, reducing broad areas of cultivable soil to tillage which, until his coming, had been covered with wild growths. To the student world of his time he was almost a prophet, so well organ- ized and so interesting was the combination of knowledge and wisdom he imparted to his classes. To the political sphere of his day he appeared as a seer, and many of his theories even now suggest the idea of illumination. The book in hand is admir- ably designed and written, from the frontispiece of the great scholar to the Index. A record and After a chapter or so of biography review of proper, Mr. Charles Hiatt's attract- ***** ively mounted book on Henry Irving (Macmillan) gradually resolves itself into a series of appreciations of that great actor's art as exem- plified in his leading rôles. The text is liberally strewn with well-chosen extracts from journalistic criticisms of Mr. Irving's impersonations—so lib- erally, indeed, that the book serves as a moderate anthology in that kind; and it should be observed that though Mr. Hiatt is a warm admirer of his hero he has by no means confined himself to quota- tions of a laudatory character. It has been his aim to give a concise account of Sir Henry's career on the stage from the time of his first appearance at Sunderland in 1856 down to the recent production of “Robespierre,” and at the same time to faithfully illustrate what critics have said pro and con of his work. The opinions of Mr. Clement Scott and Mr. William Archer will accordingly be found side by side with those of Mr. Joseph Knight and Mr. A. B. Walkley. Some interesting facts as to Sir Henry's childhood and youth are supplied in the opening chapters, and a full list of parts played by him in London, with dates of first performances, is appended. The book is copiously and handsomely illustrated, mainly with portraits—one of which, by-the-way, after an early original, so closely re- sembles R. L. Stevenson that it might easily pass for a rather flattering likeness of that author. Some interesting reprints of play-bills of the chief produc- tions at the Lyceum will be found useful to students of the stage. The tasteful exterior of Mr. Hiatt's readable book calls for special mention. 1900.] THE DIAL 207 º Reminiscence, aſ Of the band of self-devoted men an Anti-slavery and women who were chiefly instru- Reformer. mental in awakening the national conscience to a sense of the degradation involved in slaveholding, few remain. One of the youngest of the number, Aaron Macy Powell, survives now only in the memory of a very few associates, and in the “Personal Reminiscences of the Anti-Slavery and other Reforms and Reformers” which he had pre- pared and is now published by his devoted widow, Mrs. Anna Rice Powell. The book is one to be read especially by any timid souls who in these later days fear to speak out on the unpopular side of great questions affecting the honor and well- being of the nation. It is the temperate and accu- rate statement of a man who was yet in early man- hood when he saw Garrison, known to him first as a target for unmerchantable eggs and unmention- able abuse, the honored guest of the nation at the raising of the Stars and Stripes over Fort Sumter in April, 1865. From anti-slavery, at the close of the war, Powell passed to other agitations for re- form — to the demand for equal political and other rights between the sexes, and for many other prob- lems which are yet awaiting settlement. The book concludes with contributions, in prose and verse, from several hands, to the sterling qualities of this energetic reformer and valuable citizen. A myth-crop Following his “Myths and Legends from our “New of Our Own Land ” comes Mr. C. Possessions.” M. Skinner's supplementary volume, uniform in size and shape, entitled “Myths and Legends of Our New Possessions” (Lippincott), including in the latter category Puerto Rico, Cuba, Hawaii, and the Philippines, but omitting Guam. It is from Hawaii that most of the real legends are derived, though the isolated instance from Samoa, where an American newspaper man, ten years ab- sent, has been erected into a tutelary war-god — an eminence for which so many American journals have been striving in vain—is brought forward to prove what a savage imagination can do in the face of Christianity. The stories of Spain are, almost without exception, slight romances on familiar lines, such as must have been known in the peninsula before being transplanted to the islands of the east- ern or western sea. All are entertaining, and form a treasure-house for future writers. The dozen rollicking but not over- drawn sketches of rural life in the west of Ireland, collectively entitled “Some Experiences of an Irish R. M.” (Long- mans), are reprinted from the “Badminton Maga- zine,” and they are well worth it. There is a note of genuineness in the book, despite its element of fiction, that we like. The stories are supposed to be told by a newly settled Resident Magistrate, who gradually becomes used to the ways of his horse-dealing, fox-hunting, hard-drinking, and by no means unlikable neighbors. The types and cus- Experiences of an Irish magistrate. toms of the region are delineated with much humor, and the leading characters and their fortunes, mari- tal and other, are carried on through the several chapters. The authors are Messrs. E. Somerville and Martin Ross, and Mr. Somerville furnishes some acceptable drawings. pºwe, zºo, in “Pepys's Ghost” (Badger) is the modern Gotham title of an amusing skit in which the and elsewhere. style and mental idiosyncrasy of the prattling old diarist are cleverly parodied by Mr. Edwin Emerson, Jr. The book is quaintly de- scribed as, “His Wanderings in Greater Gotham, his Adventures in the Spanish War, together with his Minor Exploits in the Field of Love and Fashion, and his Thoughts Thereon. Now recy- phered and here set down, with many annotations.” Mr. Emerson, in the guise of Pepys revisiting the glimpses of the moon, journalizes in Pepysian phrase and fashion some every-day up-to-date experiences in New York, and also some actual adventures of his own as press correspondent at the front during the Spanish War. Mr. Emerson evidently knows his Pepys, and his book is bright and entertaining and not too big. BRIEFER MENTION. Mr. A. T. Quiller-Couch, in his “Historical Tales from Shakespeare” (Scribner), does for the “histories” something like what was done by the Lambs for the other plays; that is, he tells in simple language the stories of the historical plays. A book of similar scope, although of different plan, is “The Story of English Kings According to Shakespeare” (Appleton), by Mr. J. J. Burns. This book, designed especially for school reading, pieces together characteristic extracts from the historical plays, and supplies easy narrative for con- nective purposes. The idea is a good one, and well carried into execution. Mr. Nicholas Browse Trist, the well-known whist expert, has written a small volume on “American Leads and Their History,” which has been published by Messrs. Harper & Brothers. The work consists of (1) a his- tory of the American leads, (2) a critique of later American innovations (in which such vagaries as the “Street attachment” and the methods of the “short- suiters” are sharply scored), and (3) a synopsis of the approved Anglo-American leads. We recommend the book to all devotees of the noble game with which it is concerned. Mr. Trist has a pleasing style and a con- vincing manner of exposition. “The Age of Johnson,” by Mr. Thomas Seccombe, is a volume in the series of “Handbooks of English Lit- erature” (Macmillan), of which Professor Hales is the general editor. The series now comprises six volumes, covering the period from 1632 to 1870, and forming as a whole one of the best histories of modern English lit- erature that have thus far been produced. Milton, Dryden, Pope, Johnson, Wordsworth, and Tennyson, give their respective names to the volumes now pub- lished, and other volumes for the earlier ages are soon to appear. Mr. Seccombe has performed his task with 208 THE DIAL [March 16, taste and discernment. His period is the latter half of the eighteenth century, and he boldly claims for it the inclusion of more great names than any other “Age” thus far dealt with in the series. “Choral Songs by Various Writers and Composers in Honour of Her Majesty Queen Victoria” (Macmil- lan) is a sumptuous vellum-encased folio containing thirteen compositions. The writers include such men as Messrs. Robert Bridges, A.C. Benson, John Davidson, Austin Dobson, Edmund Gosse, and F. W. H. Myers. Among the composers we note the best-known of En- glish academic names, Sir A. C. Mackenzie, Sir Hubert Parry, Sir John Stainer, and Mr. C. W. Stanford. The authors of the work join in a dignified dedication to the Queen, recalling the fact that a work similar in intent, “The Triumphs of Oriana,” was published in 1601 in praise of Elizabeth. Mr. Henry Frowde has just published “The Oxford Molière” in three forms. The first of these is a single volume of 647 double-columned pages. The second is exactly like the first, except that it is printed on India paper, and sold at a higher price. The third is in the prettiest imaginable set of four vest-pocket volumes, printed on India paper. The text and typography are the same in all these editions; the latter is necessarily rather minute, the former is taken from the standard edition of MM. Despois and Mesnard. There is not a single word of English in any of these books. We trust that the Oxford Press may see its way to publish similar editions of other foreign classics. “Don Quijote” might properly come next in the series. Mr. David Nutt has begun the publication of a series of “Popular Studies in Mythology, Romance, and Folk- lore.” The numbers take the form of sixpenny pam- phlets, of which four have thus far been issued, as fol- lows: “Celtic and Mediaeval Romance,” by Mr. Alfred Nutt; “Folklore: What Is It, and What Is the Good of It?” by Mr. E. S. Hartlund; “Ossian and the Os- sianic Literature,” by Mr. Alfred Nutt; and “King Arthur and His Knights,” by Miss Jessie L. Weston. These are engaging little books, and none the less schol- arly because of their popularizing intent. The plan of Messrs. Macmillan's new “Library of En- glish Classics” is to reproduce, in typographically per- fect reprints, the best existing texts of the masterpieces of English literature, with no fresh editorial material other than a brief bibliographical note to each volume from the pen of Mr. A. W. Pollard. Bacon's Essays and Sheridan's Plays inaugurate the series, and form two octavo volumes of handsome and dignified outward appearance, and irreproachable typography. We trust this commendable enterprise may extend indefi- nitely beyond the twenty-five volumes planned for publication during the present year. Mrs. Sara T. D. Robinson, the widow of the late Governor Robinson, has issued, through the Lawrence Journal Company, a new edition of her “Kansas: Its Interior and Exterior Life.” The book was written when Mrs. Robinson was with her husband in the Le- compton prison, and was first published in October of 1856. It ran rapidly through nine editions and exerted an important influence upon Northern opinion at the time. Its present interest lies wholly in the fact that it presents an account of important events, written by an eye-witness at the time of their occurrence. It is therefore unfortunate that Mrs. Robinson has in this edition interpolated a good many paragraphs, without distinguishing the new from the old. NOTES. Messrs. Eaton & Co. are the publishers of a “History of the United States,” by Miss Alma Holman Bar- ton. It is a text-book for school children of the younger sort. The “Old South Leaflets” enter upon their second century of numbers with “The Rights of War and Peace,” a translation of the Prolegomena to the great work of Grotius. “A Manual of Zoology,” by Messrs. T. Jeffrey Parker and William A. Haswell, is published by the Macmillan Co. in an American edition with special adaptations and illustrative material. The publishers of Mrs. Barr's “Trinity Bells,” Messrs. J. F. Taylor & Co., announce that the book has just gone into a third edition. Its success has been due largely to its exceptional fitness for young girls' reading. The two closing volumes for 1899 of the series of “Economic Studies” (Macmillan) are “The English Income Tax,” by Dr. Joseph A. Hill, and “The Effects of Recent Changes in Monetary Standards upon the Distribution of Wealth,” by Mr. Francis S. Kinder. A unique addition to the numerous reprints of “The Compleat Angler” is the India paper “Thumb" edi- tion, published by the Oxford University Press. The volume is about two inches square, and although con- taining 600 pages of text is less than half an inch thick. The publishers of Mr. Stedman's long-deferred “American Anthology” state that owing to the editor's continued illness it has been found possible to issue only the limited large-paper edition of the work this Spring, publication of the regular trade edition being post- poned until Fall. “Glimpses across the Sea,” by Mr. Sam T. Clover, is published at Evanston, Ill., by the Windiknowe Pub- lishing Co. It is a pleasant volume of sketches of travel in Europe, enlivened by humor and shrewd ob- servation. The contents are reprinted from the “Even- ing Post” of Chicago. “Outlines of the Comparative Physiology and Mor- phology of Animals,” by Professor Joseph Le Conte, is a text-book just published by the Messrs. Appleton. It presents a general view of its subject rather than that study of selected types that has found favor of late, and that many educators believe to have been overdone. By degrees the writings of Edward Rowland Sill are trickling into the light of the more permanent publicity that appertains to books as distinguished from period- icals. Three small volumes of his verse have been put forth, and now Messrs. Houghton, Mifflin & Co. an- nounce a volume of his prose and letters for early pub- lication. In connection with Messrs. J. M. Dent & Co. of London, the Macmillan Co. will shortly begin the publication of a series of international primers forming a Primer-Cyclopaedia. The aim is to provide in a con- venient and accessible form the information which the usual bulky and high priced encyclopaedias place beyond the easy reach of the average reader. The series will accordingly aim at the comprehensive in- clusion of the chief department of Literature, Science and Art, and each volume will be the work of a spec- ialist on the subject treated. Recent English texts and supplementary reading books include the following: Irving's “The Alhambra,” 1900.] THE DIAL 209 edited by Mr. A. M. Hitchcock; Scott’s “Marmion,” edited by Mr. George B. Aiton; and Lowell's “Sir Launfal” and other poems, edited by Mr. Herbert Bates. These three are published by the Macmillan Co. From the Messrs. Appleton we have “Stories from the Arabian Nights,” selected by Mr. Adam Singleton. The American Book Co. sends us “South America,” a geo- graphical reader by Mr. F. G. Carpenter; “A Tale of Two Cities,” edited by Miss Ella Boyce Kirk; and “The Talisman,” edited by Miss Julia M. Dewey. Dante's “Paradiso” is a new “Temple” classic which, like the recent edition of the “Laxdale Saga,” indicates a purpose on the part of the editor to enlarge the scope of this series of books beyond what have heretofore been its limits. The little volume contains the text of the “Paradiso” faced by Mr. Wicksteed's prose trans- lation. Each canto is supplied with an argument and notes, the contribution of Messrs. Wicksteed and Oels- ner. There are also given the necessary maps and charts. No announcement is made of similar editions of the other two cantiche, but the demand for them is likely to be such as to force their preparation. Messrs. D. C. Heath & Co. publish “A Practical Treatise on French Model Auxiliaries,” by Dr. Alfred Hennequin; “French Prose of the XVII. Century,” edited by Prof. F. M. Warren; “Scénes de la Révo- lution Française” from Lamartine’s “Girondins,” edited by Professor O. B. Super ; and Molière’s “Las Précieuses Ridicules,” edited by Professor Walter D. Toy. An edition of the last-named play, edited by Dr. C. Fontaine, is also sent us by Mr. W. R. Jenkins. “French Reading for Beginners,” edited by Professor Oscar Kuhns, is published by Messrs. Henry Holt & Co. The American Book Co. publish an abridgment of “La Tulipe Noire,” by Alexandre Dumas, made and edited by Professor Edgar E. Bran- don. The International Association for the Advancement of Science, Art and Education is an organization that was projected last September, when the British and French Associations for the advancement of Science held their meetings at Dover and Boulogne, respec- tively. Special committees were appointed under the general presidency of M. Léon Bourgeois. It is plan- ned to hold an International Assembly in Paris during the summer of the Exposition, in connection with the comprehensive scheme of Congresses which will be in Paris, as it was in Chicago, an important adjunct to the work of the Exposition. As Secretary of the British contingent of the Committee in charge, Professor Patrick Geddes is now in the United States for the purpose of securing the coöperation of our scientific and educational forces in the prosecution of this im- portant and altogether praiseworthy undertaking. In a general way, it may be said that the Assembly will aim to secure to those who take advantage of its ar- rangements the fullest benefits of the Exposition, and of its auxiliary congresses. Provision will be made for classes, lectures, expert guidance, excursions, and social gatherings, which should greatly enhance the profit of American students in Paris during the coming sum- mer. The energy and contagious enthusiasm of Pro- fessor Geddes are such that his present mission is sure to be productive of good results, and we cordially in- vite those interested in the matter to put themselves into communication with him. He may be addressed at any time in care of the United States Commissioner of Education. ANNOUNCEMENTS OF SPRING BOOKS. THE DIAL's annual Spring Announcement List, pre- sented herewith, is considerably larger than any previ- ous list of the kind that we have yet given our readers at this time of year. Over 700 titles are included, as against 600 a year ago. It is not intended to name in this list any books already issued and entered in our regular List of New Books; and all the books here given are presumably new books — new editions not being in- cluded unless having new form or matter. The list presents, therefore, a real survey of the new and forth- coming books of the Spring of 1900, carefully classified, and compiled from authentic data. BIOGRAPHY AND MEMOIRs. Life of William H. Seward, by Frederic Bancroft, 2 vols., $5.-Our Presidents and How We Make Them, by A. K. McClure, with portraits. (Harper & Brothers.) Memoirs of the Baroness Cecile de Courtot, lady in waiting to the Princess de Lamballe, compiled from the letters of the Baroness to Frau von Alvensleben, and the diary of the latter, by Moritz von Kaisenberg. (Henry Holt & Co.) Sir Arthur Sullivan, his life-story, with letters and reminis- cences, by Arthur Lawrence, illus., $3.50. --Some Players, by Amy Leslie, illus., $2. (H. S. Stone & Co.) The Private Memoirs of Madame Roland, edited, with In- troduction, by Edward Gilpin Johnson. - Historical Me- moirs of the Emperor Alexander I. and the Court of Rus- sia, by Madame la Comtesse de Choiseul-Gouffier, née Comtesse de Tisenhaus. (A. C. McClurg & Co.) John Ruskin, a sketch of his life, work, and opinions, with personal reminiscences, by M. H. Spielmann, with a paper by Ruskin on "The Bi. Arts,” and a note by Harrison S. Morris, $2. – The Sovereign Ladies of * edited by the Countess a Won Bothmer, illus., $4. (J. B. Lip- pincott Co.) Stevenson, by L. Cope Cornford, $1.25.-The Kendals, by T. Edgar Pemberton, illus., $3.50. (Dodd, Mead & Co.) The Men Who Made the Nation, by Edwin E. Sparks, illus. — Foreign Statesmen series, new vols.: Louis XI., by G. W. Prothero; Ferdinand the Catholic, by E. Armstro §: Mazarin, by Arthur Hassall; Catharine II., by J. B. Bury; Louis XIV., by H. O. Wakeman; per vol., 75 cts. —Edward Thring, his life, diary, and letters. º George R. Parkin, new edition in 1 vol. (Macmillan Co. Chopin, the man and his music, by James Huneker, with portrait, $2. (Charles Scribner's Sons.) Heroes of the Nations series, new vols.: Charlemagne (Charles the Great), by H. W. Carless Davis; Oliver Cromwell, by Charles Firth; each illus. $1.50. – Literary Hearthstones series, by Marion Harland, new vols.; John Knox, and Hannah More; each illus., $1.50. (G. P. Putnam's Sons. Stonewall Jackson and the American Civil War, by Lieut.- Col. G. F. R. Henderson, new and cheaper edition, with Introduction by Lord Wolseley, 2 vols., illus., $4 – Lucian, the Syrian Satirist, by. Lieut.-Col. Henry W. L. Hime, $1.50 net.-Michel de l'Hospital, being the Lothian prize essay, 1899, by C. T. Atkinson. — The Story of the Life of Dr. Pusey, by the author of “Charles Lowder.” (Longmans, Green, & Co.) American Statesmen series, new vol.: Charles Sumner, by Moorfield Storey, $1.25. (Houghton, Mifflin & Co.) Personal Memoirs of P. H. Sheridan, General U. S. A., by Brigadier-Gen. M. W. Sheridan, new edition, with an ac- count of Gen. Sheridan's later years. (D. Appleton & Co.) Heroes of the 19th Century, Wellington, Garibaldi, Grant, Gordon, by Geo. Barnett Smith, illus., $1.75. (New Am- sterdam Book Co.) Life of Commissary James Blair, by D. E. Motley. (Johns Hopkins Press.) HISTORY. A General History of Modern Times, edited by Lord Acton, in 12 vols., § I., The Renaissance.-Caesar's Conquest of Gaul, by T. Rice Holmes, with maps, $6.50 net.- American History Told by Contemporaries, by Albert Bushnell Hart, Vol. III., National Expansion, 1783–1845, $2.- The Welsh People, their origin, language, and his- tory, by John Rhys and David Brynmor Jones, Q.C. (Mac- millan Co.) 210 [March 16, THE DIAL The Mississippi Valley in the Civil War, §. John Fiske, with maps, $2.-The Constitution and the Navy under Sail, by Ira N. Hollis, illus. –The Monitor and the Navy under Steam, by F. M. Bennett, U. S.N., illus.-The Constitutional History and Government of the United States, by Judson S. Landon, LL.D., revised edition, $3.-The Mayflower and her Log, by Azel Ames, M.D.—Numbers and Losses in the Civil War in America, 1861–65, by Thomas L. Liv- ermore. (Houghton, Mifflin & Co.) A History of Scotland, by Andrew Lang, Vol. I. (Dodd, On the Trail of a Mead & Co.) American Explorers series, new title: Spanish Pioneer, the diary and itinerary of Francisco Garcés in his travels through Sonora, Arizona, and Cali- fornia, 1775-76, now first translated from the original Spanish, and edited, by Dr. Elliot Coues, 2 vols., illus., $6. net. (Francis P. Harper.) A History of the People of the United States, by John Bach McMaster, Vol. W., $2.50. — A History of the Spanish- American War, by Richard H. Titherington, $1.50. (D. Appleton & Co.) The Downfall of Spain, a naval history of the Spanish-Amer- º * by H. W. Wilson, illus., $4.50. (Little, Brown, 0. Side Lights on the Reign of Terror, by Mdlle des Echerolles, trans. from the French by M. C. Balfour, illus. in photo- avure, $4. net.—The Spanish Conquest in America, by ir Arthur Helps, new edition, edited by M. Oppenheim, 4 vols., $5. (John Lane.) Side Lights on English History, extracts from letters, papers, and diaries, of the past three centuries, collected and ar- ranged by Ernest F. Henderson. —Leading Documents of English History, edited by Dr. Guy Carlton Lee. (Henry Holt & Co.) Slavery and Four Years of War, by J. Warren Keifer, 2 vols., illus.--Story of the Nations series, new vol.: Modern Spain, by Martin A. S. Hume, illus., $1.50. (G. P. Put- nam's Sons.) The Northwest under Three Flags, #. Charles Moore, $2.50. —The Story of the Boers, by H. G. Van der Hooght. (Harper & Brothers.) A History of Spain from the Earliest Times to the Death of Ferdinand the Catholic, by Ulick Ralph Burke, M.A., sec- ond and cheaper edition, edited, with additional Notes and Introduction, by Martin A. S. Hume, 2 vols., $5. (Longmans, Green, & Co.) Source Book of the Renaissance, by Merrick Whitcomb, Ph.D., $1.50.-State Documents on Federal Relations, by Herman V Ames, Ph.D., $1.-Selections from the Writ- ings of Zwingli, by Samuel Macauley Jackson, D.D., $1.25. —Select Colloquies of Erasmus, by Merrick Whit- comb, Ph.D., $1.-Translations and Reprints, Vol. VI., series of 1899, $1.50. (University of Pennsylvania, Depart- ment of History.) Duruy's History of Modern Times, revised and condensed by E. A. Grosvenor, with maps, $1. – Duruy's History of the Middle Ages, revised and condensed by E. A. Gros- venor, with maps, 75 cts. (T. Y. Crowell & Co.) The Story of the Nineteenth Century, by Elbridge S. Brooks, illus., $1.50. (Lothrop Publishing Co.) Samson Occom and the Christian Indians of New England, by W. De Loss Love, Ph.D., illus., $1.50 net. (Pilgrim Press.) Advanced Australia, by W. J. Galloway, M.P., $1.25. (New Amsterdam Book Co.) How England Saved Europe, the story of the Great War, 1793–1815, by W. H. Fitchett, Vol. IV., illus., $2. (Charles Scribner's Sons.) GENERAL LITERATURE. An American Anthology, by Edmund Clarence Stedman, limited large paperedition, 2 vols., with photogravure por- traits, $10. net.—The Prose of Edward Rowland Sill, with an Introduction comprising some familiar letters. — Hotel de Rambouillet and the Précieuses, by Leon H. Vin- cent, $1. – The Arts of Life, by R. R. Bowker. — Notes on the Bacon-Shakespeare Question, by Charles Allen. (Houghton, Mifflin & Co.) More Letters of Edward FitzGerald, edited by W. Aldis Wright.— A Concordance to FitzGerald's Omar Khayyám, by J. R. Tutin.-Makers of Literature, by George Ed- ward Woodberry. — Studies in Literature, by Lewis E. Gates, second series.—National Studies in American Let- ters series, new vols.: The Clergy in American Life and Letters, by Rev. Daniel Dulaney. Addison; The Knicker- bockers, by Rev. Henry van Dyke; The American Histor- ical Novel, by Paul Leicester Ford. —The Evolution of the Fº Novel, by Francis Honey Stoddard. (Macmil- an vo. Hazlitt and Lamb, letters and family papers, edited by W. Carew Hazlitt, $1.50. (Dodd, Mead & Co.) The Anglo-Saxon Review, edited by Lady Randolph Spencer Churchill, Vol. IV., completing the first year, with photo- avure portraits, $6. net. —Sleeping Beauty and Other É. Fancies, by Richard Le Gallienne, $1.25.-What Is Poetry? an essay, by Edmond Holmes, $1.25. – Rud- yard Kipling, a criticism, by Richard Le Gallienne, with bibliography by John Lane, with portrait, $1.25. – George Meredith, some characteristics, by Richard Le Gallienne, with bibliography (much enlarged) by John Lane, new revised edition, illus., $1.50.-The Trials of the Bantocks, by G. S. Street, $1.25. — Mortal Immortals, by Baron Corvo, $1.50. (John Lane.) Balzac's Letters to Madame Hanska, trans. by Katharine Prescott Wormeley, $1.50. (Little, Brown, & Co.) Salons Colonial and Republican, by Anne H. Wharton, illus., $3. (J. B. Lippincott Co.) Ruskin and the Religion of Beauty, by Robert de la Sizer- anne, trans. by Lady Galloway, $1.50. — Beautiful Thoughts series, selections for every day from the best authors, new vols.: Bulwer Lytton, arranged by P. W. Wilson; Robert and Elizabeth Browning, arranged by Margaret Shipp; Thomas Carlyle, arranged by P. W. Wil- son; per vol., 75 cts. (James Pott & Co.) The Individual, a study of life and death, by Prof. N. S. Shaler. — Literatures of the World series, new vol.: A History of Russian Literature, by K. Waliszewski. (D. Appleton & Co.) The Ways of Men, by Eliot Gregory (“An Idler”), $1.50.- Interpretations of Poetry and Religion, by George Santa- yana, $1.50.- Periods of European Literature series, new vol.: The Romantic Triumph, by T. S. Omond, M.A., $1.50 net. (Charles Scribner's Sons.) Christian Science, and other essays, by Mark Twain, illus.- As Seen by Me, by Lilian Bell, illus. (Harper & Bros.) Browning Study Programmes, by Charlotte Porter and Helen A. Clarke, $1.50. (T. Y. Crowell & Co.) Discovery of a Lost Trail, by Charles B. Newcomb, $1.50. (Lee & Shepard.) The Bending of the Bough, a comedy in five acts, by George Moore, $1.25. —Answers of the Ages, 75 cts. (H. S. Stone & Co.) King Arthur in Cornwall, by W. Howship Dickinson, M. D. (Longmans, Green, & Co.) Opportunity, and other essays and addresses, by J. L. Spald- ing, $1. (A. C. McClurg & Co.) - Our Lady's Tumbler, a twelfth century legend done out of old French into English by Philip H. Wicksteed, $1. net.— Primavera, poems by four authors, with Preface by John Addington Symonds, $1. net. (Thomas B. Mosher.) London Souvenirs, by C. W. Heckethorn, $2. – Ivory Apes and Peacocks, by “Israfel,” $1.75 met. (A. Wessels Co.) Shaksper not Shakespeare, by William H. Edwards, illus., $2. (Robert Clarke Co.) The Open Road, a little book of poems, by various authors, for wayfarers, bicycle-wise and otherwise, compiled by Edward Verrall Lucas, $1.50. (Henry Holt & Co.) The Apostle of the Ardennes, or The Legend of St. Hubert the Hunter, by Lady Lindsay, $1.25. (New Amsterdam Book Co.) As Talked in the Sanctum, by Rounsevelle Wildman, $1. (Lothrop Publishing Co.) Alabama, by Augustus Thomas, new edition, illus. with scenes from the play, $1. (R H. Russell.) For Friendship's Sake, essays on friendship by various au- thors, $1. (Dodge Publishing Co.) The Best of Browning, by James Mudge, D.D., new and cheaper edition, with portrait, $1. (Curts & Jennings.) PoETRY AND VERSE. The Mystery of Godliness, by F. B. Money Coutts, $1.25. – The Professor, and other poems, by Arthur Christopher Benson, $1.25. (John Lane.) The Wº; and other poems, by S. Weir Mitchell, $1. (Cen- tury Co.) The Toiling of Felix, and other poems, by Henry van Dyke, $1. (Charles i. Sons.) Grey Stone and Porphyry, by Harry Thurston Peck, $1.25. ºb. Mead & 3. ..) 1900.] THE TXIAL 211 A Bººk of Verses, by Nixon Waterman, $1.25. (Forbes & o.) The Search of Ceres, by Sarah Warner Brooks, $1.25. (A. Wessels Co.) Smiles Yoked with Sighs, by Robert J. Burdette, illus., $1.25. (Bowen-Merrill Co.) Egypt, a poem, by Mrs. Laura G. Collins, illus., $1. (Rob- ert Clarke Co.) Joy, and other poems, by Danske Dandridge, second edition, enlarged, with portrait. (G. P. Putnam's Sons.) FICTION. Resurrection, by Count Leo Tolstoy, illus., $1.50.-The Ala- baster Box, by Sir Walter Besant, $1.50.- Three Men on Wheels, by Jerome K. Jerome, illus., $1.50.-Joan of the Sword Hand, by S. R. Crockett, illus., $1.50.-Féo, by Max Pemberton, illus., $1.50.-The Strength of Gideon, by Paul Laurence Dunbar, illus., $1.25. – Hearts Impor- tunate, by Evelyn Dickinson, $1.25,-Outside the Radius, by W. Pett Ridge, $1.25.-The Tone King, by Heribert Rau, $1.50. – One Year, by Dorothea Gerard, $1.50. (Dodd, Mead & Co.) The Brass Bottle, by F. Anstey.—In Circling Camps, a ro- mance of our Civil War, by J. A. Altsheler.—The Girl at the Halfway House, a romance of the West, by E. Hough.-The Last Lady of Mulberry, a story of Italy in New York, by Henry Wilton Thomas, illus. --Pine Knot, a story of Kentucky life, by William E. Barton, illus. – A Hero in Homespun, by William E. Barton, new edition. -Mirry. Ann, a nx story, by Norma Lorimer.—The Immortal Garland, by Anna Robeson Brown.—Garthowen, a Welsh story, by Allen Raine.-The Minister's Guest, by Mrs. Isabel Smith —The Lunatic at Large, by J Storer Clouston.—The Jay-Hawkers, a story of free soil and border ruffian days, by Mrs. Adela F. Orpen — Diana Tempest, by Mary Cholmondeley, new edition, with por- trait and biographical sketch. (D. Appleton & Co.) The Heart's Highway, a romance of Virginia in the 17th Century, by Mary E. Wilkins, $1.50.-The Isle of the Winds, a romance of Scotland and the American colonies, by S. R. Crockett, illus., $1.50. - Debts of Honor, by Maurus Jokai, $1.25. – The Sea Farers, by Mary Gray Morrison, $1.50 — The Bewitched Fiddle, and other stories, by Seumas MacManus, 75 cts. – Iroka, tales of Japan, by Adachi Kinnosuke, $1.25.-Short Novels series, first vols.: Captain Dieppe, by Anthony Hope; Kela Bai, an Anglo-Indian idyll, by Charles Johnston; An Eventful Night, by Clara Parker; Bennie Ben Cree, by Arthur Colton; A Christian but a Roman, by Maurus Jokai; each 50 cts. (Doubleday, Page & Co.) Hilda Wade, by Grant Allen, illus. – The Things That gº; by Elizabeth Knight Tompkins. (G. P. Putnam's ons. Sophia, by Stanley J. Weyman, with frontispiece. — Elissa, and Black Heart and ite Heart, by H. Rider Haggard. (Longmans, Green, & Co.) Princess Sofia, by E. F. Benson.-The Rebel, by H. B. Mar- riott Watson. — A Silver Wedding Journey, by W. D. Howells. –The Action and the Word, by Brander Mat- thews, illus.-The Conspirators, by R. W. Chambers, illus. - Woman and Artist, by Max O'Rell. — The Man that Corrupted Hadleyburg, and other stories, by Mark Twain, illus. – Men with the Bark On, by Frederic Remington, illus.-The Passing of Thomas, and other stories, by T. A. Janvier, illus. – The Booming of Acre Hill, and other sketches, by John Kendrick Bangs, illus. – Adam Grig- son, by Mrs. Henry de la Pasture.—Jimmyjohn Boss, and other stories, by Owen Wister, illus. – A Cumberland Wendetta, by John Fox, Jr. — A Man of his Age, by Ham- ilton Drummond, illus. – Hiwa, by E. P. Dale. (Harper & Brothers.) Senator North, by Gertrude Atherton, $1.50. —The Car- dinal's Snuff Box, by Henry Harland, $1.50. — The Wor- shipper of the Image, a tragic fairy tale, by Richard Le Gallienne, $1.25. —The Realist, by Herbert Flower- dew, $1.50. – Ursula, by E. Douglas King, $1.50. —Sev- erance, by Thomas Cobb, $1.50. – The White Dove, by W. J. Locke, $1.50. – The Crimson Weed, by Christopher St. John, $1.50. (John Lane.) A Master of Craft, by W. W. Jacobs, $1.50. —Sandburrs, by Alfred Henry Lewis, illus., $1.50. —The Cambric Mask, by Robert W. Chambers, $1.50. —The Bath Comedy, by Egerton Castle, $1.50. —The Minx, by Mrs. Manning- ton Caffyn, $1.50. – Marcelle of the Quarter, by Clive Holland, $1.25. — Geber, a tale of Harun the Khalif., by Kate A. Benton, $1.50. (F. A. Stokes Co.) The Garden of Eden, by Blanche Willis Howard, $1.50. – The Grip of Honor, a romance of the Revolution, by Cyrus Townsend Brady.—The Touchstone, by Edith Wharton. - Enoch Willoughby, a novel of the Middle West, by James A. Wickersham, $1.50.-Boys and Men, a story of life at Yale, by Richard Holbrook, $1.25. —Smith College Stories, by Josephine Dodge Daskam, $1.50. — The Boss of Taroomba, by E. W. Hornung, 75 cts. – Red Blood and Blue, by Harrison Robertson.—The Monk and the Dancer, by Arthur Cosslett Smith. –Stories of the East §. by Robert Shackleton, illus. (Charles Scribner's Sons.) 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