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THE DIAL
A Montbly Journal of
1
CURRENT LITERATURE.
VOLUME IX.
MAY, 1888, TO APRIL, 1889.
CHICAGO:
A. C. McClurg & COMPANY, PUBLISHERS.
1889.


AP
D54


INDEX TO VOLUME IX.
·
·
· ·
·
·
·
·
· ..
·
64
42
·
· ·
·
33
·
·
·
·
·
·
·
·
·
·
·
·
.
AMERICA, MR. BRYCE ON . . . . . . . . . . . . 1. C. McLaughlin . . . . . . 255
AMERICAN HISTORY, OMITTED CHAPTERS OF . . . . . . Walter P. Stradley . . . . . 290
AMERICAN LITERATURE, A LIBRARY OF . . . . . . . . Horatio N. Powers . . . . . 55, 121
AMERICAN POETRY AND FICTION . . . . . . . . . . Edırard Playfair Anderson . . . 235
AMERICAN PUBLIC LIFE, HALF A CENTURY OF. ..
Edward Gilpin Johnson .... 240
ANCIENT ROME, MODERN STUDIES OF . . . . . .
W. F. Allen . . . . . . .
ANIMAL MAGNETISM . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Titus Munson Coan . . . . . 36
ARNOLD, MATTHEW (SONNET) . . . . .
Francis F. Broune .. .
ARNOLD AND His WORK . . . . . . .
Melville B. Anderson ...
ARNOLD'S LATER CRITICISM . . . . . .
Melrille B. Anderson .. . 284
BACKBONED ANIMALS, THE STUDY OF . . . . . . . . . Elliott Coues . . . . . . . 201
Books, THE ENEMIES OF . . . . . . . . . . . . .
W. F. Poole . . . . . .
CALIFORNIA FOR THE SICK AND THE WELL...
Titus Munson Coan . .
237
Civics, RECENT BOOKS ON . . . . . . . .
James F. Claflin . ...
CIVIL WAR IN AMERICA, THE . . . . . . . .
John C. Ropes . . . .
CIVIL WAR, RECENT BOOKS ON TIIE . . . . . . . . . J. J. Halsey . . . . . . . . 196
CUTLER, MANASSEH , .
W. H. Ray . . . . .
CUTLER, MANASSEH, AND THE ORDINANCE OF 1787 .. . . W. P. Cutler . . . .
DE SÉVIGNÉ, MADAME. . . . . . . . . . . . . . Octave Thanet . . . . . . .
ECONOMIC DisCUSSION, RECENT . . . . . . . . . . . Arthur B. Woodford . . . . . 155
EDUCATION, BOOKS ON . . . . . . .
Junius B. Roberts . . .
ENGLAND FIFTY YEARS AGO . . . . . . . . . . . . Edward Gilpin Johnson . . . . 123
EVOLUTION AND LIFE, BOOKS ON . . . . . . . . . . John Bascom . . . . . . . 59
• FICTION, RECENT . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . William Morton Payne . 65, 160, 291
FOLK-LORE OF THE NORTH . .
Aubertine Woodward Moore ... 157
FRANKLIN THE PEACEMAKER . . . . . . . . . . . . Frederick J. Turner . . . . . 204
FRENCH PAINTING, A HISTORY OF . . . . . . . . . . Horatio N. Powers . . . . . . 261
“FRIEND OF THE PEOPLE, A" .....
Edward Gilpin Johnson
97
INQUISITION IN THE MIDDLE AGES, THE .
W. F. Allen . . .
INSECT LIFE, STUDIES OF . . . . . .
David S. Jorilan ..... 283
IRELAND, THE LEGISLATIVE SYSTEMS OF . . . . . . . . W. F. Allen . . . . . . . 153
ISRAEL, Renan's HISTORY OF . . . .
.. Emil G. Hirsch . . . . . . 39
LAMB, THE LETTERS OF . . . . .
Edırard Gilpin Johnson .
LANG'S LETTERS ON LITERATURE ..
W. Irving Way . . . ..
LAST OF THE KINGS . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . J. J. IIalsey . . . . . . . . 7
MAKING OF A STATE, THE . .. .
Willium Henry Smith ..
MANCHURIA, A JOURNEY IN . . . . . . . . . . . .
George C. Noyes . . .
MARSHALL, CHIEF-JUSTICE. . . . . . . .
Melville W. Fuller . .
128
MUSIC, A POPULAR HISTORY OF . . . . . . . . . . George P. Upton . . . . . . 126
MUSICAL INSTRUMENTS, THE HISTORY OF . . . . . . . George P. Upton . . . . . . 265
NAPOLEON's RUSSIAN CAMPAIGN . . . . . . . . . . . W. II. Ray . . . . . . . . 12
NORSE TRILOGY, A . . . . . . . .
.. Aubertine Woolward Moore .. 200
NORTHWEST, THE OLD . . . . . . . . . . . . . A. C. McLaughlin . . . . . 79
PEOPLE, REAL HISTORY OF THE . .
.. Henry D, Lloyd .. .
PHILOSOPHICAL STUDIES, RECENT . . . . . . . . . . John Bascom . . . . . . . . 319
POET AND POLITICIAN . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Melville B. Anderson . . . . . 95
POETRY, RECENT . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . William Morton Payne . 14, 242, 323
.
.
34
.
.
.
.
.
154
.
81
MUS
TY


INDEX.
...
·
..
.
·
·
·
·
.
·
·
.
· ·
·
.
·
SAND, GEORGE . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
Octave Thanet . . . . . . 102
SOCIALISM, SCIENTIFIC . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Arthur B. Woodford . . . . . 281
TENTING ON THE PLAINS. . . . . . . . . . . . . Rossiter Johnson . . . . . . 13
TRAVEL, RECENT BOOKS OF . . . . . . . . . . . . Octave Thanet . . . . . . . 313
UNITED STATES AFTER THE REVOLUTION, TAE . . . . . . W. F. Poole . . . . . . . . 127
VAN BUREN, MARTIN . . . . . . . . . . . . . . J. J. Halsey . . . . . . . . 100
VANE, SIR HENRY . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . W. F. Poole . . . . . . . . 316
WASHINGTON THE MAN . . . . . . . . . . . . . . J. J. Halsey , . . . . . . . 309
WEATHER-LORE ·
WEATHER-LORE ........
· · · · · · · · · · · · ·
Selim H. Peabody . . . . . . 263
WHITTIER . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Melville B. Anderson . . . . . 193
WILLIAM I., EMPEROR . . . . . . . . . . . . . . A. C. McLaughlin .
. 9
·
·
.
· ·
·
.
·
·
.
.
.
AUTHORS AND TITLES OF BOOKS REVIEWED.
329
211
87
156
19
296
Abbott, Evelyn. History of Greece. . . Bolton, Sarah K. Famous American States-
Abbot, Willis J. The Blue-Jackets of "76.
men . . . . . . .
165
Adams, Herbert B. History of Coöperation Bolton, Sarah K. Some Successful Women . 213
in the United States . . . . . . :
Bonham, John M. Industrial Liberty . . .. 157
Ainger, Alfred. The Letters of Charles Lamb Books That Have Helped Me . . . . . .
Allen, John H. The Tariff and Its Evils . .. Bradley, Henry. The Story of the Goths .
Alma, the Story of a Little Music Mistress.
Bray, S. Alice. The Baby's Journal . . . 214
Ames, Lucia T. Great Thoughts for Little Brooks, Elbridge S. The Story of New York 72
Thinkers . . : : :
Brooks, Elbridge S. The Story of the Ameri-
Andrews, Jane. The Stories Mother Nature
can Sailor
.::: 214
Told Her Children .
Brookes, Warwick. Pencil Sketches of Child
Arnold, Matthew. Essays in Criticism, Sec-
Life .
:
209
ond Series . .
284 Brown, Mary E. and Wm. Adams. Musical
Arnold, Sir Edwin. With Sa'di in the Garden 246
Instruments and Their Homes . . . 265
Atkinson, William P. The Study of Politics 44 Brownell, W. C. French Traits . . . . . 328
Babyland for 1888 . . . . . . . . . 214 Browning, Mrs. Romances, Lyrics, and Son-
Bacon, Theodore. Life of Delia Bacon .. 294
nets. . ..
243
Ball, J. T. Historical Review of the Legis Browning, Robert. The Pied Piper of Hamelin
214
lative Systems Operative in Ireland . 153 Bryce, James. The American Commonwealth 255
Ballou, Maturin M. Footprints of Travel. 314 Buck, J. D. A Study of Man and the Way to
Bancroft, H. H. California Inter-Pocula 103
Health . . .
Wir: · .. 321
Bancroft, H. H. California Pastoral . . . 103 Burnett, Frances H. Editha's Burglar . 211
Barnard, F. P. Strongbow's Conquest of Burrows, Montague. The Cinque Ports ..
Ireland . . .
47 Butterworth, Hezekiah. Zigzag Journeys in
Barnum, P. T. Barnum's Museum and Me-
the Antipodes . . . . . . . . .
213
nagerie . . . . . . . . . . . 214
Cable, George W. Bonaventure . . . . . 67
Barr, Amelia E. Remember the Alamo . . 162 Caine, Hall. The Deemster ...
66
Barron, Elwyn A. The Viking . . . . .
325
Calendars for 1889 . ..
Barrows, W. The United States of Yesterday Campbell, Helen. The American Girl's Hand
and of To-Morrow . . . . . . .
Book . . . .
214
Baumbach, Robert Summer Legends ... Campbell, John Preston. The Land of Sun
Besant, Walter. Fifty Years Ago. . 123
and Song . . .
325
Besant, Walter. Eulogy of Richard Jefferies 267 Carmen, Sylva. Songs of Toil..
327
Besant, Walter, and Rice, James. The Golden Caro, E. George Sand . . .
102
Butterfly . . . . . . . . .
68 Carpenter, William B. Nature and Man. . 320
Bigelow, John. France and the Confederate Carr, Lucien. Missouri .
104
Navy .
Carter, Robert. A Summer Cruise on the Coast
Binet, Alfred, and Féré, Charles. Animal
of New England .
Magnetism . . . . . . . . . . 36 Catherwood, Mary Hartwell. The Secret at
Binet, Alfred. The Psychic Life of Micro-
Roseladies . . . . . : :.:.:.:.
212
Organisms . . . . . . . . . .
322 Centennial of a Revolution, by a Revolutionist 268
Bingham, G. Clifton. A Snow Baby ... 214 Century Magazine for 1888 . . .
210
Björnson, Björnstjerne. Sigurd Slembe.. 200 Champney, Elizabeth W. Great Grandmoth-
Black, Alexander. The Story of Ohio . . 87
Cer's Girls in New Mexico ..
213
Black, William. In Far Lochaber . . . . Champney, Elizabeth W. Howling Wolf and
Black, William. The Strange Adventures of
His Trick Pony.
a House-Boat . . . . . . . . . Champney, Elizabeth'w. Three Vassar Girls -
Blades, William. The Enemies of Books .
in France . . . . . . . . . .
213
Blake, Mary E., and Sullivan, Margaret F. Chatterbox for 1888-89. . . . . .
214
Mexico . . . . . . . . . . . 164 Church, Alfred J. Three Greek Children . 214
Blanchard, Amy Ella. Bonny Bairns ... 214 Clason, A. W. Seven Conventions . . . . 268
Boissier, Gaston. Madame de Sévigné.. 85 | Clayden, P. W. Early Life of Samuel Rogers 20
210
88
88
292


INDEX.
69
213
94
Onu yun
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
214
8
ཎྜ
67
Clodd, Edward. The Story of Creation . . 60 | Evans, George A. Hand-Book of Historical
Coffin, Charles Carleton. Marching to Victory 198
and Geographical Phthisiology... 237
Colette, The Story of ..
Everett, C. C. Poetry, Comedy, and Duty 248
Conway, Moncure D. Omitted Chapters of Farmer, Lydia Hoyt. Life of La Fayette. 132
Ristory . . . . . . . . . . . 290 ) Farrington, Margaret Vere. King Arthur and
Cook, Albert's. Translation of Judith. . 163 His Knights of the Round Table ..
Cooke, M. W. The Human Mystery in Hamlet 297 Favorite Folk Ballads . . . . . . . . 209
Coolidge, Susan. Clover . . . . . . . 213 Fenn, Harry, and Skelding, Susie Barstow.
Corning, Charles R. Aalesund to Tetuan . . 314 'Sea Vistas in Many Climes . . . . 209
Cossa, Lugi. Principles and Methods of Tax Field, Henry M. Gibraltar.
314
ation . . . . . . . . . . . .
43 Firth, J. C. Our Kin Across the Sea ... 268
Cowper. The Diverting History of John Gilpin 209 Fitzgerald, Edward. Rubáiyát of Omar
Craddock, Charles Egbert. The Despot of
Khayyam, in English Verse: . . .
245
Broomsedge Cove . . . . . . . 292
Five Talents of Woman, The . . . . . . 329
Cranch, Christopher P. Kobboltozo . . . 212
Forbes, Archibald. William of Germany. 11
Cranch, Christopher P. The Last of the Hug Ford, Worthington C. The Writings of George
germuggers . .
Washington .
Crawford, F. Marion. With the Immortals 161 Franzos, Carl Emil. For the Right . . .
Custer, Elizabeth B. Tenting on the Plains 13 Frost, John, and French, H. W. Lives of the
Cutler, William P. and Julia Ď. Journals and
Presidents . . . . . .
331
Correspondence of Manasseh Cutler 61, 106 Galdós, B. Perez. The Court of Charles IV.
Cutts, E. L. Colchester ...
105 Gallaudet, Edwin Miner. Life of Thomas
Dabney, Richard H. The Causes of the
Hopkins Gallaudet ..
164
French Revolution . . . .
46 Garner, John Leslie. The Strophes of Omar
Dall, Caroline H. Life of Dr. Anandibai Joshee 70 Khayyam . . . .
246
Dante. Inferno . . . . . . . . . . 210 Gerard, E. The Land Beyond the Forest. . 314
Dante. Purgatory and Paradise . . . . . 210 Giberne, Agnes. Ready, Aye Ready ...
Daryl, A. J. A Merry Round . . . . . . 214 Gilchrist, Fredericka B. The True Story of
Dasent, Sir George Webb. Popular Tales
Hamlet and Ophelia . . . . .
from the Norse . .
Gilmore, James R. The Advance Guard of
Daudet, Alphonse. Thirty Years of Paris.
Western Civilization . . . . . . 269
Dawson, Sir J. W. Modern Science in Bible Ginn, Edwin. Selections from Ruskin .. 249
Lands . . . . . . . . . . .
Goetbe. Faust . . . . . . . . . . 206
Deland, Margaret. John Ward, Preacher. Goethe. Hermann and Dorothea . . . . 208
Denslow, Van Buren. Principles of the Eco. Goethe. Tasso . . . . . . . . .
297
nomic Philosophy of Society, Govern Goldsmith. The Traveller . . . . . . 208
ment, and Industry . . . . . . . 156 Good Things of Life, The . . . . . . . 210
De Trobriand, Regis. Four Years with the Gordon, A. C., and Page, Thomas Nelson.
Army of the Potomac ......
198
Befo' de War: Echoes in Negro Dialect 16
Dimond, Mary B. A Handbook for Pilgrims 210 | Gordon, Lydia L. From Lady Washington
Dippold, G. T. Wagner's Ring of the Nibelung 89
to Mrs. Cleveland . . . . . . . 330
D'Ooge, B. L. Colloquia Latina .... 165 Grant, Robert. Jack in the Bush. ... 212
Doré. Bible Gallery . . . . . . . . . 210 Gray, David. Poems and Prose Writings . 330
Dowden, Edward. Correspondence of Sir Greely, A. W. American Weather . . . . 263
Henry Taylor, ..
Grimm, Hermann. Life of Raphael . . . 295
Downes, William Howe. The Tin Army of the Guardians, The . . . . . . . . . .
Potomac, or, a Kindergarten of War. 214 Guiney, Louise Imogen. Brownies and Bogles 214
Dulac, George. Before the Dawn . . . . 66 Hague, Parthenia A. A Blockaded Family . 199
Dumas, Alexandre. The Three Musketeers 208 Hale, Edward Everett. Franklin in France. 204
Dumas, Alexandre. The Vicomte de Braga Hale, Edward Everett. The Man Without a
lonne . . . . . . . . . . . 208
Country . . . . . . . . . . . 207
Dumas, Alexandre. Twenty Years After. 208 Hall, J. A. Glimpses of Great Fields.. 321
Dunn, J. P., Jr. Indiana . . . . . . 269 Hamilton, Anthony. The Memoirs of Count
Eaton, Arthur Wentworth. The Heart of the
Grammont .
Creeds . . . . . . . . . .
72 Harcourt, E. W. Evelyn's Life of Mrs. Go-
Eaton, Frances. A Queer Little Princess. 214
dolphin . . . . . . . . . . .
Edwards, George Wharton. Sundry Rhymes Hare, Augustus J. C. Days near Paris..
from the Days of Our Grandmothers. 208 Hare, Augustus J. C. Walks in Paris .. 21
Efendi, Ali Aziz. The Story of Jewad . . 68 Harlow, Louis K. Coast Sketches . . . .
Eggleston, Edward. History of the United Harlow, Louis K. Thames Sketches . . .
States and Its People . . . . . . 132 Harlow, Louis K. and Lizzie K. The Wings
Eggleston, Edward. The Graysons. . . 161
of the Morning . . . . . . .
Elliott, Charlotte. Just as I Am, without Harper's Young People for 1888. . . . .
One Plea . . . . . .
Harrington, Karl P. Helps to the Intelligent
. .
210
.
Ely, Richard T. Problems of To-day . . .
Študy of College Preparatory Latin - 85
Ely, Richard T. Taxation in American States Harris, W. T. The Right of Property and
and Cities . . . . . . . . . . 157
Ownership in Land . . . . . . .
English in the Preparatory Schools . . . .
Harte, Bret. Cressy . . . . . . . .
English in the Schools . . . . . . . . 85
Harte, Bret. The Argonauts of North Liberty 68
Erskine, Payne. Iona: A Lay of Ancient Haslewood, Constance. Young America's
Greece . . . . . . . . . . . 325
Nursery Rhymes . . . . . . . . 214
161
207
༦ བློཙནྡྷ ཝ བྷྱཱ ཙཱུ
07
10.
14
156
85
292


INDEX.
--
: · 325
Life of Amos A. je
242
102
8
162
297
209
270 L
95
Headley, P. C. Fighting Phil.... Lang, Andrew. Letters on Literature . 287
Hedge, Frederick #1., and Wister, Andis Lee. Larus, John Ruse. Mastor .
Metrical Translations and Poems . 15 | Lawrence, William. Life of Amos A. Lawrence 105
Hedge, Frederick H. Martin Luther, and Lazarus, Emma. Poems . . . . .
Other Essays . . . . . . . . .
Lea, Henry Charles. A History of the Inqui-
Heimburg, W. Gertrude's Marriage . . . 294
sition in the Middle Ages . . . . . 34
Henslow, George. The Origin of Floral Struc Lear, Edward. Nonsense Books . . . . 214
tures . . . . . . . . . . . . 133 Lear, Edward. The Book of Nonsense. 214
Herrick, Sophie. The Earth in Past Ages. 270 Le Conte, Joseph. Evolution and Its Rela-
Hervey, T. K. The Book of Christmas . . 206
tion to Religious Thought . .
59
Higginson, T. W. Travellers and Outlaws. 330 Lees, J. A., and Clutterbuck, W. J. B. C. 1887 315
Hill, David J. The Social Influence of Chris Lefebvre, Ernest. Embroidery and Lace.. 208
tianity . . . . . . . . . .
Levi, Leone. International Law . . . .
Hinsdale, B, A. The Old Northwest . . . Lewis, A. H. Critical History of Sunday
Holder, Charles Frederick. A Frozen Dragon 212
Legislation. . . .
viisi
.
..
Holmes, Oliver Wendell. Before the Curfew, Lillie, Lucy C. The Household of Glen Holly 212
and Other Poems, Chiefly Occasional: 15 Lindley, Walter, and Widney, J. P. Cali.
Hosmer, James K. The Life of Sir Henry
fornia of the South . . . . . . . 237
Vane . . . . . . . . . . .
316 Little Ones' Annual for 1888 . . . . . . 214
Hugo, Victor. Ninety-Three . . . . . 207 Livingston, Grace. Pansies for Thoughts . 20
Hugo, Victor. Romances . . . . . . . 207 Lockwood, Sara E. H. Lessons in English.
Hullah, Mary E. In Hot Haste . . . . . 161 Lodge, Henry Cabot. The Federalist . . .
Hutchinson, Horace G. The Record of a Hu Long, J. H. Slips of Tongue and Pen . ..
man Soul . . . . . . . . .
Longfellow. Remembrance Book . . . .
IIutton, W.H. Simon de Montfort and His Cause 47 Longfellow. Courtship of Miles Standish. 208
Inge, W. R. Society in Rome under the Casars 46 Loomis, Chester. Familiar Selections from
Ingram, John H. Life of Elizabeth Barrett
the Rhymes of Mother Goose . . . . 214
Browning ..
Loti, Pierre. An Iceland Fisherman . . . 162
Ingram, John Kells. A History of Political Lowell, James R. Heartsease and Rue . 14
Economy . . . . . . . . . .
155 Lowell, James R. Political Essays . .
Investing, The Art of . . . . . . . .
45
Lowell, Percival. The Soul of the Far East. 329
Irving, John Treat. Indian Sketches . . 10.5 Lubbock, Sir John. On the Senses, Instincts,
James, H. E. M. The Long White Mountain,
and Intelligence of Animals . . . . 283
or, A Journey in Manchuria.
Lunt, Edward Clark. The Present Condition
Jessop, Augustus. The Coming of the Friars 330
of Economic Science.
42
Johnson, Helen Kendrick, Raleigh Westgate; Luska, Sidney. My Uncle Florimond . . . 214
or, Epimenides in Maine . . . . . Mack, Lizzie and Robert E. The Old Father
Johnson, Rossiter. A Short History of the
Santa Claus Picture Book . .
214
War of Secession. .
· 197 Magazine of Art for 1888 . . .
Jones, Charles C., Jr. Negro Myths from the Malone, J. S. The Self : What Is It? : : : 322
Georgia Coast ...
Marching through Georgia. .
Jones, E. Hugh. Smith and Schmidt in Marx, Karl. Capital: Å Critical Analysis of
Africa, or, Hottentot Blue-Book ..
Capitalistic Production
281
Jordan, David S. A Manual of the Vertebrate Masson, Gustave. The Story of Mediaval
Animals of the Northern United States
France . . . . . . . . . .
269
Kane, James J. Ilian; or, The Curse of the Matthews, Brander. Pen and Ink . . . . 267
Old South Church of Boston . . . 293 Matthew, James E. Popular History of Music,
Keats. Lamia . . . .
208
Musical Instruments, Ballet, and Opera 126
Kebbel, T. E. Life of Beaconsfield . . . 165 May, Walter W. Marine Painting. . . . 209
Kennedy, J. H. The Early Days of Mormonism 72 Mayeux, Henri. Manual of Decorative Com-
Kennedy, W. Sloane. Life of Longfellow - 331
position . . . . . . . . . . . 331
Kieffer, Harry. Recollections of a Drummer-
McAnally, D. R., Jr. Irish Wonders . . . 48
Boy . . . . . . . . . . . 214 McCosh, James. First and Fundamental Truths 322
King, Harriet E. H. The Disciples . . McCosh, James. The Religious Aspect of
King, Rufus. Ohio; First Fruits of the Ordi.
Evolution . . . . . . . . . .
59
nance of 1787.
269 McCulloch, Hugh. Men and Measures of
Kirkland, Joseph. The McVeys (An Episode)
Half a Century . . . . . . . . .
240
Klemm, L. R. Chips from a Teacher's Work-
Mead, L. T. Daddy's Boy . . . . . . . 214
shop : : : : :
210
: : : : : : 85 Menken, Adah Isaacs. Infelicia. .
Knight, Susan G. Ned Harwood's Visit to Meredith, George. A Reading of Earth. . 327
Jerusalem . . . . . . . . . 213 Meredith, George. The Ordeal of Richard
Knox, Thomas W. The Boy Travellers in
Feverel.
68
Australasia . . . . . . . . .
Meynell, Wilfrid. Modern Art and Artists . 210
Koopman, Harry Lyman. Orestes: A Dra-
Miller, Olive Thorne. In Nesting Time . . 89
matic Sketch; and Other Poems . .
Milton. Paradise Lost . . . . . . . . 210
Lampman, Archibald. Among the Millet, and Mitchell, S. Weir. A Masque, and Other Poems 16
Other Poems . . . . . . . . .
326 Moore, J. S. Friendly Letters to American
Lanciani, Rodolpho Ancient Rome in the
Farmers and Others . . . . . . . 156
Light of Recent Discoveries . . . . 238 Morley, Henry. English Writers . . 22, 1:32
Landor, Walter Savage. The Pantameron, etc. 164 | Mosby, John S. War Reminiscences and
Lane-Poole, Stanley. Story of Turkey . 105
Stuart's Cavalry Campaigns . . . 198
903
210
210
14
213
16


INDEX.
315
60
214
166
266
16
165
214
248
17
156
Müller, Max. The Science of Thought. . 132 Ristori, Adelaide. Studies and Memoirs . . 71
Mulock, Dinah M. A Christmas Carol . . 209 Rives, Amélie. A Brother to Dragons, and
Mulock, Dinah M. A Friend Stands at the
Other Old-Time Tales ..
65
Door . . . . . . . . . . . . 209 Roberts, Charles G. D. Poems of Wild Life. 327
Murray, W. H. H. Daylight Land ::: 315 Roberts, Edwards. Shoshone and other West-
Nesbit, E. Leaves of Life .
• 327
ern Wonders . . . .
Nesmith, J. E. Monadnoc and other Sketches Robinson, Ezekieh Gilman. Principles and
in Verse : : :..
324
Practice of Morality .
Newton, Richard. Bible Animals and the Rogers, James E. Thorold. The Economic In-
Lessons Taught by Them . . . 214
terpretation of History . . .
258
Neymark, Alfred. Public Debts of Europe. 45 Rogers, James E. Thorold. The Story of
Ninette: An Idyll of Provence. .
162
Holland . . . . . . . . .
268
Ober, F. A. The Knockabout Club in the Romanes, George John. Mental Evolution in
Antilles . . . . . . . . . . .
213
Man . . . . .
. . . 52%
Oliphant, Lawrence. Scientific Religion . . 320 Roosevelt, Theodore. Gouverneur Morris .
Opper, F. and Emma A. Patchwork in Pic-
Roosevelt, Theodore. Ranch Life and the
tures and Print . . . . . . . .
Hunting Trail . . . . . . . . . 209
Optic, Oliver. Taken by the Enemy... 214 Ruete, Emily. Memoirs of an Arabian Princess 70
O'Rell, Max. John Bull, Junior; or, French Rupert, W. W. The History and the Consti-
as She is Traduced . . . . . . . 22
tution of the United States . . . .
O’Rell, Max. Jonathan and His Continent. 296 Ruskin, John. The King of the Golden
Osborne, Dorothy. Letters to Sir William
River . . . . . . . . . . .
Temple . . . . .
Russell, Irwin. Poems .
Panin, Ivan. Poems by Alexander Pushkin . 246 Sanders, Lloyd C. Life of Palmerston .
Pansy for 1888. . .
Sargent, Lewis. The Government Year Book 45
Paris, Compte de. History of the Civil War Schaff, Philip. Church and State . . . . 45
in America . . .
. . . . .
33 Schindler, Solomon. Dissolving Views in the
Patrick, G. T. W. Fragments of the Work
History of Judaism . . . . . . . 248
of Heraclitus of Ephesus on Nature. 295 Seidel, Robert. Industrial Instruction a Peda-
Payson, Edward. The Law of Equivalents .
gogic and a Social Necessity . . . . 84
Peacock, Thomas Brower. Poems of the Serviss, Garett P. Astronomy with an Opera
Plains and Songs of the Solitudes. .
Glass . . . . . . . . . . . 270
Pellew, George. In Castle and Cabin .
163 Sharp, William, Sonnets of this Century . .
Philpott, Henry J. Tariff Chats . . . .
Shaw, Albert. The National Revenues..
Piatt, John James. Lyrics and Idyls of the Sheldon, Louise Vescelius. Yankee Girls in
Ohio Valley .
Zulu Land :
Piatt, Sarah M. B. The Witch in the Glass . 324 Shepard, Edward M. Martin Van Buren .. 100
Political Science Quarterly, April, 1888. . 43 | Shirley, Penn. Little Miss Weasy's Brother 213
Poole, William F. Index to Periodical Litera-
Shorthouse, J. H. A Teacher of the Violin,
ture, First Supplement . . . . . . 249
and Other Tales . . . . . . . .
67
Porter, Rose. Mary the Mother .
209 Shute, E. L. Over the Hills . . . . . . 214
Preyer, W. The Senses and the Will . . . 84 Sidney, Margaret. Old Concord . . .
209
Proudfit, David L. Mask and Domino ... 243 Sladen, Douglas B. W. A Century of Aus-
Pullman, Margaret M. Days Serene. 208
tralian Song .
Putnam, Effie Douglas. Margaret, and The Smith, G. Barnett. William I. and the Ger-
Singer's Story . . . . . . . . .
243
man Empire . . . . . . . .
Putnam, Eleanor, and Bates, Arlo. Prince Smith, Helen Ainslie. Stories of Persons and
Vance, the Story of a Prince with a
Places in America . . . . . . .
Court in His Box. .
211 Snodgrass, J. Wit, Wisdom, and Pathos
Pyle, Howard. Otto of the Silver Hand. . 211
from the Prose of Heinrich Heine. . 297
Quincy, J. P. The Peckster Professorship.
293
Social Life and Literature Fifty Years Ago , 88
Rabbe, Felix. Shelley . . . . . . . . 247 Stedman, Edmund Clarence, and Hutchinson,
Ragozin, Zenaide. The Story of Media .. 247
Helen Mackay. Library of American
Randolph, Henry F. Fifty Years of English
Literature . . . . . . . 55, 121, 297
Song . . . . . . . . . . 18, 210 Stepniak. The Russian Peasantry . . . . 131
Randolph, Henry F. The Book of Latter-Day Sterne, s. Constitutional History and Politi-
Ballads . . . . . . . . . . .
244
cal Development of the United States 70
Reid, Mayne. No Quarter . . . . . . 214 Sterne, Stuart. Beyond the Shadow, and
Reid, Mayne. The Child Wife ..
214
Other Poems . . . . . . . . 16
Reid, Mayne. The Free Lances . . . . . 214 Stevens, Agnes. How Men Propose; the
Reid, T. Wemyss. The Life of the Rt. Hon.
Fateful Question and Its Answer..
W. E. Forster . . . . .
97 Stevenson, Robert Louis. The Black Arrow 68
Renan, Ernest. History of the People of Is-
St. Nicholas Magazine for 1888 . . . . . 214
real, till the Time of King David :. 39 Stockton, Frank R. The Dusantes . .
Repplier, Agnes. Books and Men . . . . 248 Stranahan, C. H. History of French Painting 261
Richardson, Benj. Ward. The Son of a Star 291 Straub, Jacob. Prophecy and Prophets. ; 21
Richardson, Charles. Large Fortunes . . 45 | Sturdy, W. A. Individual Rights . .
Richardson, Charles F. American Literature 235 -Sue, Eugene. The Wandering Jew .
Riddle, A, G. The Tory's Daughter ... 293 Sumner, Heywood. The Besom-Maker. 214
Ringueberg, Lena J., and Matthews, F. S. My Sweet, Henry. Second Middle English Primer 23
Garden . . . . . . . . . . 210 | Swiss Family Robinson . . . . . . . . 214
•
17
23
244
214
165
67
nch Paintin:
16
:
:
:
208


viii
INDEX.
214
15
166
07
84
22
19
Talbot, Charles R. Romulus and Remus, a Wadsworth, Wedworth. Under the Green-
Dog Story..
wood Tree with Shakespeare . . . . 210
Taussig, F. W. The Tariff History of the Walker, E. D. Reincarnation . . . . . 60
United States . . . . . :
156 Wallace, Ellerslie. Amateur Photography. 166
Taylor, Edward. Is Protection a Benefit? A Wallace, Lew. The Boyhood of Christ.. 211
Plea for the Negative . . . . . . 44 Walsh, W. S. Paradoxes of a Philistine... 270
Taylor, Winnie Louise. His Broken Sword. 66 Walsh, W. S. Poems of Béranger . . . . 209
Tennyson. The Bugle Song, and Other Poems 209 Ward, Mrs. Humphrey. Robert Elsinere . . 160
Thayer, William Roscoe. Hesper: An Ameri Warner, Charles Dudley. On Horseback, .
can Drama . . . . . . . . .
325 Warren, George Wm. Hymns and Tunes.
Thom, William Taylor. Shakespeare and Watson, H. B. Marriott. Marahuna.
Chaucer Examinations . . . . . . Wells, David A. Relation of the Tariff to
Thwaites, Reuben G. Historic Waterways.
Wages .
Todd, Charles Barr. The Story of the City of What Shail We Do with It (The Surplus);
New York . .
Papers by Cleveland, Blaine, and others
Tolstoi, Count Leo. Napoleon and the Rus White, Gleeson. Ballads and Rondeaus,
sian Campaign . . . . . . . .
Chants Royal, Sestinas, Villanelles, etc.
Torrey, Mrs. K. s. Mission Sketches . . . 209 Whitman, Walt. November Boughs... 323
Trail, Florence. Studies in Criticism, . . 131 Whittier. Poetic Works, Riverside Edition . 193
Trowbridge, J. T. A Start in Life ... 214 Whittier. Prose Works, Riverside Edition . 294
Trowbridge, J. T. Biding His Time... Wide Awake for 1888.
214
Turner, Samuel Epes. The Germanic Consti Wiggins, Kate Douglas. The Birds' Christ-
tution . . . . .
214
. .
mas Carol . . . .
Tuttle, Herbert. History of Prussia under Wight, 0. W. People and Countries Visited
Frederic the Great . . . . . . .
in a Winding Journey Round the World 313
Upton, George P. The Standard Symphonies Wilde, Oscar. The Happy Prince and Other
Valdés, Armando Palacio. Maximina . .
Tales . . . . . . . . . . . 211
Vandergrift, Margaret. Little Helpers., 213 Wilkie, Franc B. Pen and Powder . . . 198
Vandergrift, Margaret. The Dead Doll, and Willett, Edward. The Search for the Star.
Other Poems . . . . . . . . . Wilstach, John Augustine. The Divine Com-
Van Eichendorff, Joseph F. Leaves from the
edy of Dante . . . . . . . . .
Life of a Good-for-Nothing . . . . Winn, Henry. Property in Land ..
Venable, W. H. Footprints of the Pioneers Winsor, Justin. Narrative and Critical His-
in the Ohio Valley . . . . . .
toty of America, Volume VII. . . .
Verestchagin, Alexander Vassili. At Home
Woodward, C. The Manual Training School 83
and in War, 1853-– 1881 . . .
Wordsworth. The Prelude ..
Verne, Jules. The Adventures of a Chinaman 212 Wormeldy, Katharine Prescott. The Other
Waddington, Samuel. The Sonnets of Europe 244
Side of War ..:: : : : : :
Wadsworth, Wedworth. Through Wood and
Field with Tennyson . . . . . . 210 | Yonge, Miss. Life of Hannah More . . . 20
14
69
212
4.5
46
127
131
Worthington's Annual for iooo : : : : : 199
. . . . 214
LITERARY NOTES AND News ...
. . . . . . . . . . . . 133, 271, 298, 331
TOPICS IN LEADING PERIODICALS ........ 23, 48, 72, 89, 107, 135, 166, 249, 272, 299, 332
Books OF THE MONTH ......... 23, 48, 73, 89, 107, 136, 166, 215, 249, 273, 299, 333



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THE DIAL
[May,
BALZAC'S NOVELS IN ENGLISH.
This enterprise, inaugurated two years since by the publication of “ Père Goriot,” has now
reached the ninth volume. Success has attended it from the first, due almost entirely to the
masterly translations of Miss WORMELEY, by whom they have all been done. The New York
Tribune of April 22d, in a review of the new volume, just published, says:
"Modeste Mignon' is excellently translated by Miss Wormeley, who is specially qualified for the work she has
undertaken by a genuine sympathy for her anthor. Upon the possession of this sympathy, which itself derives
from clear understanding, all true success in translation may indeed be said to depend. The reply of the Earth
Spirit to Faust: Thou'rt like the spirit thou comprehendest; not me'-might be applied here. A sympathetic
translator is, however, also one who is content to subordinate great gifts to the interpretation and illustration of
another mind; and this is a combination rare enough in literature to make the attainment of really excellent
translations almost as difficult as the attainment of real excellence in creative work. That the conjunction of
sympathy with intellectual power and self-sacrifice has been found in the present case is evident; and it ought to
impel the American public so to justify the enterprise of the publishers that they will continue to issue these
admirable translations so long as Miss Wormeley's patience and enthusiasm hold out.
"There is an educational value in the translation of Balzac into English which it will be well not to overlook.
It is full time the truth was everywhere perceived that this writer surpasses all others in fiction by as much as
Shakespeare surpasses all others in poetry. Nothing can be more injurious to the interest of art than the acceptance
of the modern heresy that since Balzac's time there has been an advance in the quality, the methods, or the aims
of fiction. The fact is that since Balzac's time n
the great Frenchman; and it is not less a fact that the literary product of the generation now on the scene has so
far been distinctly inferior in essentials to that of the period immediately succeeding Balzac's. The latter showed
the world what realism is. No one, either before or since, has interpreted it with his force or his logical com.
pleteness. Yet we are drifting every year further from the landmarks Balzac set up, and modern France, with
these guides in full sight, contents itself with the naked nastiness of Zola and the morbid psychology of Bourget,
while outside of France time and energy are wasted in the futile endeavor to make it appear that it is better and
higher art to examine one side of one phase of life through a hole in a shutter than to go out into the open air and
sunshine and look all round human activity.
"No timelier or wholesomer tonic than Balzac in English could be furnished or taken in the circumstances.
There is no man of letters living to-day so well equipped, so buttressed in his ideas, that he can learn nothing from
Balzac. In regard to the methods of observation, the details of composition, the thoroughness of preparation, the
scope of the outlook, the suppleness and elasticity of the creative processes, he may be studied with immense and
continned advantage by all who aspire to write fiction. We have had lately a disgusting attempt to draw peasant
life in France by that gutter-artist, Zola. Nearly fifty years ago Balzac did what Zola has failed to do, and in Les
Paysans' produced a masterpiece, the accuracy and naturalness of which are more and more perceived as consci.
entious effort towards a real comprehension of the subject advanced. Perhaps Roberts Brothers and Miss Wormeley
will some of these days put that admirable work into English. They cannot give us too many volumes from the
Comedie Humaine,' even though their enterprise should embrace the whole of that great undertaking. Balzac is
So various that almost every one of his books illustrates some new facet of his genius, and we can conceive no
better remedy for the mischievous doctrines now being upheld in regard to fiction in many places than honest study
of this master embodies."
THE FOLLOWING NOVELS ARE NOW READY:
PERE GORIOT. THE DUCHESSE DE LANGEAIS. EUGENIE GRANDET.
THE ALKAHEST. THE COUNTRY DOCTOR.
The Two BROTHERS.
Cousin Pons. RISE AND FALL OF CESAR BIROTTEAU. MODESTE MIGNON.
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receipt of price by the publishers,
Sent by mail, port-paid, on
112 FOURTH AVENUE, NEW YORK.
HOUGHTON, MIFFLIN & CO., Boston.


THE DIAL
Vol. IX.
MAY, 1888.
No. 97.
CONTENTS.
MATTHEW ARNOLD (SONNET). Francis F. Browne 5
ARNOLD AND HIS WORK. Melville B. Anderson .. 6
THE LAST OF THE KINGS. J. J. Halsey ..... 7
WILLIAM I., EMPEROR. A. O. McLaughlin .... 9
NAPOLEON'S RUSSIAN CAMPAIGN. W. H. Ray - 12
TENTING ON THE PLAINS. Rossiter Johnson ... 13
RECENT BOOKS OF POETRY. William Morton Payne 14
BRIEFS ON NEW BOOKS ........... 19
Roosevelt's Gouverneur Morris.-Bradley's Story
of the Goths.-Todd's Story of the City of New
York, – Miss Yonge's Life of Hannah More.--
Clayden's Early Life of Samuel Rogers.-Hare's
Walks in Paris.-Hare's Days near Paris.--Straub's
Prophecy and Prophets.-Max O'Rell's John Bull,
Junior; or, French as She Is Traduced.--Thwaites's
Historic Waterways.- Morley's English Writers,
Vol. II.-Miss Sheldon's Yankee Girls in Zulu
Land.--Sweet's Second Middle English Primer.
TOPICS IN MAY PERIODICALS ........ 23
BOOKS OF THE MONTH ........... 23
iar function it has been to show us the peren-
nial significance of battered and time-worn
formulas, leaves with us, as he departs, a new
and memorable interpretation of that saying
which is a stumbling-block to the Philistine of
to-day as to the Pharisee of old,—“Except a
man be born from above he cannot have part
in the society of the future.”
Matthew Arnold seems to have made it the
main task of his life to become a disinterested
critic, not merely in matters literary, but in all
matters that broadly concern civilized society.
The word criticism, as he uses it in the phrase
“criticism of life” and elsewhere, assumes a
wider meaning than it ever had before. The
well-equipped critic, as Mr. Arnold under.
stands the office, is a man with the character
and training requisite to constitute him “ that
mere court of disinterested review and correc-
tion, which every sensible man would always
be glad to have for his own activity.” By his
lifelong study and analysis of the best elements
in the culture of other nations than his own,
Matthew Arnold acquired a power of detach-
ment from British prepossessions, which is
hardly less rare than the miracle of genius.
He saw that the Anglo-Saxon race, while it
leads the world in the power of conduct and
duty, is inferior to the French in the power of
social life and manners, to the Germans in the
power of intellect and knowledge, to the Ital-
ians and Greeks in the power of beauty. He
saw, moreover, that no civilization that neg-
lects or ignores any one of these powers can
hope to inherit the future. And he had the
pluck, the persistence, and the persuasive abil.
ity, necessary to compel the most prosperous
and complacent nation in the world to give an
unwilling ear to his gospel of perfection.
We Anglo-Saxons in America were very
ready to listen and applaud when the preacher
told our English cousins of their aristocracy
materialized, of their middle class vulgarized,
of their lower class brutalized. Are we equally
ready to consider what truth there may be in
the suggestion that, while we are in advance
of England in solving “the social and political
problem,” we are still behind her in what he
calls “the human problem”? Matthew Ar-
nold is now where praise and blame are alike
indifferent to him; by fiercely and contempt.
uously thrusting back the criticism he has
offered us, we can neither hurt him nor ad.
vance ourselves one jot. Whether this crit-
icism be the spawn of a mind sharpened by
rancor, or whether it be the gift of a wise and
candid friend, should make little difference to
a great and manly nation. Nations as well
as individuals have learned the most useful
MATTHEW. ARNOLD.
Not in the meeting of the hands alone,
Nor ripples of a casual courtesy
Above the deeps of thought unstirred that lie,-
Not thus, stern Teacher, is your purport known
To those who in your printed pages own,
More than hand-clasp or meeting eye to eye,
“A presence that is not to be put by,"
Speaking more truly than your voice's tone.
And thus you go not from us in your going;
Some tree of truth from seed cast by your hand
Green-canopied shall spread its branches wide,
Its vital effluence far around bestowing,
A shadow and refuge in a weary land:
So shall your living self with us abide.
FRANCIS F. BROWNE.
ARNOLD AND HIS WORK.*
Another great luminary has gone down
behind a threatening and somewhat cheerless
horizon. The clearest and sweetest of latter.
day heralds of light has carried his torch into
the great Darkness. The prophet whose pecul-
• For a fuller consideration of Mr. Arnold's writings,
see THE DIAL, Vol. iv., pp. 121 and 221.-[EDR.]


THE DIAL
.(May,
lessons of their worst enemies. Competent crit by its newspapers. But the majority are well
icism is one of the chief elements of education; satisfied with the newspaper as it is, with its
it is the rarest commodity in the market and want of taste and decency, with its flagrant
brings the highest price. Such criticism is personality. One of the saddest results of our
offered to us as a nation by an eminent expert. system of personal journalism seems to have
Which is the more patriotic course: to join the escaped Mr. Arnold's vigilant eye : the fact
brutal mob of nameless journalists who affect that it feeds the craving for notoriety which
to deem it American to be impervious to all is rapidly making even village and country
foreign comment; or, on the other hand, to people as public and spectacular in their lives
weigh thoughtfully every suggestion that may as the French.
tend to render us personally and nationally So respectable a writer as the late Mr. Edwin
worthier of “the society of the future"? P. Whipple agrees with the newspapers that
Very likely Mr. Arnold was at fault in some Matthew Arnold's chief traits as a critic are
of his observations upon us, but he is as likely condescension and supercilious ridicule. Cer-
to be at fault in the praise as in the blame. tainly no one whose pet hobbies have been a
At any rate, no thoughtful man will think of target for his light archery is a competent
remonstrating when he tells us that, if there juror in the case against Mr. Arnold. But how
be a discipline in which we are wanting, it is can any disinterested spectator fail to perceive
the discipline of awe and respect. Doubtless that, despite his keen banter, Mr. Arnold is a
the deficiency which we share with the great critic of exemplary temper, fairness, and ur-
English middle class in the sense of manners banity,—a teacher who first wins disciples by
and urbanity, counts for something in this ; his sweetness and then informs them with his
many think the decay of religious faith counts light. Now that he is gone, perhaps we can
for more. Perhaps the very equality that has be calm enough to see that he looked upon
educated the commonest man among us to | America with no unfriendly eye. He deemed
hold himself rather more than the equal of his us in many respects a plantation of the great
neighbor, may have some share in it. What English middle class, to whose energy, strong
ever the causes, the phenomenon is most alarm practical sense, and loyalty to duty, he always
ing. It has already earned us an unenviable did full justice. He concerned himself so
reputation among the nations for flippancy much with this class and with us, simply be-
and for horny insensibility to the finer touch cause he saw in our strong and genuine qual-
of art and manners. In what other country in ities the hope of the future. It was because
the world could a foreign writer of the highest of his faith in us that he urged us to purge
distinction be treated with any approach to the away “the common and ignoble, human
coarse familiarity with which Matthew Arnold nature's enemy," and to cultivate those needs
was handled by our newspapers, at the time of of true human nature, distinction and beauty.
his visit to the United States ? In what other Matthew Arnold was much more than an
country would it “pay” (for that is the way eminent social and literary critic; he was a
to put it) for newspapers to revile their fore great spiritual emancipator. There is a dun-
most man of letters, as Mr. Lowell, our most geonless imprisonment in the sunlight and
distinguished citizen, has been reviled by the under the free sky; there are liberators who
party press ? Crude as public opinion confes sign no proclamation and level no bastille.
sedly was in the days of our fathers, that What man of the present generation who sets
opinion would not have supported a well a priceless value upon saneness and openness
known review in blackguard insolence toward of mind,—the will, if not the capacity, to see
Washington Irving. As things go now, how things as they are,-does not owe his libera-
long before the old “discipline of awe and tion from some clinging prejudice to Matthew
respect” shall have been exchanged for a posi Arnold? Who that has learned a lesson in
tive creed of unabashed derision of whatever character-building from a book like the “Essays
in human affairs is venerable or pathetic or in Criticism” can forget the day when he
heroic ?
first opened the volume ? To his real readers
Mr. Arnold has told us that we have as good Matthew Arnold living was a cheering and
newspapers as we deserve ; certainly those energizing personality ; dead, he takes his
who think our newspapers the best in the place with those whose works are the educa-
world are not the ones to complain of that tors of the race. Like his master Goethe,
way of putting it. What a matter for self- more than his master Sainte-Beuve, he was
congratulation to think that, in the opinion of "a soldier in the war for the liberation of
80 distinguished a critic, we really deserve humanity" from the hideous bondage of bleak
such excellent newspapers ! Are the news materialism and joyless superstition.
papers a true index of our minds, our man. A poet of little fluency and of somewhat
ners, and our morals? In every American scanty productiveness, but of rare lucidity
community the intelligent and sober minority and distinction; a prosaist who never penned
protest against having their community judged ' a dull or ineffective or useless line; a scholar


1888.]
THE DIAL
without touch of pedantry; a distinguished his “Heroes and Hero - Worship.” His history
specialist in education; a thinker who illu centres all its interest about a great personage,
minated letters, society, politics, religion, and men and women appear only as prepara-
Matthew Arnold holds a place apart by reason tion and chorus for him. Society plays an en-
of his peculiar message to his generation. To tirely secondary part to the hero; institutions
him, more even than to Mr. Ruskin, it was and ideas do not come within the range of the
given, in an age when men had grown obtuse author's purpose. Moreover, this dramatic
to the beauty of divinity, to quicken their method of writing history abandons fidelity
sense of the divinity of beauty. In a century to the cold truth for the sake of fidelity to a
whose dominant trend is scientific, his splendid poetical ideal. Carlyle sees in the eighteenth
powers were largely devoted to the task of century nothing but an embodied “Liar and
illustrating the perennial value and necessity Charlatan” save one great “Reality," who
of literary studies. Poetry will be kept alive, “managed not to be a Liar.” This pessimistic
he insisted, by the instinct of self-preservation view of the times and optimistic view of the
in humanity. In a generation whose most | man, taken for the sake of an antithesis, also
marked superficial traits were incredulity and colors his earlier narrative when he contrasts
irreverence, he held an abiding faith in the his worshipful Hohenzollerns with the bad
divine elements of human nature. In a coun ages through which they worked their way
try where triumphant materialism had buried steadily to a throne.
the ideal far out of sight and had rolled a great Again, Carlyle's notorious contempt for the
stone upon its tomb, he steadily predicted its genus homo — with the occasional exception of
approaching resurrection. To the great, vic this or that hero — unfitted him to deal serious-
torious, stubborn Anglo-Saxon race, loudly ly with the affairs of men. The dignity of
boasting itself the best breed upon earth, con historical writing, the result of that seriousness
gratulating itself upon its crops, its machinery, of mind which a healthy contemplation of the
its home comforts, its increase of population, crises, the catastrophes, and the progresses of
he was never weary of proclaiming that “Jeru the race produces, is unknown to his pages, but
salem is not yet."
is replaced by a style which is frequently gro-
MELVILLE B. ANDERSON. tesque and sometimes hideous in its ghastly
trifling over the hopes and fears of men and
the destinies of nations. Keen and incisive
THE LAST OF THE KINGS.*
as is Carlyle, he sees but one side of the life he
When Carlyle wrote his “History of Fried-
depicts; and whilst he delineates vividly the
rich the Second” he gave one-third of his
pageants of life amid which his heroes plot and
pages to the fortunes of the family and the
strive, he is a stranger to the great heart of
humanity which throbs truly beneath the sur-
lands of the Hohenzollerns prior to the acces-
sion of Friedrich to the throne in 1740. Con-
face of events. No man who has not a sympa-
thy for the rank and file of his fellow-mortals
sequently, his narrative is a fairly complete
dynastic history of Prussia down to that date,
can recount truly the events which are but the
and was until recently the only one addressed
outward expression of the eternal progress of
to English readers. But there are various
the race upward to its own regeneration. Let
reasons why this famous work could not satisfy
him even, as did Carlyle, read exhaustively
the historical demands of to-day, even in that
whole libraries and survey with his own eye
portion which covers the reign of Friedrich.
the scenes of his history,– the secret of what
he reads and sees will still evade him, because
Carlyle came forward as an advocate rather
than as a historian, and wrote his sketch under
the historian must interpret with judicial im-
a strong prepossession. In his first chapter he
partiality as well as observe with scientific
reveals the purpose of his writing, and strikes
accuracy.
Finally, we are now told that “it does not
the critical level of his work when he says of
Friedrich: “In his way he is a Reality; he
appear that Carlyle undertook any researches
in the Prussian archives," while « from Aus-
always means what he speaks; grounds his
trian and Russian sources he had little or
actions, too, on what he recognizes for the
nothing; from French scarcely anything that
truth; and, in short, has nothing of the Hypo-
laid claim to official authority.” . Moreover,
crite or Phantasm. ... How this man
“the subsequent publications which throw
comported himself in the Eighteenth Century,
and managed not to be a Liar and Charlatan,
light upon the reign of Frederic represent
as his Century was, deserves to be seen a little
nearly every national standpoint and every
variety of literature."
by men and kings.” The Sage of Chelsea, then,
In his “History of Prussia under Frederic
in his “Friedrich” writes another chapter in
the Great” Mr. Tuttle, while calling attention
* HISTORY OF PRUSSIA UNDER FREDERIC THE GREAT, in his preface to the bibliographical deficiency
1740 — 1756. By Herbert Tuttle, Professor in Cornell Uni.
in Carlyle's history which we have just indica-
• versity. In two volumes. Boston: Houghton, Mimin
"Ited in the quoted sentences, modestly depre-
& Co.


THE DIAL
[May,
cates all comparison of his own volumes with a and hatred which his wholesale mendacity had
work from so masterly a pen as Carlyle's. Yet wrought. The truth is that the man who as
we venture to place his work, so far as finished, crown-prince could write the “Anti-Machia-
alongside the master's," and to say that what | vel," and portray the model prince as one who
we have tried to indicate as the lack in Car- should keep faith with his people and his
lyle's work is in good measure supplied by the neighbors and rule his domains not as a per-
American historian. Mr. Tuttle is writing a sonal possession but as a trust, was himself the
history which, in his own words, shall describe incarnation of Machiavelli's “Prince.” The
“the life of Prussia as a state, the development fact that he brought the highest ability to his
of polity, the growth of institutions, the pro- task and raised Prussia temporarily to a com-
gress of society.” Four years ago appeared a manding position among the nations should
first volume, which brought the narrative down not conceal from us that his rule was a per-
to the accession of Frederic the Great; and sonal tyranny, that this cold inflexible impera-
historical critics were at once conscious that tor was an utterly selfish and unscrupulous
a new master, of the critical school of Ranke dictator, winning no cordial allies, owning no
and Freeman and Stubbs, had appeared. One genuine friendships, but living in a Sahara of
of the most difficult sections of European his distrust and suspicion produced by his own
tory, in its obscurity, its incoherence, its dif- faithlessness. His superb faith in himself,
fuseness, was there handled with a skill which which wavered but once, after the disaster of
left one in doubt which most to admire, the Kunersdorf, and his military genius, were the
insight, or the judiciousness, or the constructive forces that bore him successfully, in the face of
power shown. Out of the chaos of Prussian a hostile Europe, to the front rank of imperial
chronicle came not merely a coherent political kings. This military genius is ably analyzed
history, but the constitutional and, to a certain by Mr. Tuttle in a passage where the weakness
extent, the social life of a people who were to | of Frederic's strategy is offset by the bril-
rule Germany because of the resources of liancy of his tactics. “It was his conduct of
strength underlying the surface appearance a battle, not of a campaign, his demeanor in
which they presented to the mere annalist. the face of the enemy, not his skill in the crea-
The work has now been continued to the be tion of favorable conditions, that gives him
ginning of the Seven Years' War. A fourth the name of a great general.”
volume will cover the period of that war, while The first of these new volumes is entirely
a fifth will complete the reign of Frederic the occupied with the affairs of tortuous diplo-
Great.
macy and brilliant fighting; the second con-
We welcome the present volumes as a tains in two masterly chapters the author's
serious and valuable contribution to the history most valuable contributions to Prussian his-
of an important epoch. Whilst Mr. Tuttle is tory in the eighteenth century. Taking ad-
not a master of that pyrotechnic style in vantage of the lull in politics which for nearly.
which Carlyle has never been equalled, he is ten years followed the peace of Aix-la-Chapelle,
a safer guide. Carlyle, like Taine on English he turns our attention to “Recuperation and
Literature, should be read after a matured Reform" and “Civil and Judicial Organiza-
judgment is made up. The volumes under tion.” It is with such portions of his subject
review will become the standard history of that Mr. Tuttle is fully at home, as his preface
their subject. Written in an easy style, they indicates his purpose to be. Claiming no
recount their narrative in a deliberate yet special military knowledge, he yet carries his
sympathetic manner. The writer has a graphic reader, without much tediousness, through
power in portraying individuals, and gives us the mazes of the military affairs which it
in a few touches, which in more than one case would require the unusual endowments of the
depart from the conventional outlines, shrewd Count of Paris to render absorbingly attract-
estimates of such men as Cardinal Fleury, ive. In the treatment of the diplomatic trans-
Lord Carteret, and Kaunitz, Broglie, Bellisle, actions, which must engross so much of the
and “the old Dessauer.” But his leading por narrative, he enables us to endure patiently
trait is, of course, that of Frederic, and he has the long account of juggling tergiversation.
sketched it with no uncertain hand. “Last of But into the field of governmental growth and
the Kings" Frederic was indeed, as Carlyle calls social organization, somewhat wearied by the
him,--and a “Reality,” too, beyond a doubt; selfishness of court and camp, we eagerly fol.
but no more stupendous mis-statement was ever low him, to find our faith amply rewarded.
penned than that “he managed not to be a With a discernirg eye and a coördinating
Liar.” No man ever lied more persistently judgment he has set before us the organization
and shamelessly than the great Frederic; no of the army, the civil service, and the local
personal promise, no formal treaty was binding governments; the reform of the finances, the
on the conscience of this “last of the kings," currency, and the taxation; the supervision of
who more than once almost made shipwreck industry and of commerce; the regulation of
of his fortunes through the universal distrust I the judicature, and attempts at codification of


1888.)
THE DIAL
the laws. Here lies the worthiest portion of
WILLIAM I., EMPEROR.*
Frederic's work in these earlier years; for
If William I., Emperor of Germany, had
while the efficiency of the army was the raison
lived until the 22d of last March, or thirteen
d'être for all the rest, still the foundations
days longer than he did live, he would have
upon which Stein and Bismarck afterward
completed his ninety-first year. He had a
built up the state were then raised.
long and eventful life. It is scarcely an ex-
We wish we could have followed Mr. Tuttle
aggeration to say that his biography must be
one step further. But he is a constitutional
a history of Europe in the present century.
rather than a social historian, and we look in
Not Germany alone but all Europe has felt
vain for clear glimpses of the great substruct-
William's influence, and events of historic in-
ure of all that he has given us in the social
terest in various parts of Europe influenced
life of the people. We feel that Mr. Green or
him from boyhood. If we except that always
Mr. McMaster would have shown us more
exceptional blood-and-iron Chancellor, the
clearly what the great world, which had no
late Emperor has perhaps more than any other
part in the counsels of diplomacy or of war,
one man suggested European political thought
and which merely submitted to all that goy-
and directed political action. He was not
ernment did for trade and industry,—what this
always prominent himself in adjusting the
great body of the nation was doing; how the
weights that might preserve the trembling
people were living; whether any progress of
balance between the rival nations. But his
the individual was being made toward social,
personality, his very existence as prince, king,
economic, or intellectual enfranchisement. We
and emperor, have often controlled the hands
would have been profited by a closer view of
of more cunning and scheming statesmen.
the toiling and unthinking peasantry; of the
Upon the downfall of the Holy Roman Em-
quicker life of the boroughs; of the conserva-
pire in 1806, German greatness seemed gone
tive obstructionism in the feudal strongholds
forever. This far from imperial Empire had
of the nobles. It may be that this work can-
long been a mere pretense; but it was hallowed
not be done till a Cunningham, a Seebohm, or a
by historic memories. Prussia, raised to prom. E
Thorold Rogers shall have investigated the in-
inence by the genius and energy of Frederick
dustrial history of the German peoples. It may
the Great, was brought to humiliation in the
be that Mr. Tuttle intends to devote a portion
hands of incompetent successors.
of his fifth volume to this phase of the subject.
William was born in 1797. Among the rec-
At any rate, the people of any land have now
ollections of his early boybood were the dis-
become the preëminent theme for the historian,
asters of the war with France, the hurried
.and no history is adequate which is content to
flight from Berlin, the grief of his noble
present merely the politics of a nation or of a
mother over the threatened destruction of
period. Social, moral, and economic features
Prussia, the trials, privation, humiliation, that
must be sought for and revealed, as personal
followed Jena. Napoleon sneered at Will-
give place to national histories and the impor-
iam's father as a good connoisseur of military
tance of the monarch to the importance of the
jackets. And the truth is that Frederick Will-
people he rules. Even “the last of the kings”
iam III. was rather a lamb in Hohenzollern
would have been a small figure in history had
wolf-clothing. The army had been drilled
. not his tremendous personality rested upon a
perfectly. We are told that “there never
people persistent, enduring, thorough; a people
was more painful attention to the uniform
who, through the silent years of their history,
length of the pigtails and the equal distance
were developing beneath the surface of ephem-
between the feet.” But the army of which
eral events the forces which were to crown
Frederick the Great had been so proud did not
Kaiser Wilhelm at Versailles. In these crit-
prevent Bonaparte from humbling Prussia to
ical days of the new German empire, when
the dust. These early disasters had great in-
the sword of a line of imperators, passing for
| fluence in directing the trend of the young
the moment to a dying statesman, becomes
Prince's mind. In mere childhood, William
a sceptre, and men are anxiously asking what
evinced love for military affairs. The events of
the nearing next reign may bring forth, we
history encouraged this natural tendency. The
welcome this new and masterly history of the
army received his early and his late attention,
man and of the politics which founded Prus-
until at Sedan the still finely-drilled but also
sian Cæsarism; but we would hail with a
manly corps of Prussian soldiery took revenge
heartier satisfaction anyone who would voice
for French insolence of sixty years before.
for us the silent forces of society which, even
in the reign of the Great Frederic, were point *WILLIAM I. AND THE GERMAN EMPIRE. A Biograph.
ing to a time when an uncrowned Cæsar should
ical and Historical Sketch. By G. Barnett Smith, author
of “ Poets and Novelists," "The Biography of Gladstone,"
be able to wield the sceptre if not to wear the
etc. Obicago: A. C. McClurg & Co
crown of the Hohenzollerns in the person of WILLIAM OF GERMANY. A Succinct Biography of Will.
Prince Bismarck.
J. J. HALSEY. iam I, By Archibald Forbes. New York: Cassell & Co,
.


10
[May,
THE DIAL
Napoleon is reported to have said at St. Hel he delineates. It is always particularly annoy-
ena that in fifty years Europe would be Cos. ing to find that a biographer has not seen
sack. Russia is great; but Europe, owing to above the shoulders of the man whose charac-
William I., has rather a Teutonic than a Cos ter and actions he purports to describe. This
sack cast of countenance. Since 1840, when author has not been afflicted with this inexcus-
his father died, William has been a conspicu. able mental myopy. And for that reason, if
ous figure in history. His brother ascended | no other, this biography deserves a recognj-
the throne of Prussia as Frederick William | tion and a welcome.
IV., and almost immediately bestowed on One part of William's character, however,
William, as beir presumptive to the throne, has not been fully comprehended. Mistakes
the title of Prince of Prussia. Many events of this kind are few; but this mistake is im-
of historic interest have hurried into view portant. William inherited the Hohenzollern
since that time. These years have seen the belief in divine right. A Deo Rex, a Rege
scheming of Metternich, the patriotic struggles Lex was the Hohenzollern creed. But if this
of Garibaldi, the discovery of the fallibility were stated — and Mr. Smith has not stated
of the Pope. They have seen France change it- it would not tell all. William was pecul-
and re-change her constitution, and Russia iarly a believer in kingly authority. When
strive by diplomacy, chicanery, and wars, to king he loved his “volk," but he never forgot
reach the Bosphorus. All these events have that they were his subjects. Whatever good
influenced Prussian history and development, they received he felt they should receive from
and have been part of the life of William of him. This element of his character was prom-
Germany.
inent during his life and often had controlling
These facts will indicate to some extent the influence. The Prussian people have more
task that confronts him who attempts to write political rights than in 1840. Few of these
the story of such a life. If it is to be done have been the voluntary gifts of William'or
right, it is the task of years. It demands the have been given with his approbation. In
skill and appreciation of the trained historian, 1848, while he was Prince of Prussia, he, by
not the facility of the littérateur or the rough the advice of his brother, withdrew for a short
ness and readiness of the news-correspondent. time to England, because of the opposition of
However' well we may understand and appre the people, who seemed to have selected him
ciate William himself, the historic reasons for as the special object of their hatred. This
his actions must be known, or he and his ac was not a passing and unreasonable whim on
tions are largely meaningless. This statement the part of the people. They looked on Will-
will partly define my opinion of the biogra iam as an opponent of constitutionalism. Mr.
phies by Mr. G. Barnett Smith and Mr. Archi Smith says nothing of the stand the Prince
bald Forbes. But it will suggest an inadequate had taken in 1846, or of his later opposition
and perhaps a wrong conclusion. It is an that aroused the people; but the biographer
apology for them rather than a complete seems to content himself with wondering that
condemnation of them. These books cannot his hero should be maligned. When Frederick
pretend to be exhaustive treatments of the William IV. came to the throne, the people
subject. But in these hurrying days, few save were longing for constitutionalism; the govern-
the specialist have the leisure to read exhaust ment was practically an absolute monarchy.
ive treatments. It is of interest to the general But the King was imbued with high ideas of
reader to know William's actions, even if, kingly prerogative. Feudalism rather than
isolated from their causes, their deep historic constitutionalism was his aim. He continually
significance is not disclosed. Let the broad looked behind him. The old was the good. The
lines be true, the profile clear and distinct, and people were educated, vigorous, refined; but
he who takes a glance as he passes by may the form of their government would indicate
carry away a remembrance of a character sil that they were not capable of self-government
houette that will not leave him. But so far and needed fraternal care. The English papers
as a line is indicated it must be faithfully quietly ridiculed them as a “nation of think-
drawn, and one that is started must be com ers." The people began to grumble for politi-
pleted. The task is not an easy one. It is cal rights and individual safeguards. As other
hard for a witness to tell the truth, unless he peoples began to achieve their desires, the
tells the whole truth. Both of these biogra grumbling was changed to shouting. Now in
phers have had encounters with this difficulty. all this, the Prince of Prussia was regarded as
Mr. Smith has understood that his work re the man who prejudiced the King against the
quired his best efforts. He has taken hold of people. The assumption was not entirely jus-
his subject with earnestness. He has written tified, but it is certain that the wavering mon-
easily and well. A mind capable of appreciat arch more than once leaned on his sterner
ing ethical symmetry has comprehended the brother. William opposed the movement to-
noble largeness and simplicity of the character ward constitutionalism in 1846. He thought


1888.]
11
THE DIAL
the throne of Prussia would be in danger But in general, as already said, Mr. Smith's
if concessions were made or the royal pre difficulty has arisen from not giving enough
rogatives diminished. He opposed even the rather than in not giving right what he has
right of petition, fearing lest thereby the given. All of the events prompting the
people would interfere in all governmental | Franco-Prussian war must be understood be-
matters. It is no wonder that the people fore its historic importance is seen; but the
were prejudiced against him. The wonder author has not taken space to give them. And
is that they did not shout more loudly. The though his work is entitled “ William I. and
number of killed in the March riots foots the German Empire,” the constitution of
up some two hundred or more ; and it is cred 1871 is dismissed with half a page. Per-
itable to the Prussian people that they were haps, however, the modicum of praise is
not carried away by excitement when once too small in proportion to the adverse criti-
blood had been spilled, but contented them. cism of a book fit to be recommended despite
selves with kingly promises and concessions. its faults.
It is William's relation to the people that It is a misnomer to call Mr. Forbes's book a
interests us, his character as exhibited toward biography. It is not, indeed, a book in any
them. And here the biographer has missed a true sense of the word. It has the outward
leading element. Mr. Smith seems to have form of a book; inwardly it is a gossipy and
totally misunderstood the position of Russia, interesting newspaper article, written by an
at the outbreak of the Franco-Prussian war, and expert news correspondent. In one way the
he says: “Russia did not want to fight Prussia, work is not only entertaining but valuable as
and yet she wished to see her crippled because well. Mr. Forbes accompanied King William
of her own interests. So with a Mephistophe in the Franco-Prussian war, from the Rhine
lian smile, she threw out hints which she provinces to Paris. He was a witness of bat-
knew would make France wince and goad her ile after battle, and saw the King amid the
into action perbaps.” He forms his conclu trials, fatigues, and enthusiasm of that won-
sion from statements quoted by him from the | derful progress. The descriptions so vividly
“ Goloss” of St. Petersburg, which he thinks | given are of lasting historic importance, and
expresses Russian official sentiment. One they include almost all there is of value in the
might be satisfied if Russia's position were book. His agile pencil quickly noted the
not spoken of at all, though the Franco-Prus- shifting phases of battle, and has preserved
sian war can scarcely be understood without | for us scenes and incidents that would have
a study of the international complications. escaped another less experienced. The book
But if not historical completeness, at least is, above all, readable. There is in it not a
historical accuracy can be demanded. The dry or uninteresting page.
famous interview between William and the It is hard to understand why we cannot
Czar at Ems is mentioned, but is seemingly escape newspaper English when we escape the
not regarded as of the least importance in newspaper. If Mr. Forbes's article is to mas-
determining the position of Russia. No men querade as a book, and a book upon one of
tion is made of the Czar's nomination of the grandest themes in history, something is
William as knight of the military order of due to the dignity of its form and to the dig.
Saint George, nor of the toast of the Russian nity of its subject. If we must have a noun
ambassador on the occasion of the presentation | used as a verb, just to suit the author's con-
of the Grand Cross of that order. Russia venience, it is to be hoped that he follows
may not have been averse to war in Central Humpty Dumpty's practice and “pays it ex-
Europe, during which she might hope to tra.” If Bunsen must be said to be engaged
make another attempt to break her way out of in “bear leading ” when he is accompanying
the Black Sea. It is known that she desired the Prince in his tour through England, there
the abrogation of the treaty of Paris of 1856; is certainly no propriety in describing King
but this she hoped to accomplish through the William's dignified behavior at Ems by so
friendship of Prussia. Hardly had the war feline a metaphor as the writer uses when he
begun when Russia announced that, if a third tells us that “The King's back did at last be-
power declared for France, she would assist gin to get up.” One need not be a purist to
Prussia, and King William sent the Czar the be displeased with such expressions. We can-
following telegram: “Prussia will never not refrain from suggesting to the author, also,
forget that it is due to you that the war did that it will not do to tell American readers
not assume the most extreme dimensions." that George Washington was still President
It is a common belief that the whole affair was when King William was born (March 22,
settled by General Manteuffel's mission to 1797). But, after all, Mr. Forbes has given
Russia after the Bohemian campaign. Of | in a sketchy way a very good popular picture
all this, the author has said nothing; and the of the German Emperor, that has its places
reader is left with an entirely wrong impres and its uses.
sion of Russia's attitude.
A. C. McLAUGHLIN.


12
[May,
THE DIAL
NAPOLEON'S RUSSIAN CAMPAIGN.* naked, disorganized, the retreat of the French
could no more be stopped at Kalouga or Kras-
Man proposes, God disposes. For “God”
noë than the advance a few weeks before.
substitute "Fate” or “Destiny," and you have
All that Koutouzof could do he did. He
the key note of Count Tolstoi's recent book
turned the flight into the only route that was
on “Napoleon and the Russian Campaign."
utterly disastrous for the French-the road
Beginning with the terrific battle of Borodino,
by which they had come, and which therefore
on September 9, 1812, in which the French lost
was stripped bare of all that could support an
forty thousand men and the Russians three-
army in its march through a hostile country.
fourths as many, Tolstoi follows the course of
Four hundred and fifty thousand French
events down to the passage of the Beresina,
and allied troops encamped in the Niemen;
on November 28 of the same year: nearly
three hundred thousand entered Russia; one
three months of history,-of defeats that were
hundred thousand left Moscow; less than forty
victories, of victories that were calamitous
thousand reached the east bank of the Bere-
defeats, of splendid hope ending in dismal
sina. Of these one-half were destroyed by the
distress.
cannon of the Russians, and by the terrible
As we read Tolstoi's book we believe as
plunge into the river through a broken bridge.
never before in the futility of man's plans
The passage of the Beresina has become a
when depending for their execution upon man's
synonym for human woe, says Fyffe in
puny strength. Enraged by the Fabian policy
substance.
of Barclay, a foreign commander, the people
Tolstoï's book is a study in the Philosophy
demanded his removal. The result was Boro-
of History. He would have us believe that
dino. The French, twelve hundred miles from
“accident,” “genius," do not stand for any.
their own territory, could ill afford the loss;
thing that really exists, that therefore they
the Russians thereby opened the way to Mos-
cannot be defined, and only express a certain
cow. Barclay lost his place for evacuating
way of looking at events.
Smolensk; Koutouzof won praise for making
“I am ignorant of the cause of a fact. I believe
the surrender of Moscow a possibility. Not
that I cannot know it, and, accordingly, I do not
Napoleon —80 reasons the vigorous writer —
try to discover it; I say, it is an accident.
caused Borodino; not Napoleon's cold in the
"I see that a force has produced an action in-
head accomplished disaster for the French, compatible with the ordinary qualities of men; I
but a resistless tide of events, sweeping the cannot penetrate to the cause of this force, and I
invading army from Smolensk to Borodino, cry, it is genius.
from Borodino to Moscow and their grave.
"The sheep shut up every night by the shepherd
Moscow abandoned; Moscow occupied by the
in a special enclosure, and given extra food till it
becomes twice as fat as the others, must appear to
alien; Moscow burned.
be a genius to the rest of the flock. The fact that
To us, the entrance of the French to Russia's
the sheep, instead of entering the common fold,
ancient capital situated six hundred miles has a place by itself and extra fodder, and, once
from the border, in the very heart of the ene fattened, is delivered to the butcher and killed,
my's country, seems a sad mistake. We should doubtless impresses the other sheep as a result of
look for the reason not in the mistaken judg.
genius combined with a series of extraordinary ac-
ment of a great commander but in a stern
cidents.
"But if the sheep stop thinking that everything
necessity of physical force. No possible
that goes on is exclusively related to their own wel.
number of troops could have withstood the
fare, if they admit that events may follow ends
resistless momentum of that body hurled
they cannot comprehend, they will perceive a
against Moscow with a velocity that con unity of action and a logical conclusion in the fate
stantly accelerated as the destination was of the fattened sheep."
approached. Rostoptchin with all his conflict The fortuitous or fated combinations of
ing proclamations neither effected nor bin events, of accident and genius, which made
dered the evacuation by the Russians. They Napoleon's career, are after all but incidents
could not stay; they would not have remained of the great ethnic conflicts — that of the
if they could, to formally deliver their city Teuton against tbe Gaul, and of Europe
to the hated seeker after glory. History de aginst the Slav- a small part in the drama
clares the retreat a blunder. It could not of the present century. The play over, the
have been prevented. Every day in Moscow curtain down upon the sombre tragedy of
hastened the disorganization of the army. the Russian campaign, we may see clearly
Like a frightened and wounded beast—to use what a wretched thing men took for a force
Tolstoi's figure—the French army in hurrying when Destiny impelled him and his country-
to escape its pursuer rushed into his arms. men on to destruction in the dreary wilds of
Hounded, disheartened, disabled, starving, the frozen north.
In this book Tolstoï brings into strong light
• NAPOLEON AND THE RUSSIAN CAMPAIGN. By Count
Leo Tolstoi. Translated from the French by Hunting.
the contrast between the general and the pri-
ton Smith. New York: T. Y. Orowell & Co.
| vate soldier. The latter in the mass guides,


1888.]
13
THE DIAL
directs, compels the former. War is an ex- | ments of the first year, and in the last year he
pression of popular feeling and is controlled had risen to the rank of major-general, led a
by inexorable fate. The glorious man of division of cavalry with which he always rode
Europe during that part of the nineteenth to the charge, and achieved some of the com-
century which precedes Waterloo is reduced pletest victories won by any subordinate com-
to Plato's man. Humanity is the power; the mand.
great man the index hand upon the dial of Immediately after the war, without even an
historic events.
opportunity to visit his home in Michigan, be
The work concludes with a parable, the les- was sent to lead a cavalry expedition through
son of which is this: Man in searching for the Texas, to let the people of that far-off State
final object of events or historical personages know that the Confederacy was overthrown,
can only observe the correlations existing be- and to put an end to the bushwhacking and
tween human life and the other phenomena of disorders that still disturbed its peace. After
nature: the great first cause is unknowable. this service, he visited his home, and then
“ Canst thou by searching find out God?” accepted the lieutenant-colonelcy of the 7th
Such a book is useful. Whether or not we United States cavalry, with which he spent
agree with the author matters"little. One can eight or nine years at the frontier posts in
not give his thoughtful attention (and to read Kansas and Dakota. In all these years, Mrs.
thoughtfully is impossible) to this analysis of Custer was with him constantly, separated
motives and events which the author styles only when he was actually on the trail of
the “Physiology of War," without gaining hostile Indians.
new views. The reader lays down the book “A soldier and a soldier's wife,
with a broader conception of history as the
They marched through many a burning plain,
record of the passions and aspirations of
And sighed for many a gallant life.”
people and the deeds of nations, not of individ.
They saw the pioneer, to whom the return of
uals, be they never so good or great.
peace had imparted new hope and activity,
The translation of this work is from the
pushing westward with the edge of civiliza-
French instead of the original Russian, but it
tion, and it was theirs to protect him in his
has been capitally done by Mr. Huntington
labors; they saw the vast herds of buffalo and
Smith. The book is wretchedly bound and is
other game, now almost extinct, still roaming
not altogether free from typographical errors.
the plains; they saw the first railway making
W. H. RaY.
its slender mark across the continent, and the
untamable Indian still struggling against the
== -
-----
power that was slowly pushing him to the
wall. They experienced the “northers” of
TENTING ON THE PLAINS.*
the Gulf coast, and the floods of Kansas, and
the blizzards of Dakota. Mrs. Custer had the
When the great war was brought to a sud-
privilege of living for four months in an army
den close by the rapid surrender of the Con-
wagon, of riding beside her husband in long
federate armies, the feeling of relief from the
marches across the plains, of seeing a half-
long and severe tension, the home-coming of
settled country in a transition state between
the volunteers, and the necessity for putting
war and peace, of witnessing the military dis-
new energy into our industries, to repair the
cipline of the garrison and becoming familiar
waste of the conflict, produced an inclination
with the peculiarities of social life in the
throughout the country not only to forget the
officers' quarters. It was a part of our history
lurid chapter that had just been written in our
that has no parallel; and it is fortunate that
history, but to lose sight of those who had
of the few women who participated in it there
been conspicuous in the field. This book deals
was one sufficiently gifted in the art of expres-
with the forgotten sequel. Though the war
sion to give us its imperishable picture. Indeed,
was over, the need of an army was not; and
Mrs. Custer unites an unusual number of the
while most of the boys in blue went back to
qualities that make good writers. She has a
their firesides and the occupations of peace,
fine sense of humor, and the power of setting
some of them were obliged to remain in the
forth that which has seemed ludicrous to her
disordered States of the South or hurry off to
so that it seems equally so to the reader. She
new service on the Western frontier. One of
has the art of a dramatist in leading up to a
these was George A. Custer, the youngest
crisis and at the same time concealing it till
general in the national service, and in some
the last moment. The story of the military
respects the most brilliant soldier of the war.
execution in Texas is thus told with consum-
He was graduated at West Point barely in
mate skill. She can narrate the incidents of a
time to participate as a lieutenant in the move-
midnight freshet that sets the camp afloat and
* TENTING ON THE PLAINS; OR, GENERAL CUSTER IN sweeps the half-wakened soldiers down the
KANSAS AND TEXAS. By Elizabeth B. Custer, author of
current, so that the reader gets the outward
“Boots and Saddles." New York: Charles L. Webster
& Co.
circumstances and the emotions of the partic-


14
[May,
THE DIAL
ipators at the same time. She can portray a ful years they have been for the poet, years
character—witness that of Eliza—with strong spent for the most part in foreign lands, proud
originality, and yet with perfect naturalness. to welcome as we were proud to send the gen-
She knows how much of camp gossip to give, tleman, scholar, and man of letters, so well
and how much to suppress. She has the rare able to represent all the finer qualities of our
tact to tell with perfect delicacy some of the national character in the courts of the Old
characteristic but rough incidents of a rough World. Busy years also they have been, filled
life, which an ordinary writer would either with the many duties attached to the high
make vulgar or avoid altogether. She bas diplomatic office which Mr. Lowell graced so
patriotism without narrowness, wit without conspicuously in London and Madrid. In view
bitterness, and an abounding sympathy with of the demands made upon the statesman in
everything noble in the varied humanity that Mr. Lowell during those years, it would have
fills her pages. Not the least acceptable thing been no more than natural that the poet and
in the book is the unconscious revelation of essayist in him should enjoy a well-earned
her own character as a heroic woman and repose. But Mr. Lowell could not forget that
the perfection of a wife. Her husband is her he was a man of letters; he could not thus
hero, and it is not alone the feminine portion abruptly lay aside the tools of his craft. So it
of her readers that will be led by these alter comes that we owe to these years of diplomatic
nately breezy and thoughtful chapters to fall service two of the choicest volumes in our lit-
in love with the “boy general.”
erature, the collection of essays published a
If it be true that the second book is the year or two ago, and the collection of poems
supreme test of authorship, we have here a now before us.
triumph in literary art; for all the qualities "Along the wayside where we pass bloom few
that gave “Boots and Saddles” a sudden and
Gay plants of heartsease, more of saddening rue;
So life is mingled; so should poems be
phenomenal success seem heightened in this
That speak a conscious word to you and me."
volume, and some are here that hardly appeared With this prefatory quatrain, the volume is
in that book at all. It is at once charming as christened « Heartsease and Rue.” Like all
an entertainment and valuable and unique as
true poetry, it offers the reader heartsease in
history. It is beautifully printed, and the text rising to the height of the argument and in
is supplemented with spirited illustrations.
contemplating the beauty of the unfolded vis-
ROSSITER JOHNSON.
ion, and rue in the recollection of past joys, of
the touch of vanished hands and the sound of
voices that are heard no more. There is a
RECENT BOOKS OF POETRY.*
good deal of this memorial poetry in the vol.
It is many years since it has fallen to the ume, crowned by the stately ode to Agassiz
reviewer's lot to examine a new volume of which first meets our eyes as the pages are
poems by Mr. James Russell Lowell. Event opened. This ode takes its place in the noble
series of which the “ Commemoration Ode" is
* HEARTSEASE AND RUE. By James Russell Lowell.
the finest example. No single passage can
Boston: Hougbton, Mifflin & Co.
BEFORE THE CURFEW, AND OTHER POEMS, CHIEFLY adequately represent it, for no single passage
OCCASIONAL. By Oliver Wendell Holmes. Boston: can exhibit the harmony of its complex struct-
Houghton, Mifflin & Co.
ure, or the symmetrical development of its
METRICAL TRANSLATIONS AND POEMS. By Frederic H.
Hedge and Annis Lee Wister. Boston: Houghton, Mif. thought; but the closing lines have a value of
fin & Co.
their own, and they may be taken apart from
A MASQUE, AND OTHER POEMS. By S. Weir Mitchell,
the context more safely than most other pas-
M.D., LL.D. Boston: Houghton, Mifflin & Co.
ORESTES: A DRAMATIC SKETCH; AND OTHER POEMS.
sages of the poem.
By Harry Lyman Koopman, Buffalo: Moulton, Wen "The shape erect is prone: forever stilled
borne & Co.
The winning tongue; the forehead's high-piled heap,
BEYOND THE SHADOW, AND OTHER POEMS. By Stuart A cairn which every science helped to build,
Sterne. Boston: Houghton, Mifflin & Co.
Unvalued will its golden secrets keep:
POEMS. By Irwin Russell. New York: The Century Co. He knows at last if Life or Death be best:
BEFO' DE WAR. Echoes in Negro Dialect. By A. C.
Wherever he hath flown, whatever vest
The being hath put on which lately here
Gordon and Thomas Nelson Page. New York: Charles
Scribner's Sons.
So many-friended was, so full of cheer
To make men feel the Seeker's noble zest,
LYRICS AND IDYLS OF THE OHIO VALLEY. By John
We have not lost him all; he is not gone
James Piatt. Boston: Houghton, Mimin & Co.
To the dumb herd of them that wholly die;
POEMS OF THE PLAINS AND SONGS OF THE SOLITUDES.
The beauty of his better self lives on
By Thomas Brower Peacock, New York: G. P. Put.
In minds he touched with fire, in many an eye
nam's Sons.
He trained to Truth's exact severity;
THE DISCIPLES. By Harriet Eleanor Hamilton King.
He was a Teacher: why be grieved for him
(Ninth edition.) New York: Anson D. F. Randolph & Co.
Whose living word still stimulates the air ?
FIFTY YEARS OF ENGLISH SONG. Selections from the
In endless file shall loving scholars come
Poets of the Reign of Victoria. Edited and arranged by
The glow of his transmitted touch to share,
Henry F Randolph. Four volumes. New York: Anson
And trace his features with an eve less dim
D. F. Randolph & Co.
Than ours whose sense familiar wont makes numb."
BALLADS AND RONDEAUS, Chants Royal, Sestinas, Vil.
If there is abundance of rue in that section
lanelles, etc. Selected, with chapter on the various forms,
by Gleeson White. New York: D. Appleton & Co.
of the volume inscribed to “Friendship,”


1888.]
THE DIAL
there is surely heartsease enough to balance
“No years a wakeful heart can tire;
Not bed-time yet! Come, stir the fire
the account in the sections that follow. Among
And warm your dear old hands;
all the wealth of the poetry here classified as
Kind mother earth we love so well,
“ Sentiment” and “Fancy,” it would be diffi-
Has pleasant stories yet to tell
Before we hear the curfew bell;
cult to make a choice, were it not for the trans-
Still glow the burning brands.
cendent beauty of one poem-the “Endy-
“Not bed-time yet! The full-blown flower
mion,” or “A Mystical Comment on Titian's
Of all the vear--this evening bour-
•Sacred and Profane Love.'” This poem,
With friendship's flame is bright;
Life still is sweet, the heavens are fair,
already familiar to readers through its recent
Though fields are brown and woods are bare,
publication in the “ Atlantic Monthly ” maga-
And many a joy is left to share
zine, represents the author in his noblest mood.
Before we say Good-night!”
It is one of the choicest possessions of our lit The poem from which these stanzas are
erature. From the first verse-
taken, and the half dozen which follow it,
“My day began not till the twilight fell,”
belong to the well-known series written annu-
to the last-
ally for the reunions of the Harvard class of
“My heaven's queen-queen, too, of my earth and hell!” 1829. Nearly all the pieces in the new vol-
its elevated beauty is sustained with an unfal- | ume are, in fact, of this occasional sort; but
tering hand. One does not need to remember they are so intrinsically happy that the occa-
the picture commented upon, to enjoy to the sions themselves count for little in the enjoy.
full such lines as these of Endymion to his ment which they afford. The most ambitious
goddess.
of them is that written for the Harvard Anni-
"O fairer even than Peace is when she comes
versary, a poem fresh in the minds of most
Hushing War's tumult, and retreating drums
readers. Few of the poems are strictly humor-
Fade to a murmur like the songs of bees
ous, although humorous touches are not lack-
Hidden among the noon-stilled linden trees,
Bringer of quiet, thou that canst allay
ing. In “ The Morning Visit ” humor gets
The dust and din and travail of the day,
the upper hand, and we are quickly carried
Strewer of Silence, Giver of the dew
That doth our pastures and our souls renew,
back to the old “autocrat” days. The poem
Still dwell remote, still on thy shoreless sea
illustrates the difference between treating other
Float unattained in sacred empery,
patients and being a patient yourself.
Still light my thoughts, nor listen to a prayer
“It's mighty easy ordering when you please
Would make thee less imperishably fair."
Infusi sennae capiat uncias tres;
Space forbids the further quotations that we It's mighty different when you quackle down
would like to make from Mr. Lowell's new Your own three ounces of the liquid brown.
Pilula, pulvis,-pleasant words enough,
volume. There is a little copy of verses called
When other th: oats receive the shocking stuff;
“ The Pregnant Comment," which for light But oh, what flattery can disguise the groan
and delicate fancy it would be difficult to That meets the gulp which sends it through your own !"
match in the writers of whom that sort of | One of Dr. Holmes's poems is inscribed to
work is the specialty. There are some sin his old friend and college associate, Frederic
gularly compact and effective sonnets. There H. Hedge. We also find Dr. Hedge's name
are some humorous pieces, such as “The upon the title page of one of the volumes of
Origin of Didactic Poetry” and “At the recent poetry just now before us. This vol-
Burns Centennial,” which are written in the ume is made up of translations and original
author's happiest vein. Finally, there are a poems by Dr. Hedge, and of additional trans-
dozen or so of neatly finished and pointed epi lations by Annis Lee Wister. The transla-
grams, which leave a pleasant taste as the tions are all from the German, those made
reader closes the volume.
by Dr. Hedge being, for the most part, of
It is not alone the appearance of Mr. Lowell's familiar things from Goethe and Schiller,
volume that makes this year noteworthy in the while those made by his associate are of less
annals of our letters, for there has also come to known pieces drawn from a wider range of
us a new volume from the sparkling pen of authors. The work of both translators is far
Dr. Holmes. It is a thinner volume than we above the common standard. Many of the
might not unreasonably wish it to be, and the pieces are accurate reproductions of both
greater part of its contents have already seen thought and metrical form,-only that subtle
the light. Its title, “Before the Curfew,” harmony is lacking which the original weaves
pathetically reminds us that the genial auto in with the metrical outline, and which no
crat is nearing the close of his days,-a definition can define or formula enable us to
reminder which few of the poems themselves imitate. The “Easter Song "from “Faust”
would have for us, as far as any indication of and the “Prometheus” fragment simply can-
weariness or decline of vigor in their style is not be reproduced in another language. Of
concerned. The not infrequent express allu the few original poems, the best is that called
sions to the writer's weight of years seem to “ The Idealist.” It is the statement of a well-
ill accord with the ardor and hopefulness with mastered philosophical conception in highly
which his verse is laden.
poetic language.


16
[May,
THE DIAL
The thinness of Dr. Weir Mitchell's volume | If Dr. Mitchell's volume illustrates the virtue
of poems is probably to be accounted for by of restraint, the corresponding vice is exhibited
the fact that the author has made a judicious by Mr. Harry Lyman Koopman's volume enti-
selection of his pieces for publication, instead tled “Orestes and Other Poems." It is made up
of throwing together, as most versifiers are of pieces long and short, of finished poems and
wont to do, all the scraps of verse of which he scraps of things that fortunately never were
has at any time been guilty. Consequently finished, of doggerel fit for a country news-
we find, in “A Masque and Other Poems," paper and of poetry like the following sonnet:
quite a notable contribution to our minor verse; " In holier ages men had called thee saint;
we find at least a volume whose contents are Through thee the blind had been restored to sight,
Thy name pale lips had whispered day and night,
everywhere thoughtful and finished, a volume
In lonely cell, chapel or cloister quaint;
which contains nothing put in to fill up. Dr. Thy meekness Raphael had aspired to paint,
Mitchell's more pretentious pieces are either
And Dante had beheld thee in the light
That nearest shines to the ineffable bright,
frankly dramatic in form, or narrative with a
Where purest souls see God without restraint;
marked dramatic tendency; a few only are And, born untimely to our evil days,
contemplative or lyrical. These latter poems
Still hast thou kept thy sainthood and its powers,
Thou sowest heartsease by life's stony ways,
may be disregarded as of slight consequence.
Thou bringest morn where midnight blackness lowers,
Of the others, our choice must be between “A And on thy heavenly forehead fall the rays
Masque" and “The Swan-Woman,” the two
That wrap thee with another day than ours.”
which stand first in the volume. Such lines
“ Beyond the Shadow, and Other Poems”
as the following, which are descriptive of
appears to be the third volume of verse written
death, are at least striking :
by Stuart Sterne. The volume is made up of
“The scavenger of time,
a series of simple, meditative, subjective poems,
Who picks from off this dust-beap called a world marked by the depth of their religious feeling,
The scared and hurried ants that come and go
but entirely commonplace both in sentiment
Without a whence or whither worth a thought.”
and expression. The following stanza is a
A curious and interesting experiment is that
favorable example:
whose result is offered in the poem “How
“Love has deceived me!-With a strange, sweet smile,
Launcelot Came to the Nunnery in Search of He took from out my yielding hand the oar
the Queen.” This is an attempt to reproduce
- Wherewith I thought to guide for many a mile
My bark through sunlit waters close to shore.
in blank verse the infinite pathos of one of the
Come, I will speed thee to the Blessed Isle !'
noblest passages of “La Mort d'Arthure." He said, and smiled again, but spoke no more,
How well the author has succeeded may be
And suddenly I found me far from land,
Aground upon a bank of barren sand.”
illustrated by the following lines of the queen's
last words to her lover :
The author seems to use a facile pen—too
facile, in fact, for she overlooks such very
“And therefore, wit ye well, Sir Lancelot,
My soul's health waneth; yet thro' God's good grace
obvious faults as that illustrated by the last
I trust, when death is come, to sit with Christ,
two lines of the quotation just made.
Because in heaven more sinful souls than I
What value is possessed by the “Poems"
Are saints in heaven; and therefore, Lancelot,
For all the love that ever bound our souls
of Irwin Russell is derived from the negro
I do beseech thee hide again thy face.
dialect verses which make up more than half
On God's behalf I bid thee straitly go,
of the volume. The author was a young man
Because my life is as a summer spent;
Yea, go, and keep thy realm from wrack and war,
who died about ten years ago, at the age of
For, well as I have loved thee, Lancelot,
twenty-six. He was one of the first of that
My heart will no more serve to see thy face,
group of Southern writers who have utilized
Nay, not if thou shouldst know love in mine eyes."
the negro character and dialect for literary
The corresponding passage in Malory is as purposes, and one of the most successful.
follows :
Those who ought to know say that he has rep-
“Therefore wit thou well, sir Launcelot, I am set resented the old-fashioned unadulterated”
in such a plight to get my soules health; and yet I
negro with great fidelity; he has certainly
trust, through Gods grace, that after my death for
represented him in a strikingly humorous as-
to have the sight of the blessed face of Jesu Christ,
pect. Such pieces as “ Christmas Night in the
and at the dreadful day of dome to sit on his right
side. For as sinfull creatures as ever was I are saints
Quarters," “A Sermon for the Sisters," and
in heaven. Therefore, sir Launcelot, I require thee
several others, are quite irresistible.
and beseech thee heartely, for all the love that ever “To the memory of Irwin Russell, who
was betweene us two, that thou never looke mee more awoke the first echo," is the inscription of
in the visage. And furthermore I command thee on another volume of negro dialect verse which
Gods behalfe right straightly, that thou forsake my
comes to us this month. It is a collection of
company, and that unto thy kingdome shortly thou
pieces by A. C. Gordon and Thomas Nelson
returne againe, and keepe well thy realm from warre
and wracke. For as well as I have loved thee, sir
| Page. The latter writer is represented by only
Launcelot, now mine heart will not once serve mee
half a dozen poems, the greater part of the
to see thee; for through thee and mee is the floure volume being taken up by Mr. Gordon's work.
of kings and knights destroyed."
Whatever individual style these writers may


1888.]
17
THE DIAL
possess is so merged into the common shape of nobler aspect of human nature, who still be-
negro thought that the poems, which are mixed lieves in its responsiveness to lofty and disin-
up at random in the collection, might easily terested motives, will have no hesitation in
be taken as the work of one man. A com naming Mazzini. On the other hand, the one
panion, for example, of “Zekyl's Infidelity" who believes selfishness to be the prime factor
by Mr. Page, and “Ichabod " by Mr. Gordon, in human affairs, will be incapable of estimat-
both dealing with the same subject, will fail ing the high practical value of Mazzini's work,
to reveal any individual peculiarities of author | and will pronounce as unhesitatingly for
ship. The closing piece of the volume, enti Cavour. Mrs. Hamilton King is an ardent
tled “ One Mourner," is a graceful tribute to Mazzinian, both in sympathy and by old
Russell's memory. It describes the feelings friendship, and her collection of poems called
of an old negro on hearing of the death of “The Disciples” views the Italian struggle
“Dat gent'man down in New Orleans,
from the ideal spiritual standpoint of her mas-
Whar writ 'bout'n niggers so."
ter, rather than from the so-called practical
Mr. John James Piatt has made a selection didlomatic standpoint of Victor Emanuel's
of what, presumably, he thinks to be his best minister. She has been reproached for not
poems, and put them into a thin volume of even mentioning Cavour in her work, which
« Idyls and Lyrics of the Ohio Valley." While is hardly fair, considering its point of view.
there is nothing strikingly beautiful about his The fact is, that whatever may be thought of
verse as here represented, it rarely gives of the respective importance of what was done
fense, and its quiet grace and faithful coloring by Mazzini and Cavour, the work of each of
will doubtless make it appeal to the many hearts these men is best considered by itself ; it
among those who feel a little uncomfortable
hardly touches that of the other, except in its
at high poetical altitudes. Mr. Piatt has been
final outcome. Cavour's work was one of dip-
final outcome Cavour's work
called the Bryant of the West; and the epi.
lomatic intrigue and economic development;
thet will do as well as any other to character Mazzini's was a work of education, of intel-
ize his work. This stanza is a favorable lectual and moral regeneration. Possibly this
example:
is too much of an excursus for our present
“While fitful breezes kiss to frosty gold
purpose, which is merely that of calling atten-
The swells of foliage down the vale serene,
And all the sunset fills
tion to a new edition (the ninth) of Mrs. King's
The dreamland of the hills,
noble volume. But the work is not as well
Now all the enchantment of October old
known in America as it ought to be, so that
Feels a cold veil fall o'er its passing scene.”
Professor Thomas Danleigh Supplée, A.M.,
some exposition of its standpoint is allowable,
although the date of its original publication
Ph.D., F.R.S., who is described as “an able
lies fifteen years back. “The Disciples” com-
philologist,” introduces the poems of Mr.
Thomas Brower Peacock to an expectant
prises four poems, one of which—“Ugo
Bassi ”-makes up the greater part of the vol-
world. He tells us the following, among other
ume. This is a long narrative in blank verse
things: “In form, Mr. Peacock's poetry is not
of the outbreak of 1848, and of the memorable
conventional. One of the first and strongest
struggle of that year and the next in Rome,
impressions which one gets from its perusal, is
Bologna, and Venice. The other poems have
a certain freedom from restraint of regulation
for their subjects Jacopo Ruffini, Agesilao
poetry which is everywhere apparent.” This
Milano, and Giovanni Nicotera. Perhaps the
statement is fully substantiated by the con-
volume contains nothing more beautiful and
tents of the volume. The most delightful
feature of the work is the reprint, as an ap-
more touching than its overture addressed to
Mazzini. It begins in this fashion:
pendix, of a satirical criticism published in the
“I write of the Disciples, because He
“Saturday Review.” This criticism is taken
Who was their Master having left on earth
quite seriously by the author. We add one of The memory of a face that none could paint,
the Saturday reviewer's illustrative extracts,
The echo of a voice that none could reach,
Hath left his own immortal words and works
together with his closing comment, which we
To be a witness for him. Who should dare
cheerfully adopt. The extract is about Kan To add one line or lesson unto these?”
sas, and tells us that now-
It is difficult to find passages which will bear
"Where once War's bloody feet did rove,
removal from their context, but the following
Whose red bands death on progress hurled,
description of Mazzini will convey some idea
Spring happy bowers, like Bismarck Grove,
of the moral ardor with which Mrs. King's
Where mighty minds instruct the world.'
“Mr. Peacock not only charms us, but instructs us
noble poems glow at every point.
too. We have never read any American poetry so
“Was he not branded with all calumny
Because he dared to teach the naked truth,
exuberantly American."
Christ's words were not a book for Sabbath days,
An excellent test of cynicism might be But law of life, and judgment of the land;
found in the question as to who was chiefly
Not to be chosen, and pieced, and dogmatised,
But lived up to-the whole and not a part,
instrumental in bringing about Italian Unity.
Alive not dead, one spirit in new forms;-
The man who has not lost his faith in the And lived as Christ lived, poor, despised, alone,


18
[May,
THE DIAL
Apart with God, and working miracles,
Not on the waves and winds, but on the wills
of men, upon the hearts of multitudes,
The hidden germs of fresh humanities,
of live confederations yet unborn,
The hidden founts of gathering river-floods,
To bear one day the music of his name
Through lands of harvest to the boundless sea."
Mrs. King's style is diffuse, and not always
poetic; the intense emotion with which the
work is charged alone saves it from wreck in
many dangerous places. No effort of the im-
agination can find blank verse in such a sen-
tence as the following, -and such sentences
are of not infrequent occurrence: “General
Gorzhowski was certainly not beloved in any
part of the Romagna over which he ruled;
least of all in Bologna, which had long held
out against him, and in which his name was
spoken but with curses.” But the author's
theme is so great that her work is borne over
these reefs of prose; we forget to be techni-
cally critical when we read how such men as
Bassi died,-
“With the morning lights
Upon their faces, standing rapture-pale
Before the guns, or under sword and scourge
Of those whom they had hated as we hate
Untruth and malice and disdain of God."
It is good to read of such lives and deaths as
these; reminding us as they do, that heroism
and saintliness are of our own no less than of
other times. The American publishers of this
edition have made it very attractive. A white
back, stamped in gold with the arms of Italy,
makes the book compete closely with the vol-
ume of Mr. Lowell's poems in charm of me.
chanical execution. "Prettier volumes than
these two are rarely seen.
A very useful anthology of Victorian poetry
comes to us in the series of four tastefully
printed volumes called “Fifty Years of Eng.
Iish Song,” and edited by Mr. Henry F- Ran.
dolph. No selection of this sort has hereto-
fore been attempted upon such a scale, in spite
of the obvious importance of placing the rep-
resentative work of recent and contemporary
English poets within the reach of the general
reader of limited means. Each volume of the
present work contains, in addition to the
poetry itself, the following features : (1) bio-
graphical and bibliographical notes ; (2) ex-
planatory notes; (3) an index of authors; (4)
pseudonyms and literary soubriquets; and, (5)
an index of first lines. The latter features need
no comment. Of the notes it may be said that
those of an explanatory character are well-
chosen and concisely stated, and that the others
are compiled mainly from Mr. Stedman's
“ Victorian Poets,” and two or three other
standard books of reference. While these notes
are in the main both adequate and accurate,
we notice an occasional slip or omission. For
example, “The Water Babies” of Charles
Kingsley is not a volume of verse, as we are
told ; the English and American editions of
Dobson ought to be discriminated, as in the
case of Lang and other writers, and such vol-
umes as Swinburne's “Locrine," and Mere-
dith's “Ballads and Poems of Tragic Life"
ought to be mentioned, since other volumes of
equally recent date find a place in these notes.
For the most part, however, the notes are
accurate, and, what is of equal importance in
the present case, they are judiciously chosen.
The contents of the work exceed the Victorian
limits implied by the title only to the extent
of admitting “such poets as had an established
reputation anterior to the commencement of
the reign, and died or ceased writing during
the first fifteen years of the reign ; but only
those poets have been included who during
the reign produced work worthy of their rep-
utation, with the exception of Southey and
Wordsworth, who have been accorded a place
... by virtue of their poet laureateships.”
The first volume of Mr. Randolph's work
includes “the earlier poets ” as defined in the
above quotation from the editor's preface, and
also two other groups characterized as “the
Blackwood coterie," and “the poets of Young
Ireland." Southey, Wordsworth, Landor, and
Hunt have about half the volume to them-
selves. While we certainly grudge neither
Wordsworth nor Landor the allotted space,
we cannot help feeling that the other two
worthies are made unduly prominent. Vol.
ume two is devoted to “ the poets of the first
half of the reign" and to “ the novelist-poets."
In the first section, Tennyson, the Brownings,
Horne,and Clough, have the places of honor,and
divide about half the volume between them.
We miss “The Court Lady” of Mrs. Brown-
ing, certainly the noblest of her Italian poems;
but in general the selection from these well-
known writers is wise and conservative. Vol.
ume three contains “the poets of the second
half of the reign” and “the writers of Vers
de Société.” Here a few strictures are called
for. “The Scholar-Gypsy” of Matthew Ar-
nold is given, but not the “Thyrsis," which
surely ought to have followed, in spite of the
length of the two poems together. This omis-
sion becomes the more exasperating when we
find that Arnold is followed by Robert Buch-
anan, to which rhymester is actually allotted
more space than to the noble poet who pre-
cedes him. We should not have quarrelled
with the editor had Buchanan been omitted
altogether. Far better men—Theodore Watts,
for example—are entirely left out. Swin-
burne is very imperfectly represented by four
pieces, neither one of which is the “ Ave Atque
Vale,” or “The Last Oracle," or the “Hymn
of Man." Volume four comprises “the Pre-
Raphaelite brotherhood,” “the ballad and song
writers,” and “the religious poets.” The work
contains altogether selections from one hun-
dred and two poets. As a companion to Sted-


1888.]
19
THE DIAL
man's critical work upon the Victorian period,
it is very valuable.
It is difficult to realize the extent to which
recent English poets have given themselves up
to the imitation of artificial French forms. In
view of a collection before us, prepared by Mr.
Gleeson White, it becomes a serious question
whether we should any longer consider the
ballade and the triolet as exotic forms, so
widely have they been adopted by English
and American poets. Mr. White's volume
contains four or five hundred pieces, and rep-
resents fifty or more writers. It is, to say the
least, a striking thing that there should be
enough of this sort of verse in our literature to
call for a special anthology. Mr.White's selec-
tion has been made with excellent taste, and
he has prefaced it with a careful account of
the history and the laws of the peculiar forms
of verse which it illustrates. The volume is
becomingly compact and dainty.
WILLIAM MORTON PAYNE.
country be truly written. The author is too fond
of ranking occurrences and men in order of merit.
Comparisons are not only “odious,” they are mis-
leading. If Lafayette was “a fairly good general ”
he never gave any evidence of it. In Burgoyne's
defeat Gates's army get small credit for overcoming
obstacles, but “fairly mobbed to death the smaller
number of dispirited and poorly led regulars against
whom they were pitted." There are slurs scattered
through the book which are beneath the gravity of
historical writing. "For mobs,"we are told, “Morris,
like other clear-headed men, felt the most profound
dislike and contempt.” Paine, “the filthy little
atheist,” “belonged to the variety [of infidels] –
whereof America possesses one or two shining exam-
ples — that apparently esteems a bladder of dirty
water as the proper weapon with which to assail
Christianity." Louis Philippe “would have been
just the individual to take a prominent part in
local temperance meetings, while he sanded the
sugar he sold in his corner grocery." All this may
be brilliant journalism of a kind, but it is unworthy
of history. Mr. Roosevelt's first book was his best.
We suggest that he return to the judicious method
of his maiden pen in “The Naval War of 1812."
GIBBON, in six of his immortal chapters, first told
BRIEFS ON NEW BOOKS.
the story of the Goths, and no one since has told it
so well. Mr. Hodgkin, in his “ Italy and her In-
It is difficult to preserve the proper proportions vaders," has brought to the elucidation of Ostro-
in biographical writing; through its very isolation gothic history all the latest and best research. But
the subject tends to become heroic in the author's with so masterly a writer as Gibbon and one so
estimate. Mr. Roosevelt, in his sketch of “Gouver. scholarly as Hodgkin in the field, there was still
neur Morris " for the American Statesmen series room for an additional work which should deal
(Houghton), has prefixed the word “great" to the with the whole extent of Gothic history as a subject
word "statesman" without the warrant of truth. in itself, and that in a popular way. Yet the brill-
Morris was not a great statesman, but simply a man iant and exhaustive work done by these predeces-
of shrewd business-like instincts, with broad views, sors has made the task an exacting one for any new
clear insight, and fertile resource, who yet was tre writer. In his “ Story of the Goths" (Putnam) Mr.
mendously and almost criminally wrong at times. Bradley has not come up to the requirements. “The
No one can read the last chapter of this book, noting Story of the Nations" series is intended for young
the sympathy of the man with the disunion move readers, but the style of this volume is pitched on
ments in New England which preceded and accom too low a level. It is too much in the "once upon
panied the War of 1812, and concede the title of | a time” vein. Moreover, there is occasionally an
“great” to one who could so woefully go astray. His attempt at “smart writing,” such as that in Dick-
services to the country during the Revolution and ens's Child's History of England,”-a taking the
the years of constitution-making which followed reader into one's confidence, and laughing with him
were of exceeding value; but in greatness of mind, at the naive stupidity of certain persons, which is
of purpose, and of character, he falls below more not a success here. It occurs to one, too, that the
than a half-dozen of the men of the Revolution proper function of history, even for children, does
Mr. Roosevelt writes an exceedingly interesting nar not call for an expression of regret that the author
rative, artistic in its selection, forcible in its pungent cannot write the history other than it is, when the
expression. But this latter characteristic is the facts offend his ethics or his sentiment. This blem-
occasion of the chief defect. The author makes his ish in the treatment of Theodoric's conduct grows
narrative the text for a treatise on American politics, out of an over-anxiety to deduce moral teaching
parties and men for the last hundred years, and in from the events. Yet the estimate of Theodoric is
his attempts to draw contrasts and to read the les too high; the comparison with Alfred of England
sons of our history he is frequently more brilliant is unjust to the latter as a man. It would have been
than sound. Like Macaulay, he is at times the better if the author had gone more below the sur-
slave of a sparkling antithesis. After reading here face of chronicles of war and intrigue, and given
that the Revolution owed little to foreign aid, or to & us more of the life of the people and lands of which
fixed and lofty purpose on the part of the rank and he treats. The writings of Cassiodorus would have
file of the American people, or to good generalship given him much information as to the internal con-
in the military leaders, or to any patriotic purposes dition of Italy under the Ostrogothic rule. One
in the Continental Congress, one begins to wonder hardly gathers from these pages that the Goths,
why the Revolution did not entirely fail. In with the exception of Wulfila and Theodoric and
truth, in an effort to contrast the devotion of the Totila—had in them aught of the constructive ele-
Revolutionary period with that of the men of the ments of society; that they were capable of and
Civil War, the former has been disparaged, and the reached a high degree of civilization. In the midst
facts are not set forth fairly. Not by belittling the l of a mass of unassorted details the reader fails to
men and the deeds of '76 can the history of our discover that this race possessed that broad basis


20
[May,
THE DIAL
of worthy Teutonic life and purpose which brought and pamphlets, and they sell by the million. Finally
to them the first Teutonic Bible, which drew from she writes “Celebs in Search of a Wife”; and, in
them the first Teutonic code of laws, which made the words of Miss Yonge, her present biographer:
them the initiators of the regeneration of Italy. “The first edition was sold out in a day or two, the
We commend the book, however, as the only mon second in a fortnight; eleven had appeared in nine
ograph dealing with the subject."
months, and thirty before the close of the author's
life, twenty-four years later." The praises she
In their “Story of the Nations " series G. P. Put received from high literary and social authorities
nam's Sons are doing a public service. They have even outran the popular verdict. But now, when
now begun a companion series, opening with the scarce threescore summers have passed since her
“Story of the City of New York," by Charles Barr death, the reaction has gone so far that of all her
Todd. This is a most attractively published vol poems so extravagantly lauded by Johnson, and her
ume, and, so far as it goes, the narrative is a most dramas so highly esteemed by Garrick, hardly &
interesting one. Unfortunately, the author limits shred remains in people's minds or in the popular
himself by the strange statement in his preface anthologies; her stories are neglected; and her
that “the writer has adopted the view of most name is not mentioned in our text-books on litera-
scholars, that history ceases fifty years back of the ture. It may be that this reaction has gone too
present time.” This cuts us out of the most impor far—as reactions domand that the just equilibrium
tant fifty years in the history of the city, except in | has not yet been reached; for she modelled her
two rather sketchy chapters near the close of the style after the “Spectator," and Isaac Taylor called
book, dealing with the city in the Civil War, and her i an estimable prosaist.” Of an active life
the Tweed Ring. Even this limitation, however, that stretched over eighty-eight years, a life that
does not excuse the failure to trace topographical brought Hannah More into intimate relations with
growth since the Revolution, or social changes since the high and the low, with the country and the
“Knickerbocker" days, or the progress of journal town, with the literary, religious, political, and
ism, of trade, of Tammany. The literary home of philanthropic movements of her time, no more than
Irving, Cooper, Poe, Bryant, should have had å sketch was possible within the limits prescribed
more than a word. But even with these omissions, by this series. Miss Yonge is a writer of too much
the book is a valuable sketch. While the political experience and too much regard for popularity not
life is well handled, the most suggestive chapters to find interesting details when material is abun-
are those which catch for us the social life in the dant, and not to dovetail them together with skill
middle of the seventeenth century, and again in the when found. Yet the work apparently lacks the
middle of the eighteenth. The growth of the city revision that would have excluded all careless and
down to the close of the last century is admirably ambiguous sentences. The book, however, has
indicated, and is illustrated by maps. The author sufficient variety and liveliness to make it entertain-
takes a very unfavorable, and, we think, prejudiced, ing, and gives a sufficiently good idea of the sub-
view of Leisler's conduct in the rebellion of 1689. ject to make it instructive. If the publishers had
In one place he calls him a “rogue,” in another omitted the sixteen-page catalogue of "standard"
thinks "it is charitable to suppose that Leisler was library books, and the twelve pages of press-notices
at this time really insane." The chapter on “Ships of former volumes in the series, we should not have
and Sailors" is full of interest, with its account of missed them.
the once famous “ clippers," and the book fitly closes
with the Brooklyn Bridge and the Bartholdi Statue. THANKS are due to Mr. P. W. Clayden for his
careful compilation on the “Early Life of Samuel
THE worst hap that has hitherto befallen women Rogers" (Roberts). We should be glad of anything
of letters has been overpraise. Scott gave Joanna that could make us of this land and age better
Baillie a place beside Shakespeare; and many, if acquainted with a man so refined, so generous, so
they had dared, would have given Mrs. Browning high in his aims, so painstaking, so tasteful, so
even a higher place. But perhaps no one was ever poetical, as Samuel Rogers. But when we are given
more praised and petted, more patronized and en a biography like the one before us, in which there
couraged, than the subject of the latest volume of is a rich stock of material collected and chosen
Roberts Brothers' “Famous Women Series "-Mis with care, and the biographer's part is done cor-
tress Hannah More. As poetess and prosaist, as rectly and unobtrusively, we can hardly exaggerate
educationalist and religious philanthropist, she was the difficulty of the work, or the extent of the obli-
indeed a famous woman in her day. It was so easy gation we are under to the author. Like Mr. Tre-
for her to write cleverly, her friends and her public velyan in his “Life of Macaulay” and Mr. Cross in
were so much delighted by every pen-stroke, that'| his “Life of George Eliot,” Mr. Clayden has fol-
she kept on and on, merely to give them pleasure. lowed the method of allowing the subject, so far as
At an Italian opera, she scribbles a translation of possible, to tell his own story in copious extracts
the libretto for the friend who sits by her side, and from his diaries and correspondence. This method
next morning the papers publish this wonder. She of selecting material from dairies, letters, and com-
writes a ballad, “Sir Eldred of the Bower," and monplace books, often brings together motley as-
her publisher, Cadell, pays her a large price for it semblages of ideas expressed in a fragmentary way.
with an offer to increase the sum to whatever Gold This excessive brevity is in any case better than
smith received for the “Deserted Village." She prosing, and in this instance is due to Rogers's
writes “Percy"; four thousand copies are sold in a sometimes scanty memoranda. It is largely atoned
fortnight, and she is extolled—when Goldsmith is for by judicious notes and an excellent index. The
hardly yet well-settled in the grave, and Sheridan present volume only brings the record down to the
is still alive,-as the greatest dramatic poet of her beginning of the present century, and covers the
time. She writes “Sacred Dramas," and is honored first forty years of Rogers's life. We trust that Mr.
with nineteen successive editions. She writes tracts Clayden may receive every aid and encouragement


1888.]
21
THE DIAL
to compose his projected second volume on the en tion. The spirit in which Mr. Hare comments upon
suing period of more than fifty years. No man had the revolutions which have marked the past cen-
better facilities than Rogers for observing the liter tury's struggle for freedom is one with which few
ary celebrities of his time; and Mr. Clayden's work will sympathize. He seems to have an eye for the
bids fair to supply important links in that chain of horror of revolutions, but none for their necessity
literary anecdote and reminiscence which begins in or for their beneficent results. His total lack of
Boswell's “Johnson." Boswell himself, and many of sympathy with the Italian cause, which found
the characters he has made as familiar as old com amusingly frequent expression in the writer's books
panions, appear again in Clayden's volume. We find about the cities of Italy, made it obvious that he
here new and interesting details about the Piozzis, would regard the triumph of French popular govern-
Arthur Murphy, Dr. Parr, Adam Smith, Blair, ment with no friendly gaze. This defect does not
Robertson, Reynolds, Burke, Fox, Sheridan, and materially affect the usefulness of the new volume,
many others. We find here an account of the life Another defect, for which the publishers are respon-
of the time not only at Stoke Newington where sible, does, however, very seriously affect this use-
Rogers was brought up in childhood, and at London fulness. The unwarrantable liberty has been taken
where he ever after made his home, but in Scotland, of translating the many passages from French lit-
Wales, and France, where he spent his holidays in erature used by Mr. Hare in illustrating his book.
travel. He saw France in the early days of the This is a serious offence, and it is added to by the
Revolution and again at the time of the First Con. wretched character of the substituted translations.
sulate. To enumerate all the points in which he | We understand that the English edition of the work
was in contact with the life of his time would itself is not defaced in this way.
almost require a volume. Though he was not a man
of great powers, great industry, or great scholarship, THE “Days near Paris” (author and publisher
Rogers was a man of great opportunities; and, com the same as of the book just mentioned) does for
bining as he did a most refined taste in poetry, in the environs of the French capital a work similar
art, and in the selection of friends, with a most re to that done by the “Days near Rome” for the
tentive memory and a good command of English, neighborhood of the Eternal City. It is a volume
he was able both to improve his opportunities to nearly as large as the “Walks in Paris," and de-
the full, and to give us the advantage of them. scribes, beginning with St. Cloud, the interesting
suburbs that encircle the city. The chapter devoted
That industrious compiler of guide books, Mr. | to Versailles takes up about one-fourth of the vol-
Augustus J. C. Hare, has prepared a volume of ume. The other chapters are much briefer. To
"Walks in Paris ” (Routledge) similar in scope and indicate the extent and variety of interest attached
design to his well-known “ Walks in Rome" and to the places described in this volume, we only
“Walks in London.” All persons who are unable need mention the names of St. Germain, St. Denis,
to do their European travelling in a leisurely way Compiègne, Vincennes, Fontainebleau, Meudon, and
know the value of this series of books, each of Port-Royal, among the many places to which Mr.
which to a certain extent supplies the place of a Hare arranges the reader's excursions. Perhaps the
small library, providing the owner with indications | main impression produced by this work, as well as
of the literary, historical, and artistic associations of by the work to which it serves as a companion, is
the places visited, and, what is equally important, one of wonder at the wealth of historical and artis-
with just those passages from other books which tic interest within easy reach of the boulevard
one wants to read on the spot. The latter feature saunterer. Most visitors to Paris content them-
is, in fact, the distinetive one of Mr. Hare's manuals, selves with the modern quarter built during the
and the author would perhaps have done just as reign of Louis Napoleon, and would doubtless be
well to provide even less of miscellaneous infor surprised to learn that this is in every respect the
mation than he has done, since he cannot hope to least interesting quarter of the city.
compete with Baedeker either in the extent or ac-
curacy of this sort of knowledge. His chapters of THE Rev. Jacob Straub, author of a work enti-
what is styled “dull-useful information,” for exam tled “The Consolations of Science,” has written a
ple, are practically of no value, for they are too companion or supplemental volume on “Prophecy
fragmentary to enable one to dispense with the and Prophets" (S. W. Straub & Co., Chicago). We
technical guide-book altogether. Mr. Hare's new can do no more than indicate, somewhat vaguely,
volume will doubtless be found to contain surprises the character of the author's reasoning and the
even for those who think themselves most familiar direction of his conclusions. He believes that “in
with Paris, so great is the amount of historical nature there must be a basis for revelation, in the
interest attached to every quarter, or nearly every accepted sense of the term," and that the Bible
quarter, of that great city. The modern Paris with would be more forcibly and successfully preached
which visitors are most familiar has, of course, and taught when having well in hand the facts
much less of this sort of interest than other dis which in nature are its allies." He notes that “there
tricts; but we think that the writer has given it is an absence of a certain healthful grip which re-
less attention than it deserves. There is no account, ligion used to have on the body of its following,"
for example, of the Théâtre Français, an omission and suggests that “this grip it were important to
which seems incomprehensible, but is probably to regain." This recovery is to be chiefly a task for
be accounted for by the fact that modern Paris is science; religion is to be re-established upon a scien-
discussed in the closing chapter, and that the book | tific basis; and neither religion nor science, it is
had already reached or exceeded its destined dimen comforting to know, "would realize the fears by
sions when that chapter was reached. The closing some entertained in the accomplishment of this
chapters bear many other marks of hasty treatment, end." Prophecy Mr. Straub regards as a legiti-
and the entire work is to a certain extent chargeable mate subject of scientific and philosophic study,
with being incoherent and careless in its construc-| by inductive methods; and when this is understood,
n dliti hili lilli


22
[May,
THE DIAL
"prophecy will have entered upon its career as a With the approach of summer weather the fancy
science." Mind-reading also, which seems to be turns lightly to thoughts of out-of-door sports and
akin to prophecy, he thinks " as a principle will be recreations, and books upon these themes have a
generally recognized;" and although "recent re timeliness that doubles their interest. Such a book
searches have developed much in its favor,” yet is Mr. Thwaites's “Historic Waterways” (A. C.
there is needed “a little more headway" in accu McClurg & Co.), a work whose character is much
mulating “facts illustrative of its provisions." better indicated by its sub-title, “A Description of
Does this point to the decadence of Societies for Six Hundred Miles of Capoeing Down the Rock,
Psychical Research? These we had supposed were Fox, and Wisconsin Rivers." The Rock River was
numerous enough and prolific enough to make all traversed from a connecting lake at Madison, Wis.,
the “headway' needed by Mr. Straub in his inves to Rock Island on the Mississippi; the Fox (of
tigations. A considerable portion of the book is Wisconsin) from Portage to Green Bay; and the
occupied with striking instances of prophecy, pre Wisconsin from Portage to Prairie du Chien on the
sentiment, coincidences, etc. From these we select | Mississippi. On two of the trips the first named
the following: “A gentleman dreamed that the and the last — the author was accompanied by his
Devil carried him down to the bottom of a coal-pit, wife; and these trips are decidedly the most inter-
where he threatened to burn him unless he would esting of the three. Mr. Thwaites shows himself
agree to give himself up to his service. This he not only a good canoeist but a good observer, and
refused to do, and a very warm altercation fol his varied experiences are chronicled in an easy
lowed. He was at last allowed to depart upon con good-humored style that is very pleasant reading.
dition of sending down an individual whom the Not all the experiences could be called delightful;
Devil named, a worthless character in the neighbor- there were tedious portages, difficult rapids, rains
hood. A few days after, this person was found and sometimes drenchings,- and worst of all, we
drowned under circumstances which gave every should judge, the stoppings at Irishmen's shanties
reason to believe that his death had been voluntary." and other chance places for food and lodging. The
What befell the gentleman is not stated.
descriptions of the odd characters and “specimens"
encountered are often very amusing. The voyagers
Max O'RELL'S " John Bull, Junior, or French as seem to have borne their discomforts with great
She is Traduced” (Cassell) is all the better for need. good-nature, and to have enjoyed their outing with
ing no translation. Unlike the works that have genuine enthusiasm. On one of the three trips they
previously appeared in America under Max O’Rell's carried their supplies and camped at night on the
name, this book was originally written in Eng river-bank; and this they found to be on the whole
lish. Unlike them, moreover, it does not appear the better plan. They were good observers not
piratically but by an arrangement with the author. | only of human nature but of the animal and floral
We can readily pardon a few digs at the American life of the regions traversed; and the descriptions
translators who misrepresented his former works, often show characteristic feminine touches. An
and congratulate ourselves that they will have no added interest is afforded in the bits of historical
call to translate this one. The author's English is information connected with the localities visited,-
perhaps not always faultless; neither is that of the reminiscences of Black Hawk's war along the
many of our own writers—especially our humorous Rock River, and of the French explorers on the
writers. But whatever else may be said of Max
historic waterways between Green Bay and the Mis-
O’Rell's English, we must confess that it is piquant sissippi. Outline maps aid the reader in following
and that it always has meaning. Max O'Rell does the route of the voyageurs.
not make fun, he finds it ready-made. We feel that
the humorous side is inherent in what he describes, The first volume of Prof. Henry Morley's reissue
and that he has the gift for perceiving and portray of his “English Writers" (Cassell) was noticed at
ing this side. The present work might quite as fit- length in THE DIAL last year (Vol. VIII., p. 143).
tingly be called “Trials of a French Master in Eng- The second volume covers the period from Cæd-
land." After a brief introduction, in which the mon to the Conquest, treating, among other things,
French master explains how he came to be one, we of the Scóp, of the first teachers of Christianity, of
are ushered at once into the English school, first in Cynewulf, of Alfred, and of the vernacular litera-
the country and then in town. His experience in ture of the Northmen. With all its acknowledged
the country—though very short-was long enough excellences this book suffers from that confusion
to show that something not too unlike “Dotheboys" of aim from which the scholars of the present gen-
still exists in “Merry England." His experiences eration have been the first to thoroughly shake
at St. Paul's School, London, fill the bulk of the themselves free. The treatment is in some respects
book. He describes the typical English boys, their too full for the general reader; on the other hand,
appearance, their habits, their excuses, their trans- there is perhaps little in the work to make it essen-
lations from English into French and from French tial to the special student. No one who can read
into English, their examinations, their athletic | Anglo-Saxon poetry in the original would spend any
sports, and-last, but not least their snobbery. time over Prof. Morley's rather languid translations,
Max O’Rell knows and remembers what many of while no one seeking an introduction to the subject
our American humorists seem either to have for is interested in the lengthy canvassing of various
gotten or not to be aware of-that brevity is the theories of date and authorship. For instance, the
soul of wit. We predict a good deal of popularity enquirer who wishes to learn what is known of the
for this little book. Human nature is so much the poet Cynewulf does not care to be met at the outset
same, the world over, that we may venture to rec by a detailed discussion of Kemble's identification
ognize some of these boyish types as “not altogether of the poet with an Abbot of Peterborough, only
unknown in these parts." Though the book wears | to find that Kemble's theory was exploded and
the motley, it contains many educational hints abandoned a third of a century ago. In short, despite
deserving of serious attention from thoughtful per- the painstaking detail of this book, the novice will
sons, and especially from teachers of French, hardly find it so agreeably instructive as Prof. Ten


1888.]
23
THE DIAL
Brink's much briefer treatment. Nevertheless the
judicious skipper will find in the present volume
much of curious interest to reward him. Those,
especially, who have Kennedy's translation of Ten
Brink will find Prof. Morley's volumes useful for
the supplementary matter and for the versions of
many interesting poems.
Combination, Is It Crime? Appleton Morgan. Pop. Sci.
Darwinism and Christian Faith. Popular Science.
Denver. Edwards Roberts. Harper.
Economic Outlook, The. D. A. Wells. Popular Science.
Emperor William J. A. C. McLaughlin. Dial.
Ethics and Economics. W. Gladden. Princeton.
Evolution and Materialism. J. Le Conte. Popular Science.
Explosives. O. E. Munroe. Scribner.
Fisheries Treaty. George Stewart. Mag. Am. Hist.
Foods and Beverages. W. O. Atwater. Oentury.
French Provincial Spirit. W.O. Brownell. Princeton.
German University Notes. W. Walker. Andover.
Isaiah. Thought in. Archibald Duff, Andover.
Kirchhoff, Gustaf Robert. Popular Science.
Law and Grace. Prof. Harris. Andover.
Leo XIII. M. F. Egan. Oentury.
Lincoln, Abraham. O. K. Tuckerman. Mag. Am. Hist.
Lincoln, Abraham. Hay and Nicolay. Century.
London as a Literary Center. R. R. Bowker. Harper.
Marriage, Reform in. F. G. Cook, Atlantic.
Milton. Matthew Arnold. Century.
Moslem's Bible, The. J. P. Hughes. Andover.
Napoleon's Russian Campaign. W. H. Ray. Dial.
Orchard Oriole, The Olive. Thorne Miller. Atlantic.
Orthodoxy, Peril of. Andover.
Pastoral Elegies. C. G. D. Roberts. Princeton.
Poetry, Recent Books of. W. M. Payne. Dial.
Political Frankenstein, A. Eugene Schuyler. Princeton.
Pope, Alexander. Austin Dobson, Scribner.
Prussia under Frederick II. J. J. Halsey. Dial.
Ranch, Sheriff's Work on a. Theodore Roosevelt. Cent.
Republic, Center of the James Baldwin, Scribner.
Robin and His Congeners. Spencer Trotter. Pop. Sci.
Ruskin, John, Atlantic.
Russia, Justice and Law in. Harper.
Russian Convicts in the Salt Mines. H. Lansdoll. Harper.
Salmon Angling. Scribner.
Shakespearean Controversy. L. Sears. Andover.
Siberia and Exile System. Geo. Kennan. Century.
Sound-Signals at Sea. A, B. Johnson. Popular Science.
Spencer, H., on Organic Evolution. Argyll. Pop. Sci.
Tennessee, Ancient. G. P. Thruston. Mag. Am. hist.
Tenting on the Plains. Rossiter Johnson, Dial.
Tolstoi on Immortality. John Faville. Andover.
Vases. W. P. P. Longfellow. Scribner.
William IV., Emperor of Germany. H. Tuttle. Atlantic.
A. Sen. Scribner Dial.
“YANKEE Girls in Zulu Land" is the product of
three young women into five years of life in South
Africa. One of the young women was an invalid,
and the other two carried her off to Cape Colony
in search of health. The trip was a successful one
as far as the principal object was concerned; it also
had the satisfactory result of providing materials
for the very pretty and very interesting volume now
published by the Worthington Co. The text of the
volume is by Miss Louise Vescelius-Sheldon, and
the illustrations by Miss E. J. Austen. Of the latter
we need only say that they are in the manner of
those found in the illustrated Daudet, and almost
equal to them in delicate and accurate design. In
the text, Miss Sheldon has contented herself mainly
with a record of actual experiences and observations.
Her narrative is simple, unaffected, and graphic. It
covers a great variety of scenes and adventures in
Cape Colony, the Orange Free State, the Transvaal,
and Natal. It describes, in a highly attractive man-
ner, a country little known to the general reader.
It is written in a spirit of tempered enthusiasm bet-
ter calculated to convince the reader of the charms
of life in South Africa than the most roseate of eu-
logies. Altogether, it is an exceedingly readable
book of travels.
In the “Second Middle English Primer ” Prof.
Henry Sweet gives students of the mother tongue a
welcome continuation of his “First Middle English
Primer” which was published in 1884 (Macmillan
& Co.). Those who are willing to take the moder-
ate pains necessary to enable them not only to un-
derstand Chaucer's meaning but also to hear his
melody, will find in this booklet the requisite appa-
ratus. The pronunciation, phonology, and inflec-
tions of the first of our great poets are here set forth,
within the space of twenty-four pages, by the uner-
ring hand of a master. The remainder of the vol-
ume is filled with tempting extracts or complete
poems, considerable portions of which are phonet-
ically transcribed with the utmost accuracy, so that
no one need go astray. The principal texts are
“The Complaint to Pity," "The Parliament of
Birds,” “The Pardoner's Tale," and most of the
“Prologue.” To learn to read Chaucer is as easy
as to learn to read Burns, and the reward is much
greater."
new in: Harper. H. Lansdoll. Harper
BOOKS OF THE MONTH.
[The following list contains all New Books, American and For.
eign, received during the month of April by MESSRS.
A. C. MCCLURG & Co., Chicago.)
HISTORY.
History of the Civil War in America. By the Comte
de Paris. Vol. IV. 8vo, pp. 681. Portrait. Porter &
Coates. $3.50.
Governor Chamberlain's Administration in South
Carolina. A chapter of Reconstruction in the
Southern States. By Walter Allen. Portrait. 8vo,
pp. 544. Gilt top. G. P. Putnam's Sons. $3.00.
Life in the Confederate Army. Being the observations
and Experiences of an Alien in the South during the
American Civil War. By William Watson, 12mo, pp.
456. Scribner & Welford. $2.00.
A History of the Inquisition of the Middle Ages. By
Henry C. Lea. 8vo. Vol. III. (completing the work).
Pp. 736. Gilt top. Harper & Brothers. Per vol., $3
Discovery of America by Northmen. Address at the
Unveiling of the Statue of Lief Eriksen. Delivered
in Faneuil Hall, Oct. 29, 1887. By Eben N. Horsford.
With Photo.Gravure of Statue. Quarto, pp. 113.
Houghton, Mifflin & Co. Net, $5.00.
Tho Puritan Age and Rule in the Colony of the Mas-
sachusetts Bay - 1629-1685. By George E. Ellis.
8vo, pp. 576. Giſt top. Houghton, Mifflin & Co. $3.50.
Palestine in the Time of Christ. From the French of
E. Stapfer, D.D. New edition, revised. 12mo, pp. 527.
A. C. Armstrong & Son. $2.50.
Early Days of Mormonism. Palmyra, Kirtland, and
Nauvoo. By J. H, Kennedy. Portraits. 12mo, pp. 275.
C. Scribner's Sons. $1.50. .
The Story of New York. By Elbridge S. Brooks. Illus.
trated. Small 8vo, pp. 311. “The Story of the States."
D. Lothrop Co. $1.50.
The Causes of the French Revolution. By R. H. Dabney,
M.A., Ph.D. 12mo, pp. 297. H. Holt & Co. $1.25.
BIOGRAPHY.
Dictionary of National Biography. Edited by Leslie
Stepheng. Vol. XIV. Damon-D'Eyncourt. 8vo, pp.
456. Gilt top. Macmillan & Co. $3.75.
TOPICS IN LEADING PERIODICALS.
MAY, 1888.
Albany to Buffalo. Prof. Hopkins. Mag. Am. Hist.
Algiers. F. A. Bridgman, Harper.
American Indian, Future of the. T. J. Mays. Pop. Sci.
American Philosophical Society. The Atlantic.
Arnold, Matthew, and His Work. M. B. Anderson. Dial.
Arnold. Matthew, on Civilization in the U.S. Andover.
Atmospheric Phenomena, Worship of. Popular Science.
Balzac. John Safford Fiske. Princeton.
Barnes, Alfred s. Mrs. Martha J. Lamb.
Bird Music. S. P. Cheney. Century.
Brown, Charles Brockden. Allantic.
Central America, an Episode of. W. E. Curtis. Princeton,
Chicago. O. D. Warner. Harper.
Church of England in the Colonies. Century.
Cicero. Harriet Waters Preston. Atlantic,
Climato, Moral Influence of. F. L. Oswald. Pop. Sci.


24
[May,
THE DIAL
The Life of Benvenuto Cellini. Newly translated into
English by John A. Symonds. 2 vols., 12mo. Portrait.
Scribner & Welford. $3.00.
The Early Life of Samuel Rogers. By P. W. Olayden,
12mo, pp. 405. Roberts Bros. $1.75.
The Prima Donna: Her History and Surroundings from
the Seventeenth to the Nineteenth century. By. H.
S. Edwards. 2 vols., 8vo. London. $7.50.
Life and Letters of George Perkins Marsh. Compiled
by Caroline 0. Marsh. 8vo, 2 vols. Vol. I. now ready.
Portrait. C. Scribner's Sons. Net, $3.50.
Reminiscences of William Rogers, Rector of St. Botolph
Bishopgåte. Compiled by R. H. Hadden. Portrait.
12mo, pp. 228. London. $2.40.
The Life of Dr. Anandabai Joshee. A Kinswoman of
the Pandita Ramabai. By Mrs. C. H, Dall. Portrait.
12mo, pp. 187. Roberts Bros. $1.00.
William the Conqueror. By Edward A. Freeman. 16mo,
pp. 200. Macmillan & Co. Paper, 50; cloth, flex, 75
cents.
Amos Bronson Alcott. His Character. A Sermon by
Cyrus A. Bartol. 16mo, pp. 31. Paper. Roberts Bros.
20 cents.
TRAVEL
Pioturesque New Guinea. With an Historical Intro.
duction and Supplementary Chapters on the Man.
ners and Customs of the Papuans; Accompanied with
fifty full-page Autotype Illustrations from Negatives
of Portraits from Life and Groups and Landscapes
com Nature. By J.W. Lindt, F.R.G.S. Large 8vo, pp.
194 Gilt top. Longmans, Green & Co. $15.00.
Days Near Paris. By A.J. C. Hare. 12mo, pp. 359.
Illustrated. G. Routledge & Sons. $2.50.
London of To-Day. An Illustrated Hand.book. By C.
E. Pascoe. Edition for 1888 completely revised, with
numerous additional illustrations. 12mo, pp. 395.
Roberts Bros. $1.50.
Yankee Girls in Zulu Land. By Louise Vescelius.
Sheldon. Illustrated. 12mo, pp. 287. Worthington
Co. $2.25.
The Pocket Guide for Europe. Hand-book for Trav.
ellers on the Continent and the British Isles, and
through Egypt, Palestine, and Northern Africa. By
Thos. w. Knox. Edition for 1888. 18mo, pp. 223. G.
P. Putnam's Sons. 75 cents.
The People's Year-Book and Traveller's Companion,
1888. An Encyclopædia of a million facts every one
should know. 16mo, pp. 201. Brentano Bros. Paper, 25
cents; cloth, 50 cents.
ESSAYS-BELLES-LETTRES, ETC.
Martin Luther and Other Essays. By F. H. Hedge.
12mo, pp. 326. Roberts Bros. $2.00.
The Works of W. M. Thackeray. Edition de Luxe.
Limited to 250 copies, numbered. With numerous
illustrations, printed on Japan paper. To be com-
pleted in 20 vols. Large 8vo. Paris and Eastern
Sketches now ready. Wortbington Co. Per vol., net,
$3.50.
Thomas Carlyle's Works. The Ashburton Edition.
To be completed in seventeen vols., 8vo. Vol. XVII.
(being vol. III., and concluding volume of Critical and
Miscellaneous Essayg) now ready. English cloth un.
cut; or, cloth, paper'title, gilt top. J. B. Lippincott
Co. Each, $2.50.
The Letters of Charles Lamb. Newly arranged, with
additions.Edited, with introduction and notes, by
Alfred Ainger. 2 vols., 12mo. Gilt tops. Portrait.
A, C. Armstrong & Son. $3.00.
Correspondence of Henry Taylor. Edited by E. Dow.
den. 12mo, pp. 421. Longmans, Green & Co. $2.50.
Indian Sketches. Taken during a United States Expe.
dition to make Treaties with the Pawnee and other
Tribes, in 1833. By J. T. Irving. 12mo, pp. 365. G. P.
Putnam's Sons. $1.50.
Lucian's Dialogues. Namely, the Dialogues of the
Gods, of the Sea-Gods, and of the Dead; Zeus the Tra.
gedian, The Ferry. Boat, etc. Translated with Notes
and a Preliminary Memoir. By Howard Williams,
M.A. 12mo, pp. 315. “Bonn's Library,” London. Net,
$1.50.
A Selection from Pascal's Thoughts. Translated by
H. L. S. Lear. 18mo, pp. 175. London. $1.00.
A Book of New England Legends and Folk Lore.
In Prose and Poetry. By S. A. Drake. Illustrated.
12mo, pp. 461. Roberts Bros. $2.00.
Epipsychidion. By Peroy B. Shelley. A Type Fac-Sim.
ile Reprint of the Original Edition. First Published
in 1821. With an Introduction by the Rev.S.A. Brooke,
M.A., and a Note by A. C. Swinburne. Edited by R. A.
Potts. 8vo, pp. 97. Boards. London. Net, $3.50.
Before the Curfero and Other Poems. Chiefly Occa-
sional. By Ó. W. Holmes.16mo, pp. 110. Gilt top.
Houghton, Mimin & Co. $1.00.
Shakespeare. A Midsommer Nights Dreame. A Fac.
simile Reprint of the Text of the First Folio, 1623,
with Foot Notes giving every Variant in Spelling and
Punctuation, occurring in the two Quartos of 1600, with
Introduction and Notes by Henry Johnson. 8vo, pp.
61. Gilt top. Variant Edition. Houghton, Mufflin &
Co. $1.00.
Ballades and Rondeaus, Chants Royal, Sestinas, Vill.
anelles, etc. Selected, with Chapter on the Various
Forms. By Gleeson White 18mo, pp. 296. Gilt top.
D. Appleton & Co. $1.00.
Metrical Translations and Poems. By F. H. Hedge and
Annis L. Wister. 16mo, pp. 127. Vellum paper covers.
Houghton, Mifflin & Co. $1.00.
Befo' de War. Echoes in Negro Dialect. By A. G. Gor.
don and Thomas M. Page 16mo, pp. 131, 0. Scribner's
Sons. $1.00.
Virgil's Æneid. Translated literally, line by line, into
English Dactylic Hexameter. By the Rev. Oliver
Crane, D.D. 4to, pp. 258. The Baker & Taylor Co. $1.75.
Audiatorocte, or the Eve of Lady Day on Lake George;
and other Poems, Hymns and Meditations in Verse.
By the Rev. O. A. Walworth. 12mo, pp. 244. Gilt top.
G. P. Putnam's Sons. $1.50.
Rebecca the Witch and Other Tales in Metro. By D. S.
Foster. 12mo, pp. 198. Gilt top. G. P. Putnam's Sons.
$1.25.
Atalanta's Race, and Other Tales from the Earthly Para-
dise. By William Morris. Edited, with Notes, by
Oscar F. Adams, with the co-operation of William J.
Rolfe, A.M. Illustrated. 16mo, pp. 242. Ticknor & Co.
75 cents.
SOIENTIFIO-MEDICAL.
Watt's Dictionary of Chemistry. Revised and en.
tirely rewritten. By H. F. Morley, M.A., D.Sc., and
M. M. P. Muir, M.A., assisted by eminent contribu.
tors. To be completed in four volumes. 8vo. Vol. I.
now ready. Longmans, Green & Co. Net, $14.50.
A Treatise on Chemistry. By Sir H. E. Roscoe, F.R.S.,
and O. Schorlemmer, F.R.S. Vol. III. The Chemistry
of the Hydrocarbons and their Derivatives; or, Or.
ganic Chemistry. Part IV. 8vo., pp. 544. D. Apple-
ton & Co. $3.00.
Tho Testing of Materials of Construction. A Text
Book for the Engineering Laboratory and a Collection
of the Results of Experiment. By William C. Un.
win, F.R.S., M. Inst. C. E. Illustrated. 8vo, pp. 488.
Longmans, Green & Co. $7.00.
Simple Mechanics. A Practical Guide for the Home
and Workshop. Adapted to the daily wants of every.
body. By G. E. Blakelee. Illustrated. 8vo, pp. 720.
London. $6.00.
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• • • • • • • • •
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30
[June,
THE DIAL
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THE
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1888.]
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UT
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32
[June, 1888.
THE DIAL
umberso at the top and woman pose New York,
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TOWN AND COUNTRY


THE DIAL
----
-
-
Vol. IX. JUNE, 1888. No. 98.
a way as to afford the student the advantage
of his superior military knowledge and judg.
ment. But as a narrator of military events,
CONTENTS.
the Count has few superiors. He is sufficiently
THE CIVIL WAR IN AMERICA. John C. Ropes . . 33
33 clear,-or at least would be, if his publishers
furnished more maps, — his style is always
THE IXQUISITION IN THE MIDDLE AGES. W.F.
animated and often brilliant, and his evident
Allen . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 34
familiarity with and earnest interest in the
ANIMAL MAGNETISM. Titus Munson Coan ....
great events which he brings before the read-
THE LETTERS OF LAMB. Edward Gilpin Johnson · 38 er's mind carry his audience with him.
RENAN'S HISTORY OF ISRAEL. Emil G. Hirsch .. The volume just published is chiefly con-
RECENT BOOKS ON CIVICS. James F. Claflin ... 42
cerned with the grand campaigns of Rose-
crans and Grant for the possession of Chatta-
BRIEFS ON NEW BOOKS ........... 46
nooga in the autumn of 1863. In no events
Inge's Society in Rome under the Cæsars.-Dab.
of the war is to be found a better field for the
ney's The Causes of the French Revolution.-
Lewis's Critical History of Sunday Legislation.-
student of military history. During no epoch
Hutton's Simon de Montfort and His Cause.-Bar-
in the whole four years did the struggle ex-
nard's Conquest of Ireland. - Dowden's Corre. hibit such startling and dramatic incidents, or
spondence of Sir Henry Taylor.- Jones's Negro
fortune show herself more inconstant, or the
Myths from the Georgia Coast.- McAnally's Irish
great qualities of the American soldier have
Wonders. – Hedge's Martin Luther, and Other
Essays.
finer opportunities for display. Nor can we
point to any other great and consecutive series
TOPICS IN JUNE PERIODICALS.
of military operations in our war where the
BOOKS OF THE MONTH
alternations of success and disaster were ended
by such a crowning and decisive victory. In
THE CIVIL WAR IN AMERICA.*
all this the Comte de Paris is manifestly at
home. He thoroughly enjoys depicting these
We owe, it now appears, to the apprehen tremendous contrasts, these tragical crises.
sions of the French republican politicians the Where an American military man would be
unwelcome fact that the chief historian of our naturally, almost inevitably, dry and precise
Civil War, the Comte de Paris, has been com and professional, the Count's appreciation of
pelled to cease from his labors. The present the picturesque elements of the campaign,-
volume of the Count's history contains only the light and the shade, give to his story a
“the seventh volume of the French edition, vivid and absorbing interest.
and so much of the eighth volume as was con Coming now to the narrative considered sim-
tained in the manuscript which the distin. ply as history, it seems to us in the main to be
guished author carried with him when he was correct. The author does not appear to be
banished from France.” We learn that we unduly influenced by the controversies which
are not to look for a speedy completion of this have been raised regarding these complicated
great task.
operations. His method, as we have before
For this we are heartily sorry. The Count's intimated, is not a systematic method, and
history is so animated, so vigorously written, hence there is no careful apportionment of
so fair, so full of just and generous apprecia praise or blame. But we find the principal
tion of the military virtues of the contesting features of the campaigns correctly given.
armies and their leaders, that it is a great gift | For instance, in the account of the operations
to the people of this country. Let us hope which resulted in the storming of Missionary
that he will yet find means and opportunity to Ridge we are pleased to see that the Count has
complete it.
adhered strictly to the exact facts, and has not
As a military history the Count's work been induced by his admiration of General
leaves, it is true, much to be desired. He Grant to overstate, as have some of his ad.
does not, for instance, give sufficient space to mirers, the part wbich that distinguished offi.
stating the military problems, to explaining cer played in the success of the Federal army.
them in such a way that they can be appre We find a cordial recognition of the impor-
herded by the non-professional reader. Nor tant services rendered by General W.F. Smith
does he as a rule sum up the results of military in the planning and carrying out of the
criticism on the different campaigns, in such Brown's Ferry movement, which alone ren-
dered it possible not only to maintain the
* HISTORY OF THE CIVIL WAR IN AMERICA. By the
Army of the Cumberland at Chattanooga, but
Comte de Paris. Volume IV. With Portrait of the
Author. Philadelphia: Porter & Coates.
| to bring to its assistance, first the corps of


34
[June,
THE DIAL
Hooker, and then that of Sherman. We find As an historical composition its excellence
due recognition of the sound and sure judg., is equally marked. The history of an in-
ment of the Commanding General in availing stitution does not admit of the graphic
himself at once of this skilful plan. No sup. narration which gives a charm to the work of
port is given in the Count's narrative to the Motley, Parkman, and our other great histori-
utterly groundless story that the resolution to ans. It is only in occasional episodes that
delay commencing active operations until the these qualities find scope; while the judgments
arrival of Sherman's force gave us the required expressed at suitable points upon right and
superiority in numbers was extorted from expediency are marked by a judicial calmness
Grant, against his judgment, by a blame and fairness, joined with a constant homage
worthy unwillingness to advance on the part | rendered to the highest moral standard, that
of General Thomas. It is furthermore freely give these passages dignity and eloquence of
conceded that the battle was not fought as a high order. It must be said that the simi-
planned; that the pushing out of our lines on larity of circumstances and procedure in the
the 23d, by menacing the enemy's positions many different countries and ages necessarily
directly in front of our advanced divisions, results in a certain monotony of effect; while
caused Bragg to strengthen his right, and the plan of the work makes necessary a con-
thereby rendered more difficult the success of siderable amount of repetition in detail.
the turning movement which had been pre We are accustomed to associate the Inqui.
scribed to Sherman. It is clearly shown that sition chiefly with the persecutions of the
the theory that the task of Sherman was merely | Protestants in modern times; and it is with
a feint, undertaken with the purpose of caus something of a surprise that we find three
ing Bragg to weaken his centre in order to thick volumes devoted to the history of the
reinforce his right, was a pure afterthought; institution with no reference to modern Prot-
and that the storming of the ridge was due to estantism, and no account of the “Spanish”
the impossibility of retaining the troops in the Inquisition. This later portion of its history,
rifle-pits which they had captured at the foot | beginning with the “New Inquisition"
of the hill, an impossibility which was at once “founded by Ferdinand and Isabella,” is re-
perceived by the soldiers themselves and was served for a future work, for which the ma-
by them utilized as an opportunity to make terials are already in large part collected. It
one of the most famous and successful assaults is Mr. Lea's especial merit not merely to have
in all military history. All these are important traced the history during this earlier period
facts in the campaign of Chattanooga, and with a painful and exhaustive minuteness, but
these we find stated, though not stated con to have shown the close and integral connec-
troversially, in the narrative before us.
tion of this institution with every phase of
We cannot close without expressing regret church history during the period of its exist-
that the publishers should not have furnished ence. We have in these three volumes almost
these volumes with more maps and a good in a complete history of the church during the
dex. If the table of contents had been printed thirteenth, fourteenth, and fifteenth centuries;
with a reference after each topic to the page of course not consecutive and systematic,
where the topic is treated, instead of with a because written from the point of view of a
reference only to the page on which the chap-| single institution of the church, but touching
ter begins, it would have been a great help to upon almost every aspect of religious and
the reader.
John C. ROPES. ecclesiastical life during these centuries. So
inextricably did the machinery for the sup-
pression of free thought work itself into every
field of religious activity.
THE INQUISITION IN THE MIDDLE AGES. * The thought which impresses itself most
It is safe to say that Mr. Lea's History of
forcibly upon the reader of these volumes is
the irrepressible activity and fertility of the
the Inquisition is the most important book
upon mediæval history that this country has
human mind, which required this subtle and
produced. The previous publications of the
busy organization to hold it in check. It
author have fully established his rank in
makes almost ludicrous the boast of unity of
faith secured by an infallible church, when we
this field; and the present work, by its scope,
the thoroughness of the investigation, and the
see in the very ages of faith a diversity of
belief-often well organized—almost as great
soundness and impartiality of the judgments,
as well as by its sustained and earnest style,
as that of Protestantism. In presence of this
may fairly be taken as marking the highest
outgrowth of the intellectual growth of the
reach of American historical scholarship.
age, we see, as Mr. Lea clearly and cogently
shows, how this horrible institution was “a
* A HISTORY OF THE INQUISITION IN THE MIDDLE AGES. natural-one may almost say an inevitable-
By Henry Charles Lea, author of "An Historical Sketch
evolution of the forces at work in the thir-
York: Harper and Brothers.
teenth century”;—granting, that is, the prem-
of Sacerdotal Celibacy," etc. In three volumes. New


1888.]
35
THE DIAL
ises, the necessity of uniformity in belief, and safe-conduct granted to Huss by the Emperor
the divinely granted authority of the church is answered in the affirmative. It was “in the
to enforce this uniformity. Out of this ordinary form, without limitation or condi.
doctrine—the paramount importance of right tion . ... ordering that he be permitted to
belief-have grown the greatest woes from pass, remain and return without impediment.
which humanity has ever suffered.
.... Thus it was not a simple viaticum for
The book is divided into three parts, each protection during the journey from Bohemia,
of which has a volume devoted to it. The and it was not so regarded by any one" (vol.
first volume describes the conditions of society ii., p. 462). But while Sigismund violated his
under which the institution was developed, promise, in allowing Huss to be burned, it was
and its establishment, organization, and proce a promise which he had no right to give; if he
dure. The second volume gives its history in had attempted to protect Huss, “he would
the several countries. The third is devoted to have been punishable by perpetual relegation
“special fields of inquisitorial activity,”-in and the forfeiture of all his dominions." AC-
cluding such interesting topics as the condem cording to the principles of the Inquisition,
nation of the Templars and of Joan of Arc; “the heretic had no rights, and the man accused
the controversy among the Franciscans of the of heresy by sufficient witnesses was to be
fourteenth century upon the question of pov treated as a heretic until he could clear him-
erty; magic, sorcery, and witchcraft. Of self” (p. 467). The council therefore could not,
course the Albigensian crusades, in connection and did not hesitate about enforcing the rules
with which the Inquisition was founded, of inquisitorial procedure. At the same time
come in for a full treatment, but this is in the the greatest possible forbearance and lenity,
first volume, with a continuation in the second, | under these rules, was exercised. “The only
under its proper geographical treatment. So | deviations of tbe council from the ordinary
with the Waldenses, those Puritans of the course of such affairs were special marks of
middle ages, and the Hussite movement, which lenity towards the accused. He was not sub-
is the subject of the two last chapters of the jected to the torture, as in the customary
second volume. The relation of the Hussites | practice in such cases he should have been,
to the Waldenses, and the creation, out of this and, at the instance of Sigismund, he was thrice
relation, of the society of Bohemian Brethren, permitted to appear before the whole body
better known in this country as the Moravian and defend himself in public session” (p. 469).
Brotherhood, form an interesting part of this One of the most striking facts brought out
last chapter; and the volume ends with a by Mr. Lea is that of the malign influence of
warm and well-deserved eulogy of this noble the Inquisition upon modern systems of judi-
and useful body.
cial process. This is illustrated on several
While this work is a severe and unanswer occasions, and especially on page 589 of the
able indictment of the institution and the first volume.
principle upon which it was founded, constant
“On secular jurisprudence the example of the
testimony is borne to the sincerity and even | Inquisition worked even more deplorably. It came
the humanity of the men who organized and at a time when the old order of things was giving
operated it. Of course there could not fail to way to the new—when the ancient customs of the
be among the inquisitors, as in the world at barbarians, the ordeal, the wager of law, the wer-
large, men of cruel nature, who enjoyed the gild, were growing obsolete in the increasing intel-
sight of the suffering they caused, and this
ligence of the age, when a new system was springing
into life under the revived study of the Roman law,
cruelty of nature must have been often quick-
and when the administration of justice by the local
ened by the pride of intellect which could not
feudal law was becoming swallowed up in the widen-
put up with a difference of belief in another.
ing jurisdiction of the crown. The whole judicial
But it is noticeable, on the other hand, how system of the European monarchies was undergoing
few in proportion suffered the extreme penalty. reconstruction, and the happiness of future gener-
Every means was adopted to procure such a | ations depended on the character of the new institu-
submission of the accused as would allow the
tions. That in this reorganization the worst features
milder penalties. But even these milder pen-
of the imperial jurisprudence—the use of torture
and the inquisitorial process-should be eagerly,
alties seem to us harsh.
nay, almost exclusively, adopted, should be divested
The treatment of Huss and his followers is
of the safeguards which in Rome restricted their
narrated with great fulness, and forms per abuse, should be exaggerated in all their evil tend-
haps the most interesting and instructive por encies, and should, for five centuries, become the
tion of the work, because their case is at once prominent characteristic of the criminal jurispru-
very familiar, and illustrates in the clearest dence of Europe, may safely be ascribed to the fact
light the practical workings of the principles
that they received the sanction of the church. Thus
recommended, they penetrated everywhere along
of the Inquisition, and because at the same
with the Inquisition; while most of the nations to
time special points of interest come up in re-
whom the Holy Office was unknown maintained
lation to them. The much-mooted question their ancestral customs, developing into various
whether there was an actual violation of the forms of criminal practice, harsh enough, indeed, to


36
[June,
THE DIAL
modern eyes, but wholly divested of the more
hideous atrocities which characterized the habitual
investigation into crime in other regions."
It is often asserted that the punishments of
the Inquisition were inflicted not by the
church, but by the secular power; and of
course this is true in form. But equally of
course it is a mere subterfuge in fact. Mr.
Lea says (p. 535):
“The church took good care that the nature of
the request for mercy) should not be misappre-
hended. It taught that in such cases all mercy was
misplaced unless the heretic became a convert, and
proved his sincerity by denouncing all his fellows.
The remorseless logic of St. Thomas Aquinas ren-
dered it self-evident that the secular power could
not escape the duty of putting the heretic to death,
and that it was only the exceeding kindness of the
church that led it to give the criminal two warnings
before handing him over to meet his fate. The
inquisitors themselves had no scruples on the sub-
ject, and condescended to no subterfuges respect-
ing it, but always held that their condemnation of
a heretic was a sentence of death."
The mediæval Inquisition culminated in the
century of its birth, -
"That age of lofty aspirations unfulfilled, of
brilliant dreams unsubstantial as visions, of hopes
ever looking to fruition and ever disappointed. The
human intellect had awakened, but as yet the
human conscience slumbered, save in a few rare
souls who mostly paid in disgrace or death the
penalty of their precocious sensitiveness. That
wonderful century passed away and left as its
legacy to its successor vast progress, indeed, in
intellectual activity, but on the spiritual side of
the inheritance a dreary void. All efforts to ele-
vate the ideals of man had miserably failed. So.
ciety was harder and coarser, more carnal and more
worldly than ever, and it is not too much to say
that the Inquisition had done its full share to bring
this about by punishing aspirations and by teach-
ing that the only safety lay in mechanical con-
formity, regardless of abuses and unmindful of
corruption." (Vol. iii., p. 51.)
It is a relief to be told that the power and
activity of the Inquisition declined during the
fourteenth century, and were very low in the
fifteenth. Had it been otherwise,
"Had it existed in Germany in good working
order, Luther's career would have been short.
When, October 31, 1517, he nailed his propositions
concerning indulgences on the church-door of
Wittenberg, and publicly defended them, an in-
quisitor such as Bernard Gui would have speedily
silenced him, either destroying his influence by
forcing him to a public recantation, or handing him
over to be burned if he proved obstinate. Hundreds
of hardy thinkers had been thus served, and the
few who had been found stout enough to withstand
the methods of the Holy Office had perished.
Fortunately, as we have seen, the Inquisition had
never struck root in German soil, and now it was
thoroughly discredited and useless. Hochstraten's
hands were tied : Doctor John Eck, inquisitor for
Bavaria and Franconia, was himself a Humanist,
who could argue and threaten, but could not act."
W. F. ALLEN.
ANIMAL MAGNETISM.*
The work on “Animal Magnetism,” by the
two distinguished French specialists, Binet
and Féré, is one of great simplicity of pur-
pose. The authors do not attempt to discuss
the history of animal magnetism, so-called,
from its beginning: they trace its develop-
ment through the past century only, beginning
with Mesmer, the famous popularizer of the
science. A full sketch of his creed and prac-
tice is given, and his twenty-seven proposi.
tions are recited at length. It is noticeable
that none of them correspond to the fuller
science of to-day; they are little more, indeed,
than the cloudy conceptions of astrology in
which Mesmer himself was a believer. A
very interesting document is given in this
place,—the second or private report of the
French commissioners, among whom were
Franklin and Lavoisier, condemning both the
science and the morality of Mesmer's proceed-
ings, particularly the latter, in terms which
would startle the readers of government re-
ports to-day.
Coming to the more recent history of the
subject, we find an account at once full and
authoritative of its development from the time
of Braid to Charoot. The experiments re-
corded in the present work were made in large
part by Charcot, and the really scientific epoch
of this subject goes no farther back than 1878,
when Dr. Charcot began those remarkable
researches at the Salpétrière in Paris which
have given him the foremost rank among the
students of hypnotism. Previous observa-
tions, from those of Azam and Grimes to those
of Richet and Richer, are fully described.
But early in the course of the work we come
to the details of the subject at the point to
which it has been brought by the researches
of Charcot and his colleges. The terms mostly
used throughout the book are hypnotism or
hypnosis ; and of these all the different states
and conditions are described with great
minuteness.
The science has advanced far beyond the
simple production of a hypnotic state by the
contemplation of a bright object. The hyp-
notic state is now divided by Charcot into
three forms or types—the cataleptic, the leth-
argic, and the state of somnambulism ; these
are, however, interchangeable in the same per-
son at the will of the operator. The catalep-
tic state is produced by the well-known method
of exposing the eyes to a bright light in a fixed
position ; in this state the attitudes of the
limbs are fixed, and there is complete insensi-
bility to pain. The second or lethargic state is
produced in like manner, but high muscular
*ANIMAL MAGNETISM. By Alfred Binet and Charles
Féré. (The International Scientific Series.) New York:
D. Appleton & Co.


1888.]
THE DIAL
37
- ------
excitability is present, also with complete in- tion may usually be dispelled by assuring the
sensibility to pain. Third, the state of som- subject that he has seen, felt, and heard noth-
nambulism, or waking sleep, may be produced ing. So perfect is the plasticity of certain
by fixity of gaze, or may be developed by subjects in the operator's hands that different
slight manipulation from the state of lethargy emotions may be impressed upon different
or catalepsy. In either of these states the halves of the brain, and the right side of the
subject receives all kinds of suggestions and face may smile while the left side frowns.
acts upon them as if they were true.
There seems to be, however, scarcely any
The hypnotic procedure consists essentially limit to the power of the influence that may
“in cultivating and confirming an idea in the be exercised upon the subject. If told that a
mind of the subject of the experiment.” Sup white cardboard is red to the right eye, it will
pose, for instance, that the subject is told to appear, if he closes the left eye, to be of a
look at a bird on her apron. “ As soon as the | brilliant red; if he uses both eyes, the color
words are uttered she sees the bird, feels it in will appear to be pink. If assured that the
her hand, and can sometimes even hear it sing.” cardboard appears red to the right eye and
Suggest a wound to the subject, and he will green to the left eye, there will be a struggle
see the blood flow and will complain of pain ; between the two fields of vision, and the alter-
tell him that he holds a firm object in his hands nation of color will weary the patient's sight.
and ask him to press the object, and he will Hallucination of color, in short, may develop
find it impossible to bring his hands together. the phenomena of chromatic contrast nearly
He will confound the voice of an unknown as real sensations do. It seems to consist in a
person with that of an absent acquaintance ; cause which excites the same region of the
he will accept a piece of paper for cake and eat cerebrum as a real sensation, and excites it in
it with relish; and any suggestion of the animal nearly the same manner. The recently de-
nature will be promptly acted upon. The dan- | scribed sensory centres of the brain enable us
gers of the power which the operator has over to fix the points where the different hallucina-
the subject may easily be imagined. How is tions of the senses are going on; and, curiously
it possible for one person to exert over another enough, these sensory centres correspond in no
this power of making him speak, act, think, and way with the “bumps” which the phrenologists
feel, as it pleases the experimenter to dictate? | have indicated as the seat of the respective in-
Pitres suggested to a somnambulist that tellectual functions.
she should kill one of her neighbors. When In some cases, however, the hypnotic sub-
she supposed that the crime was done, he |ject may resist the impression, as when the
caused her, still in the same state, to appear order is given undecisively. Again, the moral
before a magistrate. She declared her inno: convictions of the subject sometimes survive
cence, and it was only when overwhelmed by | in the hypnotic state and lead him to decline
proof that she confessed that she had stabbed with more or less passiveness the suggestion
her neighbor. The somnambulist, therefore, of a wrongful act. Sometimes he says, “No,
is not merely an unconscious automaton. In I will not steal; I am not a thief.” Sometimes,
spite of the perversion of his senses and his again, he merely says, “I do not want to steal;
will, his memory and his intelligence are per some one will see me.” Many an attempt to
fect, his activity remains, his imagination is ex- | kill has been committed by the hypnotized
cited. Nor is this all: suggestion may lead to patient with a paper knife; indeed, the blow
acts committed after the state of hypnotism has | is given so promptly and forcibly that exper-
passed away. The subject's brain is charged |imenters are timid of making the experiment.
with the idea of theft: on awakening he will Not the least remarkable of these researches
still retain it, and the subject may actually are those which show actual physical lesions as
commit the theft. This power of instigation a result of the magnetic influence. A postage
to crime is a very strong and real one, and will stamp, pasted upon the skin of the patient and
before long require recognition by the law. called a plaster, has produced considerable in-
In some cases the hallucinations remain flammation; and other equally curious effects
and persist during the awakened state. On of the same nature have been recorded.
one occasion the authors of this work told The medico-legal bearing of all this is im-
their subject that a gold ten-franc piece was portant. Thus far, “hypnotism has only made
lying upon the table ; they had previously a casual appearance in the courts of justice."
told her that when she awoke they would cor But it is said that suggestion has frequently
rect the hallucination. On awakening she still been made an instrument of crime, and physi-
saw the coin which was not there. They said, | cians who make these experiments are usually
“You know what we agreed upon; the gold careful to have a third party, at least, present
coin is not really there.” None the less she as a witness. In Walter Besant's novel, “ Herr
saw and touched it, and declared that it was a Paulus," the hero employs his powers of hyp-
reality ; it was impossible to infuse the slight- | notism to procure the unconscious signature
est doubt into her mind. But the hallucina- 1 of checks of large amount.


38
[June,
THE DIAL
seur include
is embrace "nevertheles
From the scientific point of view, much is distinctive merit of Mr. Ainger's edition of
still wanting toward the explanation of these | Lamb's correspondence lies in the fact that it
remarkable phenomena. That they are throw- includes a number of interesting letters hith-
ing new light upon the functions of the erto unpublished, and in the additional infor-
brain is evident; but the secrets of the proc mation afforded by the notes. One of these
esses which work them are imperfectly known. letters, containing a bit of interesting literary
The authors of the present book write with | gossip, I shall venture to quote for the reader's
great modesty, and have refrained from pre- benefit:-
senting any attempt at a solution. Still, it is " To Thos. Manning, I
a defect in their work that they have not Diss, Norfolk.
FEBRUARY 15, 1801.
brought together what little is known respect I had need be cautious henceforward what opin-
ing the intrinsic nature of hypnotism. The ion I give of the 'Lyrical Ballads. All the North
book is too largely a collection of mere data; of England are in a turmoil. Cumberland and
still, it is the best that is easily accessible to Westmoreland have already declared a state of war.
the American reader upon the subject. Its
I lately received from Wordsworth a copy of the
pages swarm with inaccuracies, such as that of
second volume, accompanied by an acknowledg-
ment of having received from me many months
rendering the word embrasser by "embrace"
since a copy of a certain Tragedy, with excuses for
instead of “kiss,” But it is not necessary to
not having made any acknowledgment sooner, it
specify instances of this crudeness of transla being owing to an almost insurmountable aversion
tion-a too common fault with many of our from letter-writing. This letter I answered in due
best publishers. Messrs. Binet and Féré de form and time, and enumerated several of the pas-
served a better translation than is accorded
sages which had most affected me, adding, unfor-
them in the present volume.
tunately, that no single piece had moved me so
forcibly as the Ancient Mariner,' "The Mad
Titus MUNSON COAN.
Mother,'or the 'Lines at Tintern Abbey.' The Post
did not sleep a moment, I received almost instan-
. -- ----
taneously a long letter of four sweating pages from
THE LETTERS OF LAMB.*
my Reluctant Letter-Writer, the purport of which
was, that he was sorry his 2d vol. had not given
These two volumes mark the close of Mr. me more pleasure (Devil a hint did I give that it
Ainger's task as editor of what may perhaps did not please me), and was compelled to wish
be regarded as a final collection of the works that my range of sensibility was more extended, be-
of Charles Lamb. The numerous editions of
ing obliged to believe that I should receive large
Lamb's correspondence that have appeared
influxes of happiness and happy Thoughts.' (I sup-
pose from the L. B.)— With a deal of stuff about
heretofore have been little else than vari.
a certain Union of Tenderness and Imagination,
ations of Sergeant Talfourd's well-known
which in the sense he used Imagination was not the
volumes, the “ Letters of Charles Lamb, with characteristic of Shakespeare, but which Milton
a Sketch of his Life," published in 1837, and possessed in a degree far exceeding other Poets :
the “Final Memorials” published after the which union, as the highest species of Poetry, and
death of Mary Lamb in 1848. The latest and
chiefly deserving that name, 'He was most proud
most complete of these editions was that of
to aspire to;' then illustrating the said Union by
two quotations from his own 2d vol. (which I had
Mr. W. C. Hazlitt, which was announced as
been so unfortunate as to miss). 1st Specimen. -
Talfourd's, “ carefully revised and greatly en-
A father addresses his son:
larged.” The edition was made up of Tal-
When thou
fourd's narrative freely interspersed with orig-
First camest into the World, as it befalls
inal matter, and the letters arranged-for the
To new-born Infants, thou didst sleep away
Two days; and Blessings from thy father's Tongue
first time-chronologically, with certain addi.
Then fell upon thee.'
tions to their number. Mr. Ainger rightly The lines were thus undermarked, and then followed
thinks “that Talfourd's work, which, whatever "This Passage, as combining in an extraordinary de-
be its defects, has long taken its place as an gree that Union of Imagination and Tenderness
English classic," should not have been “re-
which I am speaking of, I consider as one of the
issued under its author's name after additions
Best I ever wrote!' 2d Specimen.-A youth, after
years of absence, revisits his native place, and
and alterations so extensive had been intro-
thinks (as most people do that there has been
duced into it.” Preferring, therefore, that
strange alterations in his absence:-
his own work should be independent of the
And that the rocks
labors of his predecessors, he has dispensed And everlasting Hills themselves were changed.'
altogether with Talfourd's narrative, printing You see both these are good poetry; but after one
the letters only in their chronological order, has been reading Shakespeare twenty years of the
elucidatory matter being reserved for the notes
best part of one's life, to have a fellow start up,
at the end of the respective volumes. The
and prate about some unknown quality which
Shakespeare possessed in a degree inferior to Mil-
*THE LETTERS OF CHARLES LAMB. Newly arranged, ton and somebody else ! !”
with additions. Edited, with Introduction and Notes, by
Charles Lamb was so often a wearer of the
Alfred Ainger. In two volumes, with Portrait. New
York: A. C. Armstrong & Son.
motley that we are apt to lose sight of the


1888.]
39
THE DIAL
---
-
serious side of his character. We think of der, and expecting the moment that was to trang-
him as the incorrigible punster; the quaint ! port him to Paradise for his heroic self-devotion.'”
humorist; the man who threw into speechless There is some method in the madness of this
indignation the Sage of Chelsea gazing sky whimsical answer; yet, doubtless, were the
ward into the “ vague immensities,” by art- subject of “persons one would wish to have
lessly inquiring, “Mr. Carlyle, are you a seen ” broached in our day, many of us would
p-p-poulterer ? " We remember him rather gladly pass over the grim hero of the Parlia-
as “a fellow of infinite jest,” than as the fin ment House vaults, preferring to invoke the
ished scholar whose critical opinion was gentle shade of Charles Lamb.
eagerly sought by Coleridge, Wordsworth, and Mrs. Charles Mathews, in her memoir of
Southey; or as the hero whose fortitude under her husband, gives the following sketch of the
a life-long weight of affliction is a lesson of outward man of “Elia":
patience to mankind.
“Mr. Lamb's first approach was not prepossess-
Lamb was possessed of rare critical insight; ing. His figure was small and mean; and no man
a faculty that, with him, seemed inborn-not, certainly was ever less beholden to his tailor. His
as with most men, the fruit of years of study
bran' new suit of black cloth (in which he affected
and experience. When he was barely of age
several times during the day to take great pride,
we find his friends Coleridge and Southey-
and to cherish as a novelty that he had long looked
each of them his senior, and university-bred-
for and wanted,) was drolly contrasted with his
very rusty black silk stockings, shown from his
submitting to him their verses for revision knees, and his much too large thick shoes without
and correction. Mr. Ainger remarks in his polish. His shirt rejoiced in a wide, ill-plated frill,
preface:
and his very small, tight white neckcloth was
“If the art or science of poetical criticism could
hemmed to a fine point at the ends that formed
be made matter of instruction, I know no better in-
part of the little bow, His hair was black and
troduction to the study than these scattered criti-
sleek, but not formal, and his face the gravest I
cisms of his, first upon Coleridge's and Southey's
ever saw, but indicating great intellect, and resem -
verse, then upon Wordsworth's, and generally upon
bling very much the portraits of King Charles I.”
all poetry ancient or modern quoted or referred to A truly feminine bit of description. Mrs.
in the letters."
Mathews saw Lamb after his fortunes had
Lamb, as a critic, possessed the somewhat
mended; time was, however, when a “bran
rare merit of sensibility to varieties of excel new suit” was an unwonted phenomenon to
lence foreign to that of the school to which his the toiling clerk of the India House.
taste naturally inclined. While Milton was
Mr. Ainger's edition of Lamb's correspond-
his prime favorite, he could enjoy Pope; and
ence is decidedly the best that we have had,-
although, in his literary tastes, “antiquity although it is not to be inferred that its excel-
bitten, and smit with the love of boars' heads
lence renders Talfourd's narrative obsolete.
and rosemary,” he warmly recognized the
That work rests securely upon its merits irre-
worth of contemporary poets. “I could for-
spective of the letters.
give a man for not enjoying Milton,” he wrote
EDWARD GILPIN Johnson.
to Coleridge,“ but I would not call that man
my friend who should be offended with the
divine chit-chat of Cowper.”
Whatever may be the value, however, of
RENAN'S HISTORY OF ISRAEL.*
the literary and other criticism scattered
The style of Ernest Renan holds a charm
througbout Lamb's works, men will continue
of its own. Even in English array, his writ-
to read them, as they read those of Montaigne
ings lose but little of their native grace. Our
and Sir Thomas Browne, for the insight af-
language is, indeed, more sober and more
forded of the rare personality of the writer
solid than the tongue of France. But so
himself. Hazlitt, in one of his essays, relates
strong is the individuality of this writer that
that, at a social gathering where he and Lamb
when his thoughts crave the hospitality of our
were present, it was proposed that each mem-
speech it willingly quickens its gait to keep
ber of the company should mention that one
pace with their home-step. The success
illustrious in the literature or active life of the
achieved by Renan in the field of letters is
past whom he would wish to have seen. To
largely traceable to his facile pen. The man-
the astonishment of his friends, Lamb unhes-
ner, much more than the matter, accounts for
itatingly pronounced for Guy Fawkes.
the attention his works command. Renan
"'Your most exquisite reason!' was echoed on
undoubtedly is a poet. Imagination is, un-
all sides; and Ayrton thought Lamb had now fairly
questionably, a prerequisite endowment of the
entangled himself. “Why, I cannot but think,
retorted he of the wistful countenance, that Guy
historian. Without it he sinks to the dead
Fawkes, that poor, fluttering scarecrow of straw level of the dry annalist. The historian clothes
and rags, is an ill-used gentleman. I would give
* HISTORY OF THE PEOPLE OF ISRAEL, till the Time
something to see him sitting, pale and emaciated,
of King David. By Ernest Renan. Boston: Roberts
surrounded by his matches and barrels of gunpow. | Brothers.


40
[June,
THE DIAL
the dry bones of fact with flesh and sinew, and the pages leave behind an ineffaceable impres-
breathes upon them the spirit of life. A fact sion. The author raises from the dead the
for him is a symbol. His is the task to point primitive nomads of the Syrian desert, and
out the underlying idea, the power which they come before us with the freshness of an
moves the ages and links past to the present. idyl painted with a gifted pencil. Saul, David,
And his material wherewith to bridge the and their rude companions, assume reality.
gaping chasms in the succession of tradition Sinai, massive and sublime,-a description
is often of the scantiest. Large stretches of never to be forgotten, a worthy rival for
desert challenge his boldness and whet his master's honors of the comparison between the
curiosity. Combination, inference, guess, in Greek language and the Hebrew.. But, with
tuition, must supply what archives and records all this flood of beauty, as a history the book
withbold.
is exceedingly disappointing
A still greater demand upon “historical One need not be a dogmatic defender of the
imagination” is made by the uncertain periods old (orthodox) views on the value of the
of the beginnings. Fundamental as those Biblical collection as historical documents, to
hours of dawn are for the course taken in feel with a tinge of sadness that Renan has
the after-day, they hide with exasperating not satisfactorily filled his self-assumed task.
jealousy the secrets of the birth. It is upon The most radical among German or Dutch
periods of such great uncertainty and great Bible critics,-followers of Kuenen, Graf, and
importance that Renan the historian has come Wellhausen—will perhaps only more keenly
to throw the light of his genius and research. take as many exceptions to what here would
The origins of Christianity have engaged his pass as history, as the most conservative. Nor
attention for three decades. His “Life of is the opinion warranted, which from this cir-
Jesus” opened the series, and the volume be- cumstance might naturally be formed. that
fore us is the first of the “introduction” to the | such dissatisfaction caused to the extreme
history of Christianity. This latest production parties is the best proof of the sound basis of
recalls in many particulars the first. It shares Renan's constructions. Renan makes no efforts
its glories, but also its defects. In Renan, to conceal his virtual assent to the position of
poetry and criticism are not mixed in the true the advanced schools; the Pentateuch, the
proportions which make the historian. In historical books, so-called, of the Old Testa-
his“ Life of Jesus,” imagination wields the ment canon, are not the works of the authors
queenly sceptre, and criticism follows her lead. whose names sponsor them. They are not
In consequence, we have an historical romance, contemporaneous with the events they pretend
written in an extremely fascinating style, but to chronicle. And yet, here we have a volume
a romance for all that. The nature of the of 362 pages, giving us a “history" of the
subject accounts for this; as the condition of epoch covered in the Old Testament by records
the sources explains the repetition of the of undoubted late origin (in their present
literary success and historical failure in the shape) and of doubtful historical trustworthi-
present volume. Renan's preface shows that ness. Stade, in his recent Geschichte, devotes
he was not altogether unaware of this. What from twenty to thirty pages to what Renan
he says, is true enough. His copious supply treats in more than two hundred. And R.
of qualifying adverbs, “perhaps, probably, Kittel, much more conservative than either, in
possibly," are signs of the difficulties to be his Geschichte der Hebraer, scarcely ventures
overcome; they may be cautionary signals, to give much more as historically assured than
warning the reader not to assume too much. Stade. Does, then, Renan draw altogether
The verdict, however, can be but this: Renan upon his imagination, to give shape and color
has again written an historical romance, but a to his many-paged account? The question
romance which no one will lay aside half-read. admits of an affirmative and of a negative
The book is written in such superb style that answer at one and the same time,
when the last page is reached we take leave of In his preface, he gives us his historical
it not with a sense of relief but of positive creed. He is very severe on those “narrow-
regret; for there is enough of literary oddity minded persons who have the French defect
in Renan's manner to season whatever he of not allowing that it is possible to write the
writes to sharpen the zest of his readers. In history of times concerning which one has not
the translation, some of the harsher expressions a series of material facts to relate.” Admit-
of the original are softened or suppressed. ting that were he of their company the pres-
“L'histoire du monde, c'est l'histoire de ent volume would have largely to consist of
Troppmann," is the pessimistic paradox of the blank pages, he attempts a justification of his
French edition, heightened by a side-thrust at method and its results. For him, the Patri-
America, which we failed to find in the Boston archal age of Genesis is to-day still found in
issue. But whether shocked, vexed, or more the Nomadic tribes of Arabia. And further-
frequently stirred, the reader is always en- more, ante-Islamitic Arabic antiquity has come
ticed and irresistibly drawn along. Some of down to us in the Kitab-el-Aghani (the col-


1888.]
41
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--
----
-
-----
lection of songs, etc., of the Arabs), and this the wealth of the Greeks. Facts of history
ante-Islamitic Arabia is the counterpart of and psychology protested against Renan's as-
Patriarchal Israel. The book of Genesis, sumption; but still, after the lapse of years,
though written later, as well as that of Job, he returns now to his first love, repeats his
supply information which, rightly employed, estimate “minimum” (p. 36), and gives us a
must afford rare material. These then are the picture of what the history of Israel's religious
quarries to which Renan goes for his stones. development might have been if his theory
Were his premises correct, the method pur- were true. If the original monotheism of the
sued might lead to correct results. But, un Semites ranks not very high, the successive
fortunately, they are not. The Bedouins of deterioration into national Yahwism is of
Arabia are not the living copies of the dead course a depth of degradation unfathomable.
Patriarchs. The “unprogressiveness” of the Nationalization is the mortal sin that Israel
Nomads is an often-used phrase; but it is, committed when it changed the Elohim of the
though very trite, void of truth. Renan to Semites into Yahwe, the tribal God of theirs-
the contrary notwithstanding, Islam bas in the unser Gott of King William, the leader of
fluenced these tribes to a greater extent than nationalized Germany. The prophets, indeed,
is supposed. The highly-colored pictures of return to primitive Elohim-religion. They
travellers are not very reliable. As a rule, adopt, however, with strange but shrewd
visitors find what they are looking for. The diplomacy, the name of their pet aversion-
Kitâb-el-Aghani might with greater propriety Yahwe,-to carry their proclamations of the
have been utilized; but though Renan is very universal, patriarchal, and just Elohim-doc-
eloquent about the glory and beauty of this trine. This is, in rough outlines, Renan's
collection, not one page reveals its use by notion of the religious history of the Hebrews.
him,-on the contrary, many things combine A few details may not be out of place.
to create the impression that he has but a Judaism, Christianity, and Islam, root in
superficial acquaintance with its contents. At the Arabian desert. The fathers of the old
all events, the picture he draws of the Patri faith were the Nomadic chiefs who tented
archs is not a mirror of the conditions, social there. The oldest states were organized
and religious, crystallized in these ancient materialism, ant-hills and bee-hives. The sons
songs. And in the use he makes of Genesis and of the desert represented, in a different man-
Job, he forgets his own critical canon. “The ner than the Aryans, individualism, the au-
Arthurian romances of the Middle Ages do tonomy of the family. This is the basis of
not contain a word of truth, and yet they are their morality: from it springs their sense of
storehouses of information as to the social honor. In religion they were Puritans, pre-
life of the epoch in which they were written.” historic Moslems. “God eternal and man
Yes, “ of the epoch in which they were written." temporary” is the sum of their belief. They
But Genesis is not a child of the Patriarchal were men of serious bent of mind, simple if
age. And is Job? One thousand years, narrow, and little inclined to idolatry, spirit-
Renan himself tells us, separate it from the worship, animism; and above all they had
period he discusses; but then, “it must have no taste for mythology (p. 39). Benevolence
been thought out at that time”! The fact is, and humanity were characteristics of theirs:
he uses the Bible narratives whenever it suits virtues and dispositions which tent-life pro-
his purpose. And traces of his early Catholic duces (p. 36). “They were not dupes to the
training reappear very often. In the manner dream of the hereafter” (p. 42; 35); "the
of the shallow rationalists, the Bible miracles chimeras of complete survival after death”
are explained away. (Confer., p. 139. The (p. 42). But they had their religious puzzles,
crossing of the Red Sea; p. 141-42; at the also; these gentle Patriarchs could not under-
end of three days the fugitives reached Mara. stand why the righteous should suffer on
a. 8. f.)
earth, etc., etc.
The student of Renan's earlier work on the This primitive monotheism was, however,
Semites and their language is not long in doubt destined to be tainted by foreign influences.
as to the cause of this latest volume's failure The great Nomadic fraternity, originally
to stand the test of rigorous and scholarly cradled in Arabia, had spread to the Euphrates
examination. Renan rides a hobby of his river and stretched out its tents to the Medi-
own. He preaches a theory; and this book terranean. From them became differentiated
is history remodelled after this theory. The the “Hebrews"_“trans-Euphratians” (Chap-
Semites were originally and by instinct ter VII.) They had sojourned repeatedly in
monotheists. This is, however, not to be num Paddan-Aram. Here they had become ac-
bered among their glories. At least, when he quainted with Babylonian myths, and espe-
first asked the world to accept his discovery | cially with the legend of the famous or
he was not slow to describe monotheism as the rather fabulous Orham, King of Ur-called
minimum of religion, and to contrast with this here Ab—Orham-Abraham, the Pater Or.
poverty of ideas—the poverty of the desert- | chamus of Ovid. Among the groups attached


42
[June,
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to this mythical personage, the tribe of Israel, passages, as given in the French original, are
or Jacob-El, represents a “Puritan” reaction masterpieces. Even in the setting in which
against the deterioration produced by the con we find them, combined with the protest
tact with Babylon. Of course, Babylonian influ against the fundamental hypothesis of the
ence had not been an unmitigated evil. It has book, they will undoubtedly cause many to
enriched Hebrew tradition with Genesis I.-XII., reopen the pages of the old Book; and thus
the history of creation, a most potent factor in lead them to give earnest thought to the
the religious culture of the world. More dis question of all questions, what are the well-
astrous was the intermingling with Canaanitish springs of religion, what is the secret of
Paganism; for in its very midst the progeni Israel's religious genius, whence the Bible's
tors of the Beni-Israel settled next. This led influence upon the deepest life of civilization ?
to internal conflicts; and again the “ Jacobel-
EMIL G. HIRSCH,
ites” proved a sort of Geneva. But soon
they were attracted by Egypt, and its influ-
ence proved most pernicious. Their sojourn
RECENT BOOKS ON Civics.*
in the land of the Pharaohs was the first step
to their “nationalization,” accomplished by When Carlyle called Economics “ the dis-
their leaving the Nile, their march through the mal science” he furnished an excuse to indo-
peninsula of Sinai to Palestine, and its con-
lent people for their indifference to the science
quest. Yahwe gradually replaces Elohim.
which underlies all industrial and commercial
During the period of the Judges, the old
prosperity. Another grave impediment to the
Elohim fades more and more, until with the
advancement of the science has been the crit-
constitution of the Kingdom the degradation
is complete. Among a few, the memory of the as the “historical school ” and the so-called
old “Puritans” would not down; and this
“ orthodox” or English school of economists.
caused a reaction, principally led by the Mr. Lunt, in his work on “ The Present Condi-
Prophets of the ninth century.
tion of Economic Science,” has clearly analyzed
To this course of development, cool and
the methods of each school, and has shown that
sober scholarship has to note many exceptions. | the criticisms of the new school are without
The primitive monotheism of the Semites is a
foundation, and that in their own work the
fable. The lines of development in Israel
critics have added nothing of scientific method
are running upward, not downward. From
to that of their predecessors. The old school
a tribal God (a family fetish) to the God of
confine economics to discovery of laws relating
a nation, from that to the universal God
these are the three successive stages of evo *THE PRESENT CONDITION OF ECONOMIC SCIENCE. By
Edward Clark Lunt, A.M. New York: G.P. Putnam's Song,
lution. Israel's evolution as worked out in
THE NATIONAL REVENUES. A Collection of Papers by
this book would be an anomaly, a freak of
American Economists. Edited by Albert Shaw, Ph.D.
nature. And the part of the Prophets, in Chicago: A. C. McClurg & Co.
Renan, becomes unreasonable. They preach THE POLITICAL SCIENCE QUARTERLY, for April, 1888.
Elohim, and yet are Prophets of Yahwe! The
from the "Scienza Delle Finanze" of Dr. Luigi Cossa,
etymologies of Renan are also at fault. Abra-
Professor in the University of Pavia, Italy. New York:
ham is not the Pater Orchamus of Ovid. G. P. Putnam's Sons.
Yahwe is not Assyrian, but, as our author
HISTORY OF COOPERATION IN THE UNITED STATES.
Vol. VI. of Johns Hopkins University Studies, Edited
himself concedes as a possibility, the “God
by Herbert B. Adams. Baltimore: N. Murray.
of Sinai.” Hebrew is the Trans-Jordanian. THE STUDY OF POLITICS. By Wm. P. Atkinson, Pro.
Egypt's contribution to Israel's religion was fessor in the Massachusetts Institute of Technology.
Boston: Roberts Brothers.
almost nothing. If Meyer and others go to
IS PROTECTION A BENEFIT? A Plea for the Negative.
one extreme in denying that the Hebrews By Edward Taylor. Chicago: A. C. McClurg & Co.
were ever in Egypt, Renan stands at the THE GOVERNMENT YEAR BOOK. By Lewis Sargent.
other. The 'Apru of the monuments may be
CHURCH AND STATE. By Philip Schaff, D.D., LL.D.
identical with the Hebrews; and still their
New York: G. P. Putnam's Song.
religion most certainly adopted not one-tenth LARGE FORTUNES. By Charles Richardson. Philadel.
of what Renan would have us believe as phia: J. B. Lippincott Co.
coming from the valley of the Nile.
THE ART OF INVESTING. By a Broker. New York:
D. Appleton & Co.
As a literary production, this volume chal-
PUBLIC DEBTS OF EUROPE. By Alfred Neymark.
lenges our unqualified admiration; as a New York: Homan's Publishing Co.
history, it is, though comparatively a failure, What SHALL WE DO WITH IT (THE SURPLUS). By
Cleveland, Blaine, Watterson, and Edmunds. New York:
by no means valueless. If not on the high-
Harper & Brothers.
lands of French scholarship which gave us
PROPERTY IN LAND. By Henry Winn. New York:
S. de Sacy and Caussin de Perceval, yet, such G. P. Putnam's Sons.
as it is, it cannot but stimulate reflection, and THE RIGHT OF PROPERTY AND OWNERSHIP IN LAND.
By Prof. W. T. Ilarris. Boston: Cupples & Hurd.
excite and encourage the interest in Biblical
INDIVIDUAL RIGHTS. A Treatise. By W. A, Sturdy.
problems. Some of the translations of Biblical |
PRINCIPLES AND METHODS OF TAXATION. Translated
New York: White & Allen.


1888.]
43
THE DIAL
to wealth. The new school claim that the for convenience of reference. Thousands of
creation of wealth is so intimately connected citizens of the United States will for the next
with the health, morals, and other sociological few months be engaged in studying the ques-
elements, that it cannot be treated separately; tion of our future finances. The coming
and thus they extend the term “economics” Presidential election will doubtless hinge
over the whole field of sociology. The reply upon that issue. During such political ex-
is that the intimate relation between econom- | citement, it is inevitable that the current
ics and ethics is fully admitted, but in order newspaper and magazine articles upon the
to arrive at any definite result we must discuss subject should be so colored by personal pref-
the tendency of laws, each by itself in its own erences and partisan bias as to be unfitted in
field, and then study the bearing of each in a measure for the guidance of the honest in-
the total result on society. This latter study quirer. To such students of the question this
is sociology; the former is termed economics, book will be a boon, coming as it does from
ethics, politics, hygienics, etc., according to persons removed from the arena of politics,
the class of laws we are studying. There is whose names are guarantees of their ability,
no gain in substituting the name “economics” and whose reputations are at stake for the
for “sociology," and leaving the former branch soundness of their conclusions given over
without a name. Astronomy and geology their own signatures. Of course, such brief
rest for their conclusions each on a half-dozen papers find room only for the fruit of their
tributary sciences - mathematics, chemistry, studies, rather than for the steps by which
botany, zoölogy, etc.; but that is no reason they attained those results. Among so many
why we should refuse to limit each of these able papers it would be invidious to distin-
latter to its own field and include the whole guish any by general comment; and an ex-
in the name of one branch. We gain noth tended review of any one of them would
ing by the change of terms, and bring con require space beyond the limits of this article.
fusion into the whole investigation. It is In the discussion of Taxation, two notable
asserted by the “new school” that the old contributions have lately appeared. In the
school ” use only the methods of deduction, current number of the “Political Science
and they call it “ the d priori school.” But Quarterly,” President F. A. Walker has given
Mr. Lunt shows that the criticism is baseless. an able examination of the several theories of
From Adam Smith and Malthus down, the taxation. He classifies them under the four
books of the English economists teem with heads: Taxes on property, income, expendi-
historic matter, the basis and illustration of ture, and ability. Like most of General
their theorems; while the inductionists can Walker's writings, the article is an example
take nothing by their inductions until they of clear inductive reasoning; but, from its
formulate principles of general application. | limits, it is inconclusive. The writer ap-
It would be pleasant to follow this interesting proaches the subject from the side of the
and logical investigation of a much mooted collector of taxes, without considering the
question further; but as Mr. Lunt's book is one objects for which taxes are levied. What we
which every economist will read, we will add most need now is a thorough and exhaustive
only one remark in the way of criticism, examination of the purposes to which national,
We think he has unwittingly magnified the state, county and town taxes are applied;
differences of economists; at least, this would which would prepare the way for the exam-
be the effect on persons little acquainted with ination of the question of their equitable
the science. The differences of economists assessment, and the further question of their
are very largely differences of nomenclature, efficient collection.
and are far fewer and far less important than The second contribution alluded to above is
their agreements.
the translation of the “Principles and Meth-
The study of political economy is gaining ods of Taxation" of Dr. Luigi Cossa, a noted
rapidly on the public attention, and especially Italian economist, with an introduction by
in the department of National Finance. A Horace White. The book is a cold, clear,
most valuable contribution to the discussion critical examination of the various sources of
of the dominant theme of the day in this national revenue, with as little coloring from
country has been made in the publication of political preferences or personal opinions as in
a collection of essays on “ The National algebra or geometry. The analysis approaches
Revenues," written, on request, by eighteen the diagramic, and the statement and classifi-
students and teachers of political economy, cations of principles are as brief and rigid as
representing nearly as many colleges and | the English language can make them. The
different sections of the country. The whole bare dry bones of revenue are here exposed to
is edited by Dr. Albert Shaw, whose modest view; and while the skeleton appearance may
and thorough work is already well-known to | repel many who do not care “to view the
economists. Some twenty handy tables of subject in that bony light," as Mr. Venus
statistics relating to our finances are added I would say, yet the book as a scientific analysis


44
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will doubtless have an influence upon the kindred interests. His spirit is candid and
settlement of the methods of taxation, now fair. His positions are well supported, and
forced upon the decision of the people in this | his conclusions are just. His arguments are
country.
drawn from experience rather than from prin-
Lack of space forbids us to notice as it de- ciples, and his book will therefore meet the
serves the sixth volume of the “Johns Hop want of those who distrust d priori reasoning.
kins University Studies in Historical and We heartily commend the book to those
Political Science," edited by Prof. Herbert B. voters who wish to settle their minds on this
Adams. It is a “History of Coöperation in | most prominent and important question of the
the United States,” with an Introduction by day. Having thus cordially indorsed the work,
Prof. Richard T. Ely. The work itself is on we are sorry to notice evidence of some care-
the coöperative plan. Five Johns Hopkins lessness in its composition. Thus, in the sen-
University men divided the United States into tence “ There are two general kinds of taxes,
convenient sections, and each devoted his direct and indirect,” the words “ general” and
work to his own section. The combined result “ kind” are opposed to each other in meaning,
gives to the investigation completeness and ac and cannot be properly used together. The
curacy unattainable by any one author. Three author's definition of the word “theory”
of the studies have been previously published | lacks any authority or sustaining practice.
as monographs. The subjects and writers His carelessness extends also to matters of
are as follows: Coöperation in New England fact; as when, on page 84, he says, “There
and the Middle States, by E. W. Bemis; has never been gold enough in the country,
Coöperation in the West and Northwest, by and never will be, to pay for the imports of
Albert Shaw and A. G. Warner; Coöperation on three months.” The gold in the country to-
the Pacific Coast, by C. H. Shinn ; Coöperation day is over five hundred millions, and our
in Maryland and the South, by D. R. Randall. imports are only seven hundred millions a
The recent industrial disturbances indicate that | year. These figures show the impossibility
the whole question of capital and labor is in a of paying for our imports with gold, for any
state of ferment that will soon compel atten length of time; but it does not strengthen
tion to every proposed solution. And though the argument to overstate them. We regret
cooperation is, by its necessary limitations, that Mr. Taylor did not add a chapter on
applicable to only a small portion of the total the influence of protection on Trusts and
industry of the country, the gravity of the Monopolies, as that is an interesting topic
situation demands of us candid consideration now, and has important bearing on the pend-
of every method proposed to relieve, even ing question.
partially, the distress arising from the con On June 21, 1788, New Hampshire ratified
Aicting claims of labor and capital.
the Constitution of the United States. In a
Prof. William P. Atkinson has published few weeks we shall celebrate the centennial
a lecture on the “Study of Politics,” which anniversary of that auspicious event. And it
repudiates the social-contract theory of the is a fact worthy of note and remembrance that
State, and adopts that of Evolution, viz.: that the instrument thus adopted is now the oldest
the State is a growth. Prof. Atkinson makes written constitution among the nations of the
many shrewd observations, some of which are world; so recent was the birth of strictly con-
at least paradoxical, as “ The freest State is stitutional liberty among men. This was the
the most despotic;” “The evils of a despotism bright consummate flower of the long struggle
are not that it is despotic.” The style becomes through the centuries to secure the recognition
quite tropical at times, as where he speaks of the truth that all just governments derive
of “The gigantic and unprincipled brigand, their powers from the consent of the governed.
Bonaparte.” There is an occasional careless But the rapid spread and development of
use of words, that ought not to occur in the this principle is even more noteworthy. Few
writings of a college instructor. He speaks of people are aware how wide has been our influ-
an “obsolete despotism like that of Russia.” ence and how effective our example. During
The despotism of Russia is, unfortunately, the century that has elapsed since the union of
not obsolete, nor even obsolescent. The lec these States, the leaven of our example has
ture was prepared for students still at school, worked throughout the world, even to the
and will be chiefly useful to the young.
uttermost regions of Asia and the islands of
Mr. Edward Taylor has contributed a timely the sea. Not only have the British Provinces
answer to the timely question “Is Protection in North America, Mexico, and the States of
a Benefit?” He gives a brief sketch of the South America, adopted representative legis-
history of protection in Europe; one chapter lative bodies, but England has entirely changed
to the English commercial revolution and a the character of her government; France has
running history of our own tariff changes; become a republic; Spain, Italy, Germany,
and several chapters to the effect of protection Austria and Hungary have adopted constitu-
on wages, prices, commerce, shipping, and I tions. Even Turkey promulgated a represent-


1888.]
45
THE DIAL
ative constitution in 1876; but it remains a wealth in the hands of private persons, and
dead letter. Russia has emancipated her serfs, points out in calm and kindly language the
and in many ways shown that she is affected evil influence of riches on the possessors and
by the advancing wave. Of over sixty gov on society at large. He favors restrictive leg-
ernments of civilized people, only six, with islation, but questions its efficacy, and urges
their dependencies,-China, India, Morocco, the potency of Christ's precepts and the pres-
Persia, Russia, and Siam,-remain without sure of the moral influence of strong public
some form of constitutional guaranty of the opinion on those who are disposed to take ad-
liberty of the subject. Verily, “the world do vantage of the competitive system to burden
move," in spite of Father Jasper. Where can themselves with indigestible wealth. The
we find a more striking illustration of the be book is modest and readable, but should be
neficent influence of good example and the effi classed with moral rather than with economic
ciency of the revolutionary forces working essays.
througb the nineteenth century?
In “The Art of Investing,” by a New York
We have been led to these remarks by the Broker, we have a purely practical guide in
perusal of “The Government Year Book” for the great problem of keeping what we have
1888, edited by Lewis Sargent, which exhibits got. The author says very truly that “those
the principal forms and methods of govern who hope to invest so as to get something for
ment in each particular state, and reviews the nothing will very likely — and justly - find
most striking events of each year, noting how | they have got nothing for something." He dis-
they hinge upon and tend to modify political cusses concisely and clearly the various kinds
institutions. The written constitutions are of stocks and bonds, and properly exposes and
given in full, and a compact and symmetrical characterizes the methods employed by many
account of methods of government is fur companies to boom their paper or fleece the
nished. The author, by giving us the con public. The book is made up of essays already
densed facts without obtruding his views, has published in the “Popular Science Monthly
furnished us with a very useful hand-book of and “Forum” magazines. It is good reading
ready reference, conveniently arranged with for those with or without money to invest, as
full alphabetical index, which would be more it gives a very comprehensive view of the cap-
valuable if it had a more durable binding. ital and debts of the country.
The above-named work is admirably sup In this region of finance lies the pamphlet
plemented by Prof. Philip Schaff's learned and of Alfred Neymark on “The Public Debts of
exhaustive paper on “ Church and State in the Europe," reprinted from the “Banker's Maga-
United States,” accompanied by official docu- | zine” of New York. It will prove valuable
ments pertinent to the subject. This is No. 4 to only a narrow circle of readers,-namely,
of the second volume of the valuable papers those interested in foreign securities and those
of the American Historical Association, and studying the political situation. The debts of
deals in a very able manner with a question civilized nations now amount to twenty-seven
which has greatly perplexed less acute think. billions of dollars; and these debts this author
ers in the study of our American institutions. has carefully analyzed and tabulated, giving
We have utterly severed church and state, and all information that is desirable for investors.
in our treaty with Tripoli bad formally an One significant fact noted is the steady decline
nounced that “the United States of America | of interest in all countries in the last twenty
were not in any sense founded on the Christian years,—from six and seven per cent. to four,
religion.” Hence many had jumped to the | three, and even two and one-half per cent. on
conclusion that we were an atheistic nation. good securities. The author, in some well-con-
This idea Prof. Schaff disposes of by a care sidered remarks at the close, concludes that “all
ful review of the history of the Federal con Europe, with the weight of military expendi-
stitution and of the constitutions of the States, tures and burden of public debts and taxes
fortifying his position by references to the crushing it, is marching toward war, ruin, and
decisions of the courts and quotations from an inevitable industrial and economical revolu-
official acts of the Presidents and legislatures. tion.” And he quotes high authority in sup-
He shows that the connecting links are mar port of his position.
riage, Sunday and educational laws, chaplains The pamphlet entitled “What Shall we do
in the army and navy, Congress, and the leg. with it?" (the surplus) comprises the Message
islatures. A chapter tracing the growth of of the President, Mr. Blaine's Paris Interview,
religious freedom in Europe adds to our con Henry Watterson's article in Harper's Maga-
fidence in coming civil liberty, and encourages zine for January 1888, and Senator Edmunds's
the hope of ultimate religious freedom for all reply in the February number. It shows our
the inhabitants of the earth.
embarrassment to be one of riches and not of
Charles Richardson, in his “Large Fortunes, debt, and, by the way of contrast, is cheerful
or Christianity and the Labor Problem," dis- reading. This will doubtless be a well-worn
cusses the influence of great accumulations of hand-book in the coming political campaign,


46
[June,
THE DIAL
as it states in clear contrast the positions of host of critical writers is showing us the very “form
the great political parties as enunciated by and pressure" of many a past age. Such a work
their recognized leaders.
has been done for us in “Society in Rome under the
Cæsars" (Scribner), by W. R. Inge, of King's Col-
On the everlasting “land question,” we have,
lege, Cambridge. The treatment of the subject is
among “Questions of the Day,”a pamphlet by
admirable in both selection and arrangement. Six
Henry Winn, who has read Ricardo, and has
chapters are given to a view of society as a whole;
adopted Bastiat's theory that the value of while in the remaining four the life of a Roman
land arises from the capital expended upon it, from the upper classes is portrayed in all the im-
but has overlooked Mr. Walker's masterly portant stages of its earthly career, as well as in its
reply to that theory. The work is rather a
daily routine and in that large portion of it which
series of attacks on Henry George than any
amusements occupied. The religion, philosophy,
and morality which inspired first-century life, the
serious attempt to satisfactorily solve the ques-
government which controlled it, the culture which
tion of land ownership.
ameliorated it, the social classes which made it up,
In the same field, Prof. W. T. Harris has re each receives a chapter in the former portion. The
printed his address before the Social Science quotation from Champigny," for the Roman the
Association at Saratoga, on “The Right of immortality of the family and of the fatherland was
Property and Ownership of Land." Those substituted for the immortality of his soul," --sounds
who are acquainted with Prof. Harris will not
the key-note of the chapter on religion; whilst the
need to be informed that this is a philosophical
vigorous assault which the testimony of the fathers
shows the early Church making upon the old faiths
and not an economic paper. By the constitu-
is justly cited as an indication that positive faith
tion of his mind he is incapable of limiting
was by no means a thing of the past among the pagans
his thought to the lines of any one science, of the empire.” The position of the stoic philoso-
and easily traverses the territories of econom- | phy in the midst of Roman thought and conduct is
ics, ethics, and ästhetics, in a single sentence. ably defined in the second chapter, and the chapter
He readily sacrifices definiteness and intensity
on morality gives an instructive diagnosis of that
to breadth and comprehensiveness, and loses
diseased condition of the Roman mind produced by
the blood-frenzy of the amphitheatre. The pres-
sight of the particular in the general. His
entation of the various classes of society is compre-
definition of property is characteristic. He
hensive, although we looked for a fuller account of
says: “Property is the means of transferring the industrial classes. We commend this book to
the products of the will of the individual to every college student, to every reader of Gibbon,
the race, and at the same time the means of and to every one who reads his New Testament
his participating in the products of the race.”
with an eye upon the social environment amid which
In such lights does he view all economic
the Christian Church began its career.
problems.
ONE may condemn the method of making a book,
William A. Sturdy has written what he calls
and yet value it for what it has brought together
“A Treatise upon Man's Powers and Duties,"
in one cover. Such must be the position taken
under the various heads of “Free Will,” toward “The Causes of the French Revolution"
“Education,” “Society,” “Fashion,” and (Holt), by Richard H. Dabney. The writer hopes,
“Government.” The breadth of the subject is and his hope is justified by the event, “that, in a
more than equalled by the breadth of treat-
short space, he has given a more comprehensive
ment, as the author writes entirely untram-
account of the causes of the great upheaval than
has thus far appeared.” In a small volume of
melled by any knowledge on these topics or any
three hundred pages he has clearly and comprehen-
definite views of his own. His facility of ex-
sively set forth the multifarious causes-social,
pression overlaps his fund of ideas on all sides; political, economic, religious, literary-of what he
and, like the great Shakespeare, he scorns the calls the most extraordinary event of the Christian
narrow-minded conventionalities of ordinary Era. The reader will no longer wonder that the
grammar. He is generous in punctuation, but French Revolution came, but that it was so long in
his method of using these marks is so unique
coming. The book is a good introduction to the
and original as to distinguish him from
study of the Revolution itself in the pages of Mr.
all
other authors. His orthography is perfect, so
H. M. Stephens's partially completed masterpiece.
The writer, however, seems to have drawn his in-
far as we have observed.
formation almost entirely from secondary sources.
JAMES F. Claflin.
Madame Campan and Arthur Young are apparently
the only contemporary writers whom he has used,
- -- -- -- -
and his authorities seem to be principally Louis
BRIEFS ON NEW BOOKS.
Blanc, Taine, De Tocqueville, and Buckle. Yet if
the writer had merely chosen to gather his facts in
The time has gone by when readers of history this second-hand fashion, we should have no con.
were satisfied with a narrative confined to the pub troversy with him except on the score of thorough-
lic occurrences of an epoch or of a nation's life, and ness. But we read in the preface: “In preparing
the historian of to-day must point our gaze beneath the work, the author has not only made use of the
the surface of events and let us see the social con facts recorded by the above-mentioned writers and
ditions which bear up the battles and dynasties. others [Buckle, etc.), but has also used their
Lord Macaulay began this kind of writing; Mr. thoughts, and even their language, when it seemed
Green has brilliantly outstripped him; and to-day a | best to do so. In passages where the language of


1888.]
47
THE DIAL
any writer has been paraphrased for the sake of This volume contains adequate accounts of the
condensation, or for other reasons, no quotation military events, and some extracts describing the
marks have of course been employed. For such manners and customs of the Irish. It is a dis-
cases this general acknowledgment, it is hoped, appointment that these extracts throw so little light
will suffice, and will relieve the author of the neces upon the government and the social organization
sity of loading his margin with references.” The of the people: it would be of great value if we had
alternative means of avoiding the margins loaded a description of those in the twelfth century as full
with references, even for one who does not furnish and graphic as those of Spenser and Sir John Davis
his own thoughts—to at least furnish the medium four hundred years later. These volumes ought to
of expression-would seem an obvious one.
come into extensive use in our schools, as an indis-
pensable supplement to the school text-books.
The Rev. A. H. Lewis, D.D., author of "A Criti Nothing is so important in the study of history as
cal History of Sunday Legislation " (Appleton), is to come into actual contact with the times, by the
an advocate of the Seventh-day, or old Jewish Sab use of the writers of the time.
bath. This fact should be borne in mind by the
readers of this volume, for it will explain why the A VOLUME of correspondence which begins with
history is, at many points, more partisan than criti Wordsworth and ends with Swinburne has no little
cal. The author begins his investigations with the ground to cover, and can give us only glimpses
reign of Constantine, A.D. 321, and brings them when we would like views. This is the range of
down to the year 1888. The opening chapter dis the volume of the correspondence of Sir Henry
cusses the origin and philosophy of Sunday legisla Taylor which has just been edited for us by Pro-
tion. Then the author proceeds to recount the fessor Dowden. When we consider the importance
history of Sunday legislation under the Roman of the man and the interest of everything relating
empire and after its fall, devoting a chapter to to him and to his friends, we are hardly prepared
each. He next discusses the Saxon laws concern to forgive his editor for giving us so little; for
ing the day, the Sunday laws in England, those Professor Dowden himself admits that from the let-
laws which were enacted during the Puritan ters placed in his hands “it would have been easier
Supremacy, the early Sunday laws of Scotland, to have taken material for two volumes than for
Ireland, Wales, and Holland, Sunday legislation one." (How, by the way, did Professor Dowden
in America during the colonial period and since ever come to write such a sentence as that?) The
in all the states and territories of the Union. From term “correspondence of Henry Taylor" means in
this wide field and extended period of time the the present case the letters written to as well as by
author has gathered an immense amount of valuable the illustrious poet-statesman, so that we find in
information, which is well classified and arranged, our collection unpublished letters of Wordsworth,
and is put in a compact form. This makes the vol Macaulay, Aubrey De Vere, and many other noted
ume an important and valuable contribution to the persons. It is needless to say that this collection
literature of the Sabbath question. But the author's of letters is deeply interesting, and that it must
hobby makes him at times an untrustworthy inter take its place in every library of English litera-
preter of some of his facts and an unsound reasoner ture by the side of Taylor's autobiography and of
from them. One interesting fact which he brings
the splendid series of works in verse and prose of
out is worth repeating here, since it will correct a which “Philip Van Artevelde,” is the best known.
widely-prevalent mistake. It is that Virginia and
Taylor was the last of the great men born in the
not Massachusetts, the Cavalier and not the Puritan, eighteenth century, being left the patriarch of
was the first in this country to enact rigorous Sun-
English letters by the death of Carlyle. That posi-
day laws. Three years before the Plymouth colony tion may now be claimed by Cardinal Newman, who
was founded, or in 1617, the Cavaliers of Virginia was born in the first year of the present century.
enacted a law-the first that they ever promulgated
- which provided that he who did not attend MR. JONES's “Negro Myths from the Georgia
church on Sunday “should pay a fine of two Coast” (Houghton, Mifflin & Co.) is a volume of
pounds of tobacco." Such a law enacted and en folk-lore quite in the line of “Uncle Remus," and
forced now would greatly increase church attend serves as a useful complement to Mr. Harris's vol-
ance throughout the country, or result in an enor ume. The variations in dialect and manners found
mously increased demand for tobacco.
in the upland and on the sea-coast are well marked
in the two collections. Mr. Jones's stories are often
Two new volumes of “English History from the same as Mr. Harris's, but much shorter and less
Contemporary Writers” (Putnam) are devoted to elaborate, -illustrating, perhaps, the lower stage of
"Strongbow's Conquest of Ireland” and “Simon civilization at which the coast negroes stand.
de Montfort and his Cause." The latter volume is Their dialect, too, is ruder and more unintelligible.
properly a sequel to “The Misrule of Henry III.," It seems to us, however, that the spelling is un-
and is by the same editor, Rev. W. H. Hutton. necessarily distorted; in the phonetic spelling of
The two volumes taken together present a tolera dialects there is always a temptation to excess, and
bly complete view of this long, confused, but very it is hard to know just where to draw the line. But
important reign. The volume upon the Conquest very often it appears as if the accepted spelling
of Ireland, edited by F. P. Barnard, is especially would give the sound quite as well as the uncouth
timely. To understand the present condition of form presented to the eye. Our dialect writers
Ireland, we need to know the successive steps by would do well to make it a rule always to preserve
which this island came under English rule; and the orthography of the spelling-book when pos-
although the later stages of the conquest, in the six- sible. In this point of view the book before us is a
teenth and seventeenth centuries, and the "settle sinner above all others. No doubt the dialect of
ments" at this period, are the most important to the sea islands requires more variation from the
study, no phase in the series of events is indifferent. I correct spelling than any other negro dialect; but


48
[June,
THE DIAL
we must say that Mr. Harris's “Daddy Jack," TOPICS IN LEADING PERIODICALS.
especially as he is brought directly in contact
JUNE, 1888.
with “Uncle Remus,” gives a better notion of this
Animal Magnetism. Titus Munson Coan. Dial.
dialect, with less twisting of the forms, than Mr. Animals and Environment. J. B. Steere. Pop. Science.
Jones's painful cacography. While this seems to
Candle Flame. 0. Fievez. Popular Science.
Capri. Mary E. Vandyne. Harper.
us a real fault in the book, we would heartily recog-
Chicago. Charles D. Warner. Harrer.
nize its value as a contribution to folk-lore, and as Civics, Recent Books on. J. F. Claflin. Dial.
Civil War, History of the. John C. Ropes. Dial.
a capital collection of short stories. “Br Rabbit"
Commercial Depression. H, G. S. Noble. Popular Science.
becomes here "Buh Rabbit," no doubt a real differ Darwinism and Christianity. Popular Science.
ence in usage. We are surprised that even in the
Degree of Ph.D. in Germany. E. J. James. Andover.
Drinking, Moderate. G. Harley. Popular Science.
sea-coast stories of Georgia we never meet with the Earned Decrease vs. Unearned Increase. Popular Science.
"* Co'" (Cousin) of the South Carolina islands.
Education and Employment of Children. Popular Science.
Englishman's Note-Book in America. Mag. Am. Hist.
European Deaconesses. Mrs. C. M. Mead. Andover.
LOVERS of Irish fun will be delighted with Mr. Geological Tourist in Europe. A. C. Lane. Pop. Sci.
McAnally's “Irish Wonders ” (Houghton, Mifflin
Hancock, John, Incidents in Life of. Mag. Am. Hist.
Henry, John, Cardinal Newman, A, Birrell. Scribner.
& Co.), a handsome well-illustrated volume, con Hospital Life. A, B. Ward. Scribner.
taining not only stories, but also sober descriptions Immigrants, Distribution of. E. W. Bemis. Andover.
Infants, Imitation in. W. Preyer. Popular Science.
of antiquities and popular superstitions. If we
Inquisition, History of the. W.F. Allen. Dial.
should define the work precisely, we should say Israel, History of. E. G, Hirsch. Dial.
that it does not contain true folk-lore-that is,
Izard, General. G. E. Manigault. Mag. Am. Hist.
Japan, Our Treaties with. W. E. Griffis. Andover.
popular tales of an impersonal character, derived Kansas. Robert Hay. Harper.
from the habits of thought and observation of prim-
Lamb, Letters of. E. G. Johnson. Dial.
London as a Literary Centre. R. R. Bowker. Harper.
itive society—but rather legends, attached to dis-
Madagascar. C.C. Starbuck. Andover.
tinct localities and persons. The supernatural Mayas, Conquest of the. Alice Le Plongeon. Mag.Am. Hist.
Nias and Its People. H, Sundermann. Popular Science.
element runs through most of the stories, chiefly
Packard, Prof. A. S. J.S. Kingsley. Popular Science.
associated with Satan, who is the favorite subject, Railways. T. C. Clarke. Scribner.
being generally outwitted by the popular Saint of
Reply to the Duke of Argyll. Herbert Spencer. Pop. Sci.
Religion and University Life. D. N. Beach. Andover.
the locality. The dialect is graphically given. Seward, W. H. Recollections of. Mag. Am. Hist.
We wonder if it is a slip on the part of an Amer Surplus Revenue. Edward Atkinson. Popular Science.
Theology, An Institute of. G. A. Jackson. Andover,
icanized Irishman which gives us “fall" for
Virginia, Popular Government in, 1606. 1776. Mag. Am. Hist.
“autumn,” and “boss," or whether these words are Webster's Visit to Missouri. W. A. Wood. Mag. Am. Hist.
really in use among the people of Ireland. A feat-
ure of the stories which surprises us is the constant
slurs at the female sex, with regard to which the
BOOKS OF THE MONTH.
tone is almost invariably disparaging; this we
[The following List contains all New Books, American and For.
should not have expected of the Irish people. The
eign, received during the month of May by MESSRS.
first story (perhaps the best) ends with the remark
A. C. MCCLURG & Co., Chicago.)
that “whin she gives her attinshun to it, any
woman can be the divil complately.” A good
BIOGRAPHY.
specimen of the wit of the book is where the intox-
of Walter Harriman. With Selections from his
icated Dennis O'Rourke, on his way home from the
Speeches and Writings. By Amos Hadley. 8vo, pp.
385. Gilt top. Portraits. Houghton, Miffin & Co. $2.50.
fair, “ fell in the ditch, quite spint and tired com-
Burke. By John Morley. New Edition. 12mo, pp. 315.
plately. It wasn't the length as much as the wide Macmillan & Co. $1.50.
ness av the road was in it, fur he was goin' from Adelaide Ristori. Studies and Memoirs. An Auto.
wan side to the other, and it was too much for him
biography. “Famous Women Series." Roberts Bros. $1.
Percy Bysshe Shelley. A Monograph. By H. S. Salt.
intirely."
Portrait. 16mo, pp. 277. London. Net, 90 cents.
WHEN we look into Mr. F. H. Hedge's recent Cardinal Wolsey. By Mandel Creighton, LL.D., etc.
12mo, pp. 226. "Twelve English Statesmen." Macmillan
volume, lettered on the back “Martin Luther,"
& Co. Flex, 60 cents; Library Edition, 75 cents.
and within “Martin Luther and Other Essays” William the Third. By H. D. Traill. 12mo, pp. 204.
Roberts), we feel a brief resentment, because the "Twelve English Statesmen." Macmillan & Co. Flex,
60 cents. Library Edition, 75 cents.
part played by “Martin Luther" is so small (37 pp.)
and that played by “Other Essays" is so large
Life of Victor Hugo. By F. T. Marzials. 12mo, pp. 224.
London. 40 cents.
(289 pp.). The title is somewhat of a misnomer, Abraham Lincoln. A Biography for Young People.
all the more so because some of the other essays are
By Noah Brooks. Illustrated. 12mo, pp. 476. G. P.
Putnam's Sons. $1.75.
better, as regards sympathy, taste, and style, than
the titular head of the collection. Mr. Hedge
HISTORY.
adopts a hero-worshipping attitude before Luther, The Campaign in Virginia 1781. An Exact Reprint
of Six Rare Pamphlets on the Clinton.Cornwallis
as the “providential man” with the “dæmonic
Controversy, with very numerous important unpub-
glance." The book is merely a bundle of carefully lished manuscript notes. By Sir Henry Clinton, K.B.
And the omitted and hitherto unpublished portions
written essays and occasional addresses. Six of the
of the letters in their appendixes added from the or
thirteen pieces in this bundle have already appeared inal manuscripts. With a supplement containing ex.
in various periodicals. Of the addresses, the one
tracts from the journals of the House of Lords. A
French translation of papers laid before the House,
entitled "Conservatism and Reform" was de-
and a catalogue of the additional correspondence of
livered before the Phi Beta Kappa Society of Clinton and of Cornwallis, in 1780-81: about 3,456 papers
Harvard, and others on Unitarian anniversaries.
relating to the controversy or bearing on affairs in
America. Compiled, collated, and edited (with bio-
Mr. Hedge's style is occasionally rendered some graphical notices in a copious index) by B, F. Stevens,
what turgid by the effort to express more in a
2 vols., 8vo. Gilt tops. London. Net, $10.00.
The Pilgrim Republic, An Historical Review of the
sentence than a sentence ought to hold. In the main,
Colony of New Plymouth. With Sketches of the
however, the style is clear and forcible, the English Rise of other New England Settlements, the History
of Congregationalism, and the Creeds of the Period.
is choice, the topics are of high moral or esthetic |
By J. Å. Goodwin. Illustrated. 8vo, pp. 662, Tick.
interest, and the teaching is liberal and spiritual. nor & Co. $4.00.


1888.]
49
THE DIAL
Four Oxford Leotures, 1887. Fifty Years of European
History. Teutonic Conquest in Gaul and Britain.
By E. A. Freeman, M.A., Hon. D.O.L., etc. 8vo, pp.
112. Macmillan & Co. $1.25.
France and the Confederate Navy, 1862-1868. An
International Episode. By John Bigelow. 12mo, pp.
247. Harper & Bros. $1.50.
The Aryan Race. Its Origin and its Achievements. By
Chas. Morris. 12mo, pp. 347. S. O. Griggs & Co. $1.50.
Simon de Montfort and His Cause, 1251-1266. Ex.
tracts froin the Writings of Robert of Gloucester,
Matthew Paris, William Rishanger, Thomas of
Wykes, etc. Selected and arranged by the Rev. W. H.
Hutton, M.A. Illustrated. 16mo, pp. 186. Gilt top.
“ English History by Contemporary Writers." G. P. Put.
nam's Sons. 75 cents.
Strongbow's Conquest of Ireland. By F. P. Barnard,
M.A. With illustrations and maps. 16mo, pp. 192.
Gilt top. “English History by Contemporary Writers."
G. P. Putnam's sons. 75 cents.
Song-Tide : Poems and Lyrics of Love's Joy and Sorrow,
By P. B. Marston, Edited, with Introductory Mem.
oir, by Wm. Sharp. 18mo, pp. 307. London. 40 cents.
Along the shore. By Rose H. Lathrop. 16mo, pp. 104.
Gilt top. Ticknor & Co. $1.00.
The Triumph of Music and other Lyrics By M. J.
Cawein. 18mo, pp. 171. Vellum paper cover. J. P.
Morton & Co. $1.00.
Blooms of the Berry. By M. J. Cawein. 12mo, pp. 202.
J. P. Morton & Co. $1.00.
TRAVEL-SPORTING.
Life in Corea. By W.R. Carles, F.R.G.S. With illustra.
tions and map. 8vo, pp. 317. Macmillan & Co. $4.00.
On Deck; or, Advice to a Young Corinthian Yatchsman.
By T. R. Warren. 12mo, pp. 144. G. W. Dillinghain.
$1.00.
ESSAYS-BELLES LETTRES, ETC.
The Morals of Seneca. A Selection of His Prose. Edited
by Walter Clode. 12mo, pp. 280. T. Whittaker. 40
cents,
Ignorant Essays. By Richard Dowling. 12mo, pp. 195.
Paper. D. Appleton & Co. 25 cents.
Roman Literature in Relation to Roman Art. By the
Rev. R. Burn, M.A., LL.D. Illustrated. 8vo, pp. 315.
Macmillan & Co. $4.00.
Civilization in the United States. First and Last Im.
pressions of America. By Matthew Arnold. 16mo,
pp. 192. Cupples & Hurd. Paper, 75 cents, cloth, $1.25.
Woman in the Pulpit. By Frances E. Willard. 12mo,
pp. 173. D. Lothrop & Co. $1.00.
In Nesting Time. By Olive T. Miller. 16mo, pp. 275.
Honghton, Mifflin & Co. $1.25.
Homestead Highways. By H. M. Sylvester. 12mo, pp.
302. Gilt top. Ticknor & Co. $1.50.
Julian, the Emperor: Containing Gregory Nazianzen's
Two Invectives and Libanius' Monody. With Julian's
Extant Theosophical Works. Translated by C. W.
King, M.A. 12mo, pp. 288. Bohn's Library, London. Net,
$1.50,
George Riddle's Readings. 12mo, pp. 197. W. H, Baker
& Co. 81.00.
Dethroning Shaks pere. A Selection of Letters con.
tributed to the 'Daily Telegraph." with the Prelimi.
nary Editorial Papers. Edited, with notes and
comments. By R. M. Theobald, M.A. 12mo, pp. 231.
Flex. London. Net, 90 cents.
The Age of Cleveland. Compiled largely from contempo.
rary Journals and other Original Sources, and edited
for the Benefit of Posterity. By H. F. Ralphdon.
16mo, pp. 135. F. A. Stokes & Bro. $1.00.
Sharp Eyes and Other Papers. By John Burroughs.
Paper. Riverside Literature Series. Houghton Mifflin &
Co. 15 cents.
Wilson's Tales of the Borders, and of Scotland. His.
toricul, Traditionary, and Imaginative. Revised by
Alexander Leighton, one of the original editors and
contributors. 16mo, pp. 284. London. 40 cents.
POETRY.
The Poetical Works of Robert Browning. Vol. I.
Pauline-Sordello. 16mo, pp. 289. Macmillan & Co. $1.50.
The Prelude, or Growth of a Poet's Mind; an Auto.
biographical Poem. By Wm. Wordsworth. With
Notes by A. J. George, A.M. 12mo, pp. 322. D. C.
Heath & Co. $1.00.
A Dream of Church Windows, etc. Poems of House
and Home. By J. J. Platt. 12mo, pp. 129. Gilt top.
Revised Edition. Houghton, Mifflin & Co. $1.25.
The Poetical Works of John Keats. Edited by W. T.
Arnold. Portrait. 12mo, pp. 349. London. Net, $1.25.
Lays of Ancient Rome. Together with Ivery, The Ar.
mada, A Radical War Song, The Battle of Moncontour,
Songs of the Civil War. By Lord Macaulay. Illus.
trated by G. Scharf, Jr. 18mo, pp. 237. Ġilt top.
“Knickerbocker Nuggets." G. P. Putnam's Sons. $1.00.
Poems. By Rose Terry Cooke. 12mo, pp. 412. W. S.
Gottsberger. $1.50.
Tales of a Wayside Inn. By H. W. Longfellow. With
an Introduction and Notes. In Three Numbers.
No. II. Paper. Riverside Literature Series. Houghton,
Mifflin & Co. 15 cents.
ART-ETIQUETTE.
Paris-Salon 1888. ler Volume. 40 Phototypes. Texte
par F. Bournand. Illustration par F. Rouband. 8vo.
Paper. Paris. Net, $2.25.
Salon de 1888. Catalogue Illustré. Peinture and
Sculpture. 8vo, pp. 348. Paper. Paris. Net, $1.05.
National Academy Notes and Complete Catalogue,
1888. With Illustrations reproduced from Drawings
by the Artists; Personal Notices, etc. Edited by C.
W. Kurtz, 12mo, pp. 172. Cassell & Co. 50 cents.
The Correct Thing in Good Society. By the Anthor
of “Social Customs." 18mo, pp. 219. Estes & Lauriat.
75 cents,
Manners. A Handbook of Social Customs. 18mo, pp.
114. Gilt top. Cassell & Co. 50 cents.
POLITIOS-ECONOMIOS, ETC.
Is Protection a Benefit? A Plea for the Negative. By
Prof. Edward Taylor. 12mo, pp. 274, A. C. McClurg
& Co. $1.00.
The National Revenues. A Collection of Papers by
American Economists. Edited by Albert Shaw, Ph.D.
With an Introduction and an Appendix of Statistical
Tables. 12mo, pp. 245. A, C. McClurg & Co. $1.00.
Constitutional History and Political Development of
the United States. By S. Sterne. 12mo, pp. 361.
Fourth Revised Edition, G. P. Putnam's Sons. $1.25.
A Guide to the Conduct of Meetings. Being Models
of Parliamentary Practice for Young and old. By
G. T. Fish. 16mo, pp. 189. Harper & Bros. 50 cents.
Land and Work. An Examination into the Depression
of the Agricultural, Manufacturing and Commercial
Industries of the United Kingdom, with a Proposal
for the Reunion of the “Agricultural Interest."
W. Moffatt. 12mo, pp. 203. London. Net, $1.75.
A History of Political Economy. By J. K. Ingram,
LL.D." With Preface by Prof. E. 3. James, Ph.D.
8vo, pp. 250. Macmillan & Co. Net, $1.50.
The Relation of Modern Municipalities to Quasi-Pub.
lio Works. Being a Report of the Committee of Pub.
lic Finance to the Council of the American Economic
Association. Svo, pp. 87. American Economic Associ.
ation. 75 cents.
The Present Condition of Economic Science and the
Demand for a Radical Change in its Methods and
Aims. By E. C. Lunt, A.M. 8vo, pp. 114. G. P. Put-
nam's Sons. 75 cents.
The Social Question : Its Gravity and Meaning. Ad.
dress by M. L'Abbe Winterer at the Social Congress
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