each daughter an ardent pursuer in the shape of a lover at first sight (who, as we all know, is the most eager of all lovers in the romantic chase). And these two girls, with the connivance of their respective swains, and not knowing what had be- come of their respective fathers, proceeded to get busy, taking the reins of government into their hands, and stirring up a very pretty border warfare between the two states, all with the object of cap- turing the aforementioned champion of the sacred right of making one's own unlicensed whiskey. There results a comic opera situation that is ex- tremely amusing, and one exciting incident follows upon another until the helm of state gets back into the rightful hands. All this is told, in finely humorous vein, and with artistic deftness of touch, in "The Little Brown Jug at Kildare," which we recommend as a sovereign specific for loathed melancholy or any other form of the blues. The American colonies have provided material for historical romances without number, and it is somewhat venturesome to add another to the list. The inventive faculty of Mr. Henry Longan Stuart seems sufficient, however, to warrant him in making the venture, and his " Weeping Cross" is a story with qualities sufficiently distinctive to justify its existence. The narrative is in the memoir form. Its hero, an Irishman in training for the Jesuit priest- hood, fights for the King in the civil wars, is captured at Worcester, and sent by Cromwell as a bondman to New England. He becomes the servant of a farmer at Longmeadow, and his master's only daughter, a woman of passionate temper and tragic history, be- comes the controlling influence upon his life. His stormy wooing and other highly emotional matters occupy the story until near the close, when the couple flee into the forest, and are wedded by a friendly priest Then the romance culminates with the his- torical massacre of Longmeadow, and in its sequel the woman is slain. It makes a vivid and robust tale, but its effectiveness is dulled by interminable passages of description and introspective analysis. Its extensive and rather dull moralizing makes it indeed, in considerable part, the "unworldly tale" promised by the title-page, but does not add to its 1908.] 215 THE DIAL attractiveness. There is a distinct novelty, of course, in giving a Catholic hero to a story of puritan New England, but tradition has reported that two or three priests were concerned in the Longmeadow horror, and that a Catholic was known to be living in the town as an indentured servant. This is the slender historical basis of Mr. Stuart's invention. His title conies from Montaigne, who tells us that men who wed are likely to repent their bargain and come home by "weeping crosse." Mr. John Germain, a gentleman of fifty and the owner of extensive lands, was paying his annual visit to his clergyman brother, when "An adventure of a sentimental kind presented itself to him, engaged him, carried him into mid-air upon a winged horse, and set him treading clouds and such-like filmy footing. . . . Bluntly, he, a widower of ten years' standing, fell in love with a young person half his age, and of no estate at all — bnt quite the contrary; and, after an interval of time which he chose to ignore, applied himself earnestly to the practice of poetry. There ensued certain curious relationships be- tween quite ordinary people which justify me in calling my book a Comedy of Degrees." Thus Mr. Maurice Hewlett, by way of introduction to his first novel of everyday folk and our prosaic modern life. No more primitive lovers for him, ranging in the enchanted forest, no more kings and queens of historical fame, no more eighteenth- century sentimental journeys or idyllic adventures on the road in Italy, but a story about people who wear ordinary clothes and whose speech is that to which our modern ears are daily accustomed. It is no small tribute to the author to say that his mas- tery of this prosaic material is as complete as was his mastery of the legendary and historical manners in which he worked before, that he has fitted his style to his theme with absolute nicety of adjustment. This modern reading of the tale of King Cophetua and the beggar maid is a perfectly charming product of inventive fancy, instinct with the essential spirit of comedy — by which we mean that there is no touch of the farcical about it, that it is rich in human feeling, and that the smile it brings to our lips is likely to find us close to the verge of tears. The pre- cipitation of tragedy which might so easily result from this mingling of the human elements of love and duty and instinctive feeling may cloud the medium for brief moments, but quickly disappears in the clarifying solvents of tender sympathy and illuminating intelligence. The story is, of course, one of an unhappy mating. The heroine is a nur- sery governess who is so dazed by the suit of her elderly lover that her natural impulses do not assert themselves until after she has taken the fatal step. Her lordly husband is so sunk in the gratified con- templation of his own magnanimity that it is long before he realizes that it is not love, but gratitude and respectful submission, that he has brought to his hearthstone. When the awakening comes, he broods in silence, and, dying, leaves a will with a sting, namely, a provision that his widow shall bene- fit by his estate "so long as she remain chaste and unmarried." Yet he had been mistaken all the time in the object of his suspicions, for the young gentleman at whom the shaft is aimed had touched only the surface of the heroine's life, and her deeper self had all the time been in the custody of a vaga- bond acquaintance unknown to her husband. This character, a gentleman by birth and education, abandons the flesh-pots of comfort for the free life of the open road. He takes a tent and goes gypsy- ing; he tinkers kettles for a material living, but has for his real object in life the planting of strange plants in odd corners of England, converting their bareness into spots of blossoming beauty. This interesting and sympathetic figure, this man whom Thoreau would have taken to his heart, is the soul- mate of the heroine, and it is to him that she goes in the end, renouncing without a pang the life of luxurious ease that might yet be hers. The gypsy tent is the Halfway House of her experimental ex- ploration of the world of men, and it becomes the haven of her final refuge. This outline can give no notion whatever of the exquisite charm with which the tale is told. It has all the seeming simplicity of the finest literary art, but its wit, its grace, and its subtle sentiment are qualities that make of it a far more serious book than it pretends to be. In it Mr. Hewlett has achieved a new sort of distinction, and made to his readers a more human appeal than ever before. William Morton Payne. Briefs on New Books. The palmy day, Ifc »8 ten VearS sinCe Mr< Herbert of the American E. Hamblen's "On Many Seas " de- trading vetseit. lighted readers of ocean adventure with its rapid and realistic account of the writer's experiences on the briny deep. And now there comes another autobiographic narrative, of very similar tone and of equal interest, from the pen of Captain John D. Whidden, entitled "Ocean Life in the Old Sailing-Ship Days " (Little, Brown & Co.). The same rough process of "breaking-in " as Mr. Hamblen's was undergone by the cabin-boy Whid- den, when, at thirteen years of age, and an orphan, he went aboard the clipper " Ariel" at Newburyport and began a seafaring life that culminated in the captaincy of the barque "Keystone," and included voyages to the far East and the far West and the Southern seas. The decline of our merchant ma- rine after the Civil War was the reason of Captain Whidden's retirement, after a quarter-century's ex- perience of seafaring. He deplores the war tariff which so raised the price of all shipping materials as to kill the New England ship-building industry. After reading the author's prefatory announcement that he knows nothing of book-writing, having left school at twelve and applied himself to matters wholly unconnected with literature, one is agreeably surprised to find his stirring narrative set forth in a fluent, clear, and pleasing style — a style that is certainly well suited to his purpose. It is to be 216 DIAL noted that in the account of his Eastern voyages Captain Whidden has repeated the old and all but baseless tradition of Juggernaut sacrifices. As was made clear years ago by Sir W. W. Hunter in his "Statistical Account of Bengal," and more recently by Moncure Conway in his book " My Pilgrimage to the Wise Men of the East," this tradition is based on an error. Juggernaut, or Jagannatha, who is none other than Vishnu the Preserver, under another form, is of course opposed to the taking of life of any kind, and especially the self-sacrifice of human beings. Captain Whidden's by no means puny pro- portions are partly presented in the frontispiece, and many other photogravures are scattered through the body of the book. As his old comrades would doubtless be glad to attest in his favor, the Captain spins a rattling good yarn, and we commend it to all lovers of sea stories. The deep interest taken nowadays ZTcZZZ in the decorative arts and in the modern Arts and Crafts movement, will ensure a welcome for Mrs. Julia de Wolf Addison's "Arts and Crafts in the Middle Ages" (L. C. Page & Co.), For it is to the Middle Ages that the modern movement looks back for its in- spiration as to the golden age of handicraft. Then, nobody could be a cog in the machine, no matter how much he might have preferred it; then, artist and artisan, designer and craftsman, were as a mat- ter of course one; and this versatility, which often stretched itself to include half a dozen different artistic pursuits, if it thwarted cold perfection, im- parted a charm of sincerity, naivetS, and individ- uality, that the most wonderful machine-made product must forever lack. It is of some of the work pro- duced under these conditions, which a school of modern artists is trying to recreate, that Mrs. Addison writes. Like her other art manuals, this one is intended for the amateur in such studies, who seeks the little general information that will make the collections in museums interesting and profitable, and lead to the reading of more detailed and comprehen- sive works. Accordingly there are brief and simple accounts of a dozen medieval crafts, practised ex- tensively in England, France, Germany, and Italy, with explanations of mechanical processes, descrip- tions, often accompanied by illustrations, of distin- guished examples, and quaint legends and anecdotes of famous craftsworkers and their patrons, generally kings or ecclesiastical dignitaries, themselves often practical artisans, teachers of guilds, or directors of craft shops. Chapters of varying length are devoted to the different crafts — metal work, including gold and silver work, that done in baser metals, and enameling; tapestry; embroidery; sculpture in stone, limited to its decorative applications; carving in wood and ivory; inlay and mosaic; and illumination. Each art is treated independently, though the names of workers like Cellini and Bishop Bernward of Hilde- sheim recur in different chapters; and more or less chronologically, though the emphasis is not upon A week with Gladstone at Oxford. progressive stages of development but rather upon typical examples of work and workers. Necessarily, the accounts are fragmentary, but they serve their purpose, and a short but well-chosen bibliography furnishes material for amplification in any desired direction. As Lord Rosebery not long ago re- marked, the combination of bookish- ness and statesmanship illustrated by Mr. Gladstone is becoming rarer every year. The bookishness, if not the statesmanship, of the great man was displayed to admiring and respectful observers on the occasion of his last visit but one at Oxford, in 1890, when, as honorary Fellow of All Souls, he was the guest of that college for a week in January and February. Letters descriptive of this notable event were written daily through the week by "C. B. L. F.," apparently the Warden of All Souls; and some of these, with additions and notes, are now published under the title "Mr. Gladstone at Oxford, 1890 " (Dutton). Monologue and dialogue is reproduced in some detail, and the little book gives glimpses of Gladstone that one is thankful not to have missed. As to his manner in personal intercourse, we read: "The charm of his talk cannot be rendered in description — the soft- ness of the lower tones of the voice, the easy con- stant movement as he turned from one to the other; the clenched fist, the open palm, and the challeng- ing forefinger, which the House of Commons knew so well. Sometimes he seemed to drop out of the conversation, his eye looked veiled and tired; bnt at the first sound of a name that appealed to him, the veil seemed to lift, and he was watching the moment to speak." And of his appearance: "All his portraits make him too fierce. There is great nobility and play of face, as well as of gesture with the hands, which he is fond of bringing down plump on the table to emphasize a point . . . Eyes grey- blue, and though occasionally they light up so much as to be describable as 'fierce,' in ordinary conver- sation they are essentially mild." Gladstone's inclination to discourse on Homer and on Greek archaeology appears to have bored his hearers a little, especially as they felt themselves not weU prepared to contribute to the conversation. A number of the stories told by Mr. Gladstone are to be found in the "Life," as is duly pointed out in footnotes. A portrait of the distinguished guest in academic gown faces the title-page; another picture of him, with Mrs. Gladstone standing at his side, is inserted later; and we are favored with an outside view of the college rooms occupied by him during his visit. Pattimeiof Persons of middle age can still re- "the old bow" member the municipally-sanctioned of New Bottom. coasting on Boston Common, from the Beacon and Park Streets corner down the steep incline to West Street and along the Tremont Street Mall, till the sled's momentum was exhausted some- where near Boylston Street. Something like a tobog- 1908.] 217 THE DIAL gan shute was occasionally erected to accentuate the already sharp descent at the beginning, and the speed attained was truly terrific. This and other sports and games that flourished on the Common when the nineteenth century was a hale and hearty sexagenarian are agreeably recalled and described by one who was a participant in them, Mr. James D'Wolf Lovett, his book bearing the title, "Old Boston Boys and the Games they Played." The book had its genesis at a dinner given by the late Samuel Cabot, himself one of "the old boys," to a number of friends and contemporaries who had once been prominent oarsmen, cricketers, baseball and football players, boxers, gymnasts, or otherwise athletically distinguished. The memories there recalled, with the records and remembrances of Mr. Lovett him- self, have been generously drawn upon to make a book of unique interest-—-marred only by the modesty of the author, who was a ball-player and athlete of great prowess, but gives the reader only a hint here and there of his achievements. For the history of cricket, football, baseball, and rowing, Mr. Lovett's chapters are of value; and as giving a pic- ture of mid-nineteenth-century open-air pastimes in Boston, they are highly entertaining. Coming from one who assisted at the birth of our national game, and was himself a redoubtable pitcher, what is re- corded about baseball cannot fail to find interested readers among present-day enthusiasts. One small error, or seeming error, noteworthy because so un- expected, may be mentioned. In commenting on the unvarying order of boys' games, the year round, Mr. Lovett makes marbles come after tops. Is it possible that the present cheerful sign of spring, the nimble marble, has not always made its appearance with the retreat of snow and mud? The book's many illustrations from old photographs form a valu- able part of its contents. Two drawings by Mr. C. D. Gibson are also provided. (Little, Brown & Co.) i French view ^e queer fascination that Beau of an Engiuh Brummell exercised in his lifetime beau and dandy. stQi ci;ngs to his memory. Vain, shallow, impertinent, heartless, a spendthrift and a bully, he played his game of life with superb impu- dence and crafty abandon, making snobbery a sys- tem, insolence a fine art, and frivolity heroic. His genius was essentially un-English,—one reason, no doubt, why he domineered so easily over the bril- liant, flippant, immoral society of his day, with its aspiration toward Gallic standards that it lacked the refinement fully to understand. It is not surprising, therefore, that this chief of the English beaux has had more than one French biographer. The latest of these is M. Roger Boutet de Monvel, who has produced a delightfully picturesque and sympathetic study, etched on the background of contemporary English life. It is entitled "Beau Brummell and His Times" (Lippincott). The prefatory history of dandyism in Europe is entertaining, and the trans- lation of the text is adequate, though at times rather self-conscious. M. de Monvel has been particularly successful in selecting, from the mass of anecdotage available, bits that really illuminate his subject. j Where an English biographer of to-day would have been likely to offer every item he could lay hands on, M. de Monvel has chosen to work on a smaller, better proportioned canvas, deftly avoiding too fa- miliar and too numerous instances of the Beau's conspicuous traits, and not failing to bring out the less-known sides of his enigmatical character. His perfect understanding of himself and his methods, for example, is shown in his conversations with the eccentric Lady Hester Stanhope, where he was clever enough to be as frank in his answers as she was direct in her attacks. And his real humor, his air of courtesy, and his gift for talking amiably with everybody, as the poet Crabbe bore witness to them, are not forgotten. The book is elegantly printed and bound, and is illustrated with portraits of the Beau and of some of his companions and admirers. The real Francetca of Dante, In a neat little volume, Mr. Harold Harris Mathew offers to English readers, through the press of David Nutt, an adaptation of the work of Monsieur Charles Yriarte on Francesca di Rimini. After a rather careful review of the evidence the author comes to this belief: Francesca, daughter of the Lord of Ravenna, was about eighteen when, in 1275, she was married by proxy to Giovanni, who was over thirty. Her married life lasted ten years; and she had one daughter. She was a woman "of lofty spirit" and resolute energy. Her intimacy with Paolo was of long standing. Paolo's main charac- teristic is summed up in "H Bello." Six years before meeting Francesca he had married; and his wife had two children. Giovanni was the tradi- tional shrewd soldier-politician of the period, whose physical deformities did not interfere with his per- sistent activities. The day after he murdered his wife and brother he married one Zambrasina. So much for the probable verities. In the conclusion, however, this wise sentence is penned: "But when all is said, it is useless to file our evidence, and search all possible sources of information to dis- cover the real Francesca, for Dante has superseded history." The book seems to us to serve its purpose well; and its ninety-four small pages will do much to orientate the reader who is following the many and various writings that centre about Dante's " two sad spirits indivisible." Letter* bv the A volume of the characteristic and "%onsente" amusing letters of Edward Lear, Vertei." which was published awhile ago in London, now appears in an American edition (Duf- field & Co.), with some revision and correction by the editor, Lady Strachey. The letters extend from 1847 to 1864, are written from different places visited by the wandering landscape-painter, and are mostly addressed to his friend Fortesque (Lady Strachey's uncle), with a few to Lady Waldegrave, who married Fortesque in 1863. Hasty drawings, 218 [Oct. 1, THE DIAL of characteristic whimsicality, form no unimportant part of the letters; and, as was to be expected from this pioneer "limerickian," he occasionally drops into that form of verse. As an example of his in- formal letter-writing style—and it may be doubted whether he had any formal style — let us quote a few lines disclaiming his intention ever to marry. "Single — I may have few pleasures—but married — many risks and miseries are semi-certainly in waiting — nor till the plot is played out can it be said that evils are not at hand. You say you are 30, but I believe you are ever so much more. As for me I am 40 — and some months: by the time I am 42 I shall regard the matter with 42de I hope." His punning use of the numbers four and forty is frequent, especially in the name of his friend, — "40scue." Snatches of modern Greek, chiefly in letters from Greece, add variety to these never monotonous missives, and one of them contains a translation of Tennyson's "Will." Lear died in 1888, in his seventy-sixth year. Letters covering the period 1864-88 are in Lady Strachey's possession, and she half promises to publish them if the sale of the first instalment is sufficiently encouraging.—Simultaneously with the edition of Lear's letters appears a reprint of his "Book of Limericks" (Little, Brown & Co.), with Lear's own delightfully humorous illustrations. BRIEFER MENTION. The latest guide to the mysteries of the culinary art is "The Standard Domestic Science Cook Book," com- piled and arranged by William H. Lee and Jennie A. Hansey, and published by Messrs. Laird & Lee of Chicago. It contains over 1400 recipes, all of which the authors vouch for as tried and true, menus for all seasons, and diverse directions for marketing, carving, serving meals, entertaining, and so on. A chapter on the tireless cooker attests to the thoroughly up-to-date char- acter of the suggestions. Each group of recipes is headed by a brief paragraph explaining how to distin- guish wholesome from unwholesome foodstuffs of the particular kind under discussion, this feature giving the book its distinctive title. A decided novelty is the thumb index, which enables the hurried and possibly sticky-fingered cook to turn at once to any of the thirty- two departments of the book, merely by reference to the department index compactly printed inside the front cover. A special leather-bound "gift edition" of the book has been issued along with the regular one. Miss Katherine L. Sharp, formerly librarian and library school director at the University of Illinois, has issued (through the University Press, Urbana, 111.) the fourth part of her detailed account of " Illinois Libra- ries." This section is entitled "Chicago Libraries," and in the space of 140 pages chronicles the history of no fewer than 102 extant and four obsolete libraries — unless our counting is at fault. There is no sufficient table of contents, and no index whatever, even though the author is a professional librarian! However, there is promise of a complete index to the entire work, as well as views of buildings and a list of Illinois library publications — to be comprised in a fifth and final brochure or "part." Notes. "Twelve Thousand Words Often Mispronounced," by Mr. William Henry P. Phyfe, is a revision of a well-known hand-book, now enlarged to the extent of twenty per cent. Messrs. G. P. Putnam's Sons are the publishers. Ten " Stories New and Old," by English and Ameri- can writers, are collected into a volume and published by the Macmillan Co. Mr. Hamilton Wright Mabie appears as the sponsor, and writes a brief introduction for each of the ten. Two new Baedekers, now imported by the Messrs. Scribner, are the fifteenth revised edition of " London and Its Environs," and the third edition of "Berlin and Its Environs." Both volumes are brought up to date, and provided with new maps and plans. "Japanese Folk Stories and Fairy Tales," by Mrs. Mary F. Nixon-Roulet, and "Chinese Fables and Folk Stories," by Miss Mary Hayes Davis and Mr. Chow Leung, are two volumes of the "Eclectic Readings" for schools published by the American Book Co. Messrs. Doubleday, Page & Co. publish pretty new editions, in limp leather covers, of Mr. Kipling's " Plain Tales from the Hills " and " Departmental Ditties and Barrack Room Ballads." The former volume has a biographical sketch by Professor Charles Eliot Norton. The Columbia University Press issues in handsome form a monograph, by Miss Virginia Crocheron Gilder- sleeve, on "Government Regulation of the Elizabethan Drama." The study is based largely upon official doc- uments of the time, and is a very thorough piece of work No less than eight authors have contributed to "A Text-Book of Physics," now published by Messrs. P. Blakiston's Son & Co. Professor A. Wilmer Duff is the general editor of the work and the author of the section upon "Mechanics." The book has upwards of five hundred illustrations. A second edition, completely revised throughout, of Dr. Masuji Miyakawa's "Powers of the American People " is published by the Baker & Taylor Co. As the work of a Japanese scholar, this book is of peculiar interest, particularly because it introduces many instruc- tive comparisons between the Japanese and American Constitutions. "Much Adoe about Nothing," edited by Mr. W. G. Boswell-Stone, and "The Merry Wives of Windsor," edited by Dr. F. J. Furnivall, are the latest volumes in the " Old-Spelling Shakespeare," published by Messrs. Duffield & Co. To the series of " Shakespeare Classics" the same publishers have added "The Sources and Analogues of 'A Midsummer-Night's Dream,'" a vol- ume compiled by Mr. Frank Sidgwick. Arthur Stedman, the younger of the two sons of Edmund Clarence Stedman, and the only one living at the time of the poet's death, passed away on the 16th of September. He was forty-nine years old and a Yale graduate of '81. The greater part of his life was spent in New York, in which city he died. He was an indus- trious literary worker, and wrote much for newspapers and magazines. He was of much assistance to his father in the preparation of the "Library of American Litera- ture." He will also be remembered as having written, in the early nineties, the regular New York letter of literary news which appeared in this journal. 1908.] 219 THE DIAL Announcements of Fall, Books. The titles contained in the following list were received too late for inclusion in our regular Fall Announcement Number of September 16. OXFORD UNIVEB8ITY PRESS. Chinese Porcelain, by Hsiang Yuan-P'ien, trans, by 8. W. Bushell. illus. in color.—An Alabama Student, and other biographical essays, by William Osier.—A Surrey of London, by John Stow, edited by C. L. Kinssford.—Folk-Memory, or The Continuity of British Archaeology, by Walter John- son.—The Renaissance and the Reformation, by E. M. Tanner.—Welsh Medieval Law, by A. W. Wade Evans.— The Physics of Earthquake Phenomena, by C. G. Knott. — The Management of Private Affairs, by Joseph King, F. T. R. Bigham. M. L. Gwyer. Edwin Cannan. J. S. C. Bridge, and A. M. Latter. — The Pacific Blockade, by Albert E. Hogan. — Auto de Fe and Jew, by E. N. Adler. — Fonts in English Churches, by Francis Bond. — Notes on the Early History of the Vulgate Gospels, by Don John Chapman. — The Moral System of Dante's Inferno, by W. H. V. Reade. — The Ethi- cal Aspect of Evolution, by W. Bennett. — Comparative Greek G rara mar. by Joseph Wright.—The Oxford Thackeray, edited by George Saintsbury, complete in 17 vols., illus.— Oxford Poets Series, new vols.: Poems of Crabbe, edited by Mr. and Mrs. A. J. Carlyle; Poems of Thomson, edited by J. Logie Robertson.—Oxford Library of Prose and Poetry, new vols.: Selected Poems of William Barnes, edited by Thomas Hardy; Selected Poems of John Clare, edited by Arthur Symons; The Heroine, by Eaton Stannard Barrett, with introduction by Walter Raleigh; The Annals of a Parish, by John Gait, edited by G. S. Gordon; Memoirs of Shelley, by Thomas Love Peacock, edited by H. F. B. Brett Smith; War Songs, compiled by Christopher Stone. — Stuart and Tudor Library, new vols.: Turberville's Noble Art of Venerie or Hunting; Wilson's Arte of Rhetorique, edited by G. H. Mair; Shakespeare's Merry Wives of Windsor, with introduction by W. W. Greg.—Oxford Library of Transla- tions, new vols.: Virgil, trans, by John Jackson; Plato's Republic, trans, and edited by Benjamin Jowett; Hesiod. trans, and edited by A. W. Mair; Statius Silvae, trans, and edited by D. A. Slater; St. Bernard on Consideration, trans, and edited by George Lewis.—Addison's Coverley Papers, edited by C. M. Myers. — Scott's Rob Roy, edited by R. S. Raib. — Scott's Woodstock, edited by J. 8. C. Bridge. REILLY & BRITTON CO. A Little Brother of the Rich, by Joseph Medill Patterson, illus. in color, etc., $1.60. — Dorothy and the Wizard in Oz. by L. Frank Baum, illus. in color, (1.26. — Children's Stories that Never Grow Old, illus. in color by John R. Neill, $1. — Boy Fortune Hunter Series, by Floyd Akers, first vols.: The Boy Fortune Hunters in Alaska. The Boy Fortune Hunters in Panama. The Boy Fortune Hunters in Egypt; each 60 eta. — Aunt Jane's Nieces at Millville, by Edith Van Dyne, illus., 60 eta. — Peter Rabbit and Black Sambo Painting Book, illus. in color. — Baby's Childhood Days, decorated by Dulah Clarke Krebbiel. — The Teddy Bears in Fun and Frolic, illus. in color by J. R. Bray.—Johnny Hep, by H.L. Layler, illus.— The Bride's Cook Book, illus. in color, etc.—Toasts You Ought to Know, compiled by Janet Madison. — When Good Fellows Get Together, compiled by James O'Donnell Ben- nett. — Forget-me-nots, illus. by Clara Powers Wilson. — Memorable American Speeches, Edited by John Vance Cheney. THE PILGRIM PRESS. The Pilgrims, by Frederick A. Noble, illus., $2.60 net. —The Peasantry of Palestine, life, manners, and customs of the village, by Elihu Grant, illus., $1.50 net. —The Psychology of Jesus, by Albert W. Hitchcock, $1.25 net.—Old Andover Days, by Sarah Stuart Bobbins, illus., $1. net.— The Main Points, a study in Christian belief, by Charles Reynolds Brown. $1.26 net. — The Teachings of Jesus in Parables, by George Henry Hubbard, $1.60 net. — Monday Club Sermons on the International Sunday-school Lessons, $1.26.— Glad Tidings, by Reuen Thomas. $1.26 net.— A Year of Good Cheer, by Delia Lyman Porter, 60 cts. net; leather, $1. net. — The Boy Problem, by William Byron Forbush, $1. net. — Hero Tales, by Mrs. Ozora 8. Davis, illus., $1. net.—Letters on the Great Truths of Our Christian Faith, by Henry Churchill King, $1. net.—The Strange Ways of God, a study in the Book of Job, by Charles Reynolds Brown, 76 cts. net.— The Church of Today, by Joseph Henry Crooker, 75 cts. net.— The Significance of the Personality of Christ for the Minister of Today, by Ernest G. Guthrie. Percy H. Epler, and Willard B. Thorp, 75 cts. net.—The Teacher that Teaches, by Amos R. Wells, 60 cts. net. —The Practice of Immortality, by Washington Gladden. 35 cts. net. — The Blues Cure, an anti- worry recipe, by Delia Lyman Porter, 36 cts. net. — Whence Cometh Help, by John W. Buckham, 36 cts. net. — The Love Watch, by William Allen Knight, 36 cts. net. — The Gospel of Good Health, by Charles Reynolds Brown. 36 cts. net.— The Land of Pure Delight, by George A. Gordon, 36 cts. net.— The Valley of Troubling, by Grace Duffield Goodwin. 86 cts. net. —The Signs in the Christmas Fire, by William Allen Knight. 36 cts. net; vellum. 60 cts. net. — The Keen Joy of Living, by John Edger Park. 35 cts. net.—The Face Angelic, by Hiram Collins Haydn, 36 cts. net. — The Story of the Child that Jesus Took, by Newman Smyth, 36 cts. net. TOPIC8 IN IiEADING PEHIODICAL8. October, 1908. Aeronaut, The. Frederick Todd. World't Work. Aeroplane and Its Future. Henri Farman. Metropolitan. Africa, A Trip through. 8. P. Vemer. World't Work. Alcohol and the Individual. H. 8. Williams. MeClure. Alcott, Bronson. T. W. Higginson. Putnam. American Commonwealth, Fifty Years of an. World't Work. American Desert, The Vanishing. Wm. Hard. Muntev. Anti-Injunction Legislation, Perils of. H.H.Lewis. No.Amer. Babies of the Rich. Viola Rodgers. Cotmopolitan. Barcelona. In. Ellen M. Slayden. Century. Barnard, Kate, of Oklahoma. A. J. McKelway. American. Battle Lines, Between two. Sally R. Weir. Metropolitan. Beauty, The Religion of Feminine. J. B. Fletcher. Atlantic. Bee-keeping in a Snburb. J. P. True. Atlantic. Blr el-Abd. In Camp at. Norman Duncan. Harper. Blind Citizens, Our. John Macy. Evervbody't. Blue-stocking, The Heart of a. Lucy M. Donnelly. Atlantic. Bryan's Election, Results of. J. C. Welliver. Muntev. Bryan's Third Campaign. J.Daniels. Review of Reviewt. Business Recovery. A Year of. C. F. Speare. Review of Reviewt. Calne, Hall, Autobiography of — II. Appleton. Canada's Railroads. J. O. Curwood. Putnam. China, The White House Collection of. A. G. Baker. Century. 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Leipzig: Verlag von Wilhelm Engelmann. New York: G. E. Stechert & Co. Writings on American History, 1908: A Bibliography of Books and Articles on United States and Canadian History published during the Year 1906. Compiled by Grace Griffin. 8vo, pp. 186. Macmillan Co. $2.60 net. Handy Bible Encyclopedia. By Jesse Lyman Hurlbut. Thin paper editions; illus., 8vo, full gilt, pp. 890. John C. Winston Co. Limp leather. $3. The Book of Amerioan Municipalities: Containing Statis- tical Tables of the Revenues and Expenditures of Cities, and an Authentic Summary of Civic Progress and Achievements. Illus.. 8vo. Chicago: League of American Municipalities. Paper, $2. The American Jewish Year Book, 6669 (1908-1909). Edited by Herbert Friedenwald for the American Jewish Committee. 12mo, pp.347. Philadelphia: Jewish Publication Society of America. BOOKS FOR THE YOUNG. Red Cap Adventures: Being the Second Series of Red Cap Tales Stolen from the Treasure Chest of the Wizard of the North. By S. R. 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The unsolicited statement from more than one authoritative source, that THE HIBBERT is the greatest quar- terly in the world, is surely well borne out by this number. Some of the Leading Articles for October: THE MISCARRIAGE OF LIFE IN THE WEST. By SRI RAM AN ATI! A.N. Kolicitor-(;eneral. Ceylon. A CHINESE STATESMAN'S VIEW OF RELIGION. By CHARLES JOHNSTON, late Bengal Civil Service. THE MOSLEM TRADITION OF JESUS' SECOND VISIT ON EARTH. By Captain F. W. VON HERBERT. HEGEL AND HIS METHOD. By Professor WILLIAM JAMES. A GREAT SOCIAL EXPERIMENT. By Rev. CHARLES PLATER. S.J., a Jesuit priest. INFALLIBILITY AND TOLERATION. By F. C. S. SCHILLER, the British Pragmatist. HOW MAY CHRISTIANITY BE DEFENDED 7 By Pro- fessor A. C M'Oiffert. EVANGELICAL BARGAINING. ByJOHNPAGE HOPPS. With equally important articles by Hon. Bert rand Russell, Rev. James Moffatt. 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First vols.: Sigurd the Uragon-Slayer. One for Wod and One for Lok, The Seven Champions of Christendom, The Old Old Myths of Greece and Rome. Illus. in color, etc., 24mo. E. P. Dutton St Co. Per vol., 50 cts. Fire, Snow, and Water. By Edward S. Ellis. Illus., 12mo, pp. 324. John C. Winston Co. 75 cts. The Phantom Auto. By Edward S. Ellis. Illus., 12mo, pp. 320. John C. Winston Co. 25 cts. The Pony Express; or, The Blazing Westward Way. By William L. Visscber. Illus., large 8vo, pp. 98. Chicago: Rand, McNally St Co. 50 cts. The Home Poetry Book We have all been wanting so lonCT Edited by FRANCIS F. BROWNE Editor "Poems of the Civil War," Laurel Crowned Verse," etc. Author "Everyday Life of Lincoln," etc., etc. "GOLDEN POEMS" contains more of everyone's favorites than any other collection at a popu- lar price, and has besides the very best of the many fine poems that have been written in the last few years. Other collections may contain more poems of one kind or more by one author* "GOLDEN POEMS" (by British and American Authors) has 5JO selections from 300 writers, covering the whole range of English literature. "Golden Poems' "GOLDEN POEMS" is a fireside volume for the thousands of families who love poetry. It is meant for those who cannot afford all the col- lected works of their favorite poets—it offers the poems they like best, all in one volu me. The selections in "GOLDEN POEMS " are classi- fied according to their subjects: By the Fire- side; Nature s Voices; Dreams and Fancies; Friendship and Sympathy; Love; Liberty and Patriotism; Battle Echoes; Humor;Pathosand Sorrow; The Better Life; Scattered Leaves. "GOLDEN POEMS," with its wide appeal, at- tractively printed and beautifully bound, makes an especially appropriate Christmas gift. In two styles binding, ornamental cloth and flex- ible leather. Of booksellers, or the publishers, A. C. McCLURO & CO., CHICAGO. Price, $1.50. 264 [Oct. 16, 1908. THE DIAL Important New Fiction Ramsey Benson's A Lord of Lands The nnusual and convincing story of the experiences of a man with an income of $50 a month and five children, following his determination to leave the city and farm it in the Northwest. $1.50. "Mr. Benson does for the humble workingman what Dr. Streeter, author of' The Fat of the Land.' did for the well-to-do — relates the comforts and discomforts, the pleasures and the pains, the success and the failures of the farmer's life—will appeal instantly and throughout its entire length to the lover of the outdoor life." —Boiton Transcript. "We congratulate Mr. Benson upon making a most readable book out of his practical and emotional farmer's life, and the steps that lead up to it. and we congratulate the public upon having secured a bit of literature of new flavor." — New York Timet Review. (The complete two-column review on request.) "Unique In literature. Told with the utmost art. Deeply Interesting." — San Franciico Chronicle. Charles Battell Loomis's A Holiday Touch And other tales of undaunted Americans. Illustrated by Fogarty, Gruoeb, Newell, Loomis, " Ht " Mayer, H. G. Williamson, and T. W. Adams. $1.26. This well-known humorist's best recent stories, chiefly accounts of how Americans won out smiling, with a brace of Christmas tales. The author's " Cheerful Americans " is already in its ninth edition. Stanley P. Hyatt's The Little Brown Brother A stirring story of love and war in the Philippines by one who was in the thick of it. $1.50. "Of unusual interest. Written by the only journalist at the front during the Pulajan campaign of 1904-1905. the work has the freshness of first-hand observation, the vivid picturesqueness of the trained reporter, and the vigor of a man accustomed to write cable dispatches. More than a novel: it is also a sensational political pamphlet."— The Nation. "First worthy romance with scenes laid in our Eastern islands. The love story is the real thing."—N. Y. Timet Review. Edgar Wallace's Angel Esquire A highly ingenious mystery Btory in which an inexperienced girl has to oontend with three daring oriminals for millions strangely bequeathed to one of the four. $1.50. "Inspiring originality. Mr. Wallace has achieved the impossible. He has written a detective story having for its hero a type absolutely new. Moreover, to make his book completely fascinating he put before his hero a problem of refreshing fantasticality. The story grows breathlessly exciting. Through its thrilling developments Angel Esquire moves with an airy aplomb that is irresistible. All the time he is smiling, full of quaintness and humor."—New York Tribune. "One of the very best detective stories for years. A plot of exciting interest, real people, not a single strained situation, a detective who is really a charming fellow with a sense of humor that is contagious. A strong and satisfying tale." —San Francisco Chronicle. For Young Folks Mrs. C. W. Rankin's The Adopting of Rosa Marie A sequel to " Dandelion Cottage." Illustrated by Mrs. Shinn. $1.50. "Charming response to numerous requests for a sequel to ' Dandelion Cottage' . . . four delightfully natural and likable little girls ... merry and pleasing ... no little thrilling excitement... good, wholesome, absorbing stories that Mrs. Rankin deserves credit for writing and which fun-loving adults will enjoy no less than the young folk." — Chicago Record-Herald. "Those who have read ' Dandelion Cottage' will need no urging to follow further the adventures of the young cottagers. ... A lovable group of four real children, happily not perfect, but full of girlish plana and pranks. ... A delightful sense of humor pervades the book, and the amusing happenings from day to day make entertaining reading."—Boston Transcript. Vernon L. Kellogg's Insect Stories By the Professor of Entomology in Stanford University. Author of "American Insects," " Darwinism Today," eta, Illustrated. Large 12mo. 304 pp. $1.50 net. (In American Nature Series.) "The author is among the few scientific writers of distinction who can interest the popular mind. No intelligent youth can fail to read it with delight and profit." —The Nation. "Altogether delightful, and truly scientific." — Anna Botsford Combtock, of Cornell University. Mary W. Plummer's Roy and Ray in Canada By the Director of the Pratt Institute Library School, and author of "Roy and Ray (n Mexico." With map, Canadian national songs with music, and illustrated from photographs. $1.75 net. • ;. The volume embodies very much that is interesting concerning Canadian history, manners, and customs, as well a» descriptions that describe and pictures that really illustrate. The book will be useful as a travel guide, but it is primarily intended to cover a hitherto neglected field for children. The Boston Transcript said of"Roy and Ray in Mexico": "It deserves the widest circulation and no public library can afford to be without it." Selma Lagerlof's Christ Legends Translated from the Swedish by Velma SwanstonHoward. 12mo, 272 pages, with decorations by Bertha Stuart Boxed. Probable price $1.25 net. (Nov. 1st.) Hamilton W. Mabie in the Outlook: "Selma Lagerlof is regarded by many students of Swedish literature as the fore- most living Swedish writer. There seems to be a feeling that, when the time is ripe, she will be awarded a Nobel prize." Alice C. Haine's The Luck of the Dudley Grahams V if Illustrated by Francis Day. $1.50. ^"Among the very best of books for young folks. Appeals especially to girls."—Wisconsin TowntMP Library Hit. HENRY HOLT AND COMPANY THE DIAL 21 &rmi=fflontf)Ig Journal of ILi'terarg Criticism, Wincaman, anb Information. THE VIAL (founded in 1HH0J is published on the 1st and lfith of each month. Teems of subscription, 82. a year in advance, postage prepaid in the United States, and Mexico; Foreign and Canadian pottage 50 cents per year extra. Remittances should be by check, or by express or postal order, payable to THE DIAL COMPAKY. Unless otherwise ordered, subscriptions will begin with the current number. When no direct request to discontinue at expiration of sub- scription is received, it is assumed that a continuance of the subscription is desired. Advertising Rates furnished on application. All com- munications should be addressed to THE DIAL, Fine Arts Building, Chicago. Entered as Second-Class Hatter October 8, 1892, at the Post Office at Chicago, Illinois, under Act of March 3,1879. No. 537. NOVEMBER 1, 1908. Vol. XLV. Contents. PAOB CHARLES' ELIOT NORTON 277 CABBAGES AND ROSES. Charles Leonard Moore. 280 CASUAL COMMENT 282 An educator and administrator of more than national fame.—The iniquitous book publisher.— A German Oscar Wilde. — Dante in Omarian quatrains. —The army of unemployed or would-be novelists.— Miscorrections of misquotations. — An English reader of The Dial. COMMUNICATIONS. Did St. Peter " Peter Out"? Clinton B. Evani . 284 The Origin of " Peter Out." Samuel Willard . . 284 A Question of Misquotation. H. W. F. . . . . 285 The Public Library and the Workingman. Samuel H. Rauck 285 The Administration of the University of Illinois. Arthur H. Danieh 285 A WOMAN IN UNKNOWN LABRADOR. Munton Aldrich Havens 286 THE TRAGEDY OF KOREA. Frederic Austin Ogg 289 CANADIANS OF LONG AGO. Lawrence J. Burpee 291 THE SPANISH INQUISITION IN HISTORY. Laurence M. Larson 292 RECENT FICTION. William Morton Payne . . .294 Miss Johnston's Lewis Rand. — Lewisohn's The Broken Snare.—Viele's Heartbreak Hill. — Par- rish's The Last Voyage of the Donna Isabel. — Kramer's The Castle of Dawn. — Miss Sinclair's The Immortal Moment. — Bailey's Colonel Great- heart. — Phillpotu's and Bennett's The Statue. — Bindloss's By Right of Purchase.—Bindloss's Long Odds. BRIEFS ON NEW BOOKS 297 Editorial essays from "The Atlantic." — An out- door book for in-door use. — Great movements and leaders in biologic science. — Memoirs of a business man, soldier, and diplomat. — Astronomical refer- ences in the Scriptures. — The new Rug book. — The psychology of advertising. — An analysis of Attention and Feeling. BRIEFER MENTION 300 NOTES 300 TOPICS IN NOVEMBER PERIODICALS.... .302 LIST OF NEW BOOKS 308 CHARLES ELIOT NORTON. The life of colonial New England, resting upon the granite of puritan character, was richly provided with the elements of sincerity and strength, but was singularly devoid of the qual- ity of charm. Two centuries of weathering were needed to disintegrate the rock, and cover it with a soil in which culture might take root and flourish. When the time came, the soil proved richly fruitful, and from it sprang the fine flowers of ethical order and exalted patriotism, of aesthetic feeling and literary art. With that efflorescence of the spirit of man in the new world, America first achieved a literature of its own, and adorned its annals with the names of Bryant and Longfellow and Whittier, of Haw- thorne and Lowell and Emerson. As com- pared with these names, the name of the quiet scholar who passed away at Cambridge on the twenty-first of October was less resounding in the world of publicity, but it does not seem too much to say that in penetrative influence upon American character the man who bore it was the peer of any of his contemporaries. We can think of no man who has embodied more fully and satisfactorily than Charles Eliot Norton the distinctive qualities of that idealism toward which we still believe, despite all discourage- ments, that our best self as a nation aspires. Mr. Norton was born November 16, 1827, and consequently lived until his eighty-first year was all but completed. The trees of Shady Hill that waved over his cradle were the trees that filled the air with autumnal murmurs as he drew his last breath; for he was one of the few who in this country of ours have the double fortune of living to venerable age and of dying under the roof-tree that sheltered their infancy. The fact may be taken as symbolical of the steadfast continuity with which his fourscore years were devoted, with a singleness of purpose underlying all their variety of occupation, to the pursuit of essential virtue and truth and beauty. It was in or near his Cambridge home that he labored all the years of his active life, save for his brief period of faring abroad on business in early manhood, for his occasional European sojourns, and for his many summers at Ashfield, among the hills of western Massachusetts. And for the 278 [Nov. 1, THE DIAL last half-century Shady Hill has been sought out by the wise and good of other lands as the Mecca of their American pilgrimage, and by the fellow-countrymen, old and young, of the sage who lived there, for the sake of its gracious hospitality, and the inspiration of personal con- tact with its master. As the son of Andrews Norton, himself iden- tified with the college for fifty years, Charles naturally became a son of Harvard, and was graduated with the class of 1846, at the age of nineteen. Among his classmates were Child and Lane (later his colleagues), Fitzedward Hall and George Frisbie Hoar. The first few years after his graduation were spent in business, and in 1849 he went on a voyage to the East Indies as supercargo. But the commercial life did not attract him, and he soon took up his studies again. He found his chief interest in the his- tory of art, and this subject necessarily took him to Europe for considerable periods. It was upon one of these European trips (in the mid- fifties) that he made Ruskin's acquaintance, in the cabin of an excursion boat making the trip from Vevay to Geneva. The account of this meeting, as given in Ruskin's "Prseterita," is so charming that we will quote from it at some length. "I noticed that from time to time the young Amer- ican cast somewhat keen, though entirely courteous, looks of scrutiny at my father and mother. "In a few minutes after I had begun to notice these looks, he rose, with the sweetest quiet smile I ever saw on any face (unless, perhaps, a nun's when she has some grave kindness to do), crossed to our side of the cabin, and addressing himself to my father, said, with a true expression of great gladness, and of frank trust that his joy would be understood, that he knew who we were, was most thankful to have met us, and that he prayed permission to introduce his mother and sisters to us. "The bright eyes, the melodious voice, the simple, but acutely flattering, words, won my father in an in- stant. The New Englander sat down beside us, his mother and sisters seeming at once also to change the steamer's cabin into a reception room in their own home. The rest of the time till we reached Geneva passed too quickly; we arranged to meet in a day or two again, at St. Martin's. "And thus I became possessed of my second friend, after Dr. John Brown; and of my first real tutor, Charles Eliot Norton. "The meeting at St. Martin's with Norton and his family was a very happy one. Entirely sensible and amiable, all of them; with the further elasticity and acuteness of the American intellect, and no taint of American ways. Charles himself, a man of the highest natural gifts, in their kind; observant and critical, rather than imaginative, but with an all-pervading sympathy and sensibility, absolutely free from envy, ambition, or covetousness; a scholar from his cradle, nor only now a man of the world, but a gentleman of the world, whom the highest born and best bred of every nation, from the Red Indian to the White Austrian, would recognize in a moment, as of their caste." This characterization by a man of genius leaves little to be said, and serves particularly to illustrate that faculty for friendship which drew into Mr. Norton's intimacy many of the choicest spirits of his time. It would be interesting, did our space permit, to extend the quotation by Ruskin's whimsical speculations as to " what sort of soul Charles Norton would have become, if he had had the blessing to be born an English Tory, or a Scotch Jacobite, or a French Gentilhomme, or a Savoyard Count." For the writer makes it very clear that his new friend does not belong to America, being "as hopelessly out of gear and place, over in the States there, as a runaway star dropped into Purgatory." Mr. Norton's early connection with Harvard as a teacher took the form of an instructorship in 1851 and of a lectureship in 1863-4. It was not until ten years after this that he entered into his lasting relations with the College. Meanwhile, he married Miss Susan Sedgwick in 1862, and in the same year joined with Mr. Lowell in editing "The North American Re- view," an occupation which busied him for six years. He was also one of Mr. Godkin's asso- ciates in the early years of " The Nation " (begun in 1865), and during the years of the Civil War just preceding he acted as secretary of the Loyal Publication Society, compiling broadsides which strengthened the patriotic heart of the people in their struggle to preserve the nation. Even earlier than all this, he had been influential in bringing about the establishment of "The Atlantic Monthly," and was one of the con- tributors to its first number. Besides these literary activities, he had also found time to write two books, "Considerations on Some Recent Social Theories," and " Notes of Travel and Study in Italy," dated 1853 and 1859 respectively. It was, then, with no mean record of scholarly achievement and public service that Mr. Norton, in 1874, at the age of forty-six, accepted the chair offered him at Harvard by his cousin the President. The chair was created for him, and he was styled Professor of the History of Art, but he interpreted art in a broad sense, and found in it as many implications as his friend Ruskin. It has been happily said that his real academic function was to serve as Professor of Things in General, by which is meant simply that his conception of art was so liberal, his sense of the inter-relationship of all cultural and social interests so lively, that he could not uar- 1908.] 279 THE row his work to the mere discussion of aesthetic technicalities, but was perforce constrained to take within his purview all the deeper concerns of human existence. He so vitalized the aca- demic spirit of the institution that he became easily its most popular teacher, and his class- rooms were filled to overflowing. His winning manner, and the finished style of his discourse proved so attractive to the eager and ingenuous young men who thronged to his lectures that it became a problem to provide them with accom- modation, and it was finally found necessary to reduce their numbers by restricting the courses to upper classmen. During the twenty-four years of his regular teaching, nearly all the stu- dents who went through Harvard were found in his classes at one time or another. It would be difficult to overestimate the extent of the influ- ence which he thus exerted upon a whole gener- ation of college students —an influence always exerted for sanity and restraint, for a correct appreciation of art and for the understanding of its correlation with life. As President Eliot once said: "Thousands of Harvard students attribute to his influence lasting improvements in their modes of thought, their intellectual and moral interests, and their ideas of genuine suc- cess and true happiness." The only book that resulted from these courses on the history of art was published in 1880, and was entitled "Historical Studies of Church-Building in the Middle Ages." During the eighties, he added to his work courses on Dante, imparting the results of his life-long study of the poet. As early as 1865, he had joined with Longfellow and Lowell in establishing a little Dante Club in Cambridge, which met Wednesday evenings, largely for the discussion of Longfellow's translation then in active preparation. Mr. Norton's own little book on the " Vita Nuova " (an essay with trans- lations) had appeared in 1859, and his complete version of the work came out in 1867, accom- panying his colleague's version of the " Divina Commedia." His own prose translation of the Comedy was given to the world in 1891-2. Not long afterwards he delivered a course of lectures on Dante on the Percy Turnbull Foundation at the Johns Hopkins University. These lectures have never been published, and it should be one of the first duties of his literary executors to see that they are made into a book. Mr. Norton's editorial labors in connection with Carlyle, Ruskin, Lowell, and Curtis are not the least of his claims upon our gratitude. After Froude's mangled version of the Carlyle correspondence, the family turned to Mr. Norton for redress, and there resulted "The Corre- spondence of Carlyle and Emerson" (1883), "The Correspondence of Carlyle and Goethe" (1887), and "Carlyle's Letters and Reminis- cences" (1887). For the authorized " Brant- wood" American edition of Ruskin, extending to about a score of volumes, but unfortunately far from complete, he wrote the prefatory essays in the several volumes. He was Lowell's literary executor, and gave us (1893) the "Letters of James Russell Lowell" in two volumes. A year later, he had prepared the three volumes of "Orations and Addresses " by George William Curtis, who was also one of his closest friends. He had a true genius for friendship, as these instances show, and as is also revealed in the published correspondence of Edward FitzGerald, Leslie Stephen, and E. L. Godkin, to name only a few other examples. These warm relationships with his famous contemporaries have sometimes led to the ill-natured and unjust assumption that his reputation rests upon a parasitical basis. But no one who reads the letters whioh these men wrote to him could hold that opinion in good faith, or fail to discern the modest self-effacement which characterized his relations with them. An important part of Mr. Norton's life is connected with the town of Ash field, in western Massachusetts, where, with Curtis for a neigh- bor, he made his summer home for over forty years. He identified himself with the civic life of that little community of a thousand souls, and inspired it with his own ideals of good citizenship. His influence revived the moribund Academy of the town, and the institution of the Ashfield dinners, held annually in the town hall for a quarter of a century, made the place known the country over. He presided at these dinners, and when the homely fare had been disposed of, and the material man was at peace with the world, the spiritual man took his place, and discussed questions of high social and political import, under the leadership of the beloved pre- siding officer, and of the distinguished guests whom he had brought there to speak. "Ichabod" is now the word for Ashfield, but it will long remain an inspiring memory. It was during the year of our wicked war with Spain and of our national orgy of iniquit- ous imperialism that Ashfield became best known to the country. Mr. Norton had no doubts upon the moral issues then involved, and no hesitation in condemning the course taken by his country in those disastrous years. His Ash- field address of August 25, 1898, stirred up a 280 [Nov. 1, THE DIAL storm of excitement, and brought upon his head the sort of villification which is always the lot of the far-sighted patriot who dares rebuke his fellow-citizens for their lapse from virtue. As early as June of that year, when he had just retired from his Harvard duties, and accepted the title of Professor Emeritus, he had spoken upon the same subject in Cambridge with no uncertain voice. He had said in closing: "My friends, America has been compelled against the will of all her wisest and best to enter into a path of darkness and peril. Against their will she has been forced to turn back from the way of civilization to the way of barbarism, to renounce for the time her own ideals. With grief, with anxiety must the lover of his country regard the present aspect and the future prospect of the nation's life. With serious purpose, with utter self-devotion he should prepare himself for the untried and difficult service to which it is plain he is to be called in the quick-coming years." k, The wisdom and sanity of that utterance will sometime receive general recognition. It was then the wisdom of a minority, but the decade that has since elapsed already shows signs of a reaction in the sense of that deliverance, and the "untried and difficult service" henceforth to be required of American citizenship will be more and more accepted as an obligation in the days to be. The man who takes this position in the face of the angry Demos is sure to be called a pessi- mist, and the title is a badge of honor. The pessimists (in this sense) are about the only persons who have done any real good in the world. To Mr. Norton, the storm-cloud that burst in 1898 had long been gathering. Sev- eral years before he had written, in a private letter, of " these dark days when the advocates of culture and the maintainanoe of morality in politics find their best type in Mrs. Partington," and had added: "At any rate, let us use our brooms as briskly as we can till the tide quite drowns us out." But, however disheartened he grew under the pressure of events, he never lost faith in the future. And once writing to Godkin, he spoke of "the good old cause of civilization — the cause which is always de- feated, but always after defeat taking more advanced positions than ever before." In his eightieth year, he said to a friend that if life were to be lived over again he thought, for his part, that he would like to live it in Chicago, because he seemed to see working there, in all the welter of vulgarity and commercialism, a power for good that would in time come to its own. Such hopefulness as that is surely no mark of pessimism in any rational meaning of the term. Mr. Norton received honors that were fairly commensurate with his deserts. He was awarded the doctorate by numerous universities, includ- ing both Oxford and Cambridge. His name was one to conjure with wherever scholarship was held in esteem. His permanent memorial in Harvard is the Library which bears his name, provided by a fund collected in 1905 from over five hundred subscribers, and having as a nu- cleus his own private collection of books. Two things remain to be done in his further honor. One is the preparation of an adequate biography; the other is the collection of his widely-scattered writings. Of the first, we need only say that the recipient of such letters, addressed to him by such men as Ruskin, FitzGerald, Stephen, Lowell, and Godkin, as have already been pub- lished, must have given in measure no less rich than he received, and that the epistolary material for a biography is sure to be abundant. Of the second, we would urge that Charles Eliot Norton belongs to American literature, and that his rightful place among our authors is to be secured and perpetuated only by making generally acces- sible to readers the large mass of his writing now concealed in the files of periodicals, in editorial contributions to other men's books, and in his unpublished manuscripts. This pious duty should be entered upon at once, and its performance based upon the principle that what- ever such a man had to say must be worth preserving. CABBAGES AND ROSES. The trend of modern thought has been to assert that cabbages are as admirable as roses — nay, that they are superior; for we can eat cabbages, whereas, like Du Maurier's poor musician, we do not habitu- ally "lif on roses." In almost all contemporary criticism this utilitarian idea crops up. We ought to admire, we are told, the creations of the modern fiction-monger, because he gives us people who are of use in the world — fanners, fishermen, doctors, engineers; because these are, as a rule, models of unselfish conduct, paragons who do their whole duty in this life. How superior they are, how much better fitted for our guidance and imitation, than the self-centred, imperious saviors or destroyers of mankind, the lords of ideal fiction, — Prometheus, Achilles, Hamlet, Lear, and their like! The old literature saw everywhere hierarchies of spiritual and intellectual beings, of animate and in- animate objects. Some incarnations of humanity were greater, wiser, more splendid than others; some natural objects were more beautiful and per- fect than the rest. The idea of fitness and appro- 1908.] 281 THE DIAL priateness pervaded art The heroines Ophelia or Belvidera had to go mad in white satin: now we put her in a patched frock and sabots. It is certain that we are, all of us, striving for wealth, power, distinction, or rule. We prefer mansions to hovels, athletes to cripples, beautiful women to homely ones. The shopgirl dreams of being a duchess; the salesman imagines himself a hero. Why should not this universal, this saving instinct of mankind for what it deems the best find expression-in literature? It has always done so before, and the finest figures of fiction are the em- bodiments of this human worship of greatness and beauty. The extremes of life are the regions of supreme art. On the one side are the princes and poten- tates and powers and dominations of the world. It is hardly necessary to say that these need not be born in the purple, — but they must have heads upon which crowns of some kind naturally fall. On the other side are the creatures of the gulf and gloom, dark apparitions of poverty, madness, rebel- lion, and despair. Great art bridges the distance between these opposite worlds; it strides easily from Hyperion's palace to Job's dunghill; from IUyria's court to the tavern where Burns's Jolly Beggars are congregated; it discovers in one work Lear on his throne dealing out kingdoms, and the same person- age crouching on the ground defenseless against the outrage of the elements. In the one case the artist deals with beauty and grandeur, — and poetry and romance come easily to him. In the other case he works with shadow and horror, and power is ready made to his hands. In both cases the subject is given to him and he has only to prove himself equal to it. But there is a vast extent of life where the sub- ject is not given to the artist, where he has, by mere handling, to make significant and interesting the ordinary and common happenings of mankind. This is the region of social comedy and the modern novel. Moliere's work would be mainly of this kind were it not that the gods descend from their heights in the Misanthrope, and the gulf surges up from below in Don Juan, Tartuffe, and the Miser. Re- acted upon by humor, this middle region of life can become a spectacle of power; painted merely for itself, it is likely to be monotonous, insipid, flat Vanessa said that Dean Swift could write beauti- fully about a broomstick. Our modern novelists do not often write as well as Swift, but their task is essentially to make something out of nothing — to dress up the broomsticks of ordinary life so that they shall seem animated and strong. It is creditable to their skill that they do very frequently produce such an illusion, but somehow their work has the trick of fading away before that of the creators who take the good the gods provide in the shape of great characters and actions. For there is a difference in the quality of actions. These take color and grandeur from their settings and surroundings. Generally, things done, spec- tacles presented on the stage of the world, are more impressive in the eye of mankind than those enacted in suburbs or purlieus. A young girl who works to support an aged mother or a crippled brother may have a heart as pure, a devotion as high, as Jeanne d'Arc; but the depth of spiritual monitions, the pomp of state and war, the terror of a fiery doom, lift the French maiden out of all comparison with humbler fates. Modern writers are almost all humanitarians. It is an honor to their hearts that they are so — that they have taken up the cause of the down-trodden, the forgotten, the average human being. They have said to themselves that love and joy and pain and death are universal, — that there is no reason why a poor young clerk should not love with the passion of a Romeo, why a deserted girl of the streets should not feel as deeply as Marguerite, why any mother mourning over her dead should not be as great a figure as Niobe or Rizpah. And there is perhaps no reason, except that of fitness, if the author feels competent to supply three-fourths of the capital stock in such characters. If he feels that he can afford to throw away subject and rely en- tirely on handling, there is no reason why he should not do so. . For while sensation, feeling, emotion are univer- sal, intellect is not universal. I am willing to con- cede that average or inferior human beings feel as deeply as beings of a higher grade; but they can- not express their feelings. They are inarticulate; and art, which is expression, rules out the inarticu- late. Romeo is Romeo because of the magnificence with which be utters the litany of love. A Mar- guerite who could not sing of the King in Thule, or plead with her lover about religion, or utter the wonderful sentences of the dungeon scene, would be a failure. A Lear or a Timon without their kingly splendor of thought and speech would be incon- ceivable. But the modern novelist may say that he can dower his average or inferior character with thought and language of his own. Even if he can, there is the question of fitness. Ninety-nine times out of a hundred the extremes of action and thought and speech which go to make up a great character in fiction would be ridiculous if brought into the milieu of the middle class. The whole matter comes round to a question of subject Are there any subjects, actions, themes, better than others? Are there any kind of person- ages more suited to exploitation in literature than the common ruck of mankind? Are there any surroundings — grandeurs or splendors of scenery, sunsets, storms, moonlight magnificences, architec- tural backgrounds, palaces, gardens, and the like — which help and heighten a work of art? In short, is there any real difference between cabbages and rosea? In one of the first and perhaps one of the most important of Matthew Arnold's critical pieces, the preface to his Early Poems, he deals with this ques- tion. The essay is a revolt against the mannered 282 [Nov. 1, THE DIAL detailed modern work in poetry—all foreground — and an appeal for the large masses and outlines of the ancients. Seize a great action, he tells the poet; approximate language will follow. It will — if the author is filled with the power of his theme, capable of being thrilled by its significance. Great actions are usually, the results of great causes; they take place among those who have that stamp of intellec- tual superiority which, far more than emotional agita- tion, is the mark of the highest type of literary creation. Emotion must exist in them, but it must find vent in deeds and words which denote mental power. The modern novelist, in painting the average man and woman, is necessarily debarred from great actions. His sense of fitness keeps him from put- ting into the mouths of his characters that concen- trated intellectual speech which was the privilege of the poets of the past. He tries to make up for these deficiencies by the analysis of character and of moods of mind. But just so far as he pushes this, his figures lose validity and vitality. They are seen to be puppets moved by himself — or, at the best, dissections of dead souls. Life seen near at hand is mostly detail. The trivial, the unimportant, the commonplace, do not fall away and leave the masses and the meanings of the scene apparent. Real contemporary life, there- fore, would seem to be suited mainly to comedy and social satire. Not until we get away from the foot- hills do the great mountains loom up. It is not that the heroic age is past — that there are no great souls, mighty intellects, wonderful actions, magnifi- cent settings for deed and character to-day. All these things doubtless crowd the world. But just as the singular and superb figures and actions which gleam to us out of the past were in their own time obscured by rivals or inferiors, so with us our best is hidden and hustled away in the multitude of happenings. In this sense it may be said that the commonplace is the uncommon which has not yet been tested by time and space. Practically, the great artists of literature who have brooded deepest over life have affected the distant or the past for their creations. They were not foolish enough to doubt that human life is al- ways essentially the same; they did not really believe in any Age of Gold, or Day of the Gods. But they knew that to evolve tragedy, romance, poetry, they must get away from the garish light of their own hour. All the great epic poems are pro- jections against the mists of antiquity. The great dramas are founded on traditions and legends of historical or immemorial past. Shakespeare has not one play of contemporary life — or if the Italian Comedies are contemporary, they get from remote- ness what they lack in age. Again and again modern poets and romance writers have entered the grave of the past to resurrect it. Goethe and Schiller, the German Romanticists, Scott, Byron, Rossetti, Hawthorne, Poe — one would have to call the roll of modern literature to name all who have, in the main, avoided their own day and their own native life. To be sure, there are exceptions. Per- haps Hugo's Lea MisSrobles is the most remarkable effort to find romance and tragedy at home. Is it successful? And are the Realists — the men and women of the last great revolt in literature, the artists who have refused to paint except direct from the model — are they successful? In comedy, in Bocial satire, there can of course be no doubt: that is their province, and Jane Austen and a hundred successors must live in letters. But in tragedy, in romance, have the Realists, the greatest of them,— Balzac, Turgenieff, Zola, Tolstoi, — done anything that will last beside the work of the older schools? Time alone can tell. Yet these authors have one of the sources of power that I have indicated above: they dive into the depths and draw forth its crea- tures of gloom and horror. They deal little with average fairly-contented or happy humanity. If anything saves them from posterity, it will be their pessimism. Charles Leonard Moore. CASUAL COMMENT. An educator and administrator op more than national fame was Daniel Coit Gilman, whose recent death was briefly noted in our last issue. Although we are inclined to identify him chiefly with the Johns Hopkins University, of which he was the first president and whose destinies he controlled for a quarter-century, his leadership in other good causes and large enterprises was enough to make him famous. His first educational position, after a thorough training at home and abroad, was the librarianship at Yale, to which he was appointed in 1855, at the age of twenty-four. But he soon transferred his interests and energies from the library to the class-room, being made professor of physical and political geography, and about the same time also secretary of the governing board of the Sheffield Scientific School. Two other offices, the superintendency of public schools and the sec- retaryship to the State Board of Education, fell to him before leaving New Haven, in 1872, to assume the presidency of the new University of California. His acceptance, three years later, of the task of shaping the first real university in this country, — "a place for the advanced special education of youth who have been prepared for its freedom by the discipline of a lower school," in Dr. Gilman's own words,—and his splendid success in building up an institution that soon ranked with the old uni- versities of Europe, are matters too familiar to need dwelling on here. The work of his last years as head of the Carnegie Institution at Washington, and his literary labors — chief of which is his "Life of James Monroe" in the American States- men Series — are less familiar to the public. Curi- ously enough, and perhaps somewhat unfortunately, Dr. Gilman's attention to matters of practical ad- ministration, to dealing with men and rubbing 1908.] 283 THE DIAL elbows with the world, had developed in him a cast of countenance that bespoke shrewdness and hard common sense rather than profound learning and intimate acquaintance with the world of letters. Thus he sometimes failed of being credited with the scholarship, wide rather than deep, that he un- doubtedly possessed. . , , The iniquitous book publisher, that cruel taskmaster who grinds the faces of poor authors and stubbornly refuses to conduct his business solely for the glory of literary art and the speedy emolument of writer-folk, plies his shameful trade from Greenland's icy mountains to India's coral strand (with some allowance for poetic license), and from where Aurora first tints with pink the morning sky to where Phoebus's car descends afar in a blaze of glory into the western wave. The "Japan Times" prints an article deploring the yoke of poverty imposed by publishers on the necks of long-suffering authors, and announcing the forma- tion of an association for diverting the stream of yen now pouring into publishers' pockets so that it shall henceforth empty into the purses of authors. "The Association," the writer proceeds, in language that we take pleasure in reproducing unaltered, '* has been mooted under the name 'Fushin-kai' by Messrs. Kikutei Taguchi, Shunyo Yanagawa, and others. According to its prospectus, members shall produce one work each every year; the copyright shall be preserved by the Association, ten per cent of the proceeds from the sale of the book shall be granted to the author, and the remainder shall be appropriated to the funds of the Association. The principal object of proceeding funds is to render re- lief to members." All very beautiful, but incom- plete. How about disastrous ventures? "Will ten per cent of the losses on an unsuccessful book be collected from the author and the remainder de- ducted from the "proceeding funds" of the Asso- ciation, or levied on its members? And is there to be any censorship or control of the works that the members are expected, willy-nilly, to produce, "one work each every year "? Brave schemes like this have flourished (in glowing prospectus) nearer home than Japan; but like the famous and (in all respects but one) admirable plan for belling the cat, their largeness of promise throws into total eclipse their meagreness of accomplishment. • • • A German Oscar Wilde, in the person of Franz Wedekind, is writing for the now world re- nowned "Chamber Theatre" in Berlin plays that are described as ultra-realistic, with strong lean- ings toward the erotic. The extreme realism is more properly Zolaesque, but interwoven are bits of epigram and repartee not unworthy of Oscar Wilde at his best. The theatre's revolving stage, with its seven faces for successive presentation to the audience, makes possible a bewilderingly rapid change of scene; so that many of Herr Wedekind's plays resemble, in the shortness of the segments into which they are cut, the breathless and harrowing tales serially told in the cheap daily newspaper. Details of the realistic effects aimed at (and often hit) at the "Chamber Theatre" are given by Mr. C. Valentine Williams in "The Contemporary Re- view." The very rising of the curtain is attended with solemn ceremony. First a gong is sounded somewhere at the back of the stage,— one heavy, booming note. The attendants glide noiselessly to the doors and close them; the lights are slowly dimmed till darkness is produced; then the gong sounds again, and with a soft rustle the green silk curtains divide, the drop rises, and the play begins. As the faintest ray of daylight would spoil the per- fect illusion, there are no matinees at the "Kam- merspielhaus"; and, moreover, calls before the cur- tain are forbidden, lest the charm should be broken. Besides Wedekind, Ibsen and Maeterlinck are played at this theatre. "Ghosts" is said to have been presented with a faithfulness of detail, a per- fection of acting, and a ruthlessness of subtle finesse, that were positively wrenching. On the whole, the reported plans and purposes of this Berlin enter- prise had raised hopes of rather better and worthier things than are now described by eye-witnesses. But the stage rarely rises to a level higher than the public on which it depends for support. The "Chamber Theatre" is unendowed, its managers are human, they have their bills to pay,—so what could one expect? ... Dante in Omarian quatrains would have at least, amid the countless translations of the Divina Commedia, the quality of novelty. The Rev. Dr. William Wilberforce Newton is said to be now en- gaged upon a new version of the poem, wherein he makes use of the four-line stanza rendered so fa- miliar to all the world by FitzGerald and his imita- tors and parodists. Not the entire poem, however, is to be thus rendered, considerable portions being modelled somewhat after the plan of the Greek chorus. Will it be possible to read any of Dante's lines in the metre of Omar and still feel that one is reading Dante? Take, for instance, the very open- ing stanzas, which Dr. Newton has thus turned into English: "Dark was the wood and devious was the way When in life's journey towards the close of day, Midmost twizt youth and age, a stubborn path Beguiled my feet that were not used to stray. "How hard a thing in truth it is to tell The rough and cruel steps I took! The spell Of terror worse than death which o'er me hung The while I loitered in this wooded dell. "Ah ! bitter was that fear, enmeshed with Fate! E'en Death itself seemed like a kindlier state. Yet what I saw when from the light I turned, And all the good I found, I will relate." There is much that is novel in Dr. Newton's plan of an English Dante, and we hope he will see fit to publish his work — the occupation and recreation of many leisure hours; but the feeling that he is in 284 [Nov. 1, THE DIAL, some sense infringing on FitzGerald's patent must be more or less present with his readers. Such, at any rate, has been our feeling in reading the few excerpts which have come to our notice. • • • The army of unemployed or would-be novelists responded nobly to the hundred-guinea prize lately offered by Mr. Fisher Unwin, the Lon- don publisher, for the best first novel (first by its author) submitted to him. This offer is said to have brought forth a stream of type-written matter estimated at eighteen miles in length — a result at once pitiful, pathetic, and amusing. Excepting a small fraction of a furlong, all those miles of inno- cent white paper, bescribbled with comedies and tragedies, with heroisms and villainies, with plots and counterplots, were to no purpose, except possi- bly to teach the deceitfulness of human hopes. The fortunate fraction, entitled "The Woman and the Sword," is from the pen of one Rupert Lorraine, who, by his coy reluctance to grant the publisher a personal interview, and by other marks of shyness, excites one's suspicions that "Rupert Lorraine" (happy commingling of Unguals and dentals, with one labial to give snap to the whole) may be a pseudonym, and also that the modestly shrinking Rupert may be a woman. The story, however, whatever its authorship, is to be published very soon, and is to be made the basis of still further prize offers, — for the best telegraphic criticism, not exceeding twelve words, of its merits (and de- fects?), for the best limerick inspired by its pages, and for the best imaginary portrait of the reticent Rupert . . . Miscorrections of misquotations are some- times amusing; but there is one in the October number of "The Author" that surprises and puz- zles more than it amuses. A correspondent, appar- ently well-read and not unused to handling a pen, takes issue with " C. K. S." ( even cis-Atlantic read- ers will recognize who is meant) on the literary ethics involved in a recent case in the English courts, and shows his approval of the court's decis- ion that literary work should not be liable to "re- hash on the part of irresponsible editors." The writer then adds: "But the many lovers of Fitz- gerald must have squirmed at so hideous a misquo- tation as fell from the lips of the great littirateur during the progress of the case. . . . 'Ah, take the cash in hand, and let the credit go,' 'C. K. S.' was reported to have said, which does not so correctly interpret his attitude towards literary work as what Fitzgerald really wrote: 'Ah, take the cash in hand, and waive the rest.'" If this last is a vari- ant reading of the third line of FitzGerald's thir- teenth quatrain, it is certainly an unfamiliar one. This volunteered correction from one signing him- self "Omar," together with the incorrect form of FitzGerald's name, makes one wonder whether the Tent-maker and his English translator are al- ready falling into oblivion in England. An English reader of The Dial seems angered by the examples of misquoted poetry taken from a prominent London weekly and printed in a recent issue, and he retorts, with little logic and no signature, that the locution "from whence," which appears in the same paragraph, is "ignorant usage" such as "a third form schoolboy would be flogged" if guilty of. The schoolboy might offer in defense that the phrase appears in the works of standard English authors, and that the International Dictionary says of it: "From whence is fully authorized by good usage." But this would prob- ably increase, rather than allay, the anger of our pleonastic friend. COMMUNICA TIONS. DID ST. PETER "PETER OUT"? (To the Editor of The Dial.) In your latest issue is a discussion of the source of the expression " peter out." The dictionaries throw no light on the subject. Perhaps that is because the etymology of the phrase is so obvious, particularly to anybody who has a tolerable familiarity with the Bible. You will remember that Peter denied Christ. He " Petered out" in the most shameful way at a critical time in the life of the great teacher. There is no chance for the learning of the scholars in this matter. The thing is obvious on ite face- Clinton B. Evans. Chicago, October 30, 1908. THE ORIGIN OF "PETER OUT." (To the Editor of The Dial.) In the matter of " peter-out," passing the almost too obvious suggestion of Peter's weakness at the trial of Jesus, for this recent phrase we seek a modern origin. Peter was a fisherman; hence he was early taken as the patron saint of that craft. The guild of Fishmongers in London has the cross-keys of St. Peter in its armorial bearings. It is not strange, then, if Peter and fish are often found together in phrase and fable. The haddock is named in France morue dt Saint Pierre, bearing on his shoulders two dark spots that show where the saint pinched him when he took the tribute coin from his month; and elsewhere the "John-dory" is a peterfish with the same tradition. Hunting for an etymology in a Danish dictionary, I ran upon the singular fact that a "Peterman " is a fisherman; and Halliwell, Wright, and Hotten say the same thing; but Hotten limits this use of the word at the present time to Gravesend on the Thames. A "peterboat" is defined in the Standard Dictionary as a fishing-boat pointed alike at both ends; also, a crate to float in the water and keep fish alive: said to be a "local U. S. usage." The Webster International does better: "A peterboat is a fishing-boat sharp at both ends." HalUwell (Arch, and Prov. Engl., edit. 1865) says, " A boat which is built sharp at each end and can therefore be moved either way." He calls it a Suffolk word, from the east coast of England. Wright agrees on this. But hear Admiral W. H. Smyth of the Royal Navy (of whose many books see Allibone): "Peterboat 1908.] 285 THE DIAL of the Thames and Medway, so named for St. Peter, the patron of fishermen. . . . These boats were first brought from Norway and the Baltic. They are generally short, shallow, sharp at both ends, with a well for fish in the centre £here is the Standard's crate], 225 feet over all, and six feet beam " (Sailors' Wordbook, 1867, s. v.). Notice that all these definitions pnt stress on the sharpness of the ends of the boat Here then is the original of " peter-out," to grow small or thin. Hotten (Slang Dictionary, 1865) defines the verb, "to peter, to run short or give out." Bartlett (Dictionary of Americanisms, edit. 1877) says, "To peter out, to exhaust, to run out." He quotes two examples, — from the Boston Post, 1876, "the mines were petered out," making the verb passive, or like is gone, it /alien; from the N. T. Tribune, "the influence of the Hon. seems to have quite petered out." But I first heard "peter-out" nearly twenty years earlier, in 1858, from a New Hampshire man. He had been on a farm, and later in a printing-office in Dover, a river city; still later he was among the lumbermen of Minnesota. The word in his mind had no relation to mining. This fact, and Hotten's definition in 1865, prove that the Standard Dictionary certainly errs in defining the word as primarily a mining term. It says: "In mining, to thin out, become exhausted: said of a vein or seam: and used with out: colloquially extended to anything that fails, or loses its power, efficiency, or value." On the contrary, the phrase was extended to mining from its wider sense. The definition in the Webster International is correct, but is plainly made up from Bartlett; and it is erroneously marked "Slang, U. S." But I have shown that it is English in origin. As peterboat preceded peter out, I am warranted in deriv- ing the verb from the tapering shape of the boat, thin and sharp. There are two other verbs that I should notice: (1) peter, to act the Peter Funk at an auction, making fic- titious bids; this is purely American; (2) the English pether (Wright, Prov. Diet., and Halliwell), "to run; to ram; to do anything quickly or in a hurry." This is in use in America; for instance, "I'm gwine to peter down to Washington" (Chicago Evening Post, 1871). _. Samuel Willard. Chicago, October t4, 1908. A QUESTION OF MISQUOTATION. (To the Editor of The Dial.) In regard to the misquotation of an extract from "The Rainy Day," commented on in the "Communi- cations" department of your last issue, where an English writer is accused of making seven errors in quoting two lines from Longfellow's familiar poem, I notice that four of the errors are caused by the sub- stitution of the last line of the third stanza of the poem (correctly quoted) for the last line of the first stanza, which is thus incorrectly quoted. That is, four of the seven words that are wrong are really Long- fellow's, and appear elsewhere in the poem. H. W. F. Cambridge, Matt., October S6, 1908. [It is true that the substitutional words appear elsewhere in the poem. They appear also in the dictionary.—Edr. Dial.] THE PUBLIC LIBRARY AND THE WORKINGMAN. (To the Editor of Thk Dial.) Referring to the paragraph on page 202 of The Dial of October 1, giving an account of the " Boston cabman of literary tastes," it occurs to me that your readers might be interested in seeing a list of books which one of our branch librarians recently reported to me as having been read by a worker in the Wolverine Brass Works in this city. It is the purpose of this enter- prising working-man to take up the history of all the countries in a similar way. This is his list: Prescott, "Conquest of Mexico," "Conquest of Peru"; Donnelly, "Atlantis"; Young, "Rome"; Hudson, " Greece"; Okey, * Story of Venice ;Crawford, " Salve Venetia "; Myers, "General History"; Breasted, " History of Egypt." I am sure such a list might be parallelled by other libraries if they keep track of what individuals are reading. Samuel H. Rauck, Librarian. Grand Rapidt Public Library, October 20, 1908. THE ADMINISTRATION OF THE UNIVERSITY OF ILLINOIS. (To the Editor of Thb Dial.) Enclosed please find a communication which is called forth by an article lately appearing in the public press, attacking the administration of the University of Illinois. The Senate of this University consists of the whole body of full professors, and may be presumed to voice the University sentiment in any matter it takes action about. It will be seen that this body has adopted an absolutely unqualified vote of confidence in the President of the University and his administration of University affairs. If you will kindly give this communication a place in your columns, you will confer a favor on the Faculty of the University of Blinois. Arthuk H. Daniels, Professor of Philosophy, Secretary of the Senate. Urbana, Illinois, October 16, 1908. At a meeting of the Senate of the University of Illinois, held Thursday afternoon, October 15, the following resolu- tions were adopted: Whereas, There is ground for apprehending that recent articles in the press may lead the public to think that academic freedom is suppressed or interfered with at the University of Illinois by the President, or that tenure of office is insecure because of autocratic administration; there- fore, without entering at all into a discussion of the case referred to in said article, be it Resolved, By the Senate of the University of Illinois (a body which includes all heads of departments and full professors in the University), that it is our belief that each member of the faculty has entire freedom of opinion; that he is free to express his opinions on all matters of University administration and educational policy to his colleagues and to the President without interference and without fear that it will endanger his position. Resolved, That we hereby express our confidence in the President of the University and our conviction that he admin- isters his high office as a colleague rather than as a superior. Resolved, That in the opinion of the University Senate the course of the administration has been such as to stimulate to a marked degree the higher scientific and educational interests of the University. Resolved, That as members of the faculty we assure the President of our loyal and hearty support in the varied and difficult responsibilities imposed upon him as the executive head of this University. 286 [Nov. 1, THE DIAL tyt itfa ioohs. A Woman in Unknown Labrador.* Few books of exploration have commanded so wide an interest, on the part of such varied classes of readers, as Mr. Dillon Wallace's "The Lure of the Labrador Wild " and " The Long Labrador Trail." In the former, Mr. Wallace told of the unsuccessful attempt, in 1903, of Leonidas Hubbard, Jr., himself and an Indian guide named George Elson, to traverse the interior of Labrador northward. Starvation was Hubbard's fate; Wallace narrowly escaped the same death after struggling heroically to save his leader and comrade; the Indian guide, with centuries of endurance as his heritage, suc- ceeded in reaching a settlement and sending aid — in time for Wallace, too late for Hubbard. In the second book Wallace related his success- ful attempt (two years later), inspired by the example of his friend, to accomplish the task that Hubbard had undertaken. It would be curious to appraise at their true value the elements of these narratives which have led to their wide circulation. In point of scientific value, neither can be compared with scores of travel books — notably, recent vol- umes of Arctic exploration. Probably the true reasons for the far-spread interest they awak- ened were, first, their appeal to the average, active, out-of-doors sort of man as the narrative of an adventure within the range of his own foresight, fortitude, and strength; and, second, the tense dramatic style of the narrator, and the intimate, elemental and deeply tragic events of the first book, and to a lesser degree of the second. Now, Mrs. Leonidas Hubbard, Jr., gives us the narrative of her own successful effort to complete her husband's unfinished work in order that his name " should reap the fruits of service which had cost him so much." To the story of her journey she appends the diary of her hus- band from the outset of his trip to the time he fell asleep forever, and the narrative of George Elson, his guide, covering his own experiences on that first fatal trip. The book is very fully illustrated; there are excellent portraits of Mrs. Hubbard and her husband, and a map which enables the reader to follow every weary portage, every night's camp, and almost every dip of • A Woman's Way through Unknown Labrador. An Account of the Exploration of the Nascaupee and George Rivers. By Mrs. Leonidas Hubbard, Jr. Illustrated. New York: The McClure Co. the paddle that carried this courageous woman through the wilderness. Mrs. Hubbard started by canoe from the Northwest River post, at the head of Groswater Bay, June 27, 1905 (not July 27, as an inex- cusable typographical error on page 24 would have us believe). Her companions were four in number — Elson, who had been her husband's guide; Joseph Iserhoff, a Russian half-breed; Job Chapies, a pure-blood Cree Indian; and Gilbert Blake, a half-breed Eskimo boy trap- per, — the last, unlike the others, a resident of Labrador. Her outfit included two canvas- covered canoes, nineteen feet long, thirteen inches deep, and thirty-four inches wide, and with each of them three paddles and a sponge. The remainder of the outfit consisted of two balloon-silk tents, one stove, seven water-proof canvas bags, one dozen ten-pound waterproof balloon-silk bags, three tarpaulins, 392 pounds of flour, four pounds of baking powder, fifteen pounds of rice, twenty cans of standard emer- gency rations, twelve pounds of tea, twelve pounds of chocolate, sixty pounds of sugar, twenty pounds of erbswurst, one ounce of crys- talose, four cans of condensed milk, four cans of condensed soup, four pounds of hard-tack, two hundred pounds of bacon, fourteen pounds of salt. She had also kitchen utensils, three small axes, one crooked knife, and two nets. The firearms were two rifles — a 45-70 with sixty rounds of ammunition, and a 38—55 with a hun- dred rounds. Each of the men had a 22 calibre single-shot pistol for small game, a pair of light wool camp-blankets, and an extra pair of " shoe- packs." Mrs. Hubbard was, of course provided with a revolver, fishing-tackle, kodaks, films, a sextant, and an artificial horizon. With naive femininity she says: "I wore a short skirt over knickerbockers, a short sweater, and a belt. . . . My hat was a rather narrow brimmed soft felt. I had one pair of heavy leather moc- casins reaching almost to my knees, one pair of high sealskin boots, one pair low ones, and three pairs of duffel. Of underwear I had four suits and five pairs of stockings, all wool. I took also a rubber automobile shirt, a long Swedish dog-skin coat, one pair leather gloves, one pair woolen gloves, and a blouse — for Sundays. For my tent, I had an air mattress, crib-size, one pair light camp blankets, one light wool comfortable weighing Si lbs., one little feather pillow, and a hot- water bottle." From Grand Lake Mrs. Hubbard passed into the Nascaupee River without difficulty, but not without thoughts of the dreadful error which had led her husband's party to pass by its out- let and enter the fatal Susan River, five miles beyond. By canoe and portage she followed the 1908.] 287 THE DIAL northwesterly course of the Nascaupee, leaving it only for the long portage to Seal Lake, which she reached in three weeks, the distance covered being a hundred and fifteen miles. From Seal Lake the Nascaupee River carried her westerly to Lake Michikamau — Lake Michikamau, which her husband had been destined to see, but never to reach, ere he turned discouraged backward for the desperate struggle to reach the coast before winter. Through Michikamau her route was northward again to Lake Michi- kamats, and thence by a chain of small lakes to the very source of the Nascaupee and the George River, the height of land from which she would thenceforth travel downward instead of upward, though northward still, her hopes and fears now centred on reaching Ungava Bay. She had now travelled three hundred miles. Her journey had been one of compelling interest; she had found Labrador beautiful," with a strange, wild beauty, the remembrance of which buries itself silently in the deep parts of one's being." In the beginning, she says, there had been no response to it in her heart; but gradually, in its silent way, it had won, "and now was like the strength-giving presence of an understand- ing friend." She had not experienced hardship. Weariness and discomfort she had met with de- termined good-humor and optimism. The northward descent, the second half of the journey, was made on the George River, and the descriptions of its rapids are among the best in the book. Near one of the lakes of the upper George, Mrs. Hubbard had the good for- tune to witness the migration of the caribou, which she thus describes: "We pushed on, keeping close to the west shore of the lake. Little more than a mile further up, the men caught sight of deer feeding not far from the water's edge. We landed, and climbing to the top of the rock wall saw a herd of fifteen or more feeding in the swamp. I watched them almost breathless. They were very beautiful, and it was an altogether new and delightful experience to me. Soon they saw us, and trotted off into the bush, though without sign of any great alarm! George and Job made off across the swamp to investigate, and not long after returned, their eyes blazing with excite- ment, to say that there were hundreds of them not far away. Slipping hurriedly back into the canoes, we paddled rapidly and silently to near the edge of the swamp. Beyond it was a barren hill, which from near its foot sloped more gradually to the water. Along this bank, where this lower slope dropped to the swamp, lay a number of stags, with antlers so immense that I won- dered how they could possibly carry them. Beyond, the lower slope of the hill seemed to be a solid mass of caribou, while its steeper part was dotted over with many feeding on the luxuriant moss. "Those lying along the bank got up at sight of us, and withdrew toward the great herd in rather leisurely manner, stopping now and then to watch us curiously. When the herd was reached, and the alarm given, the stags lined themselves up in the front rank and stood facing us, with heads high, and a rather defiant air. It was a magnificent sight. They were in summer garb of pretty brown, shading to light grey and white on the under parts. The horns were in velvet, and those of the stags seemed as if they must surely weigh down the heads on which they rested. It was a mixed company, for male and female were already herding together. I started toward the herd, kodak in hand, accompanied by George, while the others remained at the shore. The splendid creatures seemed to grow taller as we ap- proached, and when we were within two hundred and fifty yards of them their defiance took definite form, and with determined step they came toward us. "The sight of that advancing army under such leader- ship was decidedly impressive, recalling vivid mental pictures made by tales of the stampeding wild cattle in the west. It made one feel like getting back to the canoe and that is what we did. . . . We and the caribou stood watching each other for some time! Then the caribou began to run from either extreme of the herd, some round the south end of the hill, and the others away to the north, the line of stags still maintaining their position. ... A short paddle carried us round the point . . . and there we saw them swimming across the lake. Three quarters of a mile out was an island, a barren ridge, standing out of the water, and from mainland to island they formed as they swam an unbroken bridge; from the farther end of which they poured in steady stream over the hill-top, their flying forms clearly out- lined against the sky. How long we watched them I could not say, for I was too excited to take any note of time; but finally the main body had passed. Yet when we landed above the point from which they had crossed, companies of them, eight, ten, fifteen, twenty in a herd, were to be seen in all directions. . . . The country was literally alive with the beautiful creatures and they did not seem to be much frightened. They apparently wanted only to keep what seemed to them a safe distance between us, and would stop to watch us curiously within easy rifle shot. Yet I am glad that I can record that not a shot was fired at them. Gilbert was wild, for he had in him the hunter's instinct in fullest measure. The trigger of Job's rifle clicked longingly, but they never forgot that starvation broods over Labrador, and that the animal they longed to shoot might some time save the life of one in just such extremity as that reached by Mr. Hubbard and his party two years before. . . . For fifty miles of our journey beyond this point we saw com- panies of caribou every day, and sometimes many times a day, though we did not again see them in such numbers. The country was a net-work of their trails, in the wood- lands and bogs cut deep into the soft soil, on the barren hillsides, broad dark bands converging to the crossing place at the river." The caribou seem to have been on their way to the highlands between the George River and the Atlantic. Mrs. Hubbard believes herself the first person to have witnessed the migration of the great herd, save the Indians, who slaughter the caribou in great numbers during this period. It was the expectation of the party to find the Nascaupee Indians and secure from them some information as to the character of the George 288 [Nov. 1, THE DIAL River whose waters they must now traverse to their journey's end. The guides were appre- hensive. « Turning to me, George remarked, 'You are giving that revolver a fine rubbing up to-night.' "«Yes,' I replied, laughing a little, 'I am getting ready for the Nascaupees.' "' They would not shoot you,' he said gravely. «It would be us they would kill if they took the notion. Whatever their conjuror tells them to do, they will do.' "'No,' asserted Gilbert, 'they would not kill you, Mrs. Hubbard. It would be to keep you at their camp that they would kill us.' "I had been laughing at George a little, but Gilbert's startling announcement induced a sudden sobriety. As I glanced from one to the other, the faces of the men were all unwontedly serious. There was a whirl of thoughts for a moment, and then I asked, 'What do you think I shall be doing while they are killing you? You do not need to think that because I will not kill rabbits, or ptarmigan, or caribou, I should have any objection to killing a Nascaupee Indian if it were neoes- sary.' Nevertheless, the meeting with the Indians had for me assumed a new and more serious aspect, and, remembering their agony of fear lest some harm befall me ere we reached civilization again, I realized how the situation seemed to the men. When I went to my tent it was to lie very wide awake, turning over in my mind plans of battle in case the red men proved aggressive." The meeting with the Nascaupee Indians proved, however, to be one of the most agree- able incidents of the trip. The first inquiry of the Indians was for tobacco, and then hands were extended in greeting. In broken English, but with expressive gestures, the Indians in- formed them of the distance and course yet to be travelled. An arm held at an angle showed the rapids to be expected, and a vigorous drop of the hand indicated the falls. Best of all was the assurance that if they travelled fast they would sleep but five times before reaching the post atUngava. This meant that Mrs. Hubbard would arrive in time to secure passage on the last steamer leaving before the long Labrador winter set in. The Indians were hospitable, but no gallantries were attempted except a very diplomatic and indirect effort on the part of one young brave to make an impression on the fair visitor. "One of the young men, handsomer than the others, and conscious of the fact, had been watching me through- out with evident interest. He was not only handsomer but his leggings were redder. As we walked up toward the camp he went a little ahead, and to one side. A little distance from where we landed was a row of bark canoes turned upside down. As we passed them he turned, and, to make sure that those red leggings should not fail of their mission, he put his foot up on one of the canoes, pretending, as I passed, to tie his moccasin, the while watching for the effect." From the Nascaupee camp the George River was an almost continuous course of rapids. There were stretches, miles in length, when the slope of the river was a steep gradient, and Mrs. Hubbard held her breath as the canoe shot down at toboggan speed. There was not only the slope down, but a distinct tilt from one side to the other of the river could be observed. Even when the water was smooth and apparently motionless (though actually tremendously swift) the slope downward was clearly marked. "But more weird and uncanny than wildest cascade or rapid was the dark vision which opened out before us at the head of Slanting Lake. The picture in my memory still seems unreal and mysterious, but the actual one was as disturbing as an evil dream. Down, down, down the long slope before us stretched the lake and river, black as ink under leaden sky and shadowing hills. The lake, which was three-quarters of a mile wide, dipped not only with the course of the river but appeared to dip also from one side to the other. Not a ripple or touch of white could be sean anywhere. All seemed motionless as if an unseen hand had touched and stilled it. A death- like quiet reigned and as we glided smoothly down with the tide we could see all about us a soft, boiling motion at the surface of this black flood which gave the sense of treachery as well as mystery." The travelling day was a short one during this part of the trip; the strain on the men was too intolerable to be borne for many hours. The nights were made hideous by the mosquitoes. The flies had nearly driven Mrs. Hubbard to distraction at an earlier period of the journey. Even a heavy veil, of several thicknesses, was insufficient protection. And so they raced down to the bay and found they had arrived ahead of the ship whose depar- ture without them they had feared so strongly. Summing up, they found they had travelled 576 miles from post to post; the trip occupied forty- three days of actual travelling, eighteen days in camp. They had started with 750 pounds of provisions, 392 of which was flour; their surplus was 150 pounds, of which 105 pounds was flour. The results claimed by Mrs. Hubbard for her journey are pioneer maps of the Nascaupee and George Rivers, that of the Nascaupee showing Seal Lake and Lake Michikamau to be in the same drainage basin — proof that the Northwest and Nascaupee are not two distinct rivers, but one, the outlet of Lake Michikamau; some notes by the way on the topography, geology, flora and fauna of the country traversed. From her own experience Mrs. Hubbard con- cludes that had the season in which her husband made the journey, one of unprecedented sever- ity, been the more normal one in which her own trip was made, he would have returned safe and triumphant, despite his failure to find the open waterway to Lake Michikamau. His outfit and THE DIAL 289 provisions, she believes, would have been ample under normal conditions ; but she reminds those who have criticized him for lack of foresight in planning his outfit, that he did not plan it him- self. Mrs. Hubbard's story occupies about two hundred pages. The remaining hundred pages are made up of a partial transcript of her husband's diary, and the narrative of Elson, the guide, with reference to the first expedition. The Hubbard diary is, for the most part, written in short phrases from which unnecessary words are omitted, — notes, evidently, for the story he meant to write at the conclusion of his jour- ney, the story finally written by another hand. Here are his last written words: "My tent is pitched in open tent style in front of a big rock. The rock reflects the fire, but now it is going out because of the rain. I think I shall let it go and close the tent, till the rain is over, thus keeping out rain and saving wood. Tonight or tomorrow perhaps the weather will improve so I can build a fire, eat the rest of my moccasins, and have some bone broth. Then I can boil my belt and oil tanned moccasins and a pair of cow-hide mittens. They ought to help some. I am not suffering. The acute pangs of hunger have given way to indifference. I am sleepy. I think death from starvation is not so bad. But let no one suppose that I expect it. I am prepared, that is all. I think the boys will be able, with the Lord's help, to save me." The latter half of the diary is perhaps as vivid a description of human suffering as ever was given to the world to read. Elson's diary contains an unbelievable state- ment with regard to Wallace — that for the sake of recovering the much-used and probably broken-in canoe he would have had Elson re- turn to the wilderness soon after Hubbard's body bad been recovered. Aside from this, the Elson diary is most interesting, and in its own way supplements the earlier narratives. Mrs. Hubbard has accomplished a hazardous undertaking, requiring such courage and endur- ance as only a woman of rare character would have possessed. Her book should command a wide circle of interested readers. It is to be regretted, however, that her account lacks both definiteness and good form in its presentation; there are hopeless and involved anti-climaxes when striking situations afforded opportunities for quite the opposite effects. One reader, at least, has been pained by the evident deprecia- tion, throughout her book, of Wallace's services to her husband and loyalty to his memory, as evidenced in the earlier books and by Hubbard's own diary. Private differences, if there be such, should not have led Mrs. Hubbard to set down aught in malice. By inference, she clearly gives all the credit for the heroic effort to save her husband's life to Elson: to him belongs the praise for heroism almost beyond belief. But it should be remembered that when, after finding the dis- carded flour, it was Elson's duty to seek his way out of the wilderness; he knew that every step he took, painful and desperate as his condition was, took him nearer to light and warmth and food and the friends he was to send back to the rescue. But Wallace shouldered his sack of mouldy flour, bade farewell to Elson, and turned his face resolutely back again toward the wilder- ness — toward that tent in the very valley of the shadow of death; back to find, if he could, the dying man to whom he carried food, there per- haps to die with him ere the rescuers came. He is not the less a hero that he failed, — and he did not sink down in despair until he had gone the full distance back to the tent, and beyond it, missing it with his blinded eyes, still strug- gling with naked frozen feet through the snow to find his friend. They were all three heroic in their courage and devotion to each other, their patience and their hopefulness. But there were three heroes, not two, — and the number of them should not be lessened as the tale is told. Munson Aldrich Havens. The Tragedy of Korea.* To the already imposing literature of protest which the passing of Korean independence has called forth in three short years, a fresh and noteworthy addition has recently been made in a volume by Mr. McKenzie, English traveller and journalist, under the title of " The Tragedy of Korea." Of distinct merits, the book posses- ses not a few. For one thing, it is not unduly ambitious; and for a book of its class that is saying a good deal. It makes no attempt to. attack and despatch all things Oriental, past, present, and future. Its scope is definite and its treatment concise. If at first glance it appears a slight piece of work, it will be found a more satisfying book than the majority of its kind, and the jaded reader should be thankful for its lack of the customary journalistic "dead mat- ter." In the second place, the book is the work of a man who has been long upon the ground and who writes entirely from observation or other first-hand sources of information. And in the third place, though obviously intended as an arraignment of Japan for her recent course * The Tragedy of Korea. By F. A. McKenzie. Illustrated. New York: E. P. Dutton St Co. 290 [Nov. 1, THE DIAL, in Korea, the volume comes from the pen of an Englishman who was until recently an ardent admirer of the Japanese, and who, reluctantly brought by events to a change of sentiment, is as fair-minded and conservative in his judgments as any writer upon so vexed a subject can well be. Approximately, the first third of the volume is taken up with a running sketch of the opening of Korea, from the ill-fated visit of the American schooner " General Sherman" in 1866 and the conclusion of the first Japanese-Korean treaty in 1876 to the outbreak of the recent Russo- Japanese war. The Korean aspects of the Chino- Japanese war and of the treaty of Shimonoseki, together with the striking events following the murder of the Korean queen in 1895, are described in an unusually intelligible manner. Then follows a careful account of the period from 1895 to the Russo-Japanese war and the treaty of Portsmouth. The inevitableness of the conflict is clearly brought out, together with the reasons why such a war was certain to be epochal in the history of the Korean peninsula. The body of the book, however, is devoted to the brief period since the Peace of Portsmouth, and more particularly to the operations of the Japanese in the Hermit Kingdom since that date. Mr. McKenzie has been in Korea con- tinuously during these years, and has had under his eye the methods and processes by which the influence of Japan has been made all-pervasive and all-powerful among the Korean people. In a succession of vivid chapters he sets forth a melancholy record of devastation, plunder, cruelty, and ruin, wrought by Japanese troops and officials throughout the peninsula in course of the work of "pacification." Describing a horseback observation trip in the vicinity of I-Chhon, he writes as follows: "We rode on through village after village and ham- let after hamlet burned to the ground. The very atti- tude of the people told me that the hand of Japan had struck hard there. We would come upon a boy carrying a load of wood. He would run quickly to the side of the road when he saw us, expecting he knew not what. We passed a village with a few houses left. The women flew to shelter as I drew near. Some of the stories that I heard later helped me to judge why they should run. Of course they took me for a Japanese. All along the route I heard tales of the Japanese plundering, where they had not destroyed. Here the village elders would bring me an old man badly beaten by a Japanese soldier because he resisted being robbed. Then came darker stories. In Seoul I had laughed at them. Now, face to face with the victims, I could laugh no more. That afternoon we rode into I-Chhon itself. This is quite a large town. I found it practically deserted. Most of the people had fled to the hills to escape the Japanese. I slept that night in a school-house, now deserted and unused. There were the cartoons and animal pictures and pious mottoes around, but the children were far away. I passed through the market-place, usually a very busy spot. There was no sign of life there. I turned to some of the Koreans. < Where are your women? Where are your children?' I demanded. They pointed to the high and barren hills looming against the distant heavens. < They are up there,' they said. 'Better for them to lie on the barren hill-sides than to be ontraged here.'" And so the mournful story goes, chapter after chapter. Allowing as much as one may for possible over-drawing, it is still plain that we have here a record of bloodshed and ruin which challenges the attention of the civilized world. In a very interesting chapter on " The Suppres- sion of Foreign Criticism," the author considers the natural query as to why the Europeans and Americans resident in Korea did not make known the full facts about the Japanese administration at an earlier date. "Some of them did attempt it," he asserts, "but the strong feeling that generally existed abroad in favor of the Japanese people—a feeling due to the magnificent con- duct of the nation during the war—caused com- plaints to go unheeded." And he declares that scores like himself, alienated by the mistakes and follies of Russia's Far Eastern policies and favorably impressed by the qualities of the Japanese which caught the fancy of the whole world, looked on for a long time in silence, unwilling to believe anything but the best of the sturdy antagonists of the Muscovite. Per- haps the most interesting portion of the whole book is the account of the journalistic rivalries of the pro-Japanese and anti-Japanese parties in Seoul, with particular reference to the work of Mr. Bethell, the editor of the " Korea Daily News." Although high officials at Tokio, such as Viscount Teranchi, Minister of War and Acting Minister of Foreign Affairs, are insistently pro- claiming that Japan's programme is not one of empire, of conquest, and of war, Mr. McKenzie refuses to be convinced. In his concluding chapter he contends that the policy of Japan in Korea to-day "cannot be fully understood unless it is regarded, not as an isolated manifestation, but as apart of a great Imperial scheme.'' Japan, he asserts, has set out to be a great world-power, and she is rapidly realizing her ambition. Else- where he declares: "I, for one, am convinced that we owe it to ourselves and to our ally, Japan, to let it be clearly known that a policy of Imperial expansion based upon breaches of solemn treaty obligations to a weaker nation, and built up by odious cruelty, by needless slaughter, and by a wholesale theft of the private property rights of a 1908.] 291 THE DIAL dependent and defenceless peasantry, is repugnant to our instincts and cannot fail to rob the nation that is doing it of much of that respect and goodwill with which we all so recently regarded her." Mr. McKenzie confesses to a very profound respect for the capacities of the Japanese people, but it is his belief that in her striving to become a world-power the nation is at present over-reach- ing herself. Indeed, he is generous enough to attribute the Empire's obnoxious Korean policies to the grinding economic conditions prevailing since the war. "Japan," he says," has broken her solemn promises to Korea, and has evaded in every way her pledged obligations to maintain the policy of equal opportunities, because she is driven thereto by heavy taxation, by the poverty of her people, and by the necessity of obtaining fresh markets and new lands for settlement." But that these are the impelling forces rather than mere rampant imperialism, does not help matters for Korea. Her lot Mr. McKenzie regards as palpably unhappy, and as likely to continue so unless Japanese energies shall be turned in other directions. Obviously, there is a good deal that might be said— a good deal that has been said — on the other side. But the statements of fact and the assertions of opinion which Mr. McKenzie has set down in his little book are abundantly worth giving to the world. There is an appendix containing a number of the essential documents, and there are numer- ous excellent illustrations, which are also the author's handiwork. But, unfortunately, there is no index. Frederic Austin Ogg. Canadians of IiONG Ago.* In the very readable volume entitled " Cana- dian Types of the Old Regime," Professor Colby does not profess to have brought forward any strikingly new material. His aim is, rather, to approach the life of Old Canada by an untried route; to present certain phases of that life in a manner that, as he has applied it, is both novel and effective. To secure distinctness, in discuss- ing various aspects of French colonization in the New World, "the examples have been drawn, chapter by chapter, from some one career. Or, rather, a single personage has been made the representative of a class, and in considering the large subject with which he is connected, certain features of his experience are rendered promin- ent. But," the author adds, "this method does * Canadian Types of the Old Rkgime, 1606-1696. By Charles W. Colby. New York: Henry Holt & Co. not involve the exact portraiture of individuals, nor does it exclude minor figures from the field of the discussion." The subject is opened by an admirable intro- ductory chapter on " The Historical Background of New France." Professor Colby points out the strong influence of the Renaissance, and of the Reformation, upon the colonization of New France; and sketches briefly and skilfully the relations of the king, the nobles, the great min- isters Richelieu, Mazarin, and Colbert, and the Church, respectively, to the colony, as well as the effect which the neighboring colonies of New England had upon the development of New France. In succeeding chapters, he takes up the several colonial types one by one. Champ- lain is taken as the type of the Explorer, but not entirely to the exclusion of the other famous pathfinders of Old Canada, such as La Salle, Marquettef Joliet, and Nicolet. Similarly, Bre- beuf is taken as type of the Missionary, the personalities of other Jesuit martyrs being grouped around that heroic figure of New France. Opportunity is found for a discus- sion of the attitude of the Roman Catholic Church and the Calvinists toward missions, and the rela- tions of the several orders, Jesuits, Re"collets, and Sulpicians, toward New France and each other. With Louis Hubert as his type of the Col- onist, Professor Colby sketches effectively the commercial life of Canada under the Old Regime, the fur-trade, Richelieu and the Com- pany of the Hundred Associates, the exclusion of the Huguenots, the seigniorial system and its effect upon the habitant the coureur de bois, etc. With DTberville as a central point, the Soldier type of New France is presented. We are reminded not only of the romantic exploits of D'Iberville himself in Hudson Bay and else- where— exploits as dramatic and fascinating as anything in fiction — but of many other incidents of pluck and heroism, the story of Dollard's matchless self-sacrifice at the Long Sault, the adventures of Francois Hertel, Maisonneuve and the Iroquois, Frontenac's raids against the British colonies, etc. Du Lhut, as type of the coureur de bois, introduces us to one of the most fascinating phases of the life of New France — the fur- trader, with his curious blending of commerce and romance. Du Lhut's own adventures, his relations with La Salle, his rescue of Hennepin (most mendacious of historians) from the Sioux, are sufficiently interesting; but they pale before the exploits of that matchless adventurer Kadis- 292 [Nov. 1, THE DIAL son and his brother-in-law Groseilliers. Of the remaining chapters, Laval furnishes a type for the Bishop; and the Governor is represented by Frontenac. In the final chapter, the author brings together a great deal of interesting material bearing on the position of Women in New France, contrasting the women of France and of Canada in the seventeenth century, and quoting the entertaining account of the Swedish traveller, Peter Kalm. For the rest, we have striking word-pictures of some of the more famous women of New France — the heroine Madeleine de Vercheres, the Duchesse d'Aiguillon and the hospital at Quebec, Madame de la Peltrie and the Ursulines, Marie de l'lncarnation, Jeanne Mance and the hospital at Montreal, Marguerite Bourgeoys and the Nuns of the Congregation. All this is both informing and entertaining. "History," says Professor Colby, "does not exist simply for the benefit of the erudite, and there are always some to whom a book is recom- mended by the absence of specific gravity." No one could call this book heavy, and yet even the erudite might find much in it that would repay perusal. Its foundation, it may be added, is a course of lectures originally delivered by Pro- fessor Colby before the May Court Club at Ottawa, Canada. Lawrence j. Burpee. The Spanish Inquisition in History.* The last few years have witnessed a remark- able activity in the field of American histor- iography. Scholars who but recently were engaged in monographic investigations appear to have developed a sudden desire to work in broader fields, to present results already ob- tained rather than give all their energies to the examination of difficult and disputed problems. As a consequence, the historical side of Amer- ican literature is developing as never before. Abroad, however, if we may judge from the scanty notices that some of our best recent productions have received in literary journals, little attention is being paid to this develop- ment. Except in a general way, the European student is not interested in American history; and as most of our historical writers are study- ing the annals of our own country their work does not appeal, as it might, to foreign scholars. It is the subject-matter, and not deficiencies in * A History of the Inquisition of Spain. By Henry Charles Lea. In four volumes. New York: The Macmillan Co. The Inquisition in the Spanish Dependencies. By Henry Charles Lea. New York: The Macmillan Co. quality, that prevents the American historian from receiving merited recognition abroad. Still, there is at least one American writer of history whose fame is great in Europe — greater, perhaps, than in his own country. Forty years ago a Philadelphia business man began to publish a series of studies in mediaeval society which placed him at once in the front rank of historical investigators. His first book was a collection of essays on the judicial pro- cedure of the Middle Ages, to which he gave the general title "Superstition and Force." Since then, Dr. Lea has continued to explore the mysterious borderlands of mediaeval eccle- siastical and social history, and has written learnedly on such themes as Clerical Celibacy, Excommunication, the Mediaeval Inquisition, Auricular Confession, the Expulsion of the Moors, and kindred subjects. In 1888 ap- peared his three-volume " History of the Inquisi- tion of the Middle Ages," which a distinguished English historical student, Lord Acton, called the greatest contribution of the New World to the history of the Old World. At the same time it was announced that the author was col- lecting materials for a study of the later form of the Inquisition, that which originated in Spain in the reign of Ferdinand and Isabella. This work has recently appeared, as planned, in four volumes of about six hundred pages each. To these the author has added a supplementary volume, in which he traces the history of the Inquisition in the Spanish dependencies. Dr. Lea has grouped his materials under nine heads, the discussion of each making a book. These are, the Origin, Relations with the State, Jurisdiction, Organization, Resources, Practice, Punishments, Spheres of Action, and the final fate of the institution (the conclusion). In the supplementary volume the grouping is naturally of a geographical rather than of a topical char- acter, a chapter being devoted to the Inquisition in each of the principal dependencies or each group of dependencies. The author does not attempt to discuss the Inquisition in the Spanish Netherlands, as the necessary documents (now being collected by Professor Paul Fredericq) are not yet accessible. In the popular mind the Inquisition is nearly always associated with the efforts to crush out the Protestant heresies of the sixteenth century. It is true that in many European countries, notably in the Netherlands, this tribunal in its modern form was vigorously employed for such a purpose; but with its origin Protestantism had nothing to do. The Spanish Inquisition 1908.] 293 THE DIAL had done great and effective work before the German reformer raised his voice against the abuses that he thought he had found in the Church. That we may understand why this terrible institution was called into being, the author discusses at some length the political and racial situation on the Spanish peninsula at the close of the middle ages. He finds that before the dawn of the modern era the Spaniards were the most tolerant people in Christendom. The Jews and the Moors who lived among and about them were treated with a kindness that amounted to favor. But by the close of the fourteenth cen- tury, this most tolerant nation had become the most intolerant of all. The common statement that the hatred then displayed was an inborn peculiarity of the Spanish race does not satisfy Dr. Lea. "Such facts," he tells us, "must have their explanations, and it is the business of the expositor of history to trace them to their causes." The larger part of Book I., more than two hundred pages, is devoted to a study of this change in the Castilian character and its effect on the non-Christian population. The change is attributed mainly to the