30 APRIL 1910

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Last Saturday Mr. Roosevelt lectured on " The Duties of

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the Citizen in a Republic " at the Sorbonne in Paris before an audience of about three thousand persons. He spoke in his usual direct and forcible manner, treating his audience,...

NEWS OF THE WEEK.

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T N our fi rst leading article we draw attention to the fact that the best way to solve the present Constitutional crisis is to make use of the Referendum. We desire that the...

The event of the week is the passage of the

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Budget through the House of Lords. We cannot help believing that this fact may assist to remove from men's minds the most unjust accusations levelled against the Lords in regard...

The elections to the French Chamber leave the state of

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parties very much as it was. The figures for those Deputies who have been returned on the first ballots are as follows :- Conservatives, 58; Nationalists, 13; Progressists, 40;...

We shall not repeat our arguments here, but may mention

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one point. What we suggest that the Lords should do does not necessarily commit the Lords or anybody else to the Referendum as a permanent institution. All that we ask is that...

' *0 The Editors cannot undertake to return Manuscript, in

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any case.

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Lord Balfour of Burleigh has written an admirable letter, which

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appears in all Friday's papers, defining his position. He was asked to speak at a luncheon and conference to be held shortly at Glasgow with the object of founding a branch of...

On Monday the House of Commons debated the second reading

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of the Finance Bill. The most important speech of the day was that of Mr. William O'Brien, who proposed that " Inasmuch as the announcement of this Bill has already done a cruel...

Dealing next with the Constitutional question, he declares that he

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is prepared to unite with any one who will take a broad and statesmanlike view of the situation. Fiscal policies may come and go, but once make inroads into the British...

In the House of Lords on Thursday the second reading

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of the Finance Bill was moved by Lord Crewe. Lord Lans- downe, in a speech of great ability, made certain trenchant comments on the measure and the history of its second intro-...

The Finance Bill was discussed in Committee on Tues- day.

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Attempts were made by Members in all parts of the House to convince the Government that some kinds of agricultural land would not be exempted from the Increment- duty even by...

The regrouping of the political parties in Japan is now

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complete. By the merging of the Progressists—the party founded by Count Okuma thirty-two years ago—and the party of business men into the new Constitutional Popular Party, or...

In the course of the debate which followed, Lord Cromer

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drew special attention to the trimmer in which the Govern- ment had treated the Sinking Fund. He expressed the strong hope that at least six and a half millions would in the...

Turning to the methods and results- of a man's work,

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Mr. Roosevelt said it was a good thing that the guiding intelli- gences should have ample recognition and ample reward. Their places could not possibly be filled by any number...

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Then Mr. Grahame-White, surprised by the news that M. Paulhan

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had started, left Park Royal after sunset the same evening. He was much troubled by a dangerous wind, and descended at Roade, sixty miles from London, in the dark. Early on...

The week has been remarkable for flights by aeroplane which,

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if less dramatic than M. Bleriot's flight across the Channel, were much more significant. Last Saturday Mr. Grahame-White started in his Farman biplane from Park Royal to try to...

We note with no small satisfaction the announcement that the

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Surrey Veterans—that is, the members of the Register of Trained Men which has been brought into existence by the Surrey Territorial Association—are to assemble on the after-...

Bjornstjerne Bjornson, the celebrated Norwegian poet and dramatist, died in

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Paris on Tuesday in his seventy-eighth year. Starting life as a journalist and teacher, he poured out an astonishing flood of novels, tales, poems, and dramas for fifty years,...

Details are given in Monday's Morning Post of an interest-

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ing experiment which is about to be made by the Duke of Bedford with a view to enabling agricultural labourers to become freeholders. Four hundred and fifty acres of land,...

On Wednesday the Chancellor of the Exchequer announced the names

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of the Development Commissioners. The chairman is Lord Richard Cavendish, brother of the Duke of Devon- shire, and formerly M.P. for the North Lonsdale division; and the...

A propos of the low price of Consols, supporters of

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Mr. Lloyd George lay stress on the fact that foreign securities have also fallen in the last fifteen years, but, as Sir F. Banbury points out in a letter to Wednesday's Times,...

It must be remembered that the cost of forming a

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Register of Trained Men or Veteran Reserve of this kind is almost nil. Yet it would add a national asset of the very greatest importance in case an enemy had landed,—the only...

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TOPICS OF THE DAY.

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THE REFERENDUM.—A SOLUTION OP THE CONSTITUTIONAL CRISIS. TjIHE proposal to employ the Referendum as a solution of the present Constitutional crisis is attracting more and more...

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THE DISCHARGE OF OUR EGYPTIAN TRUST.

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1../ITRING the past few months—that is, before as well as after the murder of the Egyptian Prime Minister— the news from Egypt has been of a disquieting character, and has shown...

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THE ALBANIAN RISING.

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A FTER the Counter-Revolution in Constantinople of a year ago comes the Albanian rising. It is the second great test of the statesmanship of the Young Turks. Englishmen will...

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CONSUMPTION AND SELF-HELP.

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ELSEWHERE we publish a review of a very important J study of the disease of consumption by Dr. Arthur Latham and Mr. Charles Garland, and we are glad to see that the latter is...

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MARK TWAIN. T HE fashion in humour changes with the generations,

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and no man could say whether posterity will hold the late S. L. Clemens, who made himself famous as Mark Twain, to be greater as a humorist or as a painter of phases of " the...

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"ADVICE TO YOUNG LADIES."

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J UST now in England we feel a vivid interest in every- thing that is French. Mr. .Melrose has chosen a good moment for publishing a translation of Madame Yvonne Sarcey's new...

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NEWCOMERS AT THE "ZOO."

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T HERE is an excellent opportunity for providing a study of protective colouring in the surroundings of one of the newest arrivals at the Zoological Gardens in Regent's Park....

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THE PROPOSED CHANGE IN THE CONSTITUTION.

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[To THE EDITOR or THE " SPECT1201/.1 SIR,—The reductio ad absurdum to which you bring the argu- ment in your article last week on " The King and the Constitu- tion"—that a great...

[To THE EDITOR OF THE " SPECTATOR."] SIR, — I note with

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much pleasure that you are strongly advocating the Referendum in case of any future dispute between the House of Commons and the House of Lords. I have long been of opinion that...

LETTERS TO THE EDITOR.

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VTR REFERENDUM. [TO TEE EDITOR OF THE "SproraTou."1 SIR,—You did me the honour on last Christmas Day of publishing a letter of mine in your columns in which I advocated the...

PEOPLE'S RIGHT OF VETO.

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[To THE EDITOR OP THE "SPECTATOR. "] SIR, — It was ray intention to refer to the forty-six States of the Union, not " forty-nine," as my letter in your issue of April 23rd...

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IRELAND REJECTS THE NEW ROMAN CATHOLIC UNIVERSITY. [To THE EDITOR

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07 THE " SPECTATOR:1 Sra,—Though you think it worth while to give your readers a letter of Mr. F. Hugh O'Donnell and a quotation from Sinn Fein, I hope your readers will not be...

THE ANTI-SOCIALIST UNION OF THE CHURCHES.

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[TO THE EDITOR 07 THE " SPECTATOR."1 SIR,—We invite your attention to the work of this Union, now established for just over a year. Its principles are non-party and...

THE INDIAN NAVY.

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[To THE EDITOE 07 THE " SPECTLT013."1 SIR,—There are few men connected with our Eastern Dominions who will not most cordially agree with every word written in your article...

THE "DEAL ' WITH THE NATIONALISTS.

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rTo THE EDITOR 07 THE " SPECTATOR?'] Sin,—The Prime Minister has apparently forgotten his law. When he stated in the House that there was no bargain between the Government and...

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THE TRAINING OF BRITISH OFFICERS FOR INDIA.

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[TO THE EDITOR OF THE "SPECTATOR. "] SIR,—No one who has had practical experience, here or in India, of the training of officials can fail to appreciate the large and generous...

[To THE EDITOR OP THY "SPECTATOR. "]

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SIR,—I hope that Sir Bampfylde Fuller's letter in your issue of the 23rd inst. will attract the attention of old Indian officers, especially of those who have passed through the...

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THE GREEN LEEK.

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[TO TUE EDITOR Or THE " SPECTATOR:1 SIR,—The Association Cup Tie annually arouses melancholy reflections, expressed in correspondence columns, of the devotion of decadent Rome...

CAMBRIDGE ROWING.

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[To THE EDITOR OF THE "spitc.r..ros."i Sin, In your article on " Cambridge Rowing " last week you say that if the Harvard men had persisted for another year in the style which...

ROUSSEAU AS AN " AVIATOR."

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[To THE EDITOR Or THE "SPECTATOR. "] Sin,—From the days of Icarus to those of M. Bleriot the problem of flight has continued to fascinate the human mind. At the present moment,...

RIFLE-SHOOTING FOR BOYS.

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[TO THE EDITOR OF THE " SPECTATOR."] SIE,—The advocates of rifle-shooting in preparatory schools are often met by these two questions :—(1) Is miniature rifle- shooting of any...

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PUNISHMENT AND CRIME.

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LTO THE EDITOR OP THE " SPECTATOR. "] SIR, —I have read with very great interest the article upon this subject in your issue of April 9th, which has just come to my hands. Will...

MEMORY AND THE INDIVIDUAL.

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[To THIC EDITOR Or TSR " SPECTATOR:1 Six,—With regard to the question of "Memory and the Individual," we shall surely agree with Leibniz when be says: " A quoy Tons serviroit-il...

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ART.

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THE ACADEMY.—I. A DISTINGUISHED painter was once criticising the work of some of the younger impressionists, men who began where the masters left off, and who thought it...

PROPOSED MEMORIAL TO REV. H. H. JEAFFRESON. [To THE EDITOR

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Or THE " SPECTATOR."] SIR, — It is felt that there must be many persons, not in England only, but in many parte of the world (especially, perhaps, in Italy and America), who...

THE MOHAMMEDAN PULPIT.

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(To THE EDITOR Or Tar "SPECTATOR."] SIR, —The new Islamic theology to which you refer in your article last week on the Modernist Mnssulman sermons recently preached in the...

POETRY.

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NANCY. Nov softer clouds shade evening skies Than deepen in her shining eyes ; Nor gayer than her laugh at me Is morning sunlight on the sea! Like mountain air 'mid dewy grass...

"NEW AUSTRALIA."

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[To THE EDITOR Or TEE "SPECTATOR."] SIR, —In thanking you for your very favourable review in last week's issue of " New Australia," by Mr. Stewart Grahame, will you allow me to...

A LANDOB ANECDOTE.

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[TO THE EDITOR Or THE "SPECTATOR. "] SIR,—In " The Life and Times of Mrs. Sherwood," just published (Wells Gardner, Darton, and Co.), there is an allusion to Walter Savage...

NOTICE.—When Articles or "Correspondence" are signed with the writer's name

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or initials, or with a pseudonym, or are marked "Communicated," the Editor must not necessarily be he'd to be in agreement with the rims therein expressed or with the mode of...

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BOOKS.

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THE PRICE OF BLOOD.* CAPTAIN SEHRNOIT'S former books are familiar to English readers. Both The Battle of Tsushima and Basplata ("The Reckoning ") were expanded forms of the...

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THE FOLLY OF PATRIOTISM.* WE reviewed a few weeks back

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a book which aimed at demonstrating the wickedness of patriotism. The French writer has his counterpart among ourselves in the author of Europe's Optical Illusion. In crossing...

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THE CAMPAIGN AGAINST CONSUMPTION.* [COMMUNICATED.]

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IF you are a reviewer of medical books, you come now and again across one which takes away your breath. It looked as dull as its fellows—all good medical books look dull— and...

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EVOLUTIONARY SOCIALISM.* IT is impossible for any journal which is

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not specially devoted' to the subject to keep pace with the issues of the Socialist Press, and, as one Socialist volume is very much like another, our readers will not complain...

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JOHN LOTHROP MOTLEY.* THIS volume contains only a gleaning of

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the Motley letters, but there are some good handfuls which it was quite worth while to gather. There is, for instance, a correspondence with Bismarck. Perhaps the most...

THE HOUSE OF YORKE.* THE first Lord Hardwicke held the

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Great Seal for eighteen years (1737-1755), and left his mark on the administration of Equity. In the next generation the fortunes of the house were darkened by a tragedy....

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An Imperial Adventure. By Iver McIver. (W. Blackwood and Sons.

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6s.)—Like the heroine of an Elizabethan drama, Sannie du Toit, a South African young lady, dons masculine attire and goes off to the wars. But while the sixteenth-century ladies...

READABLE Novara.—The Drums of War. By H. de Vero Stacpoole.

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(John Murray. 6s.)—A story of life in France in the days of the Second Empire.—The Question. By Parry Truseott. (T. Werner Laurie. 6s.)—The Way tells how Josephine sent her...

Corporal Sam, and other Stories. By Q (A- T. Quiller-Conch).

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(Smith, Elder, and Co. 6s.)—These ten short stories show all the literary skill which we are acenstomed to find in the works of "Q's" pen. The first is a tragedy, and might have...

NOVELS.

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SECOND STRING.* Second String is one among the first instalment of Messrs. Nelson's new series of .two-shilling novels. The print, paper, and general form are excellent, and...

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THE QUARTERLIES.

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Tire New Parliament and the House of Lords," the last article in the Edinburgh, discusses in a temperate way the present political crisis. The Edinburgh strongly advised the...

SOME BOOKS OF THE WEEK.

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[Under this heading we notice such Books of the week as him; not been reserved for review in other forms.] The Palestine Exploration Fund : Quarterly Statement. (38 Conduit...

Further Essays on Border Ballads. By Lieutenant - Colonel the Hon. Fitzwflliam

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Elliot. (Andrew Elliot, Edinburgh. 3s. 6d. net.) —Colonel Elliot again applies, and that with effect, the Higher Criticism to certain well-known ballads. The Scottish version of...

Historical Essays. -By James Ford Rhodes. (Macmillan and Co. 9s.

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net.)—Most of these eighteen papers and addresses have been read or delivered to various societies and at sundry public functions; a large proportion of them have been...

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Privateers and Privateering. By Commander E. P. Statham, R.N. (Hutchinson

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and Co. 7s. 6d. net.)—Privateering is a subject interesting for its past, and quite possibly for its future. Who knows what may happen in the next war ? International law is in...

Nisbet's Gotf Year - Book. Edited by John L. Law. (James Nisbet

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and Co. 3s. 6d. net.)—This volume opens with the results of an interesting plebiscite, the question to be decided by popular vote being this,—What is the best or the most...

Porfirio Dias. By Jose F. Godoy. (G. P. Putnam's Sons.

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10s. 6d.)—" The Master-Builder of a Great Commonwealth" is the sub-title which Seiler Godoy uses, and the description is not misapplied. What a world of difference there is...

do Etymological Dictionary of the English Language. By the Rev.

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Walter W. Skeet. (Clarendon Press. 38s. net.)—This standard work, first published some twenty-nine years ago, now appears in a fourth edition, revised and enlarged. Professor...

The Shakespeare Birthplace Catalogue. (Stratford - upon - Avon. ls.)—This catalogue, drawn up by

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Mr. R. Savage, secretary and librarian, enumerates, and on occasion describes, the books, manu- scripts, works of art, &c., which are exhibited in the birthplace. The house was...

Recollections of a Yorkshire Village. By J. S. Fletcher. (Digby,

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Long, and Co. 6s.)—We are always glad to hear what Mr. Fletcher has to say about things and people in Yorkshire. He goes back about forty years, and the picture which he gives...

Colour-Blindness. By F. W. Edridge-Green, M.D. (Began Paul, Trench, and

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Co. 5s.)—This book, one of the "International Scientific Series," has, we are glad to see, reached a second edition. Now and then we should counsel some reserve in accepting Dr....

PUBLICATIONS OF THE WEEK.

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Back to the Land, by C', cr 8vo (Longmans) net 4,6 Ballard (P. B.), Hand-Work as an Educational Medium, and other Essays, cr 8vo (Sonnenschein) net 2/6 Bancroft (F), Richard...

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'Cams of Subscription,

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PAYABLE IN ADVANCE. Inelliding Bingd postage to any part of the United om £1 Including postage to any of the British Colonies, America, France, Germany, India, China, Japan,...

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SPEC AL LITERARY SUPPLEMENT

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TO *pirriator No. 4,270.] FOR THE WEEK ENDING SATURDAY, APRIL 30, 1910. [ [ STEREO nos F } GRATIS. TRANSLESON •BRO OR AD

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BOOKS.

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G &MB ETTA.* THE title of this book in French is Gambetta par Gambetta, and that gives a truer notion of its contents than the present English title. The work is really a...

titerarp &upplantnt.

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LONDON: APRIL 30th, 1910.

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THE ENGLISH MONASTERIES ON THE EVE OF THE DISSOLUTION.* THE

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Corpus Professor of Jurisprudence appropriately gives the first place in the series of monographs he proposes to issue once a year to an essay on the English monasteries on the...

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ENGLISH AGRICULTURE.*

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Ma. CIIRTLER'S review of the history of agriculture takes in a period of nearly fifteen centuries. It begins with the arrival of the English, who took over, he thinks, the com-...

TWO BOOKS FOR ANTI-SOCIALISTS.* AMONG recent books which Anti-Socialists may

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be recom- mended to read are Mr. Dawbarn's Liberty and Progress and Mr. Headley's Darwinism and Modern Socialism. Mr. Dawbarn looks at the subject essentially from the abstract...

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BOTANY, FORESTRY, AND HERBALS.*

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THREE books recently published treat of plants from the scientific, the commercial, and the artistic points of view. The first is a history of botany, the second a manual of...

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CURRENT LITERATURE.

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ART-BOOKS. The National Gallery _Lewis Bequest. By M. W. Brockwell. (G. Allen and Sons. 5s. net.)—Forty years ago £10,000 was left by Thomas Denison Lewis to the National...

A NEW HISTORY OF SOUTH AFRICA.f MR. CORY, who is

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a Professor in the Rhodes University College at Grahamstown, has nearly twenty years' experience of South Africa behind him. He has equipped himself for the task of writing...

THE RISE OF LOUIS NAPOLEON.*

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Ern Grand Ificonnu was the title given by M. Guetary to a study of Napoleon III. which appeared in France not long ago. It goes without saying that this was a partisan study ;...

One Hundred Masterpieces of Sculpture. With an Introduction by G.

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F. Hill. (Methuen and Co. 10s. 6d. net.)--The preface tells us that this is primarily a picture-book, and not a history of sculpture. We gratefully receive it as such. Here we...

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English Leadworie. By Laurence Weaver. (B. T. Batsford. 25s. net.)—Here

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we find described the various purposes to which decorative leadwork has been put. Tanks, fountains, vases, and statues are all discussed with insight and taste. A section is...

Sefior Bernete y Moret, the biographer of Velazquez, has written

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an interesting volume dealing with The School of Madrid (Duck- worth and Co., '78. 6d. net). To most people Maze, Carron°, and others are merely names, but by means of this book...

The Sculptures of Chartres Cathedral. By Margaret and Ernest Marriage.

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(Cambridge University Press. 12s. net.)—The authors have given their text both in English and French, and have pro- vided a very large number of photographs of the carvings of...

The Mind of the Artist : Thoughts and Savings of

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Painters and Sculptors on their Art. Collected and Arranged by Mrs. Laurence Binyon. (Chatto and Windus. 3s. 6d. net.)—The work of Defection has been admirably done, and the...

The Practice of Oil-Painting and of Drawing Associated with it.

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By Solomon J. Solomon, R.A. (Seeley and Co. Os. net.)— Students will find a good deal in this book to help them. But the task of the author is an impossible one, and no one of...

A History of Art. By Dr. G. Carotti. (Duckworth and

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Co. 5s. net.)—The amount of information crowded into this little book is very great. The present volume—the second—deals with the Middle Ages, and includes the architecture,...

Students of architecture will no doubt be interested in Mr.

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Ward's volume, French Chdteaux and Gardens in the Sixteenth Century (B. T. Batsford, 25s. net). Mr. Ward found in the British Museum a collection of drawings by Jacques Androuet...

A History of Architectural Development. By F. M. Simpson. (Longmans

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and Co. 21s. net.)—This is the second volume of Mr. Simpson's work, and deals only with mediaeval chnroh archi- tecture. The author by means of diagrams shows in the most...

Messrs. Hodder and Stoughton have added to their "Great Artists

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Series" (5s. net each) a volume of reproductions of Constable's Sketches and one of the works of Botticelli. These are essentially picture-books, the biographical introductions...

The ?aides of Xsop. Illustrated by Edward J. Dotmold. (Hodder

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and Stoughton. 42s. net.)—Mr. Detmold's coloured drawings range from a Japanese simplicity to a complication reminding us of a puzzle-picture in which the aim is to conceal the...

The Art of the Plasterer. By G. P. Bankart. (B.

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T. Botsford. 25s. net.)—The author explains that his work is supplemental to the large volume published a few years ago, in which its author, Mr. Millar, dealt exhaustively with...

The Children's Book of Art. By Agnes Ethel Conway and

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Sir Martin Conway. (A. and C. Black. 68.)—This is a good intro- duction for young people to the study of art. The field covered is a wide one, from the Middle Ages to the...

Mr. Pennell has illustrated with leaves from his sketch-books Mr.

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Henry James's Italian Hours (W. Heinemann, 25s. net). Mr. Pennell always manages to get a feeling of distinction in his work, but surely both the places, and Mr. James's very...

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The Art of Modelling in Clay and Wax. By T.

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C. Simmonds. (G. Allen and Sons. ls.)—This is quite a small book giving elementary instruction in modelling, and will no doubt be useful as a guide to beginners, and a help in...

Simple Jewellery. By R. Ll. B. Rathbone. (A. Constable and

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Co. 6s. not.) —The art of the jeweller is now becoming a favourite one, and this book will be helpful to those studying the craft. Few people probably realise the enormous...

Venice and her Treasures. By H. A. Douglas. (Methuen and

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Co. 5s. net.)—Padua. By Cesare Foligno. (J. M. Dent and Sons. 4s. 6d. net.)—Both these little books would be most welcome companions during a visit to the cities they describe,...

LORD TWEEDMOUTH.

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Edward Ma rjoribants, Lord Tircedmouth. (A. Constable and Co. 53. net.)—The subject of this memoir was a characteristic example of the system on which the government of this...

The Young Carpenter. By Cyril Hall. (Methuen and Co. 5e.)

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—Careful and precise directions are to be found here as to the processes of carpentering and the uses of the various tools. Par- ticular attention is devoted to various forms of...

The Painters of Vicenza, 1480 - 1550. By Tweeted Borenius. (Chatto and

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Windus. 7s. 6d. net.)—Bartolomeo Montagne and Giovanni Buonconsiglio, the artists with whom this volume principally deals, were men of great and individual gifts, and a study of...

Those interested in the study of ornament and pattern-design- ing

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will find helpful both the late Mr. Lewis Day's Nature and Ornament, Vol. II. (B. T. Batsford, 7s. 6d. net), and Mr. Archibald Christie's Traditional Methods of Pattern -...

ODES OF HORACE,

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A Student's Edition of the Odes of Horace, Z III. By C. R. Garnsey. (Swan Sonnensehein and Co. 6s. net.)—Mr. Garnsey reads the three books of the Odes here discussed under the...

SIR WALTER SCOTT'S FRIENDS.

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Sir Walter Scott's Friends. By Florence MacCunn. (W. Blackwood and Sons. 10s. net.)—Some of the " Friends " will be well known to all students of Sir Walter's life and work ;...

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11:1.E. NEW NORTH.

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The New North. By Agnes Deans Cameron. (D. Appleton and Co. 108.6d. net.)—Miss Cameron made the journey from Edmonton to the mouth of the Mackenzie, and enjoyed herself so...

J. BEVAN BRAITHWAITE.

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J. Bevan Braithwaite : a Friend of the Nineteenth Century. By his Children. (Hodder and Stoughton. 'Ts. 6d. net.)—We may find an honourable ambiguity in the title of this book....

SIKHIM AND BHUTAN.

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Sikkim and .Bhutan. By John Claude White. (Edward Arnold. 21s. net.)—These two districts, which lie on the North-Eastern frontier of British India, are not a very important part...

FIVE BOOKS OF TRAVEL.

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To Abyssinia through an Unknown Land. By Captain C. H. Stigand. (Seeley and Co. 16s. net.)—Captain Stigand tells us that he long wished to strike out a new route, which should...

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ETON COLLEGE PORTRAITS.

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Eton College Portraits. By Lionel Cast. (Spottiswoode and Co. £5 5s.)—It was in the middle of the eighteenth century that Dr. Barnard, who was then Head-Master of Eton, first...

BUILDINGS FOR SMALL HOLDINGS.

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Buildings for Small Holdings. By Thomas Potter. (B. T. Batsford. 8s. 6d. net.)—We have pleasure in drawing attention to this exceedingly practical little work by an admitted...

THE WOMEN OF A STATE UNIVERSITY.

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The Women of a State University. By Helen R. Olin. (G. P. Putnam's Sons. 6s. net.)—For forty years there has been a system of co-education at work in the University of...

SUSAN WARNER.

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Susan Warner. By Anna B. Warner. (G. P. Putnam's Sons. 10s. Gd. net.)—Suzan Warner wrote under the name of "Elizabeth Wetherell," a name which some at least of our readers will...

THE EDUCATION OF THE BLIND.

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History of the Education of the Blind. By W. H. Mingwortla F.C.T.B. (Sampson Low, Marston, and Co. 3s. 6d. net.)—This is a treatise intended chiefly for the use of students at...

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The Book of the Railway. By George Mitton. (A. and

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C. Black. Gs.)—This is a very pleasant book, pretty to look at, and interesting to read. It arranges and corrects a quantity of know- ledge which most of us possess partially,...

On Everything. By IL Belloc. (Methuen and Co. 5s.)—A reader

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can hardly do better than take this volume and open it at random. If what he finds in it is too paradoxical for his taste, or, it may be, unintelligible—we own that sometimes...

THE NORSE INFLUENCE ON CELTIC SCOTLAND.

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The Norse Influence on Celtic Scotland. By George Henderson. (J. MacLeboso and Sons, Glasgow. 10s. net.)—This is a book for the Gaelic scholar, and we can do no more than call...

LETTERS OF JOHN MASON NEALE, D.D.

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Letters of John Mason Neale, D.D. Edited by his Daughter. (Longman and Co. 10s. 6d. net.)—We are not altogether thankful for the publication of these letters. We like to think...

NAPOLEON'S BROTHERS.

The Spectator

Napoleon's Brothers. By A. Hilliard Atteridge. (Methuen and Co. 18s. net.)—Mr. Atteridge has done well, wo think, in weaving together the stories of the four brothers. A certain...

SOUTH INDIAN MISSIONS.

The Spectator

South Indian Missions. By J. A. Sharrock, M.A. (S.P.G. 2s. Gd. net.)—Mr. Sharrock gives us here the experience of many years' work in Southern India. In this work he manifestly...

ENGLISH EPISCOPAL PALACES.

The Spectator

English Episcopal Palaces. By Caroline C. Morewood and Others. Edited by R. S. Reit. (A. Constable and Co. 7s. 6d. net.)—We gather that this book is an outcome of that...

Page 54

The Land of Regrets. By Isabel Fraser Hunter. (John Ouseley.

The Spectator

5s. net.)-The land is India, regarded from an Englishwoman's point of view, for this volume contains a " Miss Sahib's Reminiscences." We hoar how she settledin a house ; how she...

Chetham Hospital and Library. By Albert Nicholson. (Sherratt and Hughes.

The Spectator

2s. 6d. net.)-Mr. Nicholson gives a sketch of history from the Roman occupation downwards, adding the names of local celebrities as we pass from one epoch to another. He comes...

Acts of the Privy Council : Colonial Series, Vol. II.

The Spectator

Edited by W. L. Grant, M.A., and James Munro, M.A. (Wyman and Sons. 108.)- We have here the proceedings of what in the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries stood for the...