10 DECEMBER 1904, page 23

Morganatic. By Max Norden. Translated By Elizabeth Lee....

Windus. 6s.)—It is an unpleasant surprise at the end of this book (aimed, as the reader till then believes, against the pomps and vanities of this wicked world) to come upon the......

Inner Jerusalem. By A. Goodrich-freer. (a. Constable And...

6d. net.)—We read with hope the first paragraph of Miss Goodrich-Freer's first chapter in which she quotes the counsel of a friendly publisher : "Never mind where Absolom's Tomb......

Novels.

A DAUGHTER OF JAEL.* LADY RIDLEY'S new novel, the appearance of which will excite pleasurable anticipations in those who remember her earlier ventures in fiction, illustrates in......

Famous Fighters Of The Fleet. By Edward Fraser....

Co. 68.)—Mr. Fraser has put together here the story of six famous fighting ships : he begins with the Monmouth' at Chatham (when the Dutch were on the Medway), and he ends with......

River, Road, And Rail. By Francis Fox. (john Murray. 8s.

net.)—Mr. Fox, as the son of Sir Charles Fox, has had many opportunities of storing up these "engineering reminiscences." He begins with some account of Sir Charles's father,......

The Silver Poppy. By Arthur Stringer. (methuen And Co....

the heroine of this novel of literary New York com- mits an unpardonable fraud in palming off a dead man's novel as her own, the author obviously has much sympathy with her, a......