14 APRIL 1923, Page 20
The Quarterly Review.
The Quarterly preserves its record for expert reviewing. There is no journal which provides a greater solidity of fare. We ado not want to see the Quarterly turn sensational, but the rigour of its temperateness is sometimes 'disappointing. We could have desired from Major-General Sir George Aston a more acute, a more individual study of the Command in France than he gives us in his article on Haig and Foch. Every politician and every soldier mentioned is given some measure of praise ; and it is in the degree that we must look for discriminations. The rest of the number affords a con- fined variety of sober reading.