He Would Be A Bold Reviewer Who Would Attempt To
sum up even one essay of Dr. Jung's within the limits of a para- graph ; but here we have two whole books—Contributions to Analytical Psychology (Regan Paul, 18s.) and Two......
More Books Of The Week (continued From Page 993) Once
more Mr. Waley has opened to us the doors of Old Japan. In The Pillow-Book of Sei Shonagon (Allen and Unwin, 6s.) we see again the Empress and her quaint, rather intimate court,......
Whether Soldier Or Civilian, Everyone Who Has Ever Read...
about shikari has read Captain A. I. R. Glasfurd's famous Rifle and Romance in the Indian Jungle. Now that he is full of years and honours, he writes no less vividly and......
M. Oliver Pike Believes That The Study Of Nature In
England can-be carried on usefully and intelligently from the seats of a motor-car. The principle is that the many dramas and comedies that are always enacted on the stage of......
With Last Changes, Last Clumces (nisbet. 15s.) Mr. 11. W.
Nevinson concludes his line autobiographical trilogy, the earlier volumes of which have already been reviewed in these columns. We need only assure those who have read them that......
We Have Received From The Cambridge University Press (the...
jointly with the Oxford University Press and Messrs. Eyre and Spottiswoode) three copies of The Book of Common Prayer with the Additions and Deviations proposed in 1928. They......
Students Of Napoleon Will Find That Mr. John Theodore...
The Chosen Four (Cape, 7s. 6d.) fills, succinctly and interestingly, a few minor gaps in their knowledge. Mr. Tussaud recounts the early careers of Charles Tristan Montholon,......
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Mr. E. Boyd Barrett, a Jesuit for twenty years, does not at all convince us that there is an enigma about his Order. His superiors, by his own story, seem to have been most kind......
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Mr. Humbert Wolfe, in his preface to Messrs. Lanes beautiful edition of Selected Poems of Swinburne (21s.), approaches the poet by recalling the memory of his (Mr. Wolfe's)......
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Few writers have a more intimate knowledge of any English dialect than Mr. S. L. Bensusan has of the East Anglian. Not only does he know how to record the country talk as he......