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ESSAYS AND MEMOIRS.
The SpectatorTHE ENGLISH ESSAY.* Mn. ERNEST BUYS has evidently faced or evaded many difficulties in making his selection of English essays of the last half century. Hardly might a more...
BOOKS AT CHRISTMAS.
The SpectatorIT is a laudable custom to give books as Christmas presents. But if it is difficult to decide whether Aunt Emily shall have a hot-water bottle or an air-cushion, it is perhaps...
Page 4
FRENCH ESSAYS AND PROFILES.* ONCE it is felt, the fascination
The Spectatorof French literature is so strong that the victim of it is often compelled to communicate his pleasure. The reader feels that Mr. Stuart Henry writes from real enthusiasm for...
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THE EX-KAISER'S MEMOIRS.*
The SpectatorTnE English reader of these political reminiscences will hardly be able, we should think, to feel any hate for the ex-Kaiser. To the judicious reader he must be rather an object...
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SIR • RENNELL RODD'S REMINISCENCES.* Tim flood of reminiscences now being
The Spectatorissued testifies to their popularity with the reading public, and the writing ,of them is doubtless a source of much satisfaction to their distinguished authors. These facts are...
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" INDISCRETIONS " OF LADY SUSAN.*
The SpectatorTins book is more worthy than its catchpenny title would suggest of the attention of people who like an autobiography in spite of, not because of, its indiscretions. Lady Susan...
FIFTY - ONE YEARS OF VICTORIAN LIFE.* Fon once, a " jacket
The Spectator" is guilty of no exaggeration when it FIFTY - ONE YEARS OF VICTORIAN LIFE.* Fon once, a " jacket " is guilty of no exaggeration when it claims for Fifty-One Years of Victorian...
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THE CONQUEST OF MEXICO.t ILLUSTRATION is one of the most
The Spectatordangerous ways of tampering with a book. Year after year in the bookshops we open a new edition of some favourite author and close it hurriedly, carrying away an aesthetic...
ILLUSTRATED BOOKS.
The SpectatorCHINESE FURNITURE.* A FEW pages of introduction and some fifty plates constitute Mr. Herbert Cescinsky's admirable book on Chinese cabinet work, but the quality of both the text...
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VOLTAIRE'S "CANDIDE."*
The SpectatorTHERE is a use in illustrations even if they do not illustrate. Nothing displayed to us so clearly the essential qualities of Alice in Wonderland as did Mr. Rackham's charming,...
THE BRIC-A-BRAC COLLECTOR. By H. W. Lewer, F.S.A., and Maciver
The SpectatorPercival. (Herbert Jenkins. 7s. 6d. net.) All who have the collector's temperament will find themselves very pleasantly tempted and encouraged by the reading of this little...
SHAKESPEARE AND PERRAULT.*
The SpectatorMn. Joing AUSTEN is, as the titles of these books tell us, a decorator. We are not quite sure what exactly a decorator of Mr. Austen's variety is, though we are familiar enough...
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CHILDREN'S BOOKS.
The SpectatorFOLK-LORE, MYTHS AND FAIRY TALES. THE savage who believes the sun to be an extremely fine pomegranate was wholly in the right ; the philosopher who taught that the sun was five...
THEOCRITUS, DION AND MOSCHUS. Rendered into English Prose by Andrew
The SpectatorLang. Illustrated by W. Russel Flint. 2 vols. (The Riccardi Press. £8 18s. 6d.) These beautiful books do an excellentservice to the dilettante who delights in such things. They...
THE CHRISTMAS STORIES OF CHARLES DICKENS (Jonathan Cape. 12s. 6d.)
The SpectatorCharles Dickens's Christmas Stories do not all belong, we venture to think, to the immortal part of Charles Dickens. Every age has its own sentimentality. Sentimentality should...
A fascinating collection of coaching stories, full of the romance
The Spectatorthat they will always have until railways . disappear. The illustrations from old prints and pictures are excellent.
THE HISTORY OF DON QUIXOTE. Illustrated by Jean de Bosschere.
The Spectator(Constable and Co. 21s. net.) Many people will welcome this carefully-abridged edition of Don Quixote, that formidable romance. The illustrations are attractive and always in...
RUBAIVAT OF OMAR KHAYYAM. Rendered into "Eng- lish Verse by
The SpectatorEdward Fitzgerald. With Decorations by "Fish." (John Lane. 21s. net.) Christmas without a new illustrated edition of the Rubiliyat is as unlikely as a man without sin. But there...
Galloping Shoes is illustrated by Mr. Lionel Edwards, whose work
The Spectatoris well known to readers of Country Life. The atmosphere of heartiness and energy breathed by the verse is somewhat exhausting, but taken individually the poems are not bad...
IN LOTUS-LAND JAPAN. By Herbert G. Ponting. (Dent. 18s. net.)
The SpectatorThe book of which this is a revised edition was originally published twelve years ago. It is a book well worth reissue. Mr. Ponting's style is undistinguished and he often, more...
MAUI). By Alfred Lord Tennyson. Illustrated by Edmund J. Sullivan.
The Spectator(Macmillan. 10s. net.) A white cover spattered with silver stars and drops that may be ear-rings. Inside is a picture of a coy young woman hold- ing a lily in on hand and a rose...
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GUIDES TO LONDON.
The SpectatorWE have learnt to be shy of attempts to combine instruction and entertainment in books for children but Miss Netta Syrett is unusually successful in Magic London (Thornton...
The edifying refinement that rests like a blight on Andersen's
The Spectatorstories is, Miss Toksvig says, the work of his English, and we presume Victorian, translators. She has therefore rewritten some of the stories in the easy, colloquial style of...
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A DOORWAY IN FAIRYLAND. By Laurence Housman. (Jonathan Cape. Os.
The Spectatornet.)—MOONSHINE AND CLOVER. (Same author, publisher, and price.) In these two volumes Mr. Laurence Housman has reprinted fairy-tales from four previous volumes ; but the tales...
BROWN DE BRAETEN. BY Flora Forster. (Oxford Basil Blackwell. 3s.
The Spectator6d. net.) There is little story in most modern fairy tales and these are no exception to the rule. All the same, the slight stories are pretty and would amuse a child of five or...
This is a dream story. We are tired of them.
The SpectatorSending a child to sleep at the beginning and waking him up at the end is a favourite device to cover clumsy scene-shifting and inconsequent talk. In the present instance the...
Young children will like this book. The child-heroine stayed with
The Spectatoran aunt who was the caretaker of an old manor-house, and she used to roam about the deserted rooms with a feeling of awe and w I I • er. Then she came to know the family, who...
THE CITY OF WISHES. By J. A. Bentham. (Cape. 5s.net.)
The SpectatorMr. Cape has conspired to publish all the most delightful story books. In The City of Wishes we read of how Johnny Crane and Ethel were waiting in the nursery for an unpleasant...
THE SUMMER DAYS' STORY BOOK. (Ward, Lock and Co. as.
The Spectator6d. net.) This is one of the more " old-fashioned" children's books : its price is low, its contents indeterminately varied and there are all manner of illustrations. Mr. Heath...
THE CAVE TWINS, THE SCOTCH TWINS, THE IRISH TWINS, THE
The SpectatorESKIMO TWINS. By Lucy Fitch Perkins. (Jonathan Cape. Os. each.) The Cave Twins is the fourth and latest volume of the charm- ing" Twin Series," of which half a million copies...
THE PRINCESS OF EVERYWHERE AND THE FAIRIES. By Lily Hall.
The Spectator(John Ball and Son. Bs. 6d. net.) "An allegory of life with fairy interludes" is the author's description of her book. Children like " good " books. They have an instinctive...
DOCTOR DOLITTLE. Written and illustrated by Hugh Lofting. (Cape. 6s.
The Spectatornet.) A more delightfully fantastic book cannot be imagined. Both in the story and the illustrations Mr. Lofting walks in that perilous region just within the borders of the...
THE BOWER BOOK. By Lucy and Ursula Littlewood. (Daniel O'Connor.
The Spectator7s. 6d.) A pretty little anthology of poems and verses for children, illustrated by bright-coloured pictures whose only merit is that they may please. It is a little startling...
ALICE IN WONDERLAND. By Lewis Carroll. (Hodder and Stoughton. 15s.
The Spectatornet.) The original illustrations of Alice in Wonderland so took our hearts and have, through familiarity, become so insepar- able from the tale, that it is with great...
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THE FAIRY DOLL. By Netta Syrett. (Lane. Bs. 6d. net.)
The SpectatorThese gentleand amusing fairy plays could be understood by the smallest children. They are easy to act and their mild morality will do no harm.
The latest children's book by the author of the "Peter
The SpectatorRabbit" books. It contains eight nursery rhymes illustrated by pleasant pictures of animals.
PIERROT AND HARLEQUIN. By Plumerau. (Duck- worth. 2s. 6d. net.)
The SpectatorAn amusing picture book. The drawings have humour and pleasant colour. But why can we not have something in England of the quality of Giro giro tondo ?
THREE NAUGHTY CHILDREN. By Orb o Williams. (Duckworth. 7s. 6d.
The Spectatornet.) A laboured fantasy of a typical fairy-story Court, in which most of the characters are named after musical terms. The illustrations seem designed for the Worst kind of...
THE LAND OF FUNNY FOLKS AND RHYMES. (Blackie and Son.
The Spectatoris. 6d. net.) A small book, in which animals are anthropomorphized in facile limericks and other verse-forms. The illustrations are probably too childish to appeal to any normal...
LONG AGO IN GALILEE. By Muriel Clark. (The Carey Press,
The Spectator19 Furnival Street, E.C. 4. 2s. 6d. net.) These religious stories record events in the life of Christ as seen by children in Galilee in those days. Quotations from the Bible are...
One of those Fairy Stories which might bring the thought
The Spectatorof the country and green lanes pleasurably before a London child at Christmas. Its effect would be pleasantly soothing, read before bedtime.
THE WONDER BOOK. (Ward, Lock and Co. 6s. net.) The
The Spectatoreighteenth issue of this annual shows no falling oft in quality or variety. There are twelve colour-plates, each of which might well have been from an annual of last century.
A delightful book with large, ample, satisfying drawings, somewhat in
The Spectatorthe Caldicott tradition. Mr. Brooke, author of Johnnie Crow's Garden, is, of course, something of a nursery celebrity.
MEG OF THE BROWNIES. By Margaret Stuart Lane. (Milford. 2s.
The Spectator6d. net.) The woods and fields of Sussex make a pleasant back- ground to this story of the Brownies, the younger sisters of the Girl Guides. There is a most attractive motif...
ARNOT, A KNIGHT OF AFRICA. By Ernest Baker. (Seeley, Service
The Spectatorand Co. 3s. 6d. net.) A good present for a child interested in missionary work. The accounts of native life are misleading and biased ; but the book, if inaccurate, is exciting.
NURSERY RHYMES. With 12 coloured plates and 50 illustrations in
The Spectatorthe text by Maud Tindal Atkinson. (Daniel O'Connor. 7s. 6d.) A well selected and comprehensive book. The illustrations are strictly in the dull tradition of such work.
Lady Strachey's verses have a pleasant flavour of conserva- tism,
The Spectatorwithout sentimentality. The variations on the themes of well-known nursery rhymes are the best things in an agreeable book.
THE LITTLE RHODESIAN. By Margaret Batchelor. (Milford. 3s. net.) One
The Spectatorof those stories for nice mild little girls. There is no plot, but the incidents in the life of a lonely little girl in Rhodesia are sympathetically described. There are some...
Simple fairy _stories told simply and conversationally. The " Rainbow
The SpectatorCat " of the title, a cat with a violet nose, indigo eyes, pale 'blue ears, a front legs, a yellow body, orange back legs, and Ei red tail, is the hero of four of the stories.
BOYS' BOOKS.
The SpectatorA FEW decades ago G. A. Henty and Jules Verne represented the archetypal adventure book, just as Marryat and Fenimore Cooper did before them. Henty gave his heroes minor parts...
This new edition of a most justly popular children's story
The Spectatoris illustrated by clearly drawn and attractively coloured pictures.
HAWTHORNE'S WONDER BOOK. Illustrated by Arthur Racklaorn. (Hodder and Stoughton.
The Spectator20s. net.) Mr. Rackham goes on for ever, but he never makes a sudden sally and never sparkles anywhere. The memory cannot - distinguish one book that he has illustrated from...
Page 22
THE TRIUMPH OF THE TRAMP SHIP. By Archibald Hurd. (Cassell.
The Spectator7s. 6d.) The history of the cargo-carrying vessels from the Phoenician period up till now as given in this short book is exceedingly interesting, although the author's English...
ROBINSON CRUSOE. By Daniel Defoe. (Selwyn and Blount. 3s. 6d.
The Spectatornet.) This unabridged edition, with many illustrations, although quite clearly printed, occupies less than five hundred pages. Mr. Ambrose Dudley, the illustrator, has...
TOPSY-TURVY ACADEMY. By R. A. H. Goodyear. (Harrap. 5s. net.)
The Spectator" The introduction of two American boys into the conven- tional Public School of fiction has pleasantly varied the formula that all writers of school stories seem to observe....
STEPHEN GOES TO SEA. By A. 0. Cooke. (Blackie. 5s.
The Spectatornet.) Stephen was washed off a trawler and found himself in the midst of the Atlantic beside an upturned boat. He righted the boat, got into her and was soon picked up by a...
A small boy with nautical predilections might prepare for his
The Spectatorfirst year at Dartmouth with this excellent instructor. A rhyme describes the functions of the letters in the usual way, as A for the Admiral.. . ." A small note beneath gives...
SERGEANT SILK, THE PRAIRIE SCOUT. By Robert Leighton. (Jarrolds. 5s.
The Spectatornet.) So long as solitary red-coated North-West Mounted Police- men tracking cattle thieves across uninhabited prairies and fighting hordes of howling Injuns have any appeal to...
THICKTHORN CAMP. By Mark Harborough. (Milford. 3s. 6d. net.) A
The Spectatorphilanthropic landowner lets a troop of Scouts have the run of a part of his estate, much as a few very philanthropic landowners have done in real life ; they fell trees and...
GODFREY MARTEN, SCHOOLBOY. By Charles Turley. (Heinemann. Os. net.) GODFREY
The SpectatorMARTEN, SCHOOLBOY. By Charles Turley. (Heinemann. Os. net.) This reprint of a well-known school story is to be com- mended. Mr. Turley writes uncommonly well and his story,...
The hero of this agreeable tale, after enlisting as a
The Spectatorsoldier somewhere about the year 1803, was pressed for the Navy and shipped off to Ceylon. There he took part in the for- gotten campaign against the King of Candy and was...
PREFECT AND FAG. By C. Mansford. (Jarrolds. 5s. net.) The
The Spectatorvillain of this story is one of the most repulsive and cruellest bullies of whom we have ever read. He reforms at the end and the reader shuts the book with a sense that poetic...
THE BOYS OF DYALL'S HOUSE. By Richard Bird. (Blackie. 5s.
The Spectatornet.) THE BOYS OF DYALL'S HOUSE. By Richard Bird. (Blackie. 5s. net.) Mr. Bird is a most skilful compounder of school stories. His new book is as ingenious and amusing as ever....
THE WHITE MAN'S TRAIL. by Robert Leighton. (Pearson. 4s. 6d.
The Spectatornet.) White Calf, as an infant, was found lying asleep between the horns of a white buffalo which a hunter had shot. He grew up among the Red Indians of North-Western Canada...
This is a pleasant and unambitious story of boys at
The Spectatora north country school, told with quiet humour. Nothing very unusual happens, but for that very reason the tale is perhaps more true to life than many more thrilling school...
"Many wrong ideas concerning Chinese customs, manners, and institutions are
The Spectatorstill encountered among English people." To correct some of these, Mr. Lee has written an elementary but most informative and pleasantly written little book on daily life in...
SHE BLOWS I AND SPARM AT THAT! By William John
The SpectatorHopkins. (Constable. 10s. 6d. net.) A tale of experiences on a whaler in the 'seventies. There is a good measure of adventure and hazard, and accounts so excit- ing and well...
THE YELLOW PIRATES. By J. Finnemore. (Black. 5s. net.) Mr.
The SpectatorFinnemore's short stories of adventure in the China seas, in Sicily, Burma, the Australian bush and in Russia, are exciting and well told. The title-story might be a description...
THE SECRET OF THE SWORD. By Draycott M. Dell. (Jarrolds.
The Spectator5s. net.) We have here a superlative example of fine writing. "Good- bye, my blade—good-bye." This is the address of a dying man to his sword. The story might be vaguely...
THE GREENWAY HEATHENS By R. A. H. Goodyear. (Nisbet. 5s.
The Spectatornet.) THE GREENWAY HEATHENS By R. A. H. Goodyear. (Nisbet. 5s. net.) This is a school story for young boys made upon the ordinary pattern, but better reading than most of its...
THE SUMMER CAMP. By A. D. Merriman. (Oxford University Press.
The Spectator2s. (id.) As a book of instruction for scoutmasters The Summer Camp should be very useful. It describes the preliminary work necessary before a camp can be pitched, and gives...
JIM FROM JIMBALOO. By Alfred Judd. (Pearson. 4s. net.) Jim
The Spectatoris an English boy who comes fresh from East Africa to an English school and introduces his chums to some novel kinds of amusement. The attempts of a Chinaman to steal Jim's...
THE PREFECTS' PATROL. By H. Avery. (Nisbet. 5s. net.) Mr.
The SpectatorAvery is a spirited writer and the descriptions of games in the Prefects' Patrol are very well done. The relation of the fags to their awe-inspiring masters, the Prefects,...
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STIRRING DAYS IN OLD VIRGINIA. By Escott Lynn. (Chambers. (Is.
The Spectatornet.) A tale of the early colonization of America with enough bloodshed and adventure to fill ten books. It is simply written except for the conversations. These are mainly in...
THE BIG ROW AT RANGER'S. By Kent Carr. (Cham- bers.
The Spectator5s. net.)—HOW TOM MADE GOOD. By St. John Pearce. (Ward, Lock and Co. 4s. Od. net.) Two spirited stories of public school life. Each leads up to an exciting climax around a hero...
LEIF AND THORKEL. By Genevra Snedden. (Harrap. 5s.) Leif and
The SpectatorThorkel is a story about Norse boys in the year 1000. The language is picturesque. The ships and the feasts are well described, and really appear before the mind's eye. The boys...
THE BOY'S BOOK OF CANADA. By Denis Crane. (Wells Gardner,
The SpectatorDarton and Co. 7s. (Id. net.) A child will put up with a deal of dullness in the books he reads if the subject is exciting, and any healthy boy will probably read through with...
BIRDS, BEASTS AND TREES.
The SpectatorLONG gone are the days when uncles at the Christmas book- shop announced that they "only "wanted a book for children. Those were the people whose own youth was nourished on...
OUR RAILWAYS. By J. G. Adams and C. A. Elliott.
The Spectator(Blackie and Son. is. 6d.) OUR RAILWAYS. By J. G. Adams and C. A. Elliott. (Blackie and Son. is. 6d.) A pleasant little volume, which quite succeeds in suggesting the romance of...
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The Pond, by Carl Ewald (Thornton Butterworth, 6s. net), seems
The Spectatorat first sight to be inaccurate, for it seems to confuse the nest, eggs and song of a reed warbler with a bird whose white-barred head shows it to be a sedge warbler. Also, all...
THE CAPTAIN OF THE FIFTH. By Elsie Oxenham. (Chambers. 5s.
The Spectatornet.) THE CAPTAIN OF THE FIFTH. By Elsie Oxenham. (Chambers. 5s. net.) A splendid tale for schoolgirls. It is competently written ; the chain of incidents is fresh and exciting...
Prince Jan, by Forrestine C. Hooker (Mills and Boon, 6s.
The Spectatornet), and The King of the Snakes, by Rosetta Baskerville (S.P.C.K., 2s. net), are interesting little books, though too much mixed up with humanity to be, properly speaking,...
Nature's Curiosity Shop, by Richard Kerr (Boys' Own Paper, Os.
The Spectatornet), deals with the freakishness and not the homeliness of Nature. It is a valuable addition to Nature lore, and its descriptions and pictures of butterfly eggs, strange...
It seems a pity that Angela was not kept at
The Spectatorhome. She is the sort of silly, tiresome, slangy little thing the recital of whose wearisome pranks could hardly serve for a pastime on the dreariest rainy day.
Miss Fisher tells her sea-stories and country-stories a trifle too
The Spectatorconscientiously, but they do not suffer overmuch from this soberness of tone. Her book would make a good present ; it is clearly printed, well bound, and adequately illustrated...
THE NEW GIRL OF PENY-Y-GAINTT. By Dorothea Moore. (Nisbet. 4s.
The Spectatornet.) "A new girl" is determined to get into a lower class than the one in which she is " placed " on coming to school. The efforts of a good and clever child to seem stupid and...
Romances of the Wild, by H. Mortimer Batten (Blackie and
The SpectatorSon, 10s. 6d. net), Wild Kindred, by Jean M. Thompson (Jonathan Cape, Os. net), and More Nature Stories, by Waddingham Seers (Harrap, 4s. 6d. net), are all well-told stories of...
GUIDE GILLY. By Dorothea Moore. (Nisbet. Os. net.) The scene-
The Spectatoris laid at a school in Dornia—which is a sort of Ruritania somewhere in Central Europe. The adventures of the heroine are quite impossible but make pleasant reading. They bring...
THE HAPPY ADVENTURERS. By Lady Middleton. (Blackie. Os. net.)
The SpectatorLady Middleton has written a graceful story of a young girl who imagines herself back in the days when her mother was a - child. She has many adventures in South Australia with...
FLEUR AND BLANCHEFLEUR. (O'Connor. 7s. 6d. net.) This "sweet and
The Spectatortouching tale" of true love rewarded is translated out of the medieval French by Mrs. Leighton. The coloured illustrations by Miss Brickdale are reminiscent of Lovat Fraser's...
BOOKS FOR GIRLS.
The SpectatorTHE KAYLES OF BUSHEY LODGE. By Vera Dwyer. (Milford. 6s. net.) "Bushey Lodge" is situated in a suburb of Melbourne. "It stood far back in a grassy space of ground well shaded by...
As a rule boys' school stories and girls' school stories
The Spectatorare not much alike. These dormitory adventures, however, whose interest consists in children letting themselves down out of a bedroom window—" by means of a rain pipe, a strong...
Page 28
GERRY GOES TO SCHOOL. By Elinor M. Brent-Dyer. (Chambers. 8s.
The Spectator6d. net.) A vivacious tale of the friendships and quarrels of girls at school and at home.
• BOOKS FOR SMALL CHILDREN.* IT is hardly an exaggeration
The Spectatorto say that The Velveteen Rabbit, 1 that small, modest volume, is the most attractive of the children's books published this year. Other books may have more splendid bindings,...
A serious novel which the publishers have disguised as a
The SpectatorSunday-school prize. Miss Canfield shows, with much incidental wit and insight, that too great a care hi the upbringing of children may defeat its own ends, and suggests that...
HOW AUDREY BECAME A GUIDE. By F. 0. II. Nash.
The Spectator(S.P.C.K. is. net.) A mildly written account of field-days and rallies in a fictitious troop of Girl Guides. Audrey became a Guide in the usual way, she enrolled ; but at first...
THE WHITE WITCH OF ROZEL. By E. G. Cowper. (Blaekie.
The SpectatorOs. net.) THE WHITE WITCH OF ROZEL. By E. G. Cowper. (Blaekie. Os. net.) The superstitions of the Guernsey folk enliven this attractive and well-written story of some young...
A FOURTH FORM REBEL. By Christine Chaundler. (Nisbet. 4s. net.)
The SpectatorThe rebel put the finishing touch to her rebellion by running away. Fortunately she met a friend in the train and got back just in time to save the school from burning down. It...
TRIXY AND HER TRIO. By L. E. Tiddeman. (Jarrolds 5s.
The Spectatornet.) The trio are entertaining. The book is written for edifica- tion. • The moral, very skilfully rubbed in, is that little girls should not be snobbish. It in no way spoils...
ONLY PAT. By May Baldwin. (Chambers. 5s. net.) Patricia Forbes
The Spectatortravels from St. Pancras to British East Africa. She goes to school in Nairobi, and, though she finds an unfamiliar atmosphere among her fellow-schoolgirls, she succeeds in...
THE FORTUNES OF JOYCE. By L. E. Tiddeman. • (Jarrolds.
The Spectator5s. net.) A rather gloomy little book. Joyce, who is deeply attached to her grandmother,with whom she lives, becomes aware that age has enfeebled her mind. An angelic doctor, a...
Page 32
London: Printed by W. SPRAIGHT dr. SONS, LTD., 98 et
The Spectator99 Fetter Lane, E.C. 4; and published by ALFRED Ereasox for the SPECTATOR " (LIM184X1), at Chen Office. No. 18 York Street, Covent Garden, London, W i O t 2, Saturday, December...
Page 33
Last week we did not do more than mention, as
The Spectatorwe were going to press, the opening of Parliament. The Address was moved by Captain Brass, who won a notable Unionist victory at Clitheroe, and was seconded by Mr. Margesson....
In the House. of Commons on Wednesday Mr. Bonar Law
The Spectatorhad to defend this policy of boycott, and in our opinion he did so satisfactorily in spite of Labour cries of dissent. Surely the Labour Members do not think that if a Labour...
-NEWS OF THE WEEK.
The SpectatorA LTHOUGH the repercussion of events in Greece is not likely to be great whatever happens there, nothing during the week has caused such consternation as the execution of the...
Another reflection which gives us pause is that in an
The Spectatorultimate sense the late British Government under the direction of Mr. Lloyd George were largely responsible for the ruinous Greek policy in Asia Minor. But if this fact suggests...
The Court Martial delivered judgment in the early hours of
The SpectatorTuesday morning, and within a few hours the condemned men were all shot. M. Gounaris, who was extremely ill with para-typhoid, was carried from his bed in a hospital and was...
pertator
The SpectatorFOR TILE 1NG SATURDAY, HOMER 2, 1921 - No. 4,927.] [ Rscuscsitso Li Al PRICE... I). NEWSPAPER. lir Post 71G. POSTAGE ABROAD 2
Fir TO SUBSCRIBERS.
The SpectatorThe " Spectator " will be sent from its offices, 13 York Street, Covent Garden, London, W.C. 2, to any address in the United Kingdom or abroad for 30s., post free, per annum....
Page 34
On Monday, in the House of Commons, the Prime Minister
The Spectatormoved the Second Reading of the Irish Free State Constitution Bill. He said that he recommended the Bill "without any special fear as to the result, but also without any...
That is an avowal to which it is impossible to
The Spectatorgive too much publicity. It is the cardinal fact of the move- ment. Equally important is the oath administered to the unemployed by the organizers of the agitation. It runs as...
On Wednesday the Cabinet adopted certain plans for reducing unemployment
The Spectatorand stimulating trade. The plan is to introduce a Trade Facilities Bill, under which E50,000,000 will be available. It is also proposed to enlarge the Exports Credit Scheme, so...
We deal with some aspects of the question of unem-
The Spectatorployment and the need for exceptional methods else- where. Here we may note two facts which show how those whom we may call the professional unemployed— that is, the men who are...
Mr. Bonar Law then went on to speak most reasonably,
The Spectatoryet at the same time firmly, about his refusal to receive a deputation of the unemployed who had, recently flooded London. He had acted on the principle that a Prime Minister "...
Under the law of Canada "the Canadian citizen" was definitely
The Spectatorrecognized and had certain privileges. Under Clause 66 "the Irish citizen" had a right of appeal to the Privy Council. He hoped that every Member of the House would. approve of...
Subsequently it was pointed out that the Daily Herald had
The Spectatorbeen excluded. Mr. Bonar Law then explained that the reason for this was that the Daily Herald was not expected to help the Government. He had not known, however, till it was...
If this is not always done the Government will be
The Spectatorin danger of being accused with some reason of " doping " those papers on which they depend for support. That there was no sinister motive in the Government's use of publicity...
On Friday, November 24th, Mr. Erskine Childers was shot in
The Spectatorthe Beggars Bush Barracks. Before his execution he shook hands with the firing squad and bade them "Good-bye." To the military court which tried him he gave a strange rambling...
Page 35
In this context we may notice the admirable words in
The Spectatorwhich Sir James Craig invited the co-operation of the Roman Catholic minority in the Northern Province and promised them the fullest consideration of their point of view. It is...
The Times on Thursday reported an important and fascinating discovery
The Spectatorby Lord Carnarvon and Mr. Howard Carter in the Valley of the Kings, near Thebes. It had been generally supposed that this famous valley had yielded up all its mysteries long...
We deal elsewhere with the problems of the Lausanne Conference,
The Spectatorbut may here give the audacious comment of an irresponsible literary correspondent :— " Ismet Bey appears to be a fair and reasonable man with no desire to trick his fellow...
We deeply regret to chronicle the death of Mrs. Meynell,
The Spectatorthe distinguished poet and woman of letters. Great refinement both of conception and workmanship was the most remarkable quality of her work. The friend of most of the greatest...
We do not suggest for a moment that the mere
The Spectatorholding of these views should be regarded as a crime, nor would we do anything to drive such expressions of opinion underground. They must, however, be most carefully noted. The...
Beyond this chamber was another containing gold beds and more
The Spectatorinlaid boxes and alabaster vases. Beyond this again there was a third chamber which may be the actual tomb of the king. The name of the king was Tutankhamen of the XVIIIth...
At a bazaar held in Belfast last Saturday Lady Carson
The Spectatorread a letter from Lord Carson which will win the approval of all fair-minded people and show how cruel and unjust has been the misrepresentation from which Lord Carson has...
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It is gratifying to record that cable messages from India
The Spectatorreport a very decided change in Moslem feeling in regard to the Near East, and a consequent lessening of hostility to this country. The Times Peshawar corre- spondent attributes...
The alarming increase in the number of accidents caused by
The Spectatormotor-cars in the United States is the subject of much comment in the Press and is responsible for the growth of "Safety Weeks" throughout the country. The latest of these has...
Now that Mr. Lloyd George is no longer Prime Minister
The Spectatorhis versatile countryman, Mr. W. M. Hughes, one of the best cartooned figures at the Versailles Conference, holds the record for longevity in a Premiership. Mr. Hughes has been...
THE ENGLISH-SPEAKING WORLD.
The SpectatorBy EVELYN WRENCH. A MONG this week's letters to the Editor of the Spectator will be found a communication on the subject of "Anglo-American Friendship" from Mr. Victor S....
. Those who- imagine that it is only, in the
The Spectator- United "States that Mr. " Pussyfoot" has a large following may have forgotten that at the time of the last referendum in 1919 in New Zealand the Prohibitionists were defeated...
The results of the New Zealand elections this month will
The Spectatorbe followed with interest not only here but in the United States and Canada, for failing any conspicuous political issue the fight between " Wets " and " Drys " will overshadow...
The recent death of Mr. Justice Gregorowski, of the Supreme
The SpectatorCourt of South Africa, while entering a train, brings back memories of a dark page of history. It was Judge Gregorowski who presided at the trial of the leaders of the Reformers...
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WHY SHOULD FRANCE .FORFEIT THE FRIENDSHIP OF AMERICA?
The SpectatorA LTHOUGH we arc only too conscious of the normal difficulty of political negotiation between French- men and Englishmen, we desire for that very reason that both patience and...
TOPICS OF THE DAY.
The SpectatorTO OUR READERS. W E desire to thank the very large number of corre- spondents who have written to congratulate us upon the reduced price, the enlarged type of the Spectator and...
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ROADS TO EMPLOYMENT.
The SpectatorW E congratulate the Times on publishing, and Lord Montagu of Beaulieu on writing, two of the most valuable articles that have appeared in the public Press for a very long time....
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THE ISSUES AT LAUSANNE. T HE best one can say of
The Spectatorthe Conference at Lausanne is that so far it has presented some hopeful signs. To begin with, Great Britain, France and Italy have kept a more solid front than a few weeks or...
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T EN years ago or so the visitor to Dublin was
The Spectatorapt to be entertained with tales of the departed glories of the city. Twenty years earlier, he was told, it had been the centre of a gay and cultivated social life. The noble...
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TROY. T HE Allied officers and Turks who redraw the Neutral
The SpectatorZone at Chanak will trespass upon holy ground. Only a few miles away, at the foot of the hills which fall away to the low shore opposite Tenedos, stand the last relics of that...
Page 43
CORRESPONDENCE
The SpectatorLab QUESTION OF A LEVY ON CAPITAL IN SWITZERLAND. [To the Editor of the SPECTATOR.] SIR, — The Swiss Constitution presents a happy combination of Representative Government and...
Page 44
BRITAIN'S OLD LOANS AND THE AMERICAN DEBT. [To the Editor
The Spectatorof the SPECTATOR.] Sin,— ' A letter on these loans appeared in your issue of October 14th, p. 495, over the signature of Mr. Francis Moore. Commenting on this letter, you say,...
MINORITY ELECTIONS.
The Spectator[To the Editor of the SPECTATOR.] Sm,—The figures officially published by the Secretary to the Proportional Representation Society show conclusively that if the system...
LETTERS TO THE EDITOR.
The SpectatorANGLO-AMERICAN FRIENDSHIP.—SMALL MEANS TOWARD A GREAT END. [To the Editor of the SPECTATOR.] you grant me space for a few simple and prosaic suggestions in relation to the...
Page 45
"A BIGOT AND AN ORANGEMAN."
The Spectator[To the Editor of the SPECTATOR.] Sin,—I enclose an extract from Borrow's Lavengro, dealing with Ulster. I thought it might interest your readers :— " Oh yes ! It is easier to...
[To the Editor of the SPECTATOR.] Srn,—I have again to
The Spectatorthank your reviewer for pleasant words about my book : but he has made a slight mistake. He says he has given reasons against the Baconian authorship. May I tell him, so have I?...
THE ELUSIVE SHAKESPEARE. [To the Editor of the SPECTATOR.] Sm,—Your
The Spectatorreviewer, in his letter headed "The Elusive Image," which is published in your issue of November 25th, has treated Sir Sidney Lee with very great discourtesy. The sneer...
IRELAND REVISITED.
The Spectator[To the Editor of the SPECTATOR.] Sin,—Business takes me to Dublin at certain intervals. After reading the article on "Ireland Revisited" in the last issue of the Spectator I...
THE QUESTION OF PALESTINE.
The Spectator[To the Editor of the SPECTATOR.] SIR,—There is no parallel between the Balfour Declaration and Shylock's Bond: In the Bond Antonio signed away a pound of his own flesh,...
DACTYLIC VERSE IN ENGLISH. [To the Editor of the SPECTATOR.]
The SpectatorSIR,—May I point out that the first six lines of The Bride of Abydos supply what is wanted in fuller measure than the two lines quoted by Mr. Omond from Dryden's Albion and...
THE MAID-OF-ALL-WORK'S EPITAPH.
The Spectator[To the Editor of the SPECTATOR.] SIR,—You remember that some time ago you printed versions of the epitaph of a Maid-of-all-work who was " going Lo do nothing for ever and ever...
hangs its head with shame, but it is not really
The SpectatorLabour. " Vote for — and get your rent back" is a big bribe to poor folk.—
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CHRISTMAS DELICACIES.
The Spectator[To the Editor of the SPECTATOR.] Sia,—At a time when we are all laying in our store of Christ- mas delicacies, I would crave space to bring to your readers' notice an...
LONELY ANGLO-INDIAN CHILDREN. [To the Editor of the SrEcraxon.] Siir,—On
The SpectatorSeptember 9th last you published an article on this subject, in which you included a letter received from me i nforming you that I had been appointed by the Mothers' Union as...
THE McGRIGOR FAILURE. [To the Editor of the SPECTATOR.] SIE,—"
The SpectatorQui facit per alium facit per se."—I am, Sir, &c., 74 New North Road, Huddersfield. GEO. T. Lowiz.
A SATIRE.
The SpectatorGALLAGHER'S. (A Ballad of the War.) ATTEND all ye who list to hear ould Ireland's trumpet blow I I sing a Free State feat of arms against the wily foe. 'Twas in the middle av...
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THE THEATRE.
The Spectatorf' THE LAST WALTZ "—GAIETY. "THE NINE O'CLOCK REVUE "—LITTLE. "An! you are cold ! You won't save yourself You don't realize the full, passionate, primitive thrill of life ! "...
ART.
The SpectatorOLD MASTERS. A LOAN collection of old masters is being exhibited at Messrs. Agnew and Son's galleries, 43 Old Bond Street, on behalf of Lord Haig's appeal for ex-Service men....
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BOOKS.
The SpectatorESSAYS IN LIBERALISM.* 'Tins volume, consisting of lectures and papers delivered at the Liberal Summer School in 1922, though it necessarily partakes of the nature of Party...
MUSIC .
The SpectatorA NEW TENOR. THE field of European opera lies fallow. The singers of the last generation have gone, leaving only a rumour of their fame —if gramophone records of painfully...
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THE ART AND CRAFT OF FIREWORKS.* Two characteristics strike one
The Spectatoras inseparable from the general notion of fireworks—the publicity of their display and the invariable joyfulness of their occasion. The use of them solely in demonstrations of...
EDWARD THOMAS.*
The SpectatorTan wrapper of this volume states that it is a collection of fifteen of Edward Thomas's latest papers, and therefore it is surprising, on looking inside, to find that five of...
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TWO BOOKS ON FOX-HUNTING.* IT is something of an achievement
The Spectatorto discover a classic of sport that needs reprinting, and Lord Willoughby de Broke is to be congratulated on an admirable edition of Colonel Cook's Observations on Hunting,'...
THE "DAILY MAIL" YEAR BOOK FOR 1923.* Tim" Daily Mail"
The SpectatorYear Book continues to be one of the wonders of the reference world. There is no annual of any shape or kind which manages to get so much miscellaneous and up-to- date...
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CHRISTMAS ANNUALS.
The SpectatorTime Empire Annual for Girls contains some very good stories about just the pleasant, lively young people whom it is a pleasure to meet in everyday life, and who are so...
THE EMPIRE ANNUAL FOR BOYS. (R.T.S. Os. net.)
The SpectatorIn The Empire Annual for Boys we have capital school and adventure stories interspersed with articles on games and swimming and other things of interest to boys, by various...
FICTION.
The SpectatorTHE POOR MAN.* "YES, sir," says the haberdasher, "this is absolutely the latest ; in advance of the fashion, in fact," producing a ten- year-old necktie turned inside out. On...
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THE GIRL'S OWN ANNUAL. (R.T.S. 13s.)
The SpectatorThis thick volume is something between a playbook and a workbook. It might perhaps be called a Hobby Book. Any big girl who is interested in making clothes or puddings —or how...
The Schoolgirl's Annual is not of the best type of
The Spectatorold- fashioned children's book. The stories are all directed by • way of sentimentality to edification, and will, we should think, entirely fail to please the modern child, who...
THE SUNDAY AT HOME. (R.T.S. 13s.)
The SpectatorThe latest volume of The Sunday at Home contains a great deal of good reading. The special articles are, we think, better than the stories. Opening the book at random, we came...
BRITISH MUSEUM CHRISTMAS CARDS.
The SpectatorThe Trustees of the British Museum have recently published five sets of cards illustrating the Nativity and the Epiphany. It is suggested that these should be used as Christmas...
MRS. STRANG'S ANNUAL FOR CHILDREN. (Milford. 5s. net.)
The SpectatorMrs. Strang's Annual for Children is a delightful collec- tion of stories, verses and pictures. Some of the stories are of the present day and relate the holiday and school...
THE SCOUT. Volume XVII. for 1922. (C. Arthur Pearson. 10s.
The Spectator6d. net.) The unfortunate boy who has never seen a copy of The Scout should be enriched with this massive tome of eleven hundred pages. The numberless stories of adventure and...
The Oxford Annual for Scouts is quite without the faults
The Spectatorof most of the annuals. It is, we mean, without the juvenile detective element. There are no stories about who committed that breach of discipline and who is to be punished for...
HERBERT STRANG'S ANNUAL. (Milford. 5s. net.) A mixed bag of
The Spectatorschool and adventure stories, articles on laying submarine cables and subjects of equal appeal to the boyish mind ; bright coloured illustrations, and cartoons by Mr. George...
Good hearty schoolboy tales of an excellent diversity. Mystery stories,
The Spectatoradventure stories, school stories, and humorous stories are mixed with instructive articles on camping, photography, boxing, motor-cycles, botany, and travel.
YOUNG ENGLAND. Annual Volume. (Pilgrim Press. 7s. 6d.) All the
The Spectatorstories in this annual would go into two categories— the pseudo-heroic and the sentimental. Orgies of cinema violence brought to a successful conclusion by super-boys alternate...
THE BOY'S OWN ANNUAL. (R.T.S. 13s.)
The SpectatorThe Boy's Own Annual is poor as compared with the girl's. Tales of wild adventure alternate with sentimental school stories. There is far too much about great, stern...
SOME BOOKS OF THE WEEK.
The Spectator( Notice in this column does not necessarily preclude subsequent review.) THE ROUND TABLE. (Macmillan. 5s. net.) The December issue of this admirable quarterly deals with...
BLACKIE'S GIRLS' ANNUAL. (Blaekie and Son. 5s.) This book will
The Spectatorbe really useful in the Christmas holidays. It does not entirely depend for its attraction upon its fiction. A little play well worth the consideration of the schoolroom ;...
Mrs. Strang's Annual for Girls consists mostly of school stories
The Spectatorof the type that represents school life more as a setting for games than for work, and so may prove somewhat mis- leading to girls who have not gone to school as juniors. The...
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Though to the present writer this book lacks the glamour
The Spectatorof its fellow, it is nevertheless a wise and mellow collection. But can fishing compare with the glories and ardours of the chase ?
SHIPS OF THE ROYAL NAVY. By Oscar Parkes. (Sampson Low.
The Spectator6s. net.) The editor of Fighting Ships has compiled a useful and interesting account of the Navy as it is, with numerous photographs. His technical descriptions are clear and...
On Sunday, being Advent Sunday, the use of the revised
The Spectatortables of lessons recently sanctioned by the National Assembly and by Parliament will become optional in any church, in lieu of the tables in the Prayer Book. We have received...
This is a collection which will delight the scholarly rider
The Spectatorto hounds. The -muses have always loved the hunting-field, and the literary standard of the collection is as high as the technical. We hope that only considerations of copyright...
FINANCE-PUBLIC & PRIVATE.
The SpectatorBy ARTHUR W. KTDDY. SPECULATIVE BUSINESS INCREASING. [To the Editor of the SPECTATOR.] SIR, — The firmness of Government and kindred securities during the past week can be...
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In electing Mr. Francis Shipton, the London Manager of the
The SpectatorStandard Bank of South Africa, as Chairman for the ensuing year of the British Overseas Banks' Associa- tion, the Committee has paid a well-deserved compliment to one who for...
Without going into all the details of the unpleasant character
The Spectatorof the Report of the Shareholders' Committee of the Smithfield and Argentine Meat Company which was issued recently, there is one point which perhaps may be usefully emphasized....
FINANCIAL NOTES.
The SpectatorI have already referred to certain indications of some revival in business activity, and these same indications are confirmed by the success which continues to charac- terize...
Holders of the Third Series of National War Bonds may
The Spectatorbe reminded that their option of conversion into the 5 per cent. War Loan on the basis of £105 5s. 3d. of War Loan for every £100 of War Bonds is exercisable within fourteen...