18342 2 N27 Ve 221 cop. 2 Copyright, 1925, by All Rights Reserved BURGMEIE BINDERY 1948 1.60 BATTLE, GEORGE GORDON. The Effect of Pro- BLASHFIELD, EDWIN H. John Singer Sargent: "Book of the Hours, The," 723. Books Reviewed:-John Keats, by Amy Lowell, 545; Life of William Congreve, by Edmund Gosse, 556; Restoration Comedy: 1660-1720, by Bonamy Dobrée, 556; Isles of Fear, by Katherine Mayo, 560; Security Against War, by Frances Kellor and Antonia Hatvany, 560; The Road to World Peace, by Oscar Newfang, 560; The Ethical Basis of the State, by Nor- man Wilde, 560; Robert Louis Stevenson: A Critical Biography, by John A. Steuart, 567; William Dean Howells, by Oscar W. Firkins, 567; John Viscount Morley, by John H. Mor- gan, 567; William Crawford Gorgas, by Marie D. Gorgas and Burton J. Hendrick, 567; Selections from the Correspondence of Theo- dore Roosevelt and Henry Cabot Lodge, 729; Early Reminiscences, by S. Baring-Gould, 733; King Edward VII: A Biography, by Sir Sidney Lee, Vol. I. From Birth to Accession, 9th November 1841 to 22nd January 1901, 738; XXe siècle, Première Série, par Benjamin Crémieux, 743; Le Chèvrefeuille, par Thierry Sandre, 743; Mousseline, par Thierry Sandre, 743; Dialogues Sur le Commandement, par André Maurois, 743; Oncle Anghel, Les Récits d'Adrien Zograffi, II., par Panait Istrati, 743; Science and Religion, by J. Arthur Thomson, 750; The Sociology of Revolution, by Pitirim A. Sorokin, 757; The Indestructible Union, by William McDougal, 757; The New Barbarians, by Wilbur C. Abbott, 757; Glamour: Essays on the Art of the Theatre, by Stark Young, 764. CHAPMAN, PERCY. Books Reviewed:-XXe Siècle, Première Série, par Benjamin Crémieux, 743; Le Chèvrefeuille, par Thierry Sandre, 743; 743; Oncle Anghel, Les Récits d'Adrien Zograffi, II., par Panait Istrati, 743. CHEW, SAMUEL C. Book Reviewed:-John "Children's Literature", Convalescent, 528. COFFIN, ROBERT P. TRISTRAM. Honor Courses College, Honor Courses in, 713. Continent, A Forlorn, 577. Convalescent "Children's Literature", 528. Cushman, Charlotte, 689. DANA, CHARLES L., M.D. Nervous and Mental Editor, The. A Forlorn Continent, 577. GAINES, CLARENCE H. Books Reviewed:- Robert Louis Stevenson: A Critical Biography, by John A. Steuart, 567; William Dean How- ells, by Oscar W. Firkins, 567; John Viscount Morley, by John H. Morgan, 567; William Crawford Gorgas, by Marie D. Gorgas and Burton J. Hendrick, 567; The Sociology of Rev- olution, by Pitirim A. Sorokin, 757; The Inde- structible Union, by William McDougal, 757; The New Barbarians, by Wilbur C. Abbott, 757. Gompers, The Passing of, and the Future of Great Theme, The, 522. Greetings to Three Presidents, 385. HARVEY, GEORGE. A Forlorn Continent, 577. HILL, JOHN PHILIP. A State's Rights Remedy HOLLAND, JAMES P. The Workingman's View Honor Courses in Colleges, 713. 16342 Hungary, Notes on, 468. INDEX HUSSEY, EDWARD. Book Reviewed:-Glamour: Essays on the Art of the Theatre by Stark Young, 764. Huxley, Reminiscences of, 654. JOHNSON, WILLIS FLETCHER:-Books Reviewed: Isles of Fear, by Katherine Mayo, 560; Security Against War, by Frances Kellor and Antonia Hatvany, 560; The Road to World Peace, by Oscar Newfang, 560; The Ethical Basis of the State, by Norman Wilde, 560. JOHNSON, WILLIS FLETCHER. The North American Review: An Anniversary, 582. JONES, ELIOT. Railroad Consolidation, 440. JOY, HENRY BOURNE. Prohibition Against Human Nature, 608. KEYS, F. V. The Problem of Language, 701. Language, The Problem of, 701. Lowell, Amy, and the Art of Poetry, 508. MACLEISH, ARCHIBALD. Amy Lowell and the Art of Poetry, 508. MONTAGUE, MARGARET PRESCOTT. The Great Theme, 522. More Light on Lord Morley, 486. MORGAN, BRIGADIER GENERAL JOHN H. More Light on Lord Morley, 486. Morley, Lord, More Light on, 486. MORRIS, LLOYD. Books Reviewed:-Life of William Congreve, by Edmund Gosse, 556; Restoration Comedy: 1660-1720, by Bonamy Dobrée, 556. MOSES, MONTROSE J. Convalescent "Children's Literature", 528. MYERS, WILLIAM STARR. Book Reviewed:Selections from the Correspondence of Theodore Roosevelt and Henry Cabot Lodge, 729. National Defense Peace Insurance, 396. New Books Reviewed:-Miss Lowell's Biography of Keats, 545; Comedies of the Restoration, 556; Problems of Government, 560; The Truth and Nothing but the Truth, 567; A Chronicle of Friendship, 729; A Devonshire Gentleman, 733; A Royal Biography, 738; French Letters, 743; Science and Faith, 750; Revolution and Patriotism, 757; Stark Young, 764. NORTH AMERICAN REVIEW, THE: An Anniversary, 582. Notes on Hungary, 468. NOYES, C. REINOLD. The Restoration of the Republican Party, 417. OLIPHANT, CLAIRE. National Defense Peace Insurance, 396. Organized Labor, The Passing of Gompers and the Future of, 405. OSBORN, HENRY FAIRFIELD. Reminiscences of Huxley, 654. Passing of Gompers and the Future of Organized Labor, The, 405. Peace Insurance, National Defense, 396. PINCKNEY, JOSEPHINE. Dark Water, 543. Poetry:-Communion, 540; Sun Song, 542; Dark Water, 543. POWYS, LLEWELYN. Book Reviewed:-Early Reminiscences, by S. Baring-Gould, 733. PRIEST, HENRY SAMUEL. Prohibition and Respect for Law, 596. Problem of Language, The, 701. Prohibition:-Five Years of Prohibition and Its Results, 590; Have We Prohibition or only Prohibition Laws?, 591; Prohibition and Respect for Law, 596; The Effect of Prohibition Upon Crime, 601; Prohibition Against Human Nature, 608; The Workingman's View of Prohibition, 611; Nervous and Mental Diseases and the Volstead Law, 615; The Enforcement of Prohibition, 621; The Paradise of the Ostrich, 625; States and Statistics, 631; A State's Rights Remedy for Volsteadism, 635. Protocol, The, Security and Disarmament, 665. PURDY, LAWSON. States and Statistics, 631. Railroad Consolidation, 440. RALLI, AUGUSTUS. Emily Brontë: The Problem of Personality, 495. Reminiscences of Huxley, 654. Republican Party, The Restoration of the, 417. Restoration of the Democratic Party, The, 431. Restoration of the Republican Party, The, 417. ROOSEVELT, NICHOLAS. Book Reviewed:-King Edward VII: A Biography, by Sir Sidney Lee. Vol. 1. From Birth to Accession, 9th November 1841 to 22nd January 1901, 738. Sargent, John Singer: Recollections, 641. SHERRILL, HON. CHARLES H. Voting and Voteslacking, 401. SKINNER, CONSTANCE LINDSAY. Sun Song, 542. SPARGO, JOHN. The Passing of Gompers and the Future of Organized Labor, 405. STAYTON, WILLIAM H. Have We Prohibition or Only Prohibition Laws? 591. Sun Song, 542. Two Political Parties, The, 417. Voting and Vote-slacking, 401. WHEELOCK, JOHN HALL. Communion, 540. WHELPLEY, J. D. The British Empire, 454. WILL, ALLEN SINCLAIR. The Restoration of the Democratic Party, 431. WILSON, PHIlip WhitwelL. Book Reviewed:Science and Religion, by J. Arthur Thomson, 750. WINSLOW, ANNE GOODWIN. "The Book of the Hours", 723. NORTH AMERICAN REVIEW MARCH, 1925 GREETINGS TO THREE PRESIDENTS BY THE EDITORS TO WILLIAM H. TAFT (From Harper's Weekly of March 6, 1909) Good morning, Mr. President! To you we prefer to turn with serious eyes. Solemnities drop less naturally from our pen, we must own, in this greeting than in that tentative farewell we have just been pronouncing. We can imagine you saying what Charles Surface said while Sir Oliver paid his respects to Brother Joseph: "If they talk this way to Honesty, what will they say to me by and by?" And we could fall into that mood, for, strange to say, we seem less in doubt about you at your coming in than about this other at his going out. Certainly you do not suggest painful reflections on the mysteries of human nature and life and fate.... But we are to watch your every act, listen to all your words, to praise and dispraise you, for four years, perhaps for eight. Frankly, we have much hope in you, and it is hard to believe we shall ever feel bound to assail you with bitterness, to taunt, to deride. You have our liking-in common, we think, with that of nearly all your countrymen. But you know how hard it will be to keep from losing this well-nigh universal good-will. . . . ... Frankly, again, there have been some things we do not like. Like your predecessor, you in your youth revolted against that system of so-called protection which, in its present phase, we count an indefensible surrender, first of your party, and then of the Government, to greed; and you, like him, have failed to defend in plain words this acquiescence of manhood against that rebellion of youth. When you touched upon your change of heart, speaking to young faces, in the place of your youth, your words went lame. You said then that you still approved of your youthful principles, that you held them still orthodox and sound-"if only the application of them is not carried to such an ex Copyright, 1925, by North American Review Corporation. All rights reserved. |