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Books Of The Day.

Books of the Day .

Books , Music , & c . intended for review , should be addressed to the Editor of the Freemason ' s Chronicle , at Fleet Works , New Barnet . — : o : — Negro Nobodies . Being a series of sketches of Peasant life in Jamaica . By Noel de Montagnac . No . VI . of the " Over-seas Library " ( Is 6 d ) . — T . Fisher Unwin . AUTOLYCUS would perhaps describe this book as au unconsidered trifle . It is , nevertheless , a clever piece of work . When Mr . Fisher Unwin first

announced the " Over-seas Library " we anticipated that many readers blest with Epicurean sensibilities would hint a fault and hesitate dislike .. But nothing succeeds like success , and such books as "In Guiana Wilds " and the " Well-sinkers " were sure to find readers in the present state of things in general . We are pleased to say that some of these Negro Nobodies are , in fact , singular and imposing characters . They are far from being ' 'Nobody ' . ' ¦ in their own estimation . The unsophisticated fun and foolery so

prevalent in Jamaica in its later and happier life is here portrayed by one who has a good eye for the salient points in a picture . The chapter " concerning a christening " deals with a subject well worn by humorous writers ; but the author has , we think , handled it very happily . The group that surrounded Mr . Blackburn , the minister , included Hooper and Zacche ( the godfathers ) , Verona Machonochie and a goodly number besides , and their behaviour is extremely ludicrous before " Simon Peter Mount Sinai Tilbert " is christened . Many other characters in this book afford plenty of

entertainment , although their actions are few and their speech sometimes scanty and sometimes enigmatical . It is only just to mention how strong an effect is here produced with very slender materials and within the compass of so small a volume . The incident to which we have referred is one among several equally good ; but we must leave readers to sample and taste for themselves . The large type used in printing this series makes the volumes very suitable for reading on a journey . We have put them to the test , so speak from experience . We " recommend as much to every man . "

Literary Reminiscences . By Bdouard Grenier . Translated from the French by Mrs . Abel Ram ( 6 s ) . —Adam and Charles Black . THE literature of France is particularly rich in memoirs and reminiscences . The materials for an exhaustive history of French literature are much more complete than for a history of our own . This is due , in part , to a trait in our character which it is no discredit to acknowledge . We are a somewhat reticent race . At an English dinner-table the host says but little

concerning himself if many guests are present . We need only turn , almost at haphazard , to the early life of Voltaire , to the literature pertaining to the wits of the Hotel de Rambouillet , or to these literary reminiscences of M . Grenier to notice how full is the stream of narrative , how abundant is the anecdote , how minute , even to a fault , are the existing records of men of letters in France . In the volume which Messrs . Black have sent us there" is much that we have met with nowhere before , even concerning such carefully

canvassed characters as Lamartme , Heine , George Sand , and Alfred de Musset . The translator , Mrs . Abel Ram , has caught the manner of the original very successfully ; and as we read these short studies in retrospect we never for a moment miss that singular charm and grace which distinguishes almost everything that M . Grenier has written . The chapter on George Sand is long—we wish it were twice the length . George Sand is not an easy subject to write upon . She has claimed the attention of many

eminent critics , some of whom have regarded her style as the high-water mark of modern prose . We hardly know how to express our appreciation of M . Grenier's chapter on the " pale woman , dressed all in black , with a cigarette between her lips , " unless by saying that we remember Matthew Arnold ' s essay on the same subject , so exquisite in flavour , so supreme in its almost finical finish ; and that M . Grenier ' s chapters suffer little , if anything , by the comparison . Nor must we pass over the pages in which we are shown , " veluti in speculum , " at once the weakness and the strength of

the celebrated French Academy . M . Grenier . in his introduction , hastens to state that he intends to shun Boswellism in his descriptions . We are delighted to say that ha has done nothing of the kind . This volume has more of Boswell in it than any we have read for some time . Therein , we believe , lies its charm . To those who intend to write a literary biography our advice is to read Boswell by day and meditate upon him by night . We will add that a careful study of M . Grenier ' s Literary Reminiscences would be extremely beneficial .

Brown , V . C . By Mrs . Alexander . Second impression ( 6 s ) . —T . Fisher Unwin . THEBE is merit in this book , and merit of a very high order . The late Mr . Grant Allen once complained , in his essay on " The Decay of Criticism , " that the critics are wont to praise every book that falls into their hands . We hardly think this dictum holds good if applied to the present temper of the ungentle craft ; but there is in truth some excuse for those critics who indulge

in somewhat monotonous praise of the books of the day . It may be true that very few works of genius have been published recently ; but it is equally true that most of them display undoubted merit , and very few can be fairly described as bad or offensive . This is particularly the case in regard to prose fiction . There are , doubtless , many writers among Mrs . Alexander ' s contemporaries who could have written " Brown V . C . " ; there are a few—we think we could name them—who could have done greater justice to the same

subject . But this is not necessarily any disparagement of this volume . It is uniformly bright and entertaining . The style , a trifle thin , is a model of clear statement ; no sentence need be read a second time in order to understand it ; and this , as Mr . John Morley has pointed out in his essay on Macaulay , is a very great merit . One or two of the characters are admirably well sketched . The hero , a gentleman and a soldier , wins a place in the world ' s esteem and the heart of his first love , without performing any such

desperate deeds as are considered requisite by some writers . There is , however , no lack of incident or situation . The disappearance of Brown ' s mysterious mother , the courtship of Dr . Macnab , the ball atCaresford Court , the visit of Brown at Eden Lodge and the grand denouement , when it is discovered that the estate to which Marsaret Neville is hfiiresa nreanrrmtivfi

belongs in reality to Brown himself , all these incidents are cleverly narrated and keep the reader very pleasantly interested . As we have hinted , there is here but little " expense of spirit in a waste of shame , " but what is hereby lost in comic or tragic strength is gained in saneness and plausibility . We are , indeed , not at all sorry to miss the villain in the play ; he is so frequently in evidence that we are glad to be for a short time without him .

Books Of The Day.

The Englishwoman's Year Book and Directory 1900 . Second year of new issue . Edited by Emily Janes . Twentieth year ( 2 s 6 d net ) . — Adam and Charles Black . THE ladies will again welcome this handy volume . As we remarked when we noticed ' Who's Who , " in these columns , it is wonderful how such books can ba produced for so small a price . So well is this volume compiled

that we know of no book likely to be of equal service to any lady filling an important place in society . There is not only a good directory of the most prominent lady folk ; there is also the fullest details concerning the various organisations inaugurated by them recently . Messrs . A . and C . Black will , we are sure , pardon us if we point out the only error we have noticed in these

pages—a double-barrelled one . Mrs . Coulson Kernahan is here named as the author of both " Nothing but Nonsense " and " Captain Shannon . " The former was from the pen of Mr . Coulson Kernahan ' s eldest sister ; the latter is a powerful detective story by Mr . Kernahan himself . This , however , is but a small imperfection in a work of very uniform excellence , which has , we notice , attained its twentieth year .

Transvaal War Atlas ( Is net ) . —T . Nelson and Sons . MESSBS . NELSON have taken time by the forelock and have prepared the right atlas at the right moment . They have hit the happy medium between a map so thickly covered with names as to be consulted with difficulty , and a map in which the names of many important places are conspicuous by their absence . Moreover , this atlas is far more comprehensive than some of larger size . Ethnography , Climate , Routes , Political distribution , Geology ,

Vegetation , and other features are dealt with exhaustively by maps designed separately for each subject . The maps on pages 16 and 17 , showing South Africa in two sections , Western and Eastern , deserve our warmest commendation . By drawing a black line from point to point the movements of our advancing columns may be marked for future reference ; and the succint account of the Boers and Boerland will enable all who consult this atlas to do so intelligently . The course of events will probably alter the map of South Africa at no distant future ; but in the meantime Messrs . Nelson have supplied our needs admirably .

BOOKS RECEIVED . Carlo Crivelli . By G . M'Neil Rushforth , M . A . ( 5 s net ) . —George Bell and Sons . Highways and Byways in Yorkshire . By Arthur H . Norway . With illustrations by Joseph Pennell and Hugh Thomson ( 6 s ) . —Macmillan and Co ., Limited .

In tune with the infinite , or fullness of peace , power , and plently . By Ralph Waldo Trine ( 3 s 6 d net ) . —George Bell and Sons . The English Church from its foundation to the Norman conquest ( 597 1066 ) . By William Hunt , M . A . ( 7 s 6 d ) . —Macmillan and Co ., Limited . The Grammar of Science . By Karl Pearson , M . A ., F . R . S . Second edition , revised and enlarged , with 33 figures in the text ( 7 s 6 d net ) . —Adam and Charles Black .

The Jew and other Stories . By Ivan Turgenev . Translated from the Russian by Constance Garnett ( 3 s net ) . —William Heinemann . Thou shalt not — . By Stanton Morich ( 3 s 6 d ) . —C . Arthur Pearson , Limited . Andromeda . An idyll of the Great River . By Robert Buchanan ( 6 s ) . — Chatto and Windus .

Ad00803

Just published , Crown 8 vo ., Cloth , 5 s . MILITARY LODGES . The Apron and the Sword , or Freemasonry under Arms ; being an account of Lodges in Regiments and Ships of War , and of famous soldiers and sailors ( of all countries ) , who have belonged to the Society , together with biographies of distinguished Military and Naval Brethren , and anecdotes showing the influence of Masonry in warfare . By Robert Freke Gould ( late 31 st Foot , barrister-at-law ) Past Senior Grand Deacon of England , P . M . Nos . 92 and 2076 London , 153 Gibraltar , 570 Shanghai , and 743 1 st Batt . East Surrey Regiment , & c . Author of " The History of Freemasonry , " and other Works . Gale and Polden , Ltd ., 2 Amen Corner , London ; and Aldershot .

Sonnets Of The Greek Mythology, No. 8.

Sonnets of the Greek Mythology , No . 8 .

TO CLIO . SWEET maid of glowing beauty , all my soul Clings like a tendril to thy stately form ; E'en all the gods thy dignity extol—So , a poor mortal , it may well transform .

Thy heaving bosom with a stainless pride—Rises and falls in faultless symmetry ; As , breathing forth the loftiest purity Thy lips , like corals , smilingly divide , Issuing such notes of thrilling melody ;

I scarce dare breathe for fear thy voice should cease But no 1 thy strains unfailingly increase Giving such tinge of their blest harmony , Enamouring me with such ecstatic joy—I tremble lest earth ' s scenes should it destroy . Bradford . CHAS . F . FOKSHAW , M . A .

Bro . T . Collingwood , Proprietor of the Clarence Hotel , 88 Aldersgate Street , opposite Carthusian Street , E . C . and close to the Railway Station , has great pleasure in informing the Brethren and numerous other friends that the house has been wholly renovated and special attention paid to the

Masonic accommodation . The Egyptian Instruction Lodge , No . 27 , holds its meetings here every Monday , at 7 o ' clock , and Brethren wishing to join the Lodge will receive a hearty welcome . They will also find the establishment complete with new Grill and Dining Rooms , while all articles supplied are of the very best quality .

“The Freemason's Chronicle: 1900-03-03, Page 8” Masonic Periodicals Online, Library and Museum of Freemasonry, 15 Aug. 2025, django:8000/periodicals/fcn/issues/fcn_03031900/page/8/.
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Books Of The Day.

Books of the Day .

Books , Music , & c . intended for review , should be addressed to the Editor of the Freemason ' s Chronicle , at Fleet Works , New Barnet . — : o : — Negro Nobodies . Being a series of sketches of Peasant life in Jamaica . By Noel de Montagnac . No . VI . of the " Over-seas Library " ( Is 6 d ) . — T . Fisher Unwin . AUTOLYCUS would perhaps describe this book as au unconsidered trifle . It is , nevertheless , a clever piece of work . When Mr . Fisher Unwin first

announced the " Over-seas Library " we anticipated that many readers blest with Epicurean sensibilities would hint a fault and hesitate dislike .. But nothing succeeds like success , and such books as "In Guiana Wilds " and the " Well-sinkers " were sure to find readers in the present state of things in general . We are pleased to say that some of these Negro Nobodies are , in fact , singular and imposing characters . They are far from being ' 'Nobody ' . ' ¦ in their own estimation . The unsophisticated fun and foolery so

prevalent in Jamaica in its later and happier life is here portrayed by one who has a good eye for the salient points in a picture . The chapter " concerning a christening " deals with a subject well worn by humorous writers ; but the author has , we think , handled it very happily . The group that surrounded Mr . Blackburn , the minister , included Hooper and Zacche ( the godfathers ) , Verona Machonochie and a goodly number besides , and their behaviour is extremely ludicrous before " Simon Peter Mount Sinai Tilbert " is christened . Many other characters in this book afford plenty of

entertainment , although their actions are few and their speech sometimes scanty and sometimes enigmatical . It is only just to mention how strong an effect is here produced with very slender materials and within the compass of so small a volume . The incident to which we have referred is one among several equally good ; but we must leave readers to sample and taste for themselves . The large type used in printing this series makes the volumes very suitable for reading on a journey . We have put them to the test , so speak from experience . We " recommend as much to every man . "

Literary Reminiscences . By Bdouard Grenier . Translated from the French by Mrs . Abel Ram ( 6 s ) . —Adam and Charles Black . THE literature of France is particularly rich in memoirs and reminiscences . The materials for an exhaustive history of French literature are much more complete than for a history of our own . This is due , in part , to a trait in our character which it is no discredit to acknowledge . We are a somewhat reticent race . At an English dinner-table the host says but little

concerning himself if many guests are present . We need only turn , almost at haphazard , to the early life of Voltaire , to the literature pertaining to the wits of the Hotel de Rambouillet , or to these literary reminiscences of M . Grenier to notice how full is the stream of narrative , how abundant is the anecdote , how minute , even to a fault , are the existing records of men of letters in France . In the volume which Messrs . Black have sent us there" is much that we have met with nowhere before , even concerning such carefully

canvassed characters as Lamartme , Heine , George Sand , and Alfred de Musset . The translator , Mrs . Abel Ram , has caught the manner of the original very successfully ; and as we read these short studies in retrospect we never for a moment miss that singular charm and grace which distinguishes almost everything that M . Grenier has written . The chapter on George Sand is long—we wish it were twice the length . George Sand is not an easy subject to write upon . She has claimed the attention of many

eminent critics , some of whom have regarded her style as the high-water mark of modern prose . We hardly know how to express our appreciation of M . Grenier's chapter on the " pale woman , dressed all in black , with a cigarette between her lips , " unless by saying that we remember Matthew Arnold ' s essay on the same subject , so exquisite in flavour , so supreme in its almost finical finish ; and that M . Grenier ' s chapters suffer little , if anything , by the comparison . Nor must we pass over the pages in which we are shown , " veluti in speculum , " at once the weakness and the strength of

the celebrated French Academy . M . Grenier . in his introduction , hastens to state that he intends to shun Boswellism in his descriptions . We are delighted to say that ha has done nothing of the kind . This volume has more of Boswell in it than any we have read for some time . Therein , we believe , lies its charm . To those who intend to write a literary biography our advice is to read Boswell by day and meditate upon him by night . We will add that a careful study of M . Grenier ' s Literary Reminiscences would be extremely beneficial .

Brown , V . C . By Mrs . Alexander . Second impression ( 6 s ) . —T . Fisher Unwin . THEBE is merit in this book , and merit of a very high order . The late Mr . Grant Allen once complained , in his essay on " The Decay of Criticism , " that the critics are wont to praise every book that falls into their hands . We hardly think this dictum holds good if applied to the present temper of the ungentle craft ; but there is in truth some excuse for those critics who indulge

in somewhat monotonous praise of the books of the day . It may be true that very few works of genius have been published recently ; but it is equally true that most of them display undoubted merit , and very few can be fairly described as bad or offensive . This is particularly the case in regard to prose fiction . There are , doubtless , many writers among Mrs . Alexander ' s contemporaries who could have written " Brown V . C . " ; there are a few—we think we could name them—who could have done greater justice to the same

subject . But this is not necessarily any disparagement of this volume . It is uniformly bright and entertaining . The style , a trifle thin , is a model of clear statement ; no sentence need be read a second time in order to understand it ; and this , as Mr . John Morley has pointed out in his essay on Macaulay , is a very great merit . One or two of the characters are admirably well sketched . The hero , a gentleman and a soldier , wins a place in the world ' s esteem and the heart of his first love , without performing any such

desperate deeds as are considered requisite by some writers . There is , however , no lack of incident or situation . The disappearance of Brown ' s mysterious mother , the courtship of Dr . Macnab , the ball atCaresford Court , the visit of Brown at Eden Lodge and the grand denouement , when it is discovered that the estate to which Marsaret Neville is hfiiresa nreanrrmtivfi

belongs in reality to Brown himself , all these incidents are cleverly narrated and keep the reader very pleasantly interested . As we have hinted , there is here but little " expense of spirit in a waste of shame , " but what is hereby lost in comic or tragic strength is gained in saneness and plausibility . We are , indeed , not at all sorry to miss the villain in the play ; he is so frequently in evidence that we are glad to be for a short time without him .

Books Of The Day.

The Englishwoman's Year Book and Directory 1900 . Second year of new issue . Edited by Emily Janes . Twentieth year ( 2 s 6 d net ) . — Adam and Charles Black . THE ladies will again welcome this handy volume . As we remarked when we noticed ' Who's Who , " in these columns , it is wonderful how such books can ba produced for so small a price . So well is this volume compiled

that we know of no book likely to be of equal service to any lady filling an important place in society . There is not only a good directory of the most prominent lady folk ; there is also the fullest details concerning the various organisations inaugurated by them recently . Messrs . A . and C . Black will , we are sure , pardon us if we point out the only error we have noticed in these

pages—a double-barrelled one . Mrs . Coulson Kernahan is here named as the author of both " Nothing but Nonsense " and " Captain Shannon . " The former was from the pen of Mr . Coulson Kernahan ' s eldest sister ; the latter is a powerful detective story by Mr . Kernahan himself . This , however , is but a small imperfection in a work of very uniform excellence , which has , we notice , attained its twentieth year .

Transvaal War Atlas ( Is net ) . —T . Nelson and Sons . MESSBS . NELSON have taken time by the forelock and have prepared the right atlas at the right moment . They have hit the happy medium between a map so thickly covered with names as to be consulted with difficulty , and a map in which the names of many important places are conspicuous by their absence . Moreover , this atlas is far more comprehensive than some of larger size . Ethnography , Climate , Routes , Political distribution , Geology ,

Vegetation , and other features are dealt with exhaustively by maps designed separately for each subject . The maps on pages 16 and 17 , showing South Africa in two sections , Western and Eastern , deserve our warmest commendation . By drawing a black line from point to point the movements of our advancing columns may be marked for future reference ; and the succint account of the Boers and Boerland will enable all who consult this atlas to do so intelligently . The course of events will probably alter the map of South Africa at no distant future ; but in the meantime Messrs . Nelson have supplied our needs admirably .

BOOKS RECEIVED . Carlo Crivelli . By G . M'Neil Rushforth , M . A . ( 5 s net ) . —George Bell and Sons . Highways and Byways in Yorkshire . By Arthur H . Norway . With illustrations by Joseph Pennell and Hugh Thomson ( 6 s ) . —Macmillan and Co ., Limited .

In tune with the infinite , or fullness of peace , power , and plently . By Ralph Waldo Trine ( 3 s 6 d net ) . —George Bell and Sons . The English Church from its foundation to the Norman conquest ( 597 1066 ) . By William Hunt , M . A . ( 7 s 6 d ) . —Macmillan and Co ., Limited . The Grammar of Science . By Karl Pearson , M . A ., F . R . S . Second edition , revised and enlarged , with 33 figures in the text ( 7 s 6 d net ) . —Adam and Charles Black .

The Jew and other Stories . By Ivan Turgenev . Translated from the Russian by Constance Garnett ( 3 s net ) . —William Heinemann . Thou shalt not — . By Stanton Morich ( 3 s 6 d ) . —C . Arthur Pearson , Limited . Andromeda . An idyll of the Great River . By Robert Buchanan ( 6 s ) . — Chatto and Windus .

Ad00803

Just published , Crown 8 vo ., Cloth , 5 s . MILITARY LODGES . The Apron and the Sword , or Freemasonry under Arms ; being an account of Lodges in Regiments and Ships of War , and of famous soldiers and sailors ( of all countries ) , who have belonged to the Society , together with biographies of distinguished Military and Naval Brethren , and anecdotes showing the influence of Masonry in warfare . By Robert Freke Gould ( late 31 st Foot , barrister-at-law ) Past Senior Grand Deacon of England , P . M . Nos . 92 and 2076 London , 153 Gibraltar , 570 Shanghai , and 743 1 st Batt . East Surrey Regiment , & c . Author of " The History of Freemasonry , " and other Works . Gale and Polden , Ltd ., 2 Amen Corner , London ; and Aldershot .

Sonnets Of The Greek Mythology, No. 8.

Sonnets of the Greek Mythology , No . 8 .

TO CLIO . SWEET maid of glowing beauty , all my soul Clings like a tendril to thy stately form ; E'en all the gods thy dignity extol—So , a poor mortal , it may well transform .

Thy heaving bosom with a stainless pride—Rises and falls in faultless symmetry ; As , breathing forth the loftiest purity Thy lips , like corals , smilingly divide , Issuing such notes of thrilling melody ;

I scarce dare breathe for fear thy voice should cease But no 1 thy strains unfailingly increase Giving such tinge of their blest harmony , Enamouring me with such ecstatic joy—I tremble lest earth ' s scenes should it destroy . Bradford . CHAS . F . FOKSHAW , M . A .

Bro . T . Collingwood , Proprietor of the Clarence Hotel , 88 Aldersgate Street , opposite Carthusian Street , E . C . and close to the Railway Station , has great pleasure in informing the Brethren and numerous other friends that the house has been wholly renovated and special attention paid to the

Masonic accommodation . The Egyptian Instruction Lodge , No . 27 , holds its meetings here every Monday , at 7 o ' clock , and Brethren wishing to join the Lodge will receive a hearty welcome . They will also find the establishment complete with new Grill and Dining Rooms , while all articles supplied are of the very best quality .

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