+ + Ath. 1906, 1: 132. F. 3. 1040w.

“It is impossible to praise too highly the manner of executing the work.”

+ + + Nation. 82: 415. My. 17, ’06. 800w.

“The student must be very circumspect as to the manner in which he uses the information he gleans from these ‘Chronicles,’ as the dates are often inaccurate, though the facts are, in the main, correct. Mr. Kingsford’s scholarly introduction and notes will, however, aid him very materially to avoid missing his way in the labyrinth of rather loosely put information in which the ancient chroniclers conveyed their facts.”

+ + Sat. R. 102: 120. Jl. 28, ’06. 290w. Spec. 96: sup. 650. Ap. 28, ’06. 260w.

Kingsley, Mrs. Florence (Morse). Intellectual Miss Lamb. 75c. Century.

“The exuberantly youthful, kittenish beauty exhibited in Miss Lamb’s pink and white curl-shaded cherubic countenance” seems far from suggesting the fact that she is “little more than a walking edition of the great Greathead’s ‘Physiological psychology.’” She can subject the man who loves her to as critical a scientific analysis as the little “Master William,” who calls her “Lamby,”—and all for the sake of her “Tabulated records.” One day the precious manuscript is chewed to pulp by a bull terrier that must have been in sympathy with Billy Gregg; for it was the day of his delayed innings.


+ N. Y. Times. 11: 369. Je. 9, ’06. 190w.

“Merry little story.”