A group of eight sermons preached by the pastor of the Union Methodist Episcopal church of St. Louis, teaching that “through free intelligence, an enlightened conscience, a righteous will, and a heart aglow with love, Christ lives and reigns in human affairs.”

Luce, Morton. Handbook to the works of William Shakespeare. $1.75. Macmillan.

“A series of introductions to the separate works, taken chronologically, fills the bulk of the volume, the remaining contents being chapters of history, biography and bibliography, with discussions of Shakespeare’s art, philosophy and metrics.” (Dial.) “Mr. Luce’s volume is something more than a handbook; it is a criticism and an esthetic too. Not only does it contain all the generally accepted facts with regard to Shakespeare, together with the general consensus of critical opinion, but it also propounds a number of original or at least novel, ideas and dramatic theories of its own.” (Ind.)


“Has collected a good deal of value as to the sources of the plays and poems, the extant testimony concerning them, and the circumstance of their appearance. He has not the gift of arrangement. The compiler does not apparently know, what true conciseness (a quality essential in a single book about the whole of Shakespeare) means.”

+ – Ath. 1906. 2: 210. Ag. 25. 101Ow.

“The book is prepared with knowledge and judgment, and seems to be, with the possible exception of Professor Dowden’s similar work, the best single volume available for a fairly close and detailed study of the poet. Certainly, the amount of matter packed within a small compass is remarkable.”

+ + Dial. 41: 43. Jl. 16, ’06. 120w.

“It is suggestive, stimulating and to the lover of Shakespeare, thoroly readable.”

+ + Ind. 61: 758. S. 27, ’06. 290w.