How Charles Bosanquet, minister of industrial affairs, framed a measure which settled for a time the problem of the great army of the unemployable in London, and what came of it, is the burden of this story. First the starving masses are drawn, hideous, menacing, parasites upon the working poor; then comes the minister’s solution; those whom the courts deem unfit for society are to be made slaves for life. This is the beginning of that awful thing, the slave colony in the Cornish hinterland at which the Christian world stood aghast. Thru all this a love story is developed. Bosanquet and his old friend, John Hazel, now his political opponent, both love Muriel, an active worker in the anti-slavery league. And then the day comes when the slaves break loose!


“Strange though its theme and remarkable the treatment, this novel shows its greatest touch of genius in its ending.”

+ N. Y. Times. 11: 772. N. 24, ’06. 240w.

Gunne, Evelyn. Silver trail; poems. $1.25. Badger, R. G.

The author has followed her silver trail to learn its mystery. Her verse goes hither and yon for themes, sometimes beyond the mountain, to the sunset, more often far afield. The lines all breathe possibility, hope, buoyancy.

Gunsaulus, Frank W. Paths to power; Central church sermons. *$1.25. Revell.

+ Ind. 59: 1541. D. 28, ’05. 180w.

Gwatkin, Henry Melville. Eye for spiritual things: and other sermons. *$1.50. Scribner.

“Some twenty-eight sermons.... English sermons of the best type.... The ... volume ranges over a wide class of subjects, though no theme is handled which is not of importance in the religious life. The point of view is indicated in the following sentence: ‘The knowledge of God is not to be learned by sacrificing reason to feeling, or feeling to reason, by ascetic observance or by orthodox belief; it is given freely to all that purify themselves with all the force of heart and soul and mind.’”—Nation.