| + − | Ath. 1907, 1: 319. Mr. 16. 280w. |
Reviewed by Wm. M. Payne.
| Dial. 43: 93. Ag. 16, ’07. 140w. |
“There is an engaging fervor in the spirit of his work. Embodied as it is in clear and fluent verse, with an unusual melody of vowelsound, it makes a gently insistent appeal, not unlike that to be felt in certain pieces of Longfellow’s.”
| + | Nation. 84: 199. F. 28, ’07. 270w. |
“Singularly engaging.... ‘The soul’s progress,’ with its fine, high seriousness of tone and intention, its evidences of an ardent enthusiasm for the traditional ideals of English verse, and its frank, youthful assumption of an interest on the part of the world in the motions of a soul newly awakened to the universality of its own individual life.” William Aspenwall Bradley.
| + + | N. Y. Times. 12: 132. Mr. 2, ’07. 650w. |
“In a pleasing variety of metrical forms, and with sincere poetical feeling, this vision of advancing spiritual growth through beauty and truth is presented simply and clearly.”
| + | Outlook. 86: 258. Je. 1, ’07. 110w. |
Lee, Gerald Stanley. [Voice of the machines; an introduction to the twentieth century.] $1.25. Mount Tom press, Northampton, Mass.