“We should prefer a treatment of the subject in which the record of the writer’s own observations was distinct from his chronological account of events which passed during his journeys, but of which he was not a witness.”

+ −Ath. 1906, 1: 730. Je. 16. 280w.
+ −Lond. Times. 5: 208. Je. 8, ’06. 1290w.

“The all-pervading melancholy of Russian life as it manifests itself in the music and the literature of the nation—all this is treated with the sympathetic insight and the charming sincerity of true art, yet with a conversational informality, liberally interspersed with humor, which gives the reader a pleasing sense of intimacy with the writer, as well as with an irresistible subject.” Abraham Cahan.

+ +No. Am. 183: 668. O. 5, ’06. 1520w.

Nevinson, Henry Woodd. Modern slavery. **$2. Harper.

6–18826.

Descriptive note in Annual. 1906.

“Mr. Nevinson’s account is very interesting, the illustrations are good and the total impression is that it is an account of a truthful eye-witness.”

+ +Ann. Am. Acad. 29: 220. Ja. ’07. 250w.

Newberry, Percy Edward, and Garstang, John. Short history of ancient Egypt. **$1.20. Estes.