Reviewed by Edward Fuller.
| Bookm. 26: 158. O. ’07. 360w. | ||
| Ind. 63: 155. Jl. 18, ’07. 290w. | ||
| Nation. 84: 390. Ap. 25, ’07. 560w. |
“Werder is an intensely matter-of-fact critic—all prose. The beauty of the book is that Werder has a firm grip on his argument, and coherently analyzes the play in its light. It is therefore, for most readers, a new and intelligible study of ‘Hamlet,’ and as such it will be welcomed.”
| + | N. Y. Times. 12: 73. F. 9, ’07. 800w. |
“The argument is presented with great clearness and force.”
| + | Outlook. 86: 436. Je. 22, ’07. 290w. |
Wesley, John. John Wesley’s journal. Abridged. *50c. West. Meth. bk.
A handy one-volume edition in which the more interesting features of the two volume work are brought into condensed form. The main facts that illustrate the rise and progress of Methodism have been preserved in a continuous narrative.
“The condensation is considerable but the most characteristic and valuable features of this intensely interesting human document are preserved, and no liberties (except of omission) have been taken with Wesley’s text.”