“The book is characterized by the nicest scholarship.”
| + | Educ. R. 33: 535. My. ’07. 60w. (Review of v. 2.) |
“The dominant feeling with which one puts down this book is one of pleasure and gratitude. There is everything to learn in it and everything to enjoy, and all the learning is only another kind of enjoying. Nothing could be better than the editorial introductions to the different sections. They are models of what such things should be; as true as if they were written by dulness itself; as striking as if they were made up of wilfulness.”
| + | Lond. Times. 5: 301. S. 7, ’06. 5330w. (Review of v. 1.) |
“The introduction to each extract gives just the information that will be needed by the ordinary reader, and the general introduction errs, if at all, only in its brevity.”
| + | Lond. Times. 6: 339. N. 8, ’07. 1370w. (Review of v. 2.) | |
| Nation. 84: 411. My. 2, ’07. 120w. (Review of v. 2.) | ||
| N. Y. Times. 12: 433. Jl. 6, ’07. 270w. (Review of v. 2.) |
Haeckel, Ernest Heinrich Philipp August. Last words on evolution: tr. from 2d ed. by Joseph McCabe. *$1. Eckler.
6–14562.
Descriptive note in Annual, 1906.
| Ann. Am. Acad. 29: 214. Ja. ’07. 270w. |