| + + — | Nation. 81: 104. Ag. 3, ‘05. 1110w. (Review of second series.) |
“Are marked by charm and insight. They are not unduly discursive.”
| + + | N. Y. Times. 10: 496. Jl. 29, ‘05. 820w. (Review of second series.) |
“He is sound and sane, and he can penetrate sympathetically to inner realities of the works and the men he is studying. He is independent and he thinks for himself.”
| + + | N. Y. Times. 10: 730. O. 28, ‘05. 700w. (Review of third series.) |
“Mr. More has the instincts of the scholar and the tastes of the man of culture; but his feet are on the ground. And he has a generous endowment of that common sense which is the conservator of art, as genius is its inspiration.”
| + + + | Outlook. 81: 678. N. 18, ‘05. 1550w. (Review of first-third series.) |
“Whatever his subject, the stamp of leisurely scholarship, of well-backed, first-hand knowledge, of that indescribable something called ‘style’ attests the writer’s kinship with the best of the old-school essayists.”
| + + | Pub. Opin. 38: 942. Je. 17, ‘05. 180w. (Review of second series.) |
Morgan, Lewis Henry. League of the Ho-de-no-sau-nee, or Iroquois; ed. by Herbert M. Lloyd. [**]$5. Dodd.