+ + —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.