| + | Dial. 38: 201. Mr. 16, ‘05. 450w. | |
| Nation. 80: 294. Ap. 13, ‘05. 60w. |
“Cassia is a most charming poem, but without the splendor, pomp, and grim reality of the ancient city in which the fable had its birth. Miss Thomas is most felicitous on her own ground, spending her abundant and chastened fancy upon the moods that arise from modern and personal associations.”
| + | N. Y. Times. 10: 50. Ja. 28. ‘05. 320w. |
Thomas, Edward. Wales: painted by Robert Fowler; described by E. Thomas. [*]$6. Macmillan.
A picturesque treatment of Wales with brush and pencil, by Mr. Fowler, with descriptions and quaint tales by Mr. Thomas.
[*] “Between the illustrations and the letterpress there is absolutely no connexion.”
| + — | Ath. 1905, 2: 729. N. 25. 270w. |
“The illustrations are excellent; some of great beauty and admirably reproduced in color. Mr. Thomas is flippant and tiresome; in at least one place he is decidedly irreverent.”
| + — | N. Y. Times. 10: 480. Jl. 22, ‘05. 410w. |
“The color-pictures show a fine, strong sense of distance and perspective, and the artist is also to be praised for his restraint in his color-schemes. The literary part of the work is somewhat rambling and inchoate, and the note of jocosity is at times forced.”