“Yet with all it is a strangely suggestive book, reassuring to any man who feels that America is becoming the New Jerusalem, full of careful study and hasty deduction, full of leads which the author does not work to a conclusion, full of surprises and odds and ends of valuable information—and full of contempt.”
| + — | Pub. Opin. 39: 602. N. 4, ‘05. 430w. |
Warner, Horace Everett. Ethics of force. 50c. Pub. for the International Union by Ginn.
This little volume contains, in revised form, a series of five papers read before the Ethical Club of Washington, D. C., just prior to and after the Spanish war. The titles of the papers are The ethics of heroism, The ethics of patriotism, Can war be defended on the authority of Christ? Can war be defended on grounds of reason? and Some objections.
“Although the book is somewhat academic in tone, it is worth reading.”
| + + | Cath. World. 82: 118. O. ‘05. 370w. |
“This is the sort of a thoughtful volume on the subject that should be placed on the reading-lists of our public schools.”
| + + | Pub. Opin. 39: 414. S. 23, ‘05. 340w. |
Warwick, Charles Franklin. Mirabeau and the French revolution. [**]$2.50. Lippincott.
“This is the well-written story of the most extraordinary character of the most extraordinary scene in the drama of modern history, the storm-center of that scene till his death.”—Outlook.