“Though slender and unambitious, they are written in a refined style. The poems, as a whole, are the least successful work in the volume.”
| + | Acad. 62: 520. My. 13, ‘05. 600w. |
“This little volume will be welcome to all lovers of ‘The road mender.’ It has, not, indeed, the finished perfection of that book, but some of the stories and poems display the same fine artistic sense, and the same sacramental reverence for natural glory, the same deep tenderness and sympathy.”
| + | Ath. 1905, 1: 560. My. 6. 300w. |
“Is marked by an exquisite simplicity of diction and a delicacy of spiritual insight that are far out of the common.”
| + + | Dial. 39: 71. Ag. 1, ‘05. 110w. |
Fairlie, John Archibald. National administration of the United States of America. [**]$2.50. Macmillan.
Written chiefly from official records such as the Constitution of the United States, statutes of Congress, administrative reports and judicial decisions, this volume gives an account of the administrative system, treating the legislative and judicial branches only in their direct relations to the executive administration. There are chapters on the powers of the president, the senate, congress, the cabinet, and the various departments and bureaus. A complete bibliography is provided.
| + + | Am. Hist. R. 10: 948. Jl. ‘05. 30w. |
“Dr. Fairlie’s treatise on this subject is marked by all the scholarly treatment, painstaking accuracy and thoroughness which characterized his work on municipal administration.”