“North Carolina’s claim to be the first battleground of the Revolution is zealously advocated in this monograph, which is, briefly, a study of the ‘viper’ episode of 1765.... In it also is incorporated some interesting documentary matter in the way of legislative acts, Regulator’s ‘Advertisements,’ and contemporary letters and addresses.”—Outlook.

“The work is flimsy, incoherent, prejudiced.”

+ —Am. Hist. R. 10: 951. Jl. ‘05. 270w.
N. Y. Times. 10: 179. Mr. 25, ‘05. 960w. (Abstract of contents.)
+ —Outlook. 79: 709. Mr. 18, ‘05. 260w.

[*] FitzGerald, Edward. Euphranor: a dialogue on youth. [*]75c. Lane.

This fifteenth volume of the “New pocket library” contains Euphranor “very fitly presented after the text of the first edition of 1851. Mr. Frederick Chapman, who supplies a preface, dwells upon the value of the little work ... not only as a classic specimen of English prose, but as reflective of Cambridge and its contemporary life, and the author as a part of them.” (Nation.)

[*] “To possess ‘Euphranor’ in the present convenient form will give pleasure to many lovers of the famous letters and the more famous quatrains.” H. W. Boynton.

+Atlan. 96: 850. D. ‘05. 390w.
*+Nation. 81: 339. O. 26, ‘05. 90w.

[*] “A pleasing preface. There are some sixty Greek words and more than twenty mistakes.”

+ —Spec. 95: 397. S. 16, ‘05. 160w.

Fitzgerald, Edward and Pamela. Edward and Pamela Fitzgerald; being an account of their lives; compiled by Gerald Campbell. $3.50. Longmans.