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Ad00803
" THE GRAND SANHEDRIM " A Paper for reading at Royal Arch Chapters , & c . BY OEBTON COOPBB , M . B . Z . 483 , H . 1928 , Price thirteen pence , post free from BRO . ALFRED H . COOPER , PUBLISHER , 19 COLEMAN STREET , LONDON , E . C or from " Freemason ' s Chronicle Office , " New Barnet .
Books Of The Day.
Books of the Day .
Books , Music , & c . intended for review , should be addressed to the Editor of the Freemason ' s Chronicle , at Fleet Works , New Barnet . The Cathedral Church of Saint Paul . An account of the old and new building , with a short historical sketch . By the Rev . Arthur Dimock , M . A . ( Is 6 d ) . —George Bell and Sons .
THIS has been very carefully compiled , and bears on every page the hall mark of sound workmanship . As we have previously had occasion to remark , such volumes as the one before us are in some respects the easiest form of literary labour ; in other respects they are the most difficult . To select , for our subject , St . Paul ' s Cathedral ; to go to the British Museum " Rotunda " and there make copious extracts from many books dealing with the history
and architecture of Sir Christopher Wren ' s masterpiece ; then to set to work , and , arranging our materials , make one new hook out of many old ones , all this may be done by any man of average intelligence in or out of Grub Street . But to enliven and impress the whole with the stamp of originality , and invest a well worn subject with a wholly fresh interest is a very difficult task indeed . But nothing less than this has been accomplished by Mr . Dimock . He has the spirit of the antiquarian , the judgment of the historian , and the
taste of the scholar ; and it is difficult to believe that Messrs . Bell could have entrusted this subject to abler hands . The illustrations do not seem to us so good as those in other volumes of a similar character recently issued by the « ame publishers ; they will not compare , as pictures , with the illustrations to "Christchurch Priory and Wimborne Minster "; but this book is so thoroughly satisfactory from other standpoints that we are heartily thankful for the opportunity of looking it through . When the " Cathedral Series " is complete it will require , like Albert Chevalier's " nipper , " a lot of beating .
Cinder-Path Tales . By William Lindsey ( 3 s 6 d ) . —Grant Richards . THERE is admirable entertainment in these pages . The author can tell a good story well , and is sufficiently enthusiastic to satisfy the veriest devotee of the modern craze for sport . He has a manly self confidence in his own powers which is very far removed from boastfulness or self conceit , and does not fail , at the same time , to insist on a wholesome respect for the prowess
and skill of an antagonist . To proclaim his partialities is always a prerogative of the critic ; so we may say that among these cinder-path tales our favourite is that which tells " how Kitty queered the mile . " That story , " My first , for money , " and " A Virginia Jumper " are full of such thoroughly good writing that we should like to read a novel by this author on a similar subject . He has done a true service to sport and sportsmen ; for he has shown us the good side of his sub htl
ject so brigy that we can pardon much that lies in the background . This is a very tastefully printed volume . A series of such stories dealing with cricket , football , and golf respectively , in similar manner , issued by Mr . Grant Richards in the same garb and at the same price would , we venture to predict , be welcomed by " Young England " with open arms . Possibly the publisher may take our hint . He could hardly lose money by auoh a venture .
On Heroes , Hero-worship , and the Heroic in History . By Thomas Carlyle . Edited by Israel Gollancz , M . A . The Temple Classics ( Is 6 d net ) . —J . M . Dent and Co . WE have before had the pleasure of reviewing the Temple Classics ; but are particularly gratified to find that these lectures by Carlyle on " Heroes and Hero-Worship" have been included in the series . In the red cloth
edition issued by Messrs . Chapman and Hall this work must be familiar to almost everybody ; but as Messrs . Dent ' s volume is about half the size and is , to say the least , equally well printed , we do no injustice to anybody when we assert our preference for the volume before us . In these lectures Carlyle gave utterance to many wise saws and profound truths in language much more eloquent and less enigmatic than was his wont . The fact is that in discoursing on man from the heroic standpoint , and taking as examples men like Mahomet
, Cromwell , Dante , and Napoleon , compared with whom the mass of mankind are , in his opinion , as mere dross , Carlyle was at his best . He had read history deeply , and thought upon it philosophically , and in " Heroes and Hero-Worship " he expressed some of his most sane and serious conclusions on the whole matter . His tribute to Dante is , for him , singularly lucid , generous and appreciative ; on the whole it is perhaps the most satisfactory section in the volume . Wo trust Messrs . Dent will sell a great many copies of this elegant edition of an invaluable English classic .
A Man of his Age . By Hamilton Drummond . Illustrated by J . Ambrose Walton ( 3 s 6 d ) . —Ward , Lock and Co ., Limited . _ MB . HAMILTON DBUMMOND is a writer of great ability . We have no hesitation in affirming that " A Man of his Age " is very much in advance of the average volume of fiction put into our hands now-a-days . In the first place it is the work of a rare master of st yle . It combines an easy flow of
diction and an adroitness of transition with a sententious and epigrammatic conciseness which is at times truly Baconian . Thoroughly earnest in narrative , and realising his scenes with unerring vision , Mr . Drummond nevertheless contrives to drop a memorable phrase here and there which adds greatly to the dignity and permanent value of his prose . " Not even the devil himself can keep a man from bettering his generation ; " " He who fights from underneath and strikes upward is weakened by a truce "
" If your peasant heats slowly , even to his own quarrel , he cools quickly to that of another man " ; such sentences as these meet us almost at every turn . As a story "A Man of his Ago " is uniformly interesting , and is , as we have hinted , exceedingly well written . Those who have read " For the Religion , " a former volume by the same writer , and those fine short stories " A Queen ' s Favour " and " Man and Monk " recently contributed by him to the " English Illustrated Magazine " will find all his characteristic qualities of style and treatment well to the front in this volume . The great human
Books Of The Day.
passions of hatred and of love are depicted with much power and pathos ; and characters like Blaise de Bornauld , and his lady , Marcel , La Hake and Madamoiselle Suzanne , are conceived and elaborated with a completeness only too rarely evinced in prose fiction . There are some scenes in the latter chapters which greatly pleased us , such as the submission of De Luxe , the dash from Bernauld by night , and the final encounter between Blaise and
La Hake . Mr . Hamilton Drummond has gone once again to the days of Coligny for his subject ; and as we can honestly say that his choice of a theme was as happy as his treatment of it our readers may suppose that we regard him as a writer of the first rank . Messrs . Ward , Lock and Co . have recently issued many new novels . We will venture to say they know quite well that " A Man of his Age " is one of the best of them .
BOOKS RECEIVED . A Maker of Nations . By Guy Boothby . Illustrated by Gordon Browne ( 5 s ) . —Ward , Lock and Co ., Limited . The Disenchantment of Nurse Dorothy . A story of Hospital life . By Florence Baxendale . —Skeffington and Son . Of the House of Chloe . A tale of the times . By Ellis Marston ( 4 s net ) . — Simpkin , Marshall , Hamilton , Kent and Co ., Ltd .
The Love of Parson Lord and other stories . By Mary E . Wilkins . Illustrated ( 6 s ) . —Harper and Brothers . Towards Pretoria . A record of the war between Briton and Boer to the hoisting of the British flag at Bloemfontein . By Julian Ralph . With historical forward appendices and map ( 6 s ) . —C . Arthur Pearson , Ltd . Love , Sport , and a Double Event . By W . P . Gilpin ( 3 s 6 d ) . —Leadenhall Press , Ltd .
Chiswick Shakespeare . Midsummer Night's Dream , and King Lear ( Is 6 d each ) . —G . Bell and Sons . Words from St . Paul ' s . By William Sinclair , Archdeacon of London . No . 1 ( 4 d ) . —Thomas Burleigh .
Music Of The Day.
Music of the Day .
RECENT PUBLICATIONS RECEIVED . Boosey and Co . —Down the Vale . By Gunby Hadath , music by Frank L . Moir . Bosworth and Co . —The Rose and the Bee . Words and music by William Wallace . —Till Death . By Mazzoni . and Clifton Bingham , music by
Angelo Mascheroni . —Where Roses Gleam . English words by Will Ransom , music by Angelo Mascheroni . —lere Valse . By Gabriel-Marie . —Tarantellette . Pianoforte Solo by Graham P . Moore . —Murmuring Breezes . Transcribed for piano by R . Niemann . —Liedchen ohne Worte . By Franz Zureich . — Schlummerlied . For piano , by Cornelius Gurlitt . — Auf der Pussta . Hungarian dance , by Wilhelm Fink .
Gould and Co . —Farewell to Summer . By Edward Teschemacher , music by Noel Johnson . —The Garden Beautiful . By Edward Oxenford , music by H . G . Pelissier . —Those Memories Divine . By Sidney A . Herbert , music by Angelo Mascheroni . —The Golden Valley . By Ed . Teschemacher , music by Franco Sarroni . —Love ' s Greeting . By Clifton Bingham , music by Frank L . Moir . —The Soldier's Farewell . Descriptive Fantasia by J . Pridham ( new edition ) . —Comrades-in-Arms . March by Arthur E . Godfrey .
Jefferys Limited —The Woman ' s Kingdom . By M . B . S ., music by William M . Hutchison . —Eternal Light . By Jasper Vale-Lane . W . Morley and Co . —The Children ' s Home . By F . E . Weatherly , music by Frederic H . Cowen . —Number Three . By G . Hubi Newcombe , music by Gerard F . Cobb . —The Land we Love . By Geo . J . Hicks , music by Edward St . Quentin . —The Palace of Troth . By Edward Oxenford , music
by Norman MoLeod . —Beside me Stay . By Edward Oxenford , music by Ed . St . Quentin . —A World Beyond . By Clifton Bingham , music by Bryceson Treharne . —My Heart was once a Garden . By Edward Teschemacher , music by Noel Johnson . —Morley ' s Modern Mandoline Tutor . —The Children's Home . Arranged for Mandoline and Piano by Alban Booth . —St . James's Voluntaries for the American Organ , Book I .
Patey and Willis . —Thoughts of Thee . By Thomas K . Hervey , music by E . Hopkins Hann . —An old Tender Song . By J . Anthony McDonald , music by Clement Locknane . —John Bull and Jonathan . By Clifton Bingham , music by H . Trotere .- —In Bygone Years . By Clifton Bingham , musio by Anton Strelezki . —Moonbeainland . By Clifton Bingham , music by H . Trotere . —All that you are to me . By Clifton Bingham , music by Noel Johnson .
Phillips and Oliver . —Tommy's a-coming along ! By Powell Mackenzie . —The Kingdom beautiful . By John Muir , music by Hartwell Jones . —Rook of Ages . By A . M . Toplady , music by Oh . Gounod . —O Divine Redeemer . By Alfred Phillips , music by Ch . Gounod . —Royal Military Tournament . Descriptive piece for piano , by Theo . Bonheur . —Schone Roselein Waltz . By Max Werner . —Regal Beauty Waltz . By Juan Gomez .
—Japanese Barn Dance . By Neville Flux . —Drei Tanze ( 1 Turkiseher , 2 Danischer , 3 Afrikanischer ) . By G . Sarakowski . —Air de Ballet . By R . Bernard Elliott . —Pensee fur das piano . By Max Werner . —Sonatina in C . By . F . W . Davenport . —Pretty songs and nursery rhymes . Set to music by Leigh Kingsmill . —At the Zoo . Twelve action songs for Children . By Edward Oxenford , musio by Percy Jackman .
Phillips and Page . —The Lads of the Red , White , and Blue . By T . H . King , music by Fabian Rose . —Victory March . By Fabian Rose . Schott and Co . —Last Night , Love . By J . Anthony McDonald , music by Alfred Moffat . —Dear Heart , good bye . By Ethel Kidson , music by Alfred Moffat . —The Warder of the Tower . By Constance Bache , music by Martin Jacobi . —Woo thou , sweet Music . By A . 0 . Bunten , music by Edward Elgar .
—The Grandmother ' s Song . By Constance Bache , music by Max Frank . — Sweet Day of Love . By May Gillington , music by Carl Gotze . —L'Automne Valse . By J . Albeniz . —Romance and Cantilene for the Organ . By Reginald Steggall . —Berceuse , Andante-Pastorale , and Mavche-Solennello pour Orgue . By 0 . J . Grey . —Cantilene Pastorale pour Orgue . By H . M . Higgs . —Good Friday ( Wagner ) , and Angel-Scene ( Humperdinck ) Transcriptions for the Organ . By Edwin H . Lemare .
Note: This text has been automatically extracted via Optical Character Recognition (OCR) software.
Ad00803
" THE GRAND SANHEDRIM " A Paper for reading at Royal Arch Chapters , & c . BY OEBTON COOPBB , M . B . Z . 483 , H . 1928 , Price thirteen pence , post free from BRO . ALFRED H . COOPER , PUBLISHER , 19 COLEMAN STREET , LONDON , E . C or from " Freemason ' s Chronicle Office , " New Barnet .
Books Of The Day.
Books of the Day .
Books , Music , & c . intended for review , should be addressed to the Editor of the Freemason ' s Chronicle , at Fleet Works , New Barnet . The Cathedral Church of Saint Paul . An account of the old and new building , with a short historical sketch . By the Rev . Arthur Dimock , M . A . ( Is 6 d ) . —George Bell and Sons .
THIS has been very carefully compiled , and bears on every page the hall mark of sound workmanship . As we have previously had occasion to remark , such volumes as the one before us are in some respects the easiest form of literary labour ; in other respects they are the most difficult . To select , for our subject , St . Paul ' s Cathedral ; to go to the British Museum " Rotunda " and there make copious extracts from many books dealing with the history
and architecture of Sir Christopher Wren ' s masterpiece ; then to set to work , and , arranging our materials , make one new hook out of many old ones , all this may be done by any man of average intelligence in or out of Grub Street . But to enliven and impress the whole with the stamp of originality , and invest a well worn subject with a wholly fresh interest is a very difficult task indeed . But nothing less than this has been accomplished by Mr . Dimock . He has the spirit of the antiquarian , the judgment of the historian , and the
taste of the scholar ; and it is difficult to believe that Messrs . Bell could have entrusted this subject to abler hands . The illustrations do not seem to us so good as those in other volumes of a similar character recently issued by the « ame publishers ; they will not compare , as pictures , with the illustrations to "Christchurch Priory and Wimborne Minster "; but this book is so thoroughly satisfactory from other standpoints that we are heartily thankful for the opportunity of looking it through . When the " Cathedral Series " is complete it will require , like Albert Chevalier's " nipper , " a lot of beating .
Cinder-Path Tales . By William Lindsey ( 3 s 6 d ) . —Grant Richards . THERE is admirable entertainment in these pages . The author can tell a good story well , and is sufficiently enthusiastic to satisfy the veriest devotee of the modern craze for sport . He has a manly self confidence in his own powers which is very far removed from boastfulness or self conceit , and does not fail , at the same time , to insist on a wholesome respect for the prowess
and skill of an antagonist . To proclaim his partialities is always a prerogative of the critic ; so we may say that among these cinder-path tales our favourite is that which tells " how Kitty queered the mile . " That story , " My first , for money , " and " A Virginia Jumper " are full of such thoroughly good writing that we should like to read a novel by this author on a similar subject . He has done a true service to sport and sportsmen ; for he has shown us the good side of his sub htl
ject so brigy that we can pardon much that lies in the background . This is a very tastefully printed volume . A series of such stories dealing with cricket , football , and golf respectively , in similar manner , issued by Mr . Grant Richards in the same garb and at the same price would , we venture to predict , be welcomed by " Young England " with open arms . Possibly the publisher may take our hint . He could hardly lose money by auoh a venture .
On Heroes , Hero-worship , and the Heroic in History . By Thomas Carlyle . Edited by Israel Gollancz , M . A . The Temple Classics ( Is 6 d net ) . —J . M . Dent and Co . WE have before had the pleasure of reviewing the Temple Classics ; but are particularly gratified to find that these lectures by Carlyle on " Heroes and Hero-Worship" have been included in the series . In the red cloth
edition issued by Messrs . Chapman and Hall this work must be familiar to almost everybody ; but as Messrs . Dent ' s volume is about half the size and is , to say the least , equally well printed , we do no injustice to anybody when we assert our preference for the volume before us . In these lectures Carlyle gave utterance to many wise saws and profound truths in language much more eloquent and less enigmatic than was his wont . The fact is that in discoursing on man from the heroic standpoint , and taking as examples men like Mahomet
, Cromwell , Dante , and Napoleon , compared with whom the mass of mankind are , in his opinion , as mere dross , Carlyle was at his best . He had read history deeply , and thought upon it philosophically , and in " Heroes and Hero-Worship " he expressed some of his most sane and serious conclusions on the whole matter . His tribute to Dante is , for him , singularly lucid , generous and appreciative ; on the whole it is perhaps the most satisfactory section in the volume . Wo trust Messrs . Dent will sell a great many copies of this elegant edition of an invaluable English classic .
A Man of his Age . By Hamilton Drummond . Illustrated by J . Ambrose Walton ( 3 s 6 d ) . —Ward , Lock and Co ., Limited . _ MB . HAMILTON DBUMMOND is a writer of great ability . We have no hesitation in affirming that " A Man of his Age " is very much in advance of the average volume of fiction put into our hands now-a-days . In the first place it is the work of a rare master of st yle . It combines an easy flow of
diction and an adroitness of transition with a sententious and epigrammatic conciseness which is at times truly Baconian . Thoroughly earnest in narrative , and realising his scenes with unerring vision , Mr . Drummond nevertheless contrives to drop a memorable phrase here and there which adds greatly to the dignity and permanent value of his prose . " Not even the devil himself can keep a man from bettering his generation ; " " He who fights from underneath and strikes upward is weakened by a truce "
" If your peasant heats slowly , even to his own quarrel , he cools quickly to that of another man " ; such sentences as these meet us almost at every turn . As a story "A Man of his Ago " is uniformly interesting , and is , as we have hinted , exceedingly well written . Those who have read " For the Religion , " a former volume by the same writer , and those fine short stories " A Queen ' s Favour " and " Man and Monk " recently contributed by him to the " English Illustrated Magazine " will find all his characteristic qualities of style and treatment well to the front in this volume . The great human
Books Of The Day.
passions of hatred and of love are depicted with much power and pathos ; and characters like Blaise de Bornauld , and his lady , Marcel , La Hake and Madamoiselle Suzanne , are conceived and elaborated with a completeness only too rarely evinced in prose fiction . There are some scenes in the latter chapters which greatly pleased us , such as the submission of De Luxe , the dash from Bernauld by night , and the final encounter between Blaise and
La Hake . Mr . Hamilton Drummond has gone once again to the days of Coligny for his subject ; and as we can honestly say that his choice of a theme was as happy as his treatment of it our readers may suppose that we regard him as a writer of the first rank . Messrs . Ward , Lock and Co . have recently issued many new novels . We will venture to say they know quite well that " A Man of his Age " is one of the best of them .
BOOKS RECEIVED . A Maker of Nations . By Guy Boothby . Illustrated by Gordon Browne ( 5 s ) . —Ward , Lock and Co ., Limited . The Disenchantment of Nurse Dorothy . A story of Hospital life . By Florence Baxendale . —Skeffington and Son . Of the House of Chloe . A tale of the times . By Ellis Marston ( 4 s net ) . — Simpkin , Marshall , Hamilton , Kent and Co ., Ltd .
The Love of Parson Lord and other stories . By Mary E . Wilkins . Illustrated ( 6 s ) . —Harper and Brothers . Towards Pretoria . A record of the war between Briton and Boer to the hoisting of the British flag at Bloemfontein . By Julian Ralph . With historical forward appendices and map ( 6 s ) . —C . Arthur Pearson , Ltd . Love , Sport , and a Double Event . By W . P . Gilpin ( 3 s 6 d ) . —Leadenhall Press , Ltd .
Chiswick Shakespeare . Midsummer Night's Dream , and King Lear ( Is 6 d each ) . —G . Bell and Sons . Words from St . Paul ' s . By William Sinclair , Archdeacon of London . No . 1 ( 4 d ) . —Thomas Burleigh .
Music Of The Day.
Music of the Day .
RECENT PUBLICATIONS RECEIVED . Boosey and Co . —Down the Vale . By Gunby Hadath , music by Frank L . Moir . Bosworth and Co . —The Rose and the Bee . Words and music by William Wallace . —Till Death . By Mazzoni . and Clifton Bingham , music by
Angelo Mascheroni . —Where Roses Gleam . English words by Will Ransom , music by Angelo Mascheroni . —lere Valse . By Gabriel-Marie . —Tarantellette . Pianoforte Solo by Graham P . Moore . —Murmuring Breezes . Transcribed for piano by R . Niemann . —Liedchen ohne Worte . By Franz Zureich . — Schlummerlied . For piano , by Cornelius Gurlitt . — Auf der Pussta . Hungarian dance , by Wilhelm Fink .
Gould and Co . —Farewell to Summer . By Edward Teschemacher , music by Noel Johnson . —The Garden Beautiful . By Edward Oxenford , music by H . G . Pelissier . —Those Memories Divine . By Sidney A . Herbert , music by Angelo Mascheroni . —The Golden Valley . By Ed . Teschemacher , music by Franco Sarroni . —Love ' s Greeting . By Clifton Bingham , music by Frank L . Moir . —The Soldier's Farewell . Descriptive Fantasia by J . Pridham ( new edition ) . —Comrades-in-Arms . March by Arthur E . Godfrey .
Jefferys Limited —The Woman ' s Kingdom . By M . B . S ., music by William M . Hutchison . —Eternal Light . By Jasper Vale-Lane . W . Morley and Co . —The Children ' s Home . By F . E . Weatherly , music by Frederic H . Cowen . —Number Three . By G . Hubi Newcombe , music by Gerard F . Cobb . —The Land we Love . By Geo . J . Hicks , music by Edward St . Quentin . —The Palace of Troth . By Edward Oxenford , music
by Norman MoLeod . —Beside me Stay . By Edward Oxenford , music by Ed . St . Quentin . —A World Beyond . By Clifton Bingham , music by Bryceson Treharne . —My Heart was once a Garden . By Edward Teschemacher , music by Noel Johnson . —Morley ' s Modern Mandoline Tutor . —The Children's Home . Arranged for Mandoline and Piano by Alban Booth . —St . James's Voluntaries for the American Organ , Book I .
Patey and Willis . —Thoughts of Thee . By Thomas K . Hervey , music by E . Hopkins Hann . —An old Tender Song . By J . Anthony McDonald , music by Clement Locknane . —John Bull and Jonathan . By Clifton Bingham , music by H . Trotere .- —In Bygone Years . By Clifton Bingham , musio by Anton Strelezki . —Moonbeainland . By Clifton Bingham , music by H . Trotere . —All that you are to me . By Clifton Bingham , music by Noel Johnson .
Phillips and Oliver . —Tommy's a-coming along ! By Powell Mackenzie . —The Kingdom beautiful . By John Muir , music by Hartwell Jones . —Rook of Ages . By A . M . Toplady , music by Oh . Gounod . —O Divine Redeemer . By Alfred Phillips , music by Ch . Gounod . —Royal Military Tournament . Descriptive piece for piano , by Theo . Bonheur . —Schone Roselein Waltz . By Max Werner . —Regal Beauty Waltz . By Juan Gomez .
—Japanese Barn Dance . By Neville Flux . —Drei Tanze ( 1 Turkiseher , 2 Danischer , 3 Afrikanischer ) . By G . Sarakowski . —Air de Ballet . By R . Bernard Elliott . —Pensee fur das piano . By Max Werner . —Sonatina in C . By . F . W . Davenport . —Pretty songs and nursery rhymes . Set to music by Leigh Kingsmill . —At the Zoo . Twelve action songs for Children . By Edward Oxenford , musio by Percy Jackman .
Phillips and Page . —The Lads of the Red , White , and Blue . By T . H . King , music by Fabian Rose . —Victory March . By Fabian Rose . Schott and Co . —Last Night , Love . By J . Anthony McDonald , music by Alfred Moffat . —Dear Heart , good bye . By Ethel Kidson , music by Alfred Moffat . —The Warder of the Tower . By Constance Bache , music by Martin Jacobi . —Woo thou , sweet Music . By A . 0 . Bunten , music by Edward Elgar .
—The Grandmother ' s Song . By Constance Bache , music by Max Frank . — Sweet Day of Love . By May Gillington , music by Carl Gotze . —L'Automne Valse . By J . Albeniz . —Romance and Cantilene for the Organ . By Reginald Steggall . —Berceuse , Andante-Pastorale , and Mavche-Solennello pour Orgue . By 0 . J . Grey . —Cantilene Pastorale pour Orgue . By H . M . Higgs . —Good Friday ( Wagner ) , and Angel-Scene ( Humperdinck ) Transcriptions for the Organ . By Edwin H . Lemare .