St. Andrews,27,122,196
St. Andrews, Archbishop (Smith) of,124
St. Anselm's College, Rome,246-8
Salisbury, 3rd Marquis of, death of,5,33,89
Santos (Brazil),186
Scarborough, Bank Holiday at,71
Schmitt, Mgr., Bishop of Chur,213
Scorton, hospital at,116
Scott, Sir Walter,52
Shackleton, Ernest,144
Sherborne, Susan Lady, death of,83
Shrewsbury, 10th Earl of,145
Simeon, John, married,140
Simonetti, Signor,77
Sinclair, Archdeacon John,66
Skene, Felicia,53note
"Smith of Wadham," F. E.,65
Somerset, 15th Duke of,152
S. Paulo (Brazil),156et seq.
Stafford, Marquis of, married,224
Stair, 10th and 11th Earls of,54note,123
Stirlings of Keir,176,205,212,236
Stonyhurst College,221
Stotzingen, Abbot von,248
Stronlairg,214
Sutherland, 4th Duke of,225
Sutherland, Anne Duchess of,111note; Millicent Duchess of,20,224
Sven Hedin, at Oxford,135
Talbot, Lord and Lady Edmund,3,61,215
Talcott, Dr. Selden, on early rising,97note
Teck, Princess Alexander of,50
Temple, widow of Archbishop,113
Terregles,256
Tichborne, Sir Joseph,252
Tredegar, Viscount,146
Tree, Beerbohm,41
Tullibardine, Marchioness of,257
Twain, Mark, at Oxford,91,92
Tylee, Monsignor,5,6note
Uganda, King of, at Fort Augustus,253
University College School,142
Ushaw College,23
Vaughan, Father Bernard,37,79,261; Prior Jerome,258note; Charles, married,107; Bishop John,215; Rev. Kenelm,133
Venice, visit to,242
Vesey, Hon. T. E., married,217
Victory, H.M.S.,110
Wales, H.R.H. Prince of,212,222
Walmesley, Mrs. Robert,3
Walsh, Archbishop,66
Waltham Abbey,148
Ward, Wilfrid,60,134
Ware, St. Edmund's College,222
Warre, Dr. Edmond,51
Warwick, pageant at,70
Wauchope of Niddrie, Mrs.,101,152
Wells, J.,60
Westminster Cathedral,3,74,89,107,259
Weston Birt,26
Wiesbaden, visit to,189-191
Wilberforce, Bishop Samuel,121,128
Wilkinson, Cicely Lady,193
William II, Emperor, and Bismarck,24; at Naples,41
Willoughby de Broke, Lord and Lady,71
Wimborne, Lord,99
Winchilsea, Countess of,45
Woodburn,1,153,203
Woodchester Priory,26
Worcester, Bishop of, and Lady Barbara Yeatman-Biggs,66
Wyndham, Sir Charles,40
Wyndham, George,81
Wytham Abbey,35
Yew Luk Lin (Chinese Minister),225
York, Archbishop (Lang) of,216
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Telegrams:"Scholarly, Wesdo, London"41 and 43 Maddox Street,Telephone: 1883 Mayfair.London, W. 1.March, 1922.
Messrs. Edward Arnold & Co.'s
SPRING ANNOUNCEMENTS, 1922
MOUNT EVEREST
The Reconnaissance, 1921.
By LIEUT.-COLONEL C. K. HOWARD-BURY, D.S.O.,AND OTHER MEMBERS OF THE EXPEDITION.
With 33 full-page illustrations and maps. Medium 8vo.
25s. net.
Also a Limited Large Paper Edition, with additional platesin photogravure. Demy 4to, each copy numbered.
£5 5s. net.
A journey through "unknown country," with the highest mountain on earth as objective,—what visions of mystery and romance it conjures! This is the first great piece of exploration attempted since pre-war days, and the expedition will doubtless rank with the classic Arctic and continental achievements that have made land-marks in the annals of discovery.
The book opens with a brilliant introduction by Sir Francis Younghusband, President of the Royal Geographical Society and Chairman of the Mount Everest Committee, by which the Expedition was organised. Then comes the fascinating narrative of the expedition itself, told by Col. Howard-Bury, the leader; he is followed by Mr. G. Leigh-Mallory who describes the strenuous climbing which, after many failures and disappointments, discovered what appears to be a feasible route to the summit. Mr. A. F. Wollaston, another member of the expedition, enlarges upon the remarkable fauna and flora of the Tibetan plateau and valleys, and the valuable Survey work undertaken is summarized by Major O. E. Wheeler. The Geological results are dealt with by Dr. A. M. Heron. Especially interesting, in view of the coming season's expedition, is a chapter by Prof. Norman Collie, President of the Alpine Club, upon the difficulties of mountaineering at such unprecedented altitudes and the prospects of reaching the summit of Mount Everest in 1922.
The illustrations, taken from the magnificent series of photographs brought back by the expedition, are visions of beauty and grandeur, and the Maps display for the first time the topography and general features of a vast region hitherto unexplored. The hill-shaded map of the mass of Mount Everest itself on a scale of 1/100,000, will enable readers to trace the progress of the climbing parties in 1922, while showing in detail the assaults made upon the great mountain during the reconnaissance.
GENERAL ASTRONOMY.
By H. SPENCER JONES, M.A., B.Sc.,
CHIEF ASSISTANT AT THE ROYAL OBSERVATORY, GREENWICH.
About 400 pages, with 103 diagrams and 24 plates.
Demy 8vo. Cloth. About 21s. net.
Mr. Spencer Jones, who is the leader of this year's British Eclipse Expedition to Christmas Island, has written a book covering the general aspects of Astronomy. The subject matter is treated from the scientific standpoint in the light of modern theories. At the same time the exposition is not too recondite and is such as to stimulate the general reader who is interested in the study of the Heavens. Whenever possible the argument is simplified by reference to a diagram, and throughout the book mathematics have only been used where essential for the elucidation of any problem.
The book is fully illustrated and has twenty-four magnificent plates depicting comets, nebulæ, planets, etc., being the pick of the observations of the different Observatories.
A NEW MEDLEY OF MEMORIES.
BY THE
RIGHT REV. SIR DAVID HUNTER BLAIR, BT., O.S.B.,
TITULAR ABBOT OF DUNFERMLINE.
With Portrait. Demy 8vo. 16s. net.
It will be remembered that the Author's first "Medley" published in 1919 only brought his reminiscences to the year 1903. He has now continued them for another decade, and the contents of the new volume are as full of variety and anecdote as ever. Many a notable personage figures in these pages; many a good story is told and many interesting fragments of antiquarian and ecclesiastical lore are quoted.
It was the Author's privilege to spend some time in the service of his Order in Brazil, and his account of monastic life in the tropical surroundings is full of interest. At Rome, again, he describes in vivid phrases several picturesque religious functions which he attended, and wherever he goes he finds fresh material for shrewd and kindly comment.
IS GERMANY PROSPEROUS?
By SIR HENRY PENSON, K.B.E., M.A.,
FORMERLY CHAIRMAN OF THE WAR TRADE INTELLIGENCE DEPARTMENT ANDDIRECTOR OF THE INTELLIGENCE SECTION OF THE BRITISH DELEGATIONTO THE PEACE CONFERENCE, PARIS, 1919.
AUTHOR OF "THE ECONOMICS OF EVERYDAY LIFE."
Crown 8vo. 3s. 6d. net.
This is a question which every intelligent person is asking, and to which the answers supplied through the ordinary channels of information are widely divergent and confusing. Sir Henry Penson is a very shrewd observer well-qualified by training and experience to sift evidence and form an impartial judgment on facts and arguments. In addition, he is a very lucid economic writer and explains clearly the influence of the exchange position upon the situation in Germany at the present day.
The Author visited Germany only a few weeks ago, and was helped in his investigations not only by British officials in the Rhineland, but by Germans of high position in industrial and commercial circles whose statements he checked carefully. One has only to read his chapters on Prices in Germany, or on Incomes and Standard of Living in order to appreciate the value of his evidence, and of the conclusions at which he arrived. They have, of course, an important bearing upon the vital question "Can Germany Pay?"
RECENTLY PUBLISHED.
MEMORIES AND NOTES OF PERSONS AND PLACES.
By SIR SIDNEY COLVIN, M.A., D.Litt.,
FORMERLY SLADE PROFESSOR OF FINE ART IN THE UNIVERSITY OF CAMBRIDGEAND KEEPER OF THE PRINTS AND DRAWINGS AT THE BRITISH MUSEUM.
With Portrait. Second Impression. 18s. net.
"Readers of this book will be visited by only one regret—that Sir Sidney Colvin was compelled to abandon his larger plan of writing his personal recollections in several volumes. Such dreams, such memories as these are treasures. Sir Sidney, for all his modesty, does not persuade us that they can be enjoyed so richly without some equivalent virtue. That there are special aptitudes for reaching Corinth is proved by these delightful pages."—Times Literary Supplement.
"The sloven style, the trivial matter, of so many of the Reminiscences which every publishing season pours forth makes all the more welcome by contrast a book of memories that is both rich in interest and itself a piece of literature. Such is Sir Sidney Colvin's 'Memories and Notes.' It is a pleasure to read from beginning to end, if only for the exact and vivid phrasing, the sustained felicity of cadence, at times touching emotion and imagination at once with just that kind of beauty of sound in the words which is proper to fine prose."—Mr. LAURENCE BINYON in theBookman.
"The man who enormously increased the regard of the public for Landor, who indefatigably forwarded the interests of R. L. Stevenson, and who is unmatched for his scholarly exposition of Keats, would, of course, write a book of literary gossip with distinction and taste. But Sir Sidney Colvin has done more than that. This book is a model of what such books should be; it is well bred, balanced, informing, and yet it is light and readable all through."—Spectator.
"After all the reminiscences by women of no conceivable importance, and all the gossip of chatterboxes in the purlieus of Fleet Street, it is pleasant to meet a narrator who comes under the old-fashioned comfortable rubric of 'a scholar and a gentleman.'
Oh! how comely it is and how revivingTo the spirits of just men long opprest
by fusty anecdotes about third-class politicians to breathe the atmosphere of intellectual good breeding."—Mr. EDMUND GOSSE inThe Sunday Times.
"The high vitality of the 'seventies and 'eighties, both in England and France, is made to pulse again. The book is indispensable where it was bound to excel, as in the personal study of Robert Louis Stevenson. But, also, it is singularly close and graphic in ways for which we were not prepared."—Observer.
"Full of inimitable pictures."—Nation and Athenæum.
"The leading literary and artistic figures of 60 years flit through the pages with a fascination which will amply repay those who have awaited publication of the book for its real worth. The whole of the fifty pages of Stevensonia give a more faithful picture of R. L. S. on the human side than anyone has hitherto been able to do."—Daily News.
ADRIENNE TONER.
By ANNE DOUGLAS SEDGWICK(MRS. BASIL DE SELINCOURT),
AUTHOR OF "TANTE," "THE ENCOUNTER," "VALERIE UPTON," ETC.
Third Impression. Crown 8vo. 7s. 6d. net.
"Exquisite is the word that swims, not 'darkly' but with a sense of utter satisfaction, through the brain in summing up Miss Anne Douglas Sedgwick's new novel, Adrienne Toner. Its quality is extraordinarily even. It is a fine book, with flashes of humour and a strong and clear reading of human life, and withal of a quality of which it can only be said at last, as at first, that it is exquisite."—Country Life.
"I loved 'Adrienne Toner.' A wonderful book, I thought. It's well worth reading."—From "The Letters of Evelyn" in theTatler.
"As a penetrating study of a rather uncommon personality it must be regarded as a first-class piece of work."—Daily Telegraph.
"In this grave and beautiful comedy of English life, with its central figure typifying the strength and crudity of those spiritual influences which have come to us from America, Anne Douglas Sedgwick reveals the growth and maturity of her power."—Westminster Gazette.
"An immensely clever study of an American girl and of the havoc wrought by her entry into an ordinary English country family. It is probably the best novel Miss Sedgwick has yet written."—Evening Standard.
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"A remarkable and living narrative, well deserving all the applause that it has received."—Outlook.
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"A novel of rare distinction."—Pall Mall Gazette.
"No one could read 'Adrienne Toner' without determining to miss nothing from the same pen."—Birmingham Post.
"It is a long time since one has read a novel at once as interesting and as satisfying in its craftsmanship as this. Miss Sedgwick's artistry is firmer and stronger in her new book than ever yet. The way in which Adrienne is made visible is from the start quite masterly."—Review of Reviews.
"The book is to be read, thoughtfully and carefully, and with the realization that all the time we are seeing into some of the complexities of human nature as they are presented to us to-day. A fascinating and powerful and uncommon book."—Church Times.
THE RAINBOW BRIDGE.
By REGINALD FARRER,
AUTHOR OF "MY ROCK GARDEN," "ALPINES AND BOG PLANTS," ETC.
With Illustrations and Map. Second Impression. 21s. net.
"A classic of travel. Of modern travellers with a sense of style, Mr. Farrer must take his place in the forefront alongside of Mr. Doughty, Mr. Cunninghame Graham, and Mr. Norman Douglas."—Times Literary Supplement.
"There can be no denying that Mr. Farrer was one of the great masters of English prose. His last book is bright with sidelights onvie intimeof the essential China."—Morning Post.
THE SOUL AND BODY OF AN ARMY.
By GENERAL SIR IAN HAMILTON, G.C.B.
AUTHOR OF "A STAFF-OFFICER'S SCRAP-BOOK," "GALLIPOLI DIARY," ETC.
One Volume. Demy 8vo. 18s. net.
"Sir Ian Hamilton has performed atour de force. He has written a book on military organization, and in his book there is not a dull page. It will make some angry, it will make some think, but certainly it will not produce a yawn."—Major-General Sir F. MAURICE in theDaily News.
"It is an odd, original, unequal, thought-compelling book, often exasperating, but never for a moment dull. It is persuasive, too, and on all the greater matters judicious."—JOHN BUCHAN inThe Evening Standard.
WAR AND NATIONAL FINANCE.
By the HON. R. H. BRAND, C.M.G.,
FELLOW OF ALL SOULS COLLEGE, OXFORD.
One Volume. Demy 8vo. 15s. net.
"A work which is not merely interesting but is most valuable."—Morning Post.
"By its lucidity, if for no other reason, it will be quite as interesting to the layman as to those who pretend to a small knowledge of economics."—Daily Telegraph.
"No one can read it without seeing the world's situation in the white light of fact and truth and it is a sure cure for most current fallacies."—Financial News.
HINDUISM AND BUDDHISM.
An Historical Sketch.
By SIR CHARLES ELIOT, K.C.M.G.,
H.B.M. AMBASSADOR AT TOKIO.
Three Volumes. £4 4s. net.
"There can hardly be an over-measure of praise accorded to Sir Charles Eliot for the methods he uses and the qualities he exhibits. A set of volumes which henceforth, surely, must be counted indispensable."—The Times Literary Supplement.
NEW SCIENTIFIC AND TECHNICAL BOOKS.
ISOTOPES
By F. W. ASTON, M.A., D.Sc., F.R.S.,
FELLOW OF TRINITY COLLEGE, CAMBRIDGE.
With Diagrams and Plates. Demy 8vo. 9s. net.
The foundations of the Atomic Theory have been based for over a century on Dalton's definition of the Atom. The discovery of radio-activity and the application of Positive Rays to the analysis of the elements have shown that our conception of the Atom as being homogeneous and indivisible must be modified. No one is better fitted to deal with the subject of isotopes than Dr. Aston, whose memoirs on this subject extend over a number of years. The book deals not only with isotopes, but gives a general survey of the electrical theory of matter.
AN INORGANIC CHEMISTRY.
By H. G. DENHAM, M.A., D.Sc, PH.D.,
PROFESSOR OF INORGANIC CHEMISTRY IN THE UNIVERSITY OF CAPETOWN.
xii + 684 pages, with 144 figures and 56 tables.
Demy 8vo. Cloth. About 12s. 6d. net.
This is a general survey of inorganic chemistry up to the Intermediate Examination Standard of the Universities. Obsolete manufacturing processes are omitted unless they illustrate some particular type of chemical reaction. The book is treated from a modern standpoint, as much Physical Chemistry being introduced as is necessary for the proper understanding of the subject.
MAGNETISM AND ELECTRICITY.
By J. PALEY YORKE, A.M.I.E.E.,
HEAD OF THE PHYSICS AND ELECTRICAL ENGINEERING DEPARTMENT AT THEL.C.C. SCHOOL OF ENGINEERING AND NAVIGATION, POPLAR.
Second Edition. Crown 8vo. About 5s. net.
The Author has completely rewritten this book and brought it into line with the modern methods of teaching the subject. It is written primarily for the student in Technical Schools and abounds in references to the various problems the student is likely to meet in his every-day work.
RAILWAY ELECTRIC TRACTION.
By F. W. CARTER, M.I.E.E.,
HEAD OF THE TRACTION DEPARTMENT OF THE BRITISH THOMSON HOUSTONCOMPANY, RUGBY.
400 pages, with 204 diagrams, photographs and plates.
Demy 8vo. Cloth. About 25s. net.
The author, a well-known authority on this subject, starts with a survey of the different systems of electrification and with a comparison between steam and electric working under various conditions. He then deals with the locomotive, distribution systems, etc., in detail and develops the mathematical calculations necessary for dealing with the various problems which arise. Finally the characteristics of the principal types of electrical locomotives throughout the world are given with photographs of certain of these locomotives.
ELEMENTARY HYDRAULICS FOR TECHNICAL STUDENTS.
By F. C. LEA, D.Sc., M.INST., C.E.,
PROFESSOR OF CIVIL ENGINEERING IN THE UNIVERSITY OF BIRMINGHAM.
Crown 8vo. About 8s. 6d. net.
Professor Lea, who is well known as the author of "Hydraulics for Engineers and Engineering Students," has here written a shorter book suitable for the courses taken in Technical Schools. Certain of the more elementary portions of the original book are included in this volume, but much of the material is new.
IONS ELECTRONS AND IONIZING RADIATIONS.
By J. A. CROWTHER, M.A., Sc.D.,
UNIVERSITY DEMONSTRATOR IN EXPERIMENTAL PHYSICS IN THE UNIVERSITYOF CAMBRIDGE.
Third Edition. Demy 8vo. 12s. 6d. net.
This book, originally published in November, 1919, has been thoroughly revised. Many portions have been entirely rewritten and of these the Chapter on "The Electron Theory of Matter" should be especially mentioned. The tables of constants have been revised in accordance with the best data available and the book is in all respects abreast of the progress in this fast developing branch of modern Physics.
London: EDWARD ARNOLD & Co., 41 & 43 Maddox Street, W. 1.