Page:Cicero (Collins 1871).djvu/211



"Language, literature, and the arts, all touched on with admirable verisimilitude, are impressed into the service of his thesis; and often, in reading of the delights of this underground Utopia, have we sighed for the refreshing tranquillity of that lamp-lit land."—Athenæum.

"The author of the 'Coming Race' tells us a simple though circumstantial narrative with an air of truth and reality which it is extremely difficult to doubt. The book furnishes amusing commentaries on all sorts of existing institutions. The irony is neither bitter nor ill-natured. It is sustained without effort, and the artistic skill of construction in the volume is marked enough to give an interesting vitality and realism to the dramatis personæ.  A curious, suggestive, and interesting book."—Daily News.

"There is an undercurrent of humour and irony running through the vision, it is true, but it has, nevertheless, a half-painful, half-grotesque air of earnestness in it, as though the writer were quite prepared to discover any day the people of which he has dreamt, and as though he thirsted for that discovery as a solace to his soul. "—Standard.

"There is not a page of it that would willingly be missed by any intelligent reader, while the matter receives additional interest from the singular clearness, vigour, and beauty of the language."—Scotsman.