Page:In The Cage (London, Duckworth, 1898).djvu/204

 Crown 8vo, buckram cloth, gilt top. 6s.

'Careful pieces of work.'—Daily Telegraph.

'Mr. Hapgood's essays exhibit a good deal of penetration and critical acumen.'—Daily News.

'Mr. Norman Hapgood is an able writer, by no means to be despised, whether as an æsthetician or a psychologist. The unaffected straightforwardness of his dogmatism is, to us at any rate, by no means unsympathetic. His judgments, too, though subject to numberless reservations, are almost always acute and worth considering.'

'The papers are all the outcome of careful study. They make a pleasant and interesting book, which deserves to be read by many.'—Scotsman.

'The essays deserve to be preserved as the outcome of a clever and charitable thinker, and they are here presented in a most artistic form.'—Manchester Courier.

'The criticism of Lord Rosebery, while sympathetic and laudatory, is exceedingly acute. . . . These quotations will serve to show how intelligently and effectively an American onlooker can criticise our literary politicians.'—Glasgow Herald.

LONDON: DUCKWORTH AND CO.