Page:The House of Mirth (1905).djvu/559



She is to-day the most promising figure we have. To-morrow is hers. How far she will go it is hard to tell. But with her worldly wisdom, her keen insight, her wit and her fancy, and, above all, her invariable good taste, there is no knowing what the future has in store.—.

An Alpine Posting Inn

A Midsummer Week's Dream

The Sanctuaries of the Pennine Alps

What the Hermits Saw

A Tuscan Shrine

Sub Umbra Liliorum

March in Italy

Picturesque Milan

Italian Backgrounds

Belongs in that small class of books of observation which are also books of artistic and spiritual interpretation; which not only describe places and monuments, but convey an impression of peoples, a sense of society, with the elusive atmosphere in which everything of historical or artistic value is seen by those who have the gift of sight.—The Outlook.

Through this traveller's story runs a fine thread of scholarship, of savoir faire, of cosmopolitanism, not easily to be matched in travel-literature. The reader's pulse quickens with an artistic pleasure such as might be aroused by a novel by Thackeray or George Eliot, or an essay by Matthew Arnold or Lowell. The book has what we call distinction of style, as impossible to resist as to define.—The Dial.