Yale alumni magazine. ([New Haven]) 1937-1976, December 17, 1896, Page 10, Image 10

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    10
THE BOOK SHELF.
[Conducted by ALBERT LEE, "91.]
To a recent number of the “Chap
Book” (Chicago: H. S. Stone & Co.)
Mr. Joseph Pennell contributes an ar-
ticle on “Robert Louis Stevenson, Il-
lustrator,’” and it is somewhat sur-
prising to those of us who have read
and admired Stevenson for a number
of years past to note, in the opening
paragraph of this contribution, that
the little books under discussion “‘are
virtually unknown” save to Steven-
son’s friends. Mr. Pennell tells us in-
genuously that for some years he has
“been aware of the existence of a
whole series of little books.” Who
has not, who knows anything about
Stevenson’s work? No doubt Mr. Pen-
nell is also aware that the same writer
gave us “Treasure Island” and “The
Ebb Tide.”
Aside from the patronizing tone of
his introduction, however, Mr. Pen-
nell’s article is interesting, and forms
a valuable contribution to our Steven-
soniana. Mr. Pennell is especially
qualified to write upon this subject be-
ing an artist of talent himself, and a
clever writer besides; and in addition
he has in a way been brought closer
to Stevenson than most of us ky hav-
ing visited the region made famous by
“Travels With a Donkey.” He very
justly comments on the fact that it is
estonishing that Stevenson ‘could
start from a town like Le Puy and yet
barely mention it in his book,” and
any one who has read Mrs. Pennell’s
article on ‘The Most’ Picturesque
Place in the World,’’ which appeared
in the “Century” a few years ago,
will readily agree with him. But this
is an aside from the “little books.”’
The latter have never before been so
fully and carefully, not to say affect-
ionately, described, although their ti-
tles have long figured in ‘bibliograp-
hies; and it is the first time, I believe,
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YATE ALU hee 6 WHEKLY
that any of the cuts have been reprint-
ed. Mr. Pennell takes a somewhat
exaggerated view of Stevenson’s tal-
ent as an illustrator, but his enthu-
siasm and admiration for the man
doubtless overcame his critical judg-
ment.
It is by the publication of just this:
sort of thing that the “Chap Book’)
maintains, in the estimation of book.
its position of pre-eminence.
among the countless periodicals that ©
claim to belong in the same class; and »
by steadily maintaining the standard .
lovers,
for ‘‘new’’? material that it set for it-
self at the start, the “Chap Book’’ has
succeeded in earning for itself a place .
that cannot be denied or disparaged,
even by the old folk wh
ling along with the rear guard.
In its new form the ‘B‘ook Buyer”
(New York: Charles Scribner’s Sons)
may now take rank as one of the chief
of the many periodicals
has been greatly improved typograph-
ically, and there are signs that it in-
tends to reach forth into a wider field.
If the publishers can succeed in en-
tirely eliminating those features which
have hitherto stamped the ‘“Book Buy-
er’ more or less 4S an advertising me-
Gium, they will render a service not
only to their readers but to themselves.
The Christmas issue is particularly |
complete, and the large number of il;
lustrations re-vrinted from the holiday
books cf the year form a valuable
guide for the prospective purchaser by
giving him a very fair idea of what —
the new publications contain.
In the same field is the “Bookman” ~ :
(New York: Dodd, Mead & Co.), but)
this journal aims to be more than is
demanded by the conditions which
warrant its existence. For instance, @
serial story in a magazine of this char-—
acter seems a trifle out of place. For
my part, I look to the “Book Buyer”
and the ‘‘Bookman” for news of liter-
ary people and events and for crit-
icism and comment upon current liter-—
ature. A very valuable appendage to
the ‘‘Bookman” is the monthly report
of the retail book sales in the principal
cities of the country;
have a sort of ‘money talks” value.
1
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30 Royal OcTavo VOLS.
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Uy
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UDCA rE
Hwllsitnl
NEARLY 20,000 Paass.
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“ cH UY) peas:
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wo ST Won;
ass SS
01 BEST WORLOS BE
WORK sT
ERATURE
oes
rT = eres cn Berets,
Bere rege cro ah ements r { i
"
K AND VIGNETTE
PORTRAITS OF AUTHORS.
A Few Writers of the Essays,
with Subjects treated : : 3:
SHARP), etc.
TO HARPER'S
Ballads and Folk-Song, Little-Known Literature, Dictionary of the World’s Authors.
style.
| | ! i
leita
saa a Sau a 2)
0° 4 WORLD’
won i TER ATURE
I =
KL NEARLY 1,000 FULL-PAGE jf]
‘“* Brasmus”’: REV. F. W. FARRAR o
Ww.
LITERATURE (PROF. CRAWFORD H. Toy),
GREAT SPECIAL OFFER.
« THE LIBRARY is now in course of publica-
* tion, and a portion only of the first edition will
WEEKLY CLUB « be distributed at a nominal price to introduce,
" popularize, and ad¥ertise the work in advance
MEMBERS ONLY of the regular subscrip-
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at aremarkably low price (saving you about
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FOR A LIMITED :
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VOL. I. embraces ABELARD (Pror. THomas Davipson), ABIGATL ADAMS (Lucta GILBERT
RUNKLE), JOSEPH ADDISON (PRoF. HAMILTON W. Mazpre), ASSCHYLUS (Pror. Joun WILLIAMS
WHITE), AZSOP (Pror. H. T. PECK), ALCUIN (ProF. W. H. CARPENTER), ALFIERI (PrRoF. L.
Oscar Kuuns), AMIEL (Dr. RricHarD BuRTON), HANS CHRISTIAN ANDERSEN (PROF. BENJ.
Weu.s, and many other authors, and also treats ACCADIAN-BABYLONIAN and ASSYRIAN
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Address all Communications to
HARPER’S WEEKLY CLUB,
ee
e stumb- |
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and many other authors,
hci Seder LEGENDS (ProF. RICHARD JONES), and
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THE SEVEN SEAS,
But to turn from the magazine to
books, let me recommend as one of
the most important, if not the most
important, publication of the year,
Rudyard Kipling’s “The Seven Seas’’
(New York: D. Appleton & Co.) I
hope it is not my enthusiasm for Mr.
Kipling’s verse that leads me to praise
his work as of the strongest and best
that is being done at the present day.
There is no poet alive who can turn
Gut the virile, swinging, soul-stirring
rhythm that Kipling gives us. You
may talk about Dobson’s graceful
forms, which I am second to no one in
appreciating; you may quote me
Swinburne, and you may stumble
through the stilted platitudes of the
Salaried Austin, but when it comes
right down to power and manhood and
human nature, you must turn to the
author of ‘“McAndrew’s Hymn” and
“Danny Deever.’”’ I wish Kipling were
an American. He is the next thing to
it,—but yet not close enough to the
land to give us patriotic verse. I wish
he were a Yale man. If the Corpor-
ation wish to henor themselves, they
should confer upon Mr. Kipling a de-
gree in 1897, and thus make him a
Yale man. In the meantime I advise
all of you fellows who have degrees
already to get “‘The Seven Seas’’ and
tead it, so that you wilil have some
sort of an idea of the kind of a Yale
song Mr. Kipling will write for us
When he gets that degree.
—__—__+0e—___-—
At a regular meeting of the New
England Intercollegiate Triangular
League at Boston on Saturday, De-
cember 5, the following officers were
elected: President, C. E. Carr, Dart-
mouth; Vice President, C. W. Mer-
riam, Amherst; Secretary and. Treas-
urer, A. C. Twitchell, Williams. The
football championship of the season
Was awarded to Dartmouth.
a The University of California had a
live bear as a mascot in their Thanks-
giving Day game. :
‘Tiffany & Co.
Gold Watches for
Christmas Giits
An entirely new series of superior Gold
Watches for Ladies, in plain 18-karat
gold open-fuce cases, $25. In enameled
gold cases, with enameled dials, $40.
In enameled gold cases, set with dia-
monds, $70, $75, and upward.
ee
For Men, extra flat open-face 18-karat
Gold Watches, $100, $150, and upwards.
UNION SQUARE
NEW YORK
_ Christmas Morning.
{Charles Edward Thomas in Yale Courant.]
With flare of trumpet and roll of drum
Tho’ never a stick have we,
And never a horn save a dimpled hand—
A roistering, rollicking, warlike band,
Right valorous soldiers three.
Our line of march through the parlor
m,
And out to the open hall,
A step and a stamp and a fearless
stride—
And a paper-knife strapped to each
valiant side,
Then way! we are heroes all.
Shall it be a charge on the rocking-chair?
Or a siege of the balustrade?
Or a slow, strategical night-attack
On the castle walls of the old hat-rack,
Or merely a dress-parade?
’'Tis one I vow to the soldiers three,
Polly and Prue and I,
With never a horn save a dimpled
hand,
We'll march all over this Downstairs
Land.
Till the stars peep out in the sky,
And the moon says bed-time’s nigh.
PNET RTE RO ge
Girard College, Philadelphia, Pa.,
is the richest college in this country,
having over eleven and a quarter
millions of endowment. The poorest
is Milligan College, at Milligan, Tenn.,
which has only about $300 in produc-
tive funds.
No Work on Literature of like plan, scope and magnitude has ever before been attempted.
sire.
Headquarters, 91-93 Fifth Avenue, New York.
Cc. ih. BOWMAN, Manaser.
ompt actiON atone) «
will secure for you one of the Special Introductory Sets now being distributed through THE
HARPER’S WEEKLY CLUB No. 1 to introduce and advertise that important new work,
: LI Bb RA RY Covers the whole
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WORLD’S BEST
LITERATURE |
A comprehensive survey of all writers, speakers and thinkers, ancient
and modern, with their master-productions, and with hundreds of
elaborate literary essays on great authors and great books by leading
literary specialists and critics of this country and Europe.
Ml uh : Editor-in-Chief: CHARLES DUDLEY WARNER.
“Ae Associate Editors; HAMILTON WRIGHT [ABIE, LUCIA GILBERT RUNKLE, GEORGE H. WARNER,
Assisted by an Advisory Council Selected from YALE, HARVARD, COLUMBIA, and Leading Universities.
This Great Library is to Literature what the |
lopedia Britannica is to the Arts and Sciences.
The critical essays alone, which have been prepared by nearly three hundred leading writers in this country and Europe, are
permanent contributions to contemporary literature by those qualified to speak with the very highest authority, and are worth much
more than the entire cost of the thirty volumes. |
DR. LYMAN ABBOTT writes on ‘Henry Warp Bgecuer’’; MRS. HUMPHRY WARD on" GrorcE Extor’: DR. ANDREW D. WHITE on
+ n “Tus New Testament’: DR. HERMAN GRIMM on ‘“‘Gorruz”; ANDREW LANG on ALEXANDER
Dumas”’ (pere): CHARLES ELIOT NORTON on “Dante”; HENRY JAMES on“ Lowett”> W. D. HOWELLS on “Vorstot -sute., I26c.
VOL. II. embraces THOMAS AQUINAS (Pror. Epwin A. Pace), ARISTOPHANES (PROF.
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E. WoopBERRY), AUCASSIN AND NICOLE
SamuEL Harv), BABER (PROF. Epwarp_S. HoLpEN), FRANCIS BACON (CHARLTON T. LEWIS),
and also treats ARABIC LITERATURE (Pror. RicHaRD GOTTHEIL), THE
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