LITERARY NOTICES. 



249 



Primitive Property. Translated from the 

 French of Emile de Laveleye. By G. 

 R. L. Marriott, B. A., LL. B. With 

 an Introduction, by T. E. Cliffe Les- 

 lie, LL. B. New York : Macmillan & 

 Co. Pp. 355. Price, $4.50. 



This is an able work on land-tenure from 

 the point of view of modern investigation 

 into early social conditions. The author 

 holds radical views upon the subject, which 

 differ widely from those that prevail in 

 this country : " He is of opinion that the 

 dangers of democracy lie in the inequality 

 of conditions, and that, unless the catas- 

 trophe can be prevented by measures of 

 state on a large scale, the same struggle 

 between rich and poor which destroyed the 

 republics of antiquity will destroy the mod- 

 ern states also. He holds that the econo- 

 mists have made a fatal mistake in press- 

 ing the advantages of individual property 

 in land, and that the abstract arguments by 

 which private property is explained and de- 

 fended as an institution are in favor, not of 

 private and exclusive ownership, but of a 

 form of tenure under which each man, as 

 he comes into the world, shall be a proprie- 

 tor." M. de Laveleye assumes the law of 

 evolution of property in land, and traces 

 the history of its development in England, 

 China, Italy, Holland, France, Belgium, 

 Russia, India, Switzerland, and Germany. 

 The questions opened by Sir Henry Sumner 

 Maine, in his " Village Communities," are 

 here vigorously pursued, with large acces- 

 sions of new and interesting matter. 



Syllabus of Lectures in Anatomy and 

 Physiology, for Students of the State 

 Normal and Training School at Cort- 

 land, N. Y. By T. B. Stowell, A. M. 

 Syracuse, N. Y. : Davis, Bardeen & Co. 

 Pp. 82. Price, 50 cents. 



This book is prepared merely as an 

 aid to students in anatomy and physiology. 

 The author does not assume for it that it is 

 in any sense a substitute for a text-book, or 

 other book of reference, but that economy 

 of time and greater thoroughness may be 

 secured by thus directing the attention to 

 matters of chief importance. It is intended 

 to be used in connection with anatomical 

 demonstrations, charts, diagrams, and the 

 microscope. Terms which are merely tech- 

 nical, as the names of the muscles and the 

 bones, have been omitted. 



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