archives of the Roman church. Nearly all this material is new 
to the English language. The notes are detailed enough to make 
clear Petrarch’s many allusions. The book is written with the 
charm of a vital scholarship and with intimate feeling for its 
subject, and the incidents connected with the lives of the two 
great Italians who lived centuries in advance of their times have a 
remarkable variety and interest. 
Boston Evening Transcript. As we read these extracts from the letters of 
Petrarca, and the scholarly notes that accompany them, we are con- 
vinced that, whatever the opinion of the papal court, Petrarca was a 
great statesman. 
American Poems. Selected and Edited with Illustrative and Ex- 
planatory Notes and a Bibliography. By Walter C. Bronson, 
Litit.D., Professor of English Literature in Brown University. 
680 pages, 12mo, cloth; $1.50, postpaid $1.68 
The book offers a most carefully chosen and well-balanced 
presentation of the poetic works of Americans, covering the 
entire period of our history. For the teacher as well as the 
student the value of the work is greatly enhanced by the com- 
prehensive Notes, Bibliography, and Indices. It is believed that 
the book will have the wide popularity of Professor Bronson’s 
earlier collection, English Poems, which has been adopted by 
all leading American colleges. 
The Dial. The resources of the special collections of Brown University 
have supplied the editor with the best authorities for accurate texts, 
and have made possible the widest range of selections. 
Education. Professor Bronson has done a real service to teachers and 
students of literature. .... It is a truly adequate presentation of 
American poetry. 
The Courts, the Constitution, and Parties. Studies in Constitu- 
tional History and Politics. By Andrew C. McLaughlin, 
Professor of History in the University of Chicago. 
308 pages, 12mo, cloth; $1.50, postpaid $1.63 
A volume of peculiar interest at this time, when the courts 
and political ae oe are subject to general criticism. stents 
cussion is especially significant as coming from a lifelong stu _ 
of constitutional questions, whose work at the sree scons 0 
Michigan, the Carnegie Institution of Washington, and the Uni- 
versity of Chicago is so widely known. The point of via! 2 
historical. Though the articles are scientific they are — 
for the reader who is interested in public affairs rather than for 
7 
