FIELDS, FACTORIES AND WORKSHOPS 



continued. 



WESTMINSTER GAZETTE : Prince Kropotkin's 

 new book is an admirable example of its author's lucidity 

 of style and capacity for making dry statistical and 

 industrial facts vital with human interest. ... In his 

 chapters on ' The Possibilities of Agriculture ' he deals 

 with this point [the possibility of crowded industrial 

 nations, such as England, becoming self-supporting in 

 the matter of food] in a manner that, to our thinking, is 

 wholly convincing. ... A book so full of a new outlook 

 in social economics, and at the same time so forcible in 

 its demonstration of fact." 



THE ECHO : "Taken on its statistical side alone, it 

 is a storehouse of facts to which the social student will 

 do well to give heed. Taken as an argument, as a state- 

 ment of a point of view applicable to this particular stage 

 in the progress of industry, the latest book of the distin- 

 guished Russian exile is full of stimulus and illuminating 

 criticism. ... No more earnest and stimulating book 

 has come our way for many months." 



DAILY CHRONICLE: "Kropotkin is on strong 

 grounds when he assails the neglect into which the soil 

 of England has fallen. . . . To those who are weary of 

 the common interests of parties and Parliaments, a book 

 like this, whether one agrees with it or not, comes like a 

 change of air and brings a wider horizon." 



SAN FRANCISCO STAR : An exceedingly inter- 

 esting, instructive, thought-provoking and hope-inspiring 

 book. It is a treasury of useful knowledge filled with 

 important facts gathered from a wide field of observation 

 and research. No one can read the book without having 

 his faith in the beneficence of the Power that orders all 

 things deepened and strengthened." 



