I04 



REVIEW OF REVIEWS. 



March 1, 1913. 



PEDIGREES & ARMS (Englhh & Foreign.) 



Mr. Culleton traces pedigrees of middle classr as well as 

 landed families, with proofs from public records. Upon 

 his collection of references to Pedigrees and Arms 

 ;^ 10,000 have been spent during 70 years. 



Enquiry letters answered without charge. 

 LEO CULLETON, 92 Piccadilly. London. 



Culleton's Heraldic Office 



for the artistic production of Heraldic painting 

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Perhaps part of the enjoyment is 

 liecause the man himself is a para- 

 dos ; a social democrat, who counts 

 that on occasion, when Mr. Hyndman 

 thinks it right, even anarchism is de- 

 fensible, and who yet can express his 

 contempt for uneducated and undis- 

 ciplined democracy. His views about 

 the Suflrag-e movement and his de- 

 scriptions of International Congresses 

 will be read with interest — especially 

 as one gets the average idea of the 

 one clearly put, and the language diffi- 

 culties of the other practically em- 

 ph.isised. 



FICTION. 



Ihi' Light-Bearers. By M. Sylvestre. 



(John Long, 6s.) 



Miss Eobius's novel, "Where Are You 

 Going To?" shows us a victim of the 

 modern Minotaur. " The Light- 

 Bearers" poin.ts out that it is possible 

 fo,- the soul of the victim to rise 

 ibove the tormented body. In an im- 

 l)a88ioued flow of words there is laid 

 before the reader the story of an Irish 

 girl, who, left penniless by a father's 

 folly, and sorrowful l>ecause of the 

 betrayal of an innocent young girl, 

 her sister, arisee strong to fight for 

 others, helped by the pure and true 

 love of two strong men. Tara O'Neil 

 has 8een the " daughters of despair " 

 at close ciuarters. and knows there are 

 hearts of gold amongst them. She has 

 also come into contact with young 

 men ruined by depraved women, and 

 »o sees the two sides. The climax 

 comes when her sister, seeing the 

 awful ruin continually brought about 

 by one vile man, calmly decides to 

 shoot him and suffer the penalty, 

 Tara's affianced husband is the defend 

 ing l)arrister. His speech concludes 

 thus : " Are there no heroes left — 

 young, strong, chivalrous, to destroy 

 this modern Minot.iur demanding its 

 yearly toll of womanhood? Are there 

 no knights of the Graal, riding forth 

 as of oldl on the quest of the Spirit, 

 to lift the God-given creative gift of 

 sex out of the swamp of evil, and to 

 hold up .a loftier standard of life by 

 a higher chastity, a finer morality, 

 than that demanded by the world? 

 Such men will cleanse the Augean 

 stable, they will bridge over the black 

 morass," Much more might be said, 

 but this will give the tone of a book 

 which, while uncovering the muck- 

 yard, shows that there are lights 

 bearers on earth and a Star shining 

 above. 



The Golden Ease. By Fred, M, White. 

 (Ward, Look, 6s,) 



A capital holiday story about the 

 theft of a rare Persian rose, bringing 

 in a detective, a couple of lovers, and 

 some rapid adventures. 



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