Mr 



scientist's analytical skill with all the grower's enthusiasm. 



Florists' Review. If anything else could be added to the book that 

 would really increase its beauty or its scientific value or its practical 

 utility, the present reviewer is curious to know what that addition 

 could be. 



The Life and Correspondence of Philip Yorfye, Earl of Hardwicke, 



Lord High Chancellor of Great Britain. By Philip C. Yorke, 



M. A. Oxon.y Licencie-es-Lettres of the University of Paris. 



3 vols., xxxii+1938 pages, royal 8vo, cloth; $13.50, postage extra (weight 9 lbs.) 



This solid and significant work is based on the Hardwicke 

 and Newcastle manuscripts and, in addition to the life of Lord 

 Hardwicke, gives the whole history of the Georgian period from 

 1 720 to 1 764. An account of the great judge's work in the King's 

 Bench and in Chancery is included. The characters and careers 

 of Walpole, Newcastle, Henry Pelham, the elder Pitt, Henry 

 Fox, the Duke of Cumberland, George II and George III, and 

 various incidents — such as the fall of Walpole, the Byng catas- 

 trophe, and the struggle between George III and the Whigs- 

 appear in a clearer light, which the author, by aid of original 

 papers and manuscripts, has been enabled to throw upon them. 

 These documents are now published, or brought together and 

 annotated, for the first time. 



The Harvard Law Review. Every lawyer who venerates the makers of the 



law, who believes that the personality of a judge determines the nature 

 _r ! ? • to t ^ e d eve i 0Dmen t; f i aw should read in these 



service 



impressed 



equity the moral standards of a judge who was as good as he was great 



Byzantine and Romanesque Architecture. By Thomas Graham 



Jackson, R.A . With 165 Plates and 148 Illustrations. 



2 vols., xx +560 pages, crown quarto, half vellum; $12.50, 



postage extra (weight 7 lbs. 12 02..) 



This work contains an account of the development in Eastern 

 and Western Europe of Post-Roman architecture from the fourth 

 to the twelfth century. It attempts not merely to describe the 

 architecture, but to explain it by the social and political history 

 of the time. The description of the churches of Constantinople 

 and Salonica, which have a special interest at this time, is fol- 

 lowed by an account of Italo-Byzantine work at Ravenna and in 

 the Exarchate, and of the Romanesque styles of Germany, 



22 



