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Get Biology of Longevity and Aging Observations and Principles 4th Edition Robert Arking PDF Full Chapter
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to educate the coming man; How to educate our coming women; List
of books for further reading; Index.
20–7498
Reviewed by J: C. Rose
20–11960
20–23005
Although Forkel was not the first to assemble the known facts of
Bach’s career he was the first in appreciation of the preeminence of
his genius. His monograph is not a “life” in the biographic sense but
a “critical appreciation of Bach as player, teacher, and composer,
based upon the organ and clavier works, with which alone Forkel was
familiar.” (Introd.) The present volume is a revision of the first
English version published in 1820 and is edited with copious
annotations by Charles Sanford Terry. The appendices occupy nearly
half of the volume and contain: Chronological catalogue of Bach’s
compositions; The church cantatas arranged chronologically; The
Bachgesellschaft editions of Bach’s works; Bibliography of Bach
literature; A collation of the Novello and Peters editions of the organ
works; Genealogy of the family of Bach; Index.
“Dr Sanford Terry, whose services to church music are too well
known to need commendation, has made a valuable addition to the
Bach literature by his new translation of Forkel’s biography, hitherto
only available in the imperfect version published in 1820. He has
added an excellent supplementary chapter on Bach at Leipzig. The
portraits and illustrations are well chosen and reproduced.”
20–3795
This is the story of the country boy who comes to the city, goes
wrong, but eventually finds the right path again. Anthony West is the
son of a Nebraska editor, a man whose humble country paper, the
Beacon, is known from one end of the land to the other. Anthony
goes to Harvard, and following the death, first of father, and then
mother, enters New York Journalism. But quicker means of making
money appeal to him and he goes into a broker’s office, falls into the
toils of an adventuress, is disillusioned and tastes the dregs of life.
Then the girl from home comes to New York and hope picks up
again. The war breaks out and when his service in the army is
finished he is ready to go back to Little Rapids to the position Jim
Howard has kept waiting for him on the Beacon.
“The crudeness of the story lies in the fact that Anthony does not
as the publishers assert, ‘win through to a fine manhood.’ He wins
through to nothing at all. His whole moral life is negative. He
repudiates the fire of youth and through satiety and disgust regains
his will to obedience under the social law. But his mind and character
are what they were.”
“The plot is firm and logical, even if not strikingly original, but the
merit of the book is in the rapidity and variety of its action—the
scenes in London being as well done as those in New York—and in
the sharply drawn characterization.”
20–13840
A story for children about a little boy and girl who live in London
and spend their summer holidays in Dorset. It tells in a simple way of
home and school, of Christmas celebrations, of an older sister’s
wedding, etc., and reads like a book of reminiscences of a real
childhood.
20–3675
“If but one word were allowed to be said of this book and its
people, it is ‘human.’”
“The author knows his provincial Italy and the Italian character as
well. The reader’s attention will be held to the end of this charming
book.”
20–9644
“It must fall to the lot of few naval men to have a career so varied
in incident and so full of contrast as has been that of Sir Seymour
Fortescue. During his twenty-one years of duty afloat, he not only
served on the Mediterranean and China stations, and took part in the
Egyptian war of 1882 and the Sudan campaign of 1885, but had his
first experience of attendance on royalty in the Surprise and the
Victoria and Albert. During the succeeding seventeen years, he was
on the staff of King Edward VII, as equerry, and took his regular turn
in waiting, but even then he managed to put in some sea time during
the manœuvres of 1895 as commander of the Theseus, to spend six
months as A.D.C. to Lord Roberts on the Headquarters staff in South
Africa, and to pay a visit to the nitrate fields in Chile in 1907.
Dovetailed between these diversified engagements, yacht sailing and
horseracing, shooting and fishing, the opera and the theatre, with
other forms of sport and pastime, made interludes, so that as a
spectator of events from many viewpoints the present Serjeant-at-
arms in the House of lords had exceptional opportunities, and it is
not surprising that he should publish reminiscences so kaleidoscopic
in colour and change.”—The Times [London] Lit Sup
“Sir Seymour Fortescue writes so well that one wishes he could
have steered a more venturesome course. A little more latitude, and a
good deal less longitude, would have made a more entertaining
volume.”
29–11241
20–20105
“Mr Fosdick has done a great public service in the making of this
volume. A book of primary importance to the student of
government.”
+ N Y Evening Post p11 N 27 ’20 330w
20–26880
20–14214
Henry Lester was very wealthy, in fact uncomfortably so, for when
he fell in love, he couldn’t be sure that Sally Raeburn, the object of
his affections, wouldn’t marry him for his money rather than for love
of him. So he didn’t ask her to marry him at all, but instead laid a
neat little trap for her. At his country estate on the Hudson he
assembled a house party, and among those present were Mrs Dewitt,
a former sweetheart of his, and Mr Hastings, a young man of reputed
wealth, and of course Sallie. How the trap, when it was sprung,
caught not only Sallie, but Henry himself, is told in the story.
20–26587
John A. Fitch in his introduction to the book speaks of the
overwhelming power of the steel trust and says: “The story of the
most extensive and most courageous fight yet made to break this
power and to set free the half million men of the steel mills is told
within the pages of this book by one who was himself a leader in the
fight. It is a story that is worth the telling, for it has been told before
only in fragmentary bits and without the authority that comes from
the pen of one of the chief actors in the struggle.” Contents: The
present situation; A generation of defeat; The giant labor awakes;
Flank attacks; Breaking into Pittsburgh; Storm clouds gather; The
storm breaks; Garyism rampant; Efforts at settlement; The course of
the strike; National and racial elements; The commissariat—the
strike cost; Past mistakes and future problems; In conclusion.
“Too frankly partisan to be history, and with too few facts to give it
the weight of a scientific survey, this authentic picture of the labor
machine in operation has the force of valuable evidence from the
inside.”
“Mr Foster draws a vivid picture of events, all of which he saw and
a large part of which he was. His judgment is cool and dispassionate;
he sees the faults in the labor movement, but he imparts to his
readers a tremendous admiration for the men who could conduct so
long a campaign against such terrific obstacles.”
(Eng ed 20–11698)
“The contents fall into four parts: Roman religion; Roman history;
parallels from the life of other races; and finally a group of literary
studies devoted to Virgil and Horace, appreciations of Niebuhr and
Mommsen, and a discussion of the tragic element in Shakespeare’s
‘Julius Caesar.’ About half the material is reprinted from articles
which had appeared in periodicals, chiefly the Classical Review and
the Journal of Roman Studies; these, however, bear everywhere the
traces of careful revision and are to be taken as embodying Dr Warde
Fowler’s reconsidered judgments of today.”—Class J
“In these pages we are conscious not only of having laid before us
the fruits of the highest quality of scholarship but of enjoying the
guidance and companionship of a rare personality.” A. W. Van Buren