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Volume 18
(July to December 1898) | |
Issue [1] (July 1898) | Expand
Contract | Review of Reviews, 18 (1898), 23–26.
 Character Sketch. Sir Edward Burne-Jones Anon Genre: | Regular Feature, Biography | Subjects: | Anti-Scientism, Spectroscopy, Instruments, Commerce, Idealism, Measurement |
Observes that part of the huge popularity of the late artist Edward C Burne-Jones
Burne-Jones, Sir Edward Coley, 1st Baronet
(1833–98)
ODNB
Close
View the register entry >> was 'no doubt due to the natural recoil of our age from the indulgence of its predominant passion. Science with its spectroscope and its innumerable apparati of research is explaining everything. Commerce with its insatiate grasp is seizing everything. But Burne-Jones stood up in the midst of the scientific and commercial generation and proclaimed aloud that there is a knowledge which no scientist can measure and a glory which no enterprise can seize' (23).
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Section: Leading Articles in the Reviews Review of Reviews, 18 (1898), 28.
 Siberia as the Latest Surprise Anon
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Review of Reviews, 18 (1898), 41.
 ["A Curious Cure"] Anon Genre: | Abstract | Publications abstracted: |
John Russell
Russell, John
(fl. 1898–1941)
Beare 1982
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View the register entry >>
, Strand Magazine
Strand Magazine
(1891–1900+)
Waterloo
Directory
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View the register entry >>
| Subjects: | Hygiene, Medical Treatment, Health, Heterodoxy |
Details the 'curious cure' propounded by an Austrian doctor who claims that clothes are 'anti-hygienic, a source of physical and moral degradation' because the enclosed 'skin is not allowed to act as it is meant by Nature to act'. With men and women segregated, the doctor's 'patients and guests lie with but a rag round their loins and bask in the sun and air and rain'.
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Review of Reviews, 18 (1898), 51.
 Stages of Child-growth. From Suckling to Saint Anon
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Review of Reviews, 18 (1898), 53.
 The Cult of the Muscle. A New Organ for the Strong Arm Anon
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Section: The Reviews Reviewed Review of Reviews, 18 (1898), 56.
 The Contemporary Review Anon
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Review of Reviews, 18 (1898), 62–63.
 The Arena Anon
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Review of Reviews, 18 (1898), 63.
 The Humanitarian Anon
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Issue [2] (August 1898) | Expand
Contract | Review of Reviews, 18 (1898), 111–22.
 The Progress of the World Anon Genre: | Regular Feature, Editorial, News-Commentary | Subjects: | Vaccination, Government, Ethics, Politics, Medical Practitioners |
Heralds the 'defeat of the Government over the Vaccination Bill' as 'a victory of the greatest importance, for it is a victory which almost for the first time definitely and formally extends the area within which conscience is recognised as king'. The amended bill now allows that 'any parent who satisfies the Justice of the Peace that he has conscientious scruples which forbid him to assent to the vaccination of his children is to be exempt from compulsion. This concession, bitterly assailed by the medical police, who as always are dominated by the fixed idea that the health of the community can only be secured by the sacrifice of the liberties of the subject, makes a great advance, the full significance of which is yet but dimly appreciated'. (119) Applauds the 'dogged determination of anti-vaccinators to go to gaol rather than submit their children to inoculation', and acknowledges that the government 'capitulation' by which the 'anti-vaccinators reaped their reward for many years of painstaking agitation throughout the country' was occasioned by the 'conviction on the part of the majority [in Parliament] that their seats would not be safe unless some concession was made by the Government' after 'a dead set was made against the Conservative candidate by the anti-vaccinators' in a by-election at Reading (120).
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Section: Leading Articles in the Reviews Review of Reviews, 18 (1898), 142.
 The Boat That Goes Forty Miles an Hour Anon
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Review of Reviews, 18 (1898), 151.
 The Crusade Against Consumption Anon
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Review of Reviews, 18 (1898), 153.
 British Animals Past and Present Anon
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Review of Reviews, 18 (1898), 154.
 A Laboratory Farm Anon
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Review of Reviews, 18 (1898), 154.
 Have Plants Brain Power? Anon
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Review of Reviews, 18 (1898), 158.
 An Evolutionist's Hymn Anon
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Review of Reviews, 18 (1898), 160.
 Motor-car Mania Anon Genre: | Abstract | Publications abstracted: |
Georges Desjacques
Desjacques, Georges
(fl. 1900–20)
RLIN
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View the register entry >>
, Revue de Paris
Revue de Paris
(1894–1900+)
BUCOP
Close
View the register entry >>
| Subjects: | Machinery, Technology, Transport, Invention, Industry |
Observes that 'whereas our forefathers rebelled against new mechanical discoveries which by ousting the labour of man seemed almost sacrilegious, we nowadays by a curious reaction have acquired such an excessive confidence in machinery in general that we instinctively pick holes in every new invention. We are too apt to forget that the machines to which we are accustomed have only reached their present pitch of perfection by slow degrees. Motor-cars have certainly suffered by the public's expecting perfection all in a moment'.
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Review of Reviews, 18 (1898), 162.
 The Police and the Press. Scotland Yard Censorship Anon Genre: | Abstract | Publications abstracted: |
University Magazine and Free Review
University Magazine and Free Review
(1897–1900)
Waterloo
Directory
Close
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| Subjects: | Sex, Morality, Monographs, Freethought, Psychology, Sexology, Textbooks, Government, Crime, Mental Illness, Gender, Medical Practitioners, Publishing |
Reports that the 'general public' have been 'startled' by the news that 'for selling a scientific work, which he did not write and did not publish, and for which he was in no way responsible, the police were prosecuting Mr. George Bedborough
Bedborough, George
(fl. 1897–1934)
RLIN
Close
View the register entry >>', and warns that 'so far as the facts have been stated to me, the action of the police seems calculated to bring into the gravest discredit the cause in which they are supposed to be acting'. After all, the book in question, Henry H Ellis's
Ellis, Henry Havelock
(1859–1939)
ODNB
Close
View the register entry >> Studies in the Psychology of Sex
Ellis, Havelock
1897. Studies in the Psychology of Sex, Vol. 1, Sexual Inversion,
London: University Press
Close
View the register entry >>, 'was not proposed to be sold for general circulation. Every copy supplied to booksellers was labelled "This book is a scientific work, intended for medical men, lawyers, and teachers. It should not be placed in the hands of the general public". I have read the book, and no person who reads it with an impartial mind could come to the conclusion that it was published with the intention of corrupting the morals of Her Majesty's subjects'. Although it 'may be alleged that such problems should not be discussed, and that the whole question should be buried in impenetrable silence', the 'answer to this is that if the legislator makes one theory of the Psychology of Sex the basis for passing a law which sends citizens to penal servitude, it is impossible to shut out such a theory from public discussion. Dr Ellis' inquiry goes to the very root of the theory upon which one section of the Criminal Law Amendment Act is based, and if the conclusions at which he arrives are sound the principle of that legislation is unsound, and will have to be modified, for the same reason that capital punishment is never enforced upon persons of disordered minds'. Notes the 'general contention of the medical profession, which is that, if the sale of such a book as Dr. Ellis' justifies the wholesale seizure of every book on the premises of any bookseller, the sale of medical works will be very much restricted', and cautions against 'the sudden extension of the police censorship to the realm of scientific discussion'.
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Section: The Reviews Reviewed Review of Reviews, 18 (1898), 163.
 The Australasian Review of Reviews Anon
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Review of Reviews, 18 (1898), 168.
 The North American Review Anon
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Review of Reviews, 18 (1898), 171.
 The Edinburgh Review Anon
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Review of Reviews, 18 (1898), 173–74.
 The Quarterly Review Anon
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Review of Reviews, 18 (1898), 205.
 How to Make Periodicals More Accessible. A Suggestion to Students of Special Subjects Anon Genre: | Editorial, Announcement | Subjects: | Periodicals, Specialization, Science Communication, Engineering |
Proposes a scheme to 'supply subscribers at a reasonable rate with separate articles or sets of articles on certain subjects', an idea which is presently 'carried out by the Engineering Magazine
Engineering Magazine
(1891–1900+)
Waterloo
Directory
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View the register entry >>, and articles on all technical subjects connected with Engineering are offered to subscribers at certain fixed rates'.
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Issue [3] (September 1898) | Expand
Contract | Review of Reviews, 18 (1898), 219–29.
 The Progress of the World Anon Genre: | Regular Feature, Editorial, News-Commentary | Subjects: | Vaccination, Government, Ethics, Politics |
Records that the 'House of Lords
House of Lords
Close
View the register entry >> plucked up heart of grace in order to make a last stand for the principle of compulsory vaccination', although the 'system of enforced vaccination [...] has ended in making vaccination so unpopular that, to give the doctors a chance of inoculating the population against small-pox, it has been necessary to abolish compulsion wherever parents plead conscientious objection', and the lords have now grudgingly accepted the bill, and its conscience clause, after a second reading (228–29).
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Review of Reviews, 18 (1898), 233–44.
 Character Sketch. Dr. F. J. Campbell, of the Kingdom of the Blind Anon Genre: | Regular Feature, Biography | Relevant illustrations: | photo. [8] | Subjects: | Disability, Statistics, Education, Schools |
Reports that the Royal Normal College for the Blind
Royal Normal College for the Blind
Close
View the register entry >> is 'just now in the crisis of its destinies', and so 'no moment could be selected more timely for the publication of a Character Sketch' devoted to its 'remarkable' founder Francis J Campbell
Campbell, Francis Joseph
( 1832–1914)
WBI
Close
View the register entry >> (233). Across the world 'the denizens of the Kingdom of the Blind are at least one million strong', while in Britain there are '32,000 sightless of all ages' (234). In the early 1870s both Campbell, an American expatriate originally from Tennessee, and Thomas R Armitage
Armitage, Thomas Rhodes
(1824–90)
WBI
Close
View the register entry >>, founder of the British and Foreign Blind Association
British and Foreign Blind Association
Close
View the register entry >>, tried to introduce educational innovations in existing schools and colleges for the blind, but found that the 'citizens of the Kingdom of the Blind looked askance at these revolutionary proposals' and 'new-fangled theories', and so the two men determined to start 'a small school and try the experiment' themselves (241). The Royal Normal College for the Blind at Norwood in South London is now 'a veritable city of light' for its 160 pupils, and 'although no one can make them see with their eyes, Dr. Campbell has to a very large extent succeeded in making them see with their fingers' and enabling them to 'move about with an alert confidence'. Campbell himself is an accomplished mountaineer and the 'only blind man who has ever ascended Mont Blanc'. Indeed, John Tyndall
Tyndall, John
(1820–93)
DSB
Close
View the register entry >>, 'meeting the indomitable little man in the Alps, inquired as he took his arm, "Are you really blind, or are you only humbug?". (242) The college 'under the shadow of the towers of the Crystal Palace
Crystal Palace
Close
View the register entry >>' (234) is undoubtedly the 'best of its kind', but it now faces debts of nearly £25,000, and readers of the Review of Reviews are called upon to help raise the 'comparatively trifling sum necessary to wipe off this financial embarrassment, and to restore it to its necessary independence' (244).
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Section: Leading Articles in the Reviews Review of Reviews, 18 (1898), 263–64.
 Louis De Rougemont. Gulliver and Munchhausen Outdone Anon Genre: | Abstract | Publications abstracted: |
Wide World Magazine
Wide World Magazine
(1898–1900+)
Waterloo
Directory
Close
View the register entry >>
| Relevant illustrations: | photo. [2] | Subjects: | Exploration, Travel, Anthropology, Charlatanry, Societies |
Details the 'amazing experiences' of the French adventurer Louis De Rougemont
De Rougemont, Louis
(1844–1921)
WBI
Close
View the register entry >> (263), who claims to have 'lived thirty years among savages in a country that has hitherto never been explored'. Records that 'M. De Rougemont called round at the office of the REVIEW OF REVIEWS
Review of Reviews
(1890–1900+)
Waterloo
Directory
Close
View the register entry >>, and certainly his personal appearance is eminently in his favour' in his attempt to prove the veracity of his alleged experiences. In addition, he has been 'invited to read papers before the British Association
British Association for the Advancement of Science
Close
View the register entry >>, which meets at Bristol this month, and the secretaries of the Royal Geographical Society
Royal Geographical Society
Close
View the register entry >> are stated to be perfectly satisfied that he has at least a primâ facie case to be believed'. (264)
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Section: The Reviews Reviewed Review of Reviews, 18 (1898), 275.
 The Nineteenth Century Anon
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Review of Reviews, 18 (1898), 278–79.
 The National Review Anon
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Review of Reviews, 18 (1898), 280.
 The Forum Anon
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Review of Reviews, 18 (1898), 285.
 The Revue Des Deux Mondes Anon
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Review of Reviews, 18 (1898), 306.
 "Attractive Colouring" Anon
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Issue [4] (October 1898) | Expand
Contract | Review of Reviews, 18 (1898), 327–35.
 The Progress of the World Anon Genre: | Regular Feature, Editorial, News-Commentary | Subjects: | Military Technology, War, Scientism, Chemistry, Invention, Progress, Imperialism, Exploration, Organic Chemistry, Natural Economy, Agriculture, Hydrography, Dynamics, Futurism, Fear, Scientific Practitioners, Imagination, Spiritualism, Matter Theory | Institutions mentioned: | Army
Army
Close
View the register entry >> |
Remarks that the success of the British-Egyptian forces at the battle of Omdurman shows the 'thickness of the magic panoply of civilisation'. During the battle the Mahdist army of Dervishes 'fought as befits men who were making the last and the supreme rally of savage humanity against the perfected machine of scientific valour', and they 'had to be cleared out by Maxims, and died literally in heaps'. It is now evident that the 'sceptre of the world, even of the heart of Central Africa, is no longer wielded by the brawny arm of the swift barbarian. Not even in the far Soudan can the brain of the chemist and of the mechanic brook a rival. The brain that invents is now definitely master of the hand that slays, and although the lesson has been terrible—as executions always are—is it not a vital feature in the progress of the world?'. (327) At the same time, however, the 'human factor [...] cannot be eliminated even by the chemist. To hurl the thunderbolts of science it is necessary to have men who can carry them within range of the enemy. A race of weaklings cannot wield the hammer of Thor'. Also reports that four hundred miles further down the Nile from Omdurman, the town of Fashoda has been claimed by 'Major Marchand
Marchand, Jean Baptiste
(1863–1934)
CBD
Close
View the register entry >>, a French explorer who left the West Coast of Africa two years since on a pseudo-scientific expedition across the continent'. (328) At the meeting of the 'British Association
British Association for the Advancement of Science
Close
View the register entry >> Sir W. Crookes
Crookes, Sir William
(1832–1919)
DSB
ODNB
Close
View the register entry >>, in his inaugural address, indulged in an alarming speculation as to the possible exhaustion of the nitrates of the world. To answer the prayer, "Give us day by day our daily bread", it is necessary we should have sufficient store of fixed nitrogen to replenish the exhausted fertility of our wheat lands', but we are 'using it up rapidly, and wasting it [...] to the sum of £16,000,000 a year in sewage emptied into the sea'. Crookes, however, reassured his audience that 'free nitrogen exists in the atmosphere in such immense volume that if the chemist could but induce the mechanician to complete the harnessing of Niagara to the dynamo, he would ere long be able manufacture the fertilising nitrate direct from the air'. Comments that, along with Crookes, 'Another scientific man [i.e. William Thomson (1st Baron Kelvin)
Thomson, Sir William (Baron Kelvin of
Largs)
(1824–1907)
DSB
Close
View the register entry >>; see Anon, 'Mankind Under Notice to Quit. All Life Extinct Within Four Hundred Years', Review of Reviews, 17 (1898), 465] is said to indulge in the speculation that in three hundred years the progress of industrialism will have exhausted the oxygen of the atmosphere of the world. There is nothing like a man of science with imagination for the breeding of nightmares'. Also observes that 'Sir W. Crookes distinguished himself by the testimony which he bore in his Presidential address to the truth of what I am wont familiarly to speak of as "spooks". No scientific man has investigated more carefully or certified more positively the strange phenomena of spiritualism', and concludes 'Good, very good all this. Spooks are looking up'. (333)
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Section: Leading Articles in the Reviews Review of Reviews, 18 (1898), 373.
 "Why is the British Race Superior?" Anon Genre: | Abstract | Publications abstracted: |
Joseph Banister
Banister, Joseph
(fl. 1907–31)
RLIN
Close
View the register entry >>
, New Century Review
New Century
(1897–1900)
New Century Review
(1900+)
Waterloo Directory
Close
View the register entry >>
| Subjects: | Race, Nationalism, Eugenics, Crime, Narcotics |
Details that article's claims that the British race is superior because, amongst other things, of the 'tendency of our moral and mental weaklings to indulge in excess in intoxicants', which 'indulgence in the drinking habit shortens the victims' lives, precluding them from bringing into the world other weaklings', and complains that the 'strange intermixture of the grotesque and the serious leaves one in an uncertainty whether the paper is or is not meant as an elaborate pleasantry'.
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Review of Reviews, 18 (1898), 379.
 The Balloon in Warfare Anon
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Review of Reviews, 18 (1898), 388.
 The Latest Flying-machine Anon
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Review of Reviews, 18 (1898), 388.
 Cow's Milk and Consumption. Why Infant Mortality Remains So High Anon
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Review of Reviews, 18 (1898), 389.
 Women Physically Equal to Men Anon
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Section: The Reviews Reviewed Review of Reviews, 18 (1898), 392–93.
 The Nineteenth Century Anon
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Review of Reviews, 18 (1898), 393.
 The North American Review Anon
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Review of Reviews, 18 (1898), 394.
 The National Review Anon Genre: | Review, Abstract | Publications reviewed: |
Frederic W H Myers
Myers, Frederic William Henry
(1843–1901)
ODNB
Close
View the register entry >>
, National Review
National Review
(1883–1900+)
Sullivan 1984
Close
View the register entry >>
| Subjects: | Psychical Research | People mentioned: |
Richard Hodgson,
Hodgson, Richard
(1855–1905)
WBI
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View the register entry >>
Leonora E Piper
Piper, Leonora E
(fl. 1885)
WBI
Close
View the register entry >>
| Publications cited: |
Hodgson 1898
Hodgson,
Richard 1898. 'A Further Record of Observations of Certain Phenomena
of Trance', Proceedings of the Society for Psychical Research, 13,
284–582
Close
View the register entry >>
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Review of Reviews, 18 (1898), 394.
 The Arena Anon
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Review of Reviews, 18 (1898), 395.
 The Forum Anon
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Review of Reviews, 18 (1898), 400.
 The Engineering Magazine Anon
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Review of Reviews, 18 (1898), 411–15.
 Some Notable Books of the Month Anon Genre: | Regular Feature, Abstract | Publications abstracted: |
Peary 1898
Peary, Robert
Edwin 1898. Northward Over the "Great Ice": A Narrative of Life
and Work Along the Shores and Upon the Interior Ice-Cap of Northern Greenland
in the Years 1891–1897, 2 vols, London: Methuen & Co.
Close
View the register entry >>
| Subjects: | Exploration, Navigation, Physical Geography |
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Review of Reviews, 18 (1898), 417.
 Patent Railway Signalling Invention Anon Genre: | Announcement, Reportage | Relevant illustrations: | photo. | Subjects: | Invention, Railways, Patents, Engineering, Electricity |
Describes the invention by Wynford Brierly
Brierly, Mr Wynford (of Carr Hall
Villa, Nelson, Lancashire)
(fl. 1898)
RR1/18/4/14
Close
View the register entry >> of the 'Brierly apparatus', which holds out the prospect of improved safety on the railway system. The apparatus is 'as simple as anything of this kind can well be' and consists of a 'contact bar [...] mounted on the end of the rails on a rocking shaft, and [...] connected by a lever and wire to the ordinary signal connection, so that when the signal is put to danger by the man in the signal-box he also raises the contact bar into a position to strike a lever affixed to the engine. The blow, when it takes place, makes a complete electric current, sets an alarm bell ringing on the engine and works an indicator'. Also reports that 'Trials have been made on an express train on the Great Northern Railway
Great Northern Railway Company
Close
View the register entry >> for many months with the apparatus, and with complete success'.
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Issue [5] (November 1898) | Expand
Contract | Review of Reviews, 18 (1898), 431–43.
 The Progress of the World Anon Genre: | Regular Feature, Editorial, News-Commentary | Subjects: | Nationalism, National Efficiency, Declinism, Industry, Electricity, Commerce, Transport, Technology |
Remarks that 'Compared with New York, London is a badly lighted country village. Compared with Hamburg, the street locomotion is as that of the stage coach era compared to that of the train de luxe. Why, even here in Sebastopol, in the city which has risen like a phoenix from the ashes of the fortress we pounded to bits half-a-century since, electric trolley cars are running which are immensely in advance of anything to be found in the capital of the British Empire'. At the same time, there is a 'general movement against the English abroad', and although 'Englishmen made the gas for St. Petersburg', and 'All over Southern Russia, Englishmen founded and directed ironworks, and presided over the industrial development of the country. Now all is changed. Belgians and Frenchmen and Germans do the business, and a greater business, that the English began. Even in the working of tramways Belgians make lines pay which the English have abandoned in despair of earning a dividend'. (442)
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Section: Leading Articles in the Reviews Review of Reviews, 18 (1898), 480.
 [A Plea for a British Antarctic Expedition] Anon
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Review of Reviews, 18 (1898), 482.
 Andrew Lang's Origin of Religion Anon
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Section: The Reviews Reviewed Review of Reviews, 18 (1898), 488.
 "Louis De Rougemont" Anon Genre: | Review, Abstract | Publications reviewed: |
Daily Chronicle
Daily Chronicle
(1825–1900+)
Waterloo
Directory
Close
View the register entry >>
, Wide World Magazine
Wide World Magazine
(1898–1900+)
Waterloo
Directory
Close
View the register entry >>
| Subjects: | Charlatanry, Exploration, Travel, Anthropology, Societies | People mentioned: |
Louis De Rougemont
De Rougemont, Louis
(1844–1921)
WBI
Close
View the register entry >>
| Institutions mentioned: |
British Association for the Advancement of Science
British Association for the Advancement of Science
Close
View the register entry >>
| See also: |
Anon, 'Louis De Rougemont. Gulliver and Munchhausen Outdone', Review of Reviews, 18 (1898), 263–64
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Review of Reviews, 18 (1898), 489.
 The Contemporary Review Anon
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Review of Reviews, 18 (1898), 492.
 Harmsworth's Anon
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Review of Reviews, 18 (1898), 501–07.
 The Book of the Month. Dr. Sven Hedin's Adventures on "The Roof of the World". A Thrilling Romance of Real Travel Anon Genre: | Regular Feature, Abstract | Publications abstracted: |
Hedin 1898
Hedin, Sven 1898.
Through Asia, 2 vols, London: Methuen & Co.
Close
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| Relevant illustrations: | photo. [2]; eng.; map | Subjects: | Exploration, Travel, Physical Geography, Anthropology |
In the wake of 'a Norwegian
Nansen, Fridtjof
(1861–1930)
DSB
Close
View the register entry >> who' only last year 'mounted nearer than any human being before him to the summit of the Northern Icecap', now comes 'a Swede who has faced not less appalling dangers while clambering over the Eastern "roof of the world"'. Recounts the details of Sven Hedin's
Hedin, Sven
(b. 1865)
WBI
Close
View the register entry >> epic journey across Asia and over the Himalayas, on which he was 'Steadily accumulating scientific data for the enlightenment of Western savants'. (501)
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Review of Reviews, 18 (1898), 508–11.
 Some Notable Books of the Month Anon
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Issue [6] (December 1898) | Expand
Contract | Review of Reviews, 18 (1898), 533–43.
 The Progress of the World Anon Genre: | Regular Feature, Editorial, News-Commentary | Subjects: | Hunting, Natural Imperialism, Extinction, Politics, Environmentalism |
Reports that the 'long standing dispute between Canada and the United States as to the right of killing seals in the open sea has been settled by an arrangement which was foreshadowed last year at Washington by Mr. Gage
Gage, Lyman Judson
(1836–1927)
WBI
Close
View the register entry >>, the Secretary of the Treasury [....] Canada gives up the right of deep sea sealing, and the United States compensates her for this abandonment of what is admittedly a legal right' (543).
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Section: Leading Articles in the Reviews Review of Reviews, 18 (1898), 565.
 "The Autonaut" Anon
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Review of Reviews, 18 (1898), 572.
 The Battle of the Canals: Nicaragua or Panama—Which? Anon
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Section: The Reviews Reviewed Review of Reviews, 18 (1898), 586.
 The Contemporary Review Anon
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Review of Reviews, 18 (1898), 587.
 The National Review Anon
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Review of Reviews, 18 (1898), 590.
 The Revue Des Deux Mondes Anon
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Review of Reviews, 18 (1898), 592.
 The Italian Reviews Anon
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Review of Reviews, 18 (1898), 593.
 Engineering Anon
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Review of Reviews, 18 (1898), 594.
 New Reviews of Reviews Anon Genre: | Review, Abstract | Publications reviewed: |
Nathan E Boyd
Boyd, Nathan E
(fl. 1898)
RLIN
Close
View the register entry >>
, Medical and Surgical "Review of Reviews"
Medical and Surgical "Review of Reviews"
(1898–99)
Medical Review
(1899–1900+)
Waterloo Directory
Close
View the register entry >>
, Waller Jeffs
Jeffs, Waller
(fl. 1898–99)
RR1/18/6b/9
Close
View the register entry >>
, Science Work
Science Work
(1898–99)
Waterloo
Directory
Close
View the register entry >>
| Subjects: | Periodicals, Publishing, Science Communication, Medical Treatment, Surgery |
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