NEIGHBOURS OF OURS
: Scenes of East End Life.
IN THE VALLEY OF TOPHET
: Scenes of Black Country Life.
THE THIRTY DAYS' WAR
: Scenes in the Greek and Turkish War of 1897.
LADYSMITH
: a Diary of the Siege.
CLASSIC GREEK LANDSCAPE AND ARCHITECTURE
: Text to John Fulleylove's Pictures of Greece.
THE PLEA OF PAN
.
BETWEEN THE ACTS
: Scenes in the Author's Experience.
ON THE OLD ROAD THROUGH FRANCE TO FLORENCE
: French Chapters to Hallam Murray's Pictures.
BOOKS AND PERSONALITIES
: a volume of Criticism.
A MODERN SLAVERY
: an Investigation of the Slave System in Angola and the Islands of San Thomé and Principe.
THE DAWN IN RUSSIA
: Scenes in the Revolution of 1905-1906.
THE NEW SPIRIT IN INDIA
: Scenes during the Unrest of 1907-1908.
ESSAYS IN FREEDOM
.
THE GROWTH OF FREEDOM
: a Summary of the History of Democracy.
When writers are so different, it is queer that every age should have a distinguishing spirit. Each writer is as different in "style" as in look, and his words reveal him just as the body reveals the soul, blazoning its past or its future without possibility of concealment. Paint a face, no matter how delicately or how thick; the very paint—the very choice of colours red or white—betrays the nature lurking beneath it, and no amount of artifice or imitation in a writer can obscure the secret of self. Artifice and imitation reveal the finikin or uncertain soul as surely as deliberate bareness reveals a conscious austerity. Except, perhaps, in mathematics, there seems no escape from this revelation. I am told that even in the "exact sciences" there is no escape; even in physics the exposition is a matter of imagination, of personality, of "style."
Next to mathematics and the exact sciences, I suppose, Bluebooks and leading articles are taken as representing truth in the most absolute and impersonal manner. We appeal to Bluebooks as confidently as to astronomers, assuming that their statements will be impersonally true, just as the curve of a comet will be the same for the Opposition a