Abstract
IT is a pleasure, and in these days a relief, to turn to diarial musings distinguished by sanity, simplicity, and sobriety of statement. Mr. Have-lock Ellis may hold strong views, he may deal boldly with dangerous subjects, but he expresses himself so calmly, so frankly, and with an undercurrent of such delicate humour that it were surely impossible to take offence. Unkind fortune had not hitherto distributed the books of Mr. Ellis to this reviewer, who therefore was unprepared for the discovery that one of whose work in other directions he knew was also among the most delightful writers of our day.
Impressions and Comments.
Second series. 1914–20. By Havelock Ellis. Pp. 248. (London: Constable and Co., Ltd., 1921.) 12s.
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Impressions and Comments . Nature 107, 743 (1921). https://doi.org/10.1038/107743d0
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DOI: https://doi.org/10.1038/107743d0