Review of reviews and world's work . be quite indif- • to friendship and sympathy. He certainly makes no hid for either. This man, who seems to ly in his every expresI an > nvinced, one of the ->ort whose inner-ire hard ;nt for little when it i the prodigy »ho in mpliihcd in poetry and a champion of verbal literalne>s—com-bines metaphy-ics with v it, strategy with force,precise knowledge with elegant phraseology. Aristide Briand, the Socialist Premier, owesa good deal of his celebrity, thinks M. de Mon-zie, to the sharp contrast which he offers toJean Jaures. Unlike his masterful coll


Review of reviews and world's work . be quite indif- • to friendship and sympathy. He certainly makes no hid for either. This man, who seems to ly in his every expresI an > nvinced, one of the ->ort whose inner-ire hard ;nt for little when it i the prodigy »ho in mpliihcd in poetry and a champion of verbal literalne>s—com-bines metaphy-ics with v it, strategy with force,precise knowledge with elegant phraseology. Aristide Briand, the Socialist Premier, owesa good deal of his celebrity, thinks M. de Mon-zie, to the sharp contrast which he offers toJean Jaures. Unlike his masterful colleague,M. Briand persuades with suavity. He is anadept at subtle development am! all the seductiveness of his voice, whichlends a <damour to his most commonplai e utter-an< es, his speeches are really no more thanlong, familiar chat-. And he goes on chat-ting, in this -train and the next, emphasizingone point or leading up to another, according ] , ) 3 llll I III I Iff J AMERICAN REVIEW !? REVIEWS. (.Leader of the Socialist Party) i Prime Mil erof Pu as he finds himself impressing his audience,whose moods of response foD


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Keywords: ., bookcentury1800, bookdecade1890, bookidreviewofrevi, bookyear1890