Select List of Books ... Relating to the Far East - Part 39
Library

Part 39

=Pouvourville=, Albert de. La question d'extreme-orient. Avec une preface par Gabriel Hanotaux.

_Paris: A. Pedone, 1900. xii, 274 pp. 8^o. (etudes coloniales, vol.

5.)_

=Reclus=, elisee. La Chine et la diplomatie europeenne.

_Paris: editeurs de l'Humanite nouvelle, 1900. 16 pp. 8^o._

"Thinks that the alliance against China, beyond capturing Pekin, will accomplish no good; is inimical to Russia.

Thinks Russian advance has been checked to the advantage of the world."

=Reid=, Gilbert. The powers and the part.i.tion of China.

(_In_ The Crisis in China, pp. 35-50. New York, 1900. 12^o.)

=Siebold=, Alexander, _Freiherr_ von. j.a.pan's accession to the comity of nations. Translated from the German with an introduction by Charles Lowe.

_London: K. Paul, Trench, Trubner & co., 1901. xiii, 119, (1) pp.

12^o._

Appendix: Treaty of commerce and navigation between Great Britain and j.a.pan. 1894.

"The substance of this little work ... has already appeared in the form of a series of articles in the magazine Ost-Asien" (Berlin, 1899).--_Preface._

=Smith=, D. Warres. European settlements in the Far East; China, j.a.pan, Corea, Indo-China, Straits Settlements, Malay states, Siam, Netherlands, India, Borneo, the Philippines, etc.

_London: S. Low, Marston & co., 1900. xiii, 331 pp. Ill.u.s.trations.

Plates. Map. 8^o._

=Speer=, Robert E. Missions and politics in Asia. Studies of the spirit of the Eastern peoples, the present making of history in Asia, and the part therein of Christian missions.

_New York: Fleming H. Revell company, 1898. 271 pp. 12^o. (Students'

lectures on missions, Princeton theological seminary, 1898.)_

=Townsend=, Meredith. Asia and Europe; studies presenting the conclusions formed by the author in a long life devoted to the subject of the relations between Asia and Europe.

_New York: G. P. Putnam's sons; London: A. Constable & co., 1901. xii, 388 pp. 8^o._

Papers originally published in the Contemporary review, the National review, and the Spectator.

"The conclusions of the author concerning the possible influence of the West Europeans upon Asia are absolutely pessimistic and--quite correct.... Where our author is entirely right is when he proves by so many ill.u.s.trations that up to the present time the Europeans have had no influence upon the mind of the populations of Asia."--_Kropotkin in The Speaker, March 19, 1904, page 600._

=Walton=, Joseph. China and the present crisis. With notes on a visit to j.a.pan and Korea.

_London: Sampson Low, Marston & company, 1900. viii, 319 pp. Folded map. 12^o._

"Mr. Walton has only recently returned from an eight months'

journey in the Far East; he had interviews with many of those who figure so prominently in the present crisis, and his work will be found as interesting as it is opportune."

ANGLO-RUSSIAN RELATIONS

=Berard=, Victor, _i. e._, Eugene Victor. Questions exterieures (1901-1902). Creances et routes turques. Panama. La Tripolitaine.

L'alliance anglo-j.a.ponaise. La guerre sud-africaine. La royaute espagnole. L'Angleterre et la paix.

_Paris: A. Colin, 1902. vii, 321, (1) pp. 12^o._

Reprinted from the Revue de Paris.

=Boulger=, Demetrius C. England and Russia in Central Asia. With two maps and appendices (one map being the latest Russian official map of Central Asia).

_London: W. H. Allen & co., 1879. 2 vols. Maps. 8^o._

=Chirol=, Valentine. The middle eastern question; or, Some political problems of Indian defence. With maps, ill.u.s.trations, and appendices.

_London: J. Murray, 1903. xiv, 512 pp. Plates. Maps. Genealogical table. 8^o._

"Bibliography": pp. 499-500.

Based on a series of letters written for the Times.

_Preface._

=Cobbold=, Ralph P. Innermost Asia: travel and sport in the Pamirs.

_London: Heinemann, 1900. xviii, 354 pp. Ill.u.s.trations. Portrait. Maps.

8^o._

Contains a bibliography of innermost Asia. p. 346.

"In Mr. Cobbold's opinion, the destiny of Afghanistan is to be absorbed and to be divided between the rival empires, though, if the reigning Ameer is succeeded by a son of his own mold, the inevitable crisis will be deferred. To sum up his political survey, what chiefly struck him in his travels in innermost Asia was 'the barbarous insistence of the Russian Government system, the brilliant success which invariably attends Russian aims, and the puerile weakness of the British Government in the protecting of the country's interests.'"

=Colquhoun=, Archibald Ross. English policy in the Far East. Being the Times special correspondence.

_London: Field & Tuer, The Leadenhall press, 1885. 32 pp. 8^o._