1910
The Language of the Dance: Anna Pavlova’s Lesson to London. April 22, 1910. The True Pageant of England. May 3, 1910. The Shudder of the Drums. May 21,1910. The Craving to Scream . June 22,1910. Merry England. June 27,1910.
Bank Holiday Ditties. July 30, 1910. The Night Sky of London: Bizarre Effects of a New Art. October 19, 1910. Odd Volumes: Stray Notes on Some Books of Today. October 22,1910. The Life of Lord Beaconsfield: A Long Awaited Biography. October 27, 1910. The Amazing Gray: How the Australian Lad Builds a Break. November 1, 1910. Odd Volumes: The Ever Recurring Problems of the Libraries. November 5, 1910. An Irish Leader of Yesterday: Mr. Justin McCarthy and Home Rule Today. November 10, 1910. Stories of a Real Lady Bountiful: The Happy Village of Aston Clinton. November 12, 1910. Drama on the Chiltern Hills: Village Players of Buckinghamshire. November 19, 1910. A Famous Editor of ‘Punch’: Reminiscences of Sir Francis Burnand. November 29, 1910. Odd Volumes: Folk-Lore, Water Babies and Mermaids. December 5, 1910. Odd Volumes: The Prophetic Faculty in Modern Life. December 10, 1910. The Way Out: A Meditation in a Toy Shop . December 12, 1910. Odd Volumes: A Plea for the Restoration of Shakespearian English. December 17, 1910. ‘The Piper’: Mr. F. R. Benson on Plays and Players. December 21,1910.
Odd Volumes: A Human Doctor’s Diet ‘Fit for Fairies.’ December 27,1910.
1911
Odd Volumes: The Rare Gift of Literary Individuality. January 2, 1911. I Will Repay: The End of the Sidney Street Murders. January 4, 1911. Odd Volumes: Unanimity Among Conversationalists . January 7, 1911. Odd Volumes: The Unalterable Idiom . January 14, 1911. Odd Volumes: The Political Novel. January 21, 1911. In Fine Array: A Plea for Pageantry . January 26,1911. Odd Volumes: The Line Between Poetry and Prose. January 28, 1911. A New Thrill: Sahary Djeli as Salome. February 4, 1911. Odd Volumes: The Lost Atlantis. February 11, 1911. Odd Volumes: The Question of the Cut or Uncut Book. February 18, 1911. Odd Volumes: Genius and Cleverness. February 25, 1911. The Last Dread Sentence: The Closing Scenes at the Old Bailey. March 16, 1911. An Unfashionable Art: Starving the Sculptor . March 29, 1911. Odd Volumes: A Recipe for the Historical Novel. April 5, 1911. Odd Volumes: Ibsen and Sophocles . April 26, 1911. By the Avon: The Shakespeare Festival. April 27, 1911. Peter Pan: Should He Have a Place in Kensington Gardens? May 3, 1911. Odd Volumes: The Celtic Paradise. May 6, 1911. The Holy Treasures: True Story of the Jerusalem Expedition. May 11, 1911. The Holy Treasures: More Details of the Jerusalem Search. May 12, 1911. The Ark of the Covenant: Will It Be Found in Jerusalem? May 13, 1911. Odd Volumes: ‘Make Believe.’ May 13, 1911. The Holy Treasures: Nothing More Expected Until August. May 15, 1911. At Last Night’s ‘Command’: Brilliant Scenes; Fine Acting at ‘The Lane.’ May 18, 1911. Odd Volumes: Some Thoughts on Robert Louis Stevenson. May 20, 1911. Bunyan’s Book: What Is the Charm of ‘The Pilgrim’s Progress’? May 27, 1911. Odd Volumes: Some Poetry, and a Young Girl’s Novel . June 5, 1911. Odd Volumes: The Coronation and the Book Trade. Is the Public Taste Improving? June 10, 1911. Books I Haue Never Read: A Minor Poet of Amazing Industry. What Is ‘A Bad Book’? June 26, 1911. The King and the Stage: Last Night at His Majesty’s Theatre. June 28, 1911. Teaching the Young Idea. Rudyard Kipling’s New School Book. July 17, 1911. Odd Volumes: ‘An Exploration in Dickens’ Land.’ July 24, 1911.
Odd Volumes: The Language of the Future. August 2, 1911. Books for the Autumn. September 5, 1911. The Apologia of a Princess. The Life Story of An Unhappy Royal Lady. September 14, 1911. Weekday Worship: Indirect Effect of the Week-End Habit. September 30, 1911. The Problem of the Millionaire: Tyranny of Money and Machinery. October 10, 1911. The New Barrie Book Out Today . October 18, 1911. Thomas Hardy as Playwright: Tomorrow Night’s Performance. November 14, 1911. Thomas Hardy as Playwright: Wessex Audience Delighted with ‘The Wayfarers.’ November 16,1911. Poet and Super-Tramp: The Call of London and the Road. November 25, 1911. A Poem for a Man in the Street. December 8, 1911. What Is ‘The Book of the Year’? Some Notable Opinions and a Few Comments. December 19, 1911. The Problem of Tom: Sir John Gorst and Two Novelists on Education. December 20, 1911. Bedtime Drinks: What Is the Best Xmas Nightcap? December 21, 1911. The Magic of Xmas: Are We in Danger of Losing It? By an Old Fashioned Londoner . December 22, 1911. The Problem of Tom: Imagination Needed in the Schools. December 27, 1911. My Busy Year: Great Procession of Splendor and Woe. December 29, 1911.
1912
The Story of a Soul: How a Remarkable Book Was Written. January 3, 1912. ‘The Miracle’ Revisited: London’s Great Poem of Life . January 3, 1912. Max Reinhardt’s Latest: The Production of ‘Oedipus Rex.’ January 12, 1912. Wonderful London: From West to East. Some Impressions on the Way. January 17, 1912. The People’s Poet: An Author More Popular Than Tennyson. January 22, 1912. Wonderful London: The East in the West. The Greek Church in Bayswater. January 23, 1912. Wonderful London: The Miracle of ‘The Miracle’: How the Mystery Play Is Produced. January 25, 1912. Wonderful London: A Pilgrimage of the Second Hand Bookstalls. January 30, 1912. Beyond the Walls of the World: Discoveries in the Mystic Wilderness of Cathay. February 9, 1912. Wonderful London: A Day at a Dramatic School. February 10, 1912. A New Poet and His Work: Mr. John Masefield’s Method. February 19, 1912. The Miracle of ‘The Miracle’: 100th Performance at Olympia Today. February 21, 1912. Wonderful London: A Night on the Thames. February 27, 1912. Life in a Mining District: Why They Are Contented in Derbyshire. February 28, 1912. Life in the Mining Villages: A Model District in South Yorkshire. February 29, 1912. Life in the Mining Districts: Canny Sporting Men of Durham. March 1, 1912. Life in the Mining Districts: Signs of the Coming of Desolation. March 4, 1912. Life in the Mining Districts: The Work of Nature and the Work of Man. March 5, 1912. Life in the Mining Districts: The Philosopher on the Mountain. March 6, 1912. How the Potteries Will Suffer: 50,000 Workless at the Week-End. March 7, 1912. A Smokeless Land: My Tour of the Silent Coalfields . March 8, 1912. The Last Dread Sentence: Old Bailey Trial Scene . March 15, 1912. In the Music Halls: A Night at the Palace. March 20, 1912. Wonderful London: A Study in Back Streets. March 21, 1912. Father of the Bench: Some Stories of Sir John Lawrence. March 22, 1912. At Tea with the Medicine Men. March 23, 1912. New Books for the Spring: The Library Table: Bacon-Shakespeare Problem and Other Topics. March 25, 1912. The Story of a Hard Life: Talks About Some Books of the Moment. March 26, 1912. The Eternal Song of Springtime. March 26, 1912. Tree’s Othello: Devilry Amid Beautiful Scenery. April 10, 1912. The Poor Actor: Tomorrow’s Matinee to Aid Him. April 15, 1912. Wonderful London: Much Cry and Much Wool. April 18, 1912. The Steinheil Memoirs: Another Famous Necklace Story . April 18, 1912. Ben Hur: Last Night’s Revival at the Lane . April 19, 1912. Shakespeare Day Reflections. April 23, 1912. ‘Hamlet’ Played in Full. April 26, 1912. Mr. Thomas Hardy. May 2, 1912. Wonderful London: More About Back Streets. May 3, 1912. A Town of Long Ago. May 4, 1912. Parents at School in Fairyland. May 7, 1912. Some Songs of Our Own Day: The Doctrines of an Irish Playwright. May 8, 1912. A Leap into Midsummer. May 9, 1912. Wonderful London: Some of Its Unwritten Laws. May 11, 1912. Cheap Books: A Movement to Reduce the Price of Novels. May 13, 1912. The Great Problem of the Hour: First of a Series: I, What Is to Be Done About It? May 16, 1912. Wonderful London: The Water Drinkers and Others. May 17, 1912. The Great Problem of the Hour: II, The Man with the Soulless Job: His Attitude to the Present Social State. May 17, 1912. The Man With the Soulless Job: Palliative Treatment, No. III. May 18, 1912. What Is the Secret of Happiness? May 20, 1912. Marvels of Today’s Flower Show: Most Wonderful Collection the World Has Seen. May 22, 1912. Among My Books. May 23, 1912. In the Land of the Strike. May 25, 1912. A Londoner’s Holiday by Coach. May 27, 1912. New Adelphi Play: Mr. Huntley Wright Breaks Fresh Ground. May 27, 1912. The Gondola of London: Hail! and Farewell to the Hansom. May 29, 1912. A Quiet Talk with Mr. H. G. Wells. June 4, 1912. The Real King Edward. June 6, 1912. On Dressing Up for a Society Ball. June 12, 1912. The Latest About Whistler. June 14, 1912. Among My Books: A Queer Creation of a Child of Three. June 18, 1912. Mr. George Moore: A Talk About the Book He Could Not Kill. June 19, 1912. Some Prehistoric Races of Today: A Wonderful Book About Australia. June 20, 1912. Religious Drama at the Seaside. June 21, 1912. Concerning a Good Dinner. June 25, 1912. Growing Discomfort of Dress. June 29, 1912. Among My Books: The Desire in Our Hearts for Colour. July 1, 1912. Henley in Shadow. July 4, 1912. The Making of a Public Man. July 11, 1912. When Knights Were Bold. July 12, 1912. Among My Books: The Rise of the Modern Music Hall. July 17, 1912. A Stray Note on Melodrama. July 18, 1912. The New Comedian: Romance of Jock McKay’s Career. July 19, 1912. Andrew of the Brindled Hair. July 22,1912. Among My Books . July 27, 1912. A Wonder of Childhood. August 1, 1912. Among My Books. August 3, 1912. Books for a Holiday. August 5, 1912. The Londoner’s Ideal Holiday . August 7, 1912. A Patriotic Stimulus: What the Audience Liked in ‘Drake.’ September 4, 1912. A New School of Acting: The Cinema’s Lesson to the Real Stage. September 9, 1912. The Joy of Eating. September 25, 1912. Latest Autumn Books. October 4, 1912. The Rag-Time Craze. October 5, 1912. The Library Table: Interesting Heralds of Autumn Book Season. October 8, 1912. Into the Great Deep. October 11, 1912. Mr. Conrad’s Latest: The Tropics-By a Great Artist in Prose. October 14, 1912. The Library Table: The ‘Shadow’ of Christmas in the Book World. October 15, 1912. London Through Australian Eyes. October 17, 1912. Books of the Week: Glimpses of Ireland and Memories of Parnell . October 22, 1912. The New Style of Christmas Book: A Chat with a West End Bookseller. October 23, 1912. The Man Who Loves His Work: 58 Years on a Farm Near Epping. October 28, 1912. Some Novels of the Moment: Mr. George Moore Demolishes Old Notions. October 29, 1912. A Lady’s Letter to Horace Walpole . October 31, 1912. When Queen Victoria Was a Girl. November 7, 1912. A Venetian Night: Max Reinhardt’s Curious Production. November 12, 1912. The Modern Drama: Mr. Stanley Houghton on His New Play. November 12, 1912. Talks About Books . November 13, 1912. Two Sides of Disraeli: Militant Youth and Mellow Statesmanship. November 14, 1912. Talks About Books. November 20, 1912. Mr. G. Grossmith on the Review . November 21, 1912. New Novels: The Duchess Who Always Sleeps at the Morality Plays. November 26, 1912. Does London Want Shakespeare?: Some Opinions and Some Reflections. December 3, 1912. Books of the Day . December 3, 1912. Christmas Shopping: A Survey of the Great Centres . December 9, 1912. Boom in Books This Xmas. December 12, 1912. The Farandole: How It Was Danced Last Night at Covent Garden. December 13, 1912. The Children’s Joy Day . December 18, 1912. With the King’s Poulterer: How to Choose the Christmas Turkey. December 19, 1912. A Glance at Some Christmas Numbers. December 24, 1912. Books of the Day. December 31, 1912.
1913
The History of the Rothschilds: ‘The Plan’ for Moneymaking. January 9, 1913. Early Books of 1913. January 16, 1913.
What They Talk About. January 24, 1913. A Novel in a Poem: Mr. John Masefield’s Great Achievement. January 30, 1913. ‘My Most Winning Book’: Mr. George Moore Reveals Some Confidences. January 31, 1913. Captain Scott’s Memorial Service. February 14, 1913. ‘Love and Unrest’-‘The Praying Girl’: And Dragging in the Diety. February 25, 1913. Twentieth Century Village: Schoolboy Journalists and Wireless at Work. February 27, 1913. What Is Mysticism? Bringing Humanity to Exquisite Perfection. March 4, 1913. The Charm of Kent . March 15, 1913. Does the Seaside Hotel Pay? April 11, 1913. Among My Books. April 14, 1913. A Cheaper Wine Tariff: Why Hotel Keepers Should Reduce Prices. April 17, 1913. In Bed with ‘The Flu.’ May 1, 1913. Aflame Is the Gorse Today. May 6, 1913. Nelson’s Enchantress: An Unpublished ‘Apologia’ on Lady Hamilton. May 7, 1913. The Importance of the Unimportant. May 10, 1913. The Joy of Life. May 14, 1913. Our Lost Paradise. June 18, 1913. The Sunshine Cure. June 21, 1913. London in Brave Attire: Decorative Possibilities. June 24, 1913. Death of Thomas Hardy’s Old Fiddler. July 3, 1913. Festival of the River: Fairy Lamps and Music in the Shining Night. July 4, 1913. How to Write a Successful Novel: Mr. Jeffery Farnol’s Career. July 10, 1913. A Week End in North Wales . July 15, 1913. My Wandering Week: (I) Record of a Pilgrimage Far and Wide. July 25, 1913. My Wandering Week: (II) Summer Time in Somerset . July 28, 1913. My Wandering Week: (III) Glastonbury. July 29, 1913. In a Kentish Hop Garden. September 5,1913. In Belfast Today . September 25, 1913. Belfast’s View of Home Rule: Proposition Which Is Not Businesslike. September 26, 1913. A Drive Through Belfast: Nationalist Jarvey Talks of the Fight. September 27, 1913. What I Saw in Ulster. September 29, 1913. Fairy Glens in Ulster. September 30, 1913. ‘Labby.’ October 8, 1913. My Lady’s Shrewish Tongue. October 21,1913. Some Autumn Books. October 23, 1913. When I Was Young in London: (I). October 23, 1913. Some Autumn Books. October 24, 1913. When I Was Young in London: (II). October 25, 1913. When I Was Young in London: (III) The Gaslight of the Strand. October 28, 1913. When I Was Young in London: (IV) Restaurants and Chop Houses . November 1, 1913. When I Was Young in London: (V) Almost as Lonely as Robinson Crusoe. November 4, 1913. My Book Shelf. November 5, 1913. Here Are Ladies: Mr. James Stephens’ Philosophy of Life. November 8, 1913. London Thirty Years Ago: On Seeing the Sights and What They Were. November 17, 1913. My Book Shelf . November 27, 1913. How to Pronounce It. December 5, 1913. What I Would Buy This Christmas. December 12, 1913. The Joy of the Circus. December 20, 1913. The Young Man in the Blue Serge Suit: My Strange Experience in Kew
Gardens. December 29, 1913.
1914
Dinner-And Dance Music. January 15, 1914. New Books of 1914. January 21, 1914. The Joy of London: No. 1. January 27, 1914. Who Was Parsifal?: Tonight’s Great Opera at Covent Garden. February 2, 1914. Setting the Donkeys by the Ears. February 10, 1914. The Joy of London: No. II. February 14, 1914. Is Death Painful?: Well Known Writer’s Remarkable Experience. February 25, 1914. Concerning Mr. Wells: A Plea for a Jolly England. March 2, 1914. Memorial Services at Sea for Victims of Submarine A.7 Disaster. March 4, 1914. March 11, 1914. Mr. George Moore and His Frends.Initiation: Mons: Benson’s New Book. March 17, 1914. In the World of Books: The Critics and Mr. Henry James’s Style. March 25, 1914. Joys of London: No. III. April 15, 1914. A Glorious Old Church: Famous Landmark in Northern Essex. April 24, 1914. Our Poster Stamp Competition: A Glance at the Designs. April 29, 1914.
Sixty Years of Photographs: The Early Victorian and His Album. May 5, 1914. May on the South Coast. May 8, 1914.
A Progress by Train on the South Coast. May 9, 1914. Mr. Wells’s Radium Bomb: ‘The World Set Free’ by the Touch of a Buton. May 11, 1914. Moods at Margate . May 12, 1914. The Policeman’s Note-Book. May 18, 1914. What Age Would You Like to Be? June 2, 1914. English Taste for the French Revue. June 9, 1914. Old Ghosts: A Curious Experience That All of Us Have Had. June 10, 1914. The Growth of Kindness: Is It a Sign of Weakness? June 23, 1914. The Peter Pans of the Riverside. June 26, 1914. Re-Discovery of London: I, An Oasis St. Tooting. July 8, 1914. Re-Discovery of London: II, Merry Islington. July 11, 1914. Re-Discovery of London: III, Clapton. July 15, 1914. Re-Discovery of London: IV, Brentford. July 20, 1914. Re-Discovery of London: V, The Pride of Pimlico . July 23, 1914. A United Empire: London Prepared as for Dread Necessity. July 31, 1914. ‘Let Us Sing of War!’ August 18, 1914.
In Time of War: A Day Among the Territorials. August 25, 1914. The Exiles: Folkstone in a French Guise. September 8, 1914. What About Those Russians? September 15, 1914. The Ceaseless Bugle Call. September 17, 1914. Why We Should Go to the Play. September 24, 1914. Sunday Night in London. September 28, 1914. The Bowmen: The Angels of Mons. September 29, 1914. The Soldiers’ Rest . October 20, 1914. Among My Books in Wartime. October 22, 1914. The War Song of the Welsh. November 2, 1914. War Books of the Moment. November 3, 1914. The Canadians on Salisbury Plain: ‘An Alberta Landscape.’ November 9, 1914. The Roll of the Drum . November 9, 1914. ‘More Men Wanted.’ November 23,1914. The Reflections of a Man of Forty or Thereabouts . December 2, 1914. ‘Massacre of the Innocents’: M. Maerterlinck’s New-Old Story . December 4, 1914. A Man Who Cheers Us All Up. December 7, 1914. To-Night’s Gossip. December 9, 1914. To-Night’s Gossip. December 17, 1914. To-Night’s Gossip . December 22, 1914. Afternoon Gossip. December 23, 1914.
1915
Waiting for the Boat Train. January 5, 1915. The Journal of the Lonely Soldier . January 7, 1915. The Journal of the Lonely Soldier: Australia Asks to Join In . January 9, 1915. The Rose Glow on the Waters: A Night Scene in the Flooded Fens. January 14, 1915. The Trail of the Zepplin: In the Stricken Street of King’s Lynn. January 21, 1915. The Bugle and the Birds: A Spring Duet in January. January 26, 1915. Rum. January 28, 1915. A Journey Through Khaki-Land: I, Making the Robe of Victory . February 4, 1915. Laughter in Wartime: Very Necessary as a Medicine. February 5, 1915. A Journey Through Khaki-Land: II, The Silent Men of Huddersfield. February 6, 1915. Books Slain by the Sword. February 11, 1915. Give Us Beer. February 12, 1915. War and the Spring Poets: ‘A Certain Liveliness in Parnassus.’ February 15, 1915. The High Cost of Dying. February 19, 1915. ‘And So To Convalescence!’ On Recovering from Influenza. March 5, 1915. How the Lights of London Called Me to Grub St. March 19, 1915. I Have Heard the Chimes at Midnight. March 24, 1915. In the Days of My Youth. March 25, 1915. Concerning a Book Not Yet Written: Magic Usk Valley. March 26, 1915. Solitude-Sir Thomas Browne’s Miracle of Thirty Years. March 27, 1915. Burning Mountain: Well Water: Roger Gibbon: The Good Neighbor . March 29, 1915. The Crown of Wild Olive. March 30, 1915. Books at Gwent. March 31, 1915. Household Words: Alchemy. April 5, 1915. Translators. April 6, 1915. Philosophy and Spring Books. April 7, 1915. The Passing of the Gentry . April 7, 1915. Cider Making. April 9, 1915. A Drawing Room, 50 Years Ago. April 14, 1915. Love of Gothic. April 15, 1915. The Call of London. April 16, 1915. How I Got News of London. April 19, 1915. My Arrival in London in 1880. April 20, 1915. On Going to the Play. April 21, 1915. London That Was. April 22, 1915. West End Changes. April 23, 1915. How I Was Tempered by Town and Country. April 27, 1915. My Early Beginnings as an Author. April 28, 1915. April 29, 1915. I Write the Worst Verses Ever Written.Servant Girl Out of Fairy Land. May 3, 1915. ‘The Bowmen’ on the Battlefield: A Rival of the Great Russian Fable. May 3, 1915. My First Rejected Contribution. May 4, 1915. My Relatives Decide to Make Me a Journalist. May 6, 1915. I Fail to Learn Shorthand. May 10, 1915. When I Was Twenty, Poor and Desolate . May 12, 1915. I Become a Teacher. May 18, 1915. Lodger and Luxurious Feeding . May 21, 1915. Recipe for Imaginative Writing. May 25, 1915. How I Explored Suburban London. May 27, 1915. Strand: Finest Street in the World. May 28, 1915. Loneliness in London. June 2, 1915. My First Book: ‘Anatomy of Tankards.’ June 8, 1915. Karl Heinz’s Diary: The Story of a Battlefield Vision . June 9, 1915. The Lieutenant’s Dream: A Story from the Front. June 14, 1915.
The Men Who ‘Came Home’: The St. Paul’s Service to the Australians. June 16, 1915. Dr. Horton and ‘The Bowmen’: My Mons Legend Appears Yet Again. June 17,1915. I Shock My Aunt by Eating Dry Bread. June 17, 1915. My First Book Finds a Publisher. June 23, 1915. I Think to ‘Be Happy Ever After.’ June 29, 1915. I Translate the ‘Heptameron’, and Disappear. July 12, 1915. The Bowmen. (reprinted) July 20, 1915. War and the Soothsayer: Rich Harvest in London. July 22, 1915. Our Soldiers in Armour: The Story of a Dream. July 24, 1915. Great Demand for ‘The Bowmen’ Story: To Be Issued in Book Form. July 27, 1915. No Escape from ‘The Bowmen’: My Sympathy with Frankenstein. July 30, 1915. The Angels at Mons: Mr. Machen’s and Miss Campbell’s Evidence . August 23, 1915. Broadsheets in the Trenches. August 31, 1915. What the Prebendary Saw. September 5, 1915. Those Angels! Arthur Machen’s Reply to Harold Begbie’s ‘On The Side of the Angels.’ September 9, 1915. The Men From Troy . September 10, 1915. On Going to Brighton by Pullman. September 13, 1915. A Night at the Cafe Royal: The Place Every Lover of France Loves. September 22, 1915. Angels-Tomorrow the Feast of St. Michael and All Angels. September 28, 1915. One Song Leads to Another: Starting of a Great ‘I Remember’ Correspondence. September 30, 1915. Old Songs Our Readers Remember: The ‘I Remember’ Correspondence. October 4, 1915. The Future of Musical Comedy: What George Edwards Did for Theatrical England. October 5, 1915. Symposium on the Banning of Novels: ‘Who Is to Judge Trash?’ October 6, 1915. A New War Poet: Lord Dunsany’s Discovery . October 9, 1915. Night in London: ‘Pattering Shadows Going to and Fro.’ October 11, 1915. A Walk Among Autumn Leaves: The Great Law Which Makes for Beauty. October 13, 1915. The Great Return: Chapter I: Hints of Coming Mysteries. October 21, 1915. The Great Return: Chapter II: Odours of Paradise. October 25, 1915. The Great Return: Chapter III: The Man Who Repented. October 28, 1915. The Great Return: Chapter IV: The Tolling of a Great Bell. November 3, 1915. The Great Return: Chapter V: The Rose of Fire. November 5, 1915. How Should We Spend Christmas?: Cheerful and Cheap, the Watchword. November 8, 1915. To Darktown-On-Sea: My Night with the Concert Party. November 9, 1915. The Great Return: Chapter VI: Olwen’s Dream. November 10, 1915. The Man That Offends the Chapel: An Amazing Book on Welsh Life. November 12, 1915. Saturday Nights in Wartime: I: Sheffield ‘A Bright and Glittering Place.’ November 15, 1915. The Great Return: Chapter VII: The Mass of the Sangraal. November 16, 1915. Is Germany Past Forgiveness?: The Example of the Judge & the Guilty Man. November 17, 1915. Saturday Nights in Wartime: II: Big Fortunes Being Made in Birmingham. November 22, 1915. Saturday Nights in Wartime: III: I Go West: Where I See No Sign of War and Worry. November 29, 1915. The Meaning of Death: The Exquisite and the Perfect of ‘The Beyond.’ December 4, 1915. Saturday Nights in Wartime: IV: In The North Leeds: A Pork Pie Symphony. December 6, 1915. God and the War: To Those Whose Faith Is Sorely Tried. December 7, 1915. Stephen Phillips-An Appreciation. December 9, 1915. Saturday Nights in Wartime: V: My Surprise at Leicester: The Comfortable ‘Old English Feeling.’ December 13, 1915. Saturday Nights in Wartime: VI: What Pays in Coventry: The Swarms of New Perambulators. December 20, 1915. The Nonsense of Shakespeare: Thoughts on the Madness of Great Wits. December 22, 1915. The Goodly Xmas Crowd: The Only Crowd I Don’t Dislike. December 23, 1915.