faxon TOWARDS A PHILOSOPHY OF INDUSTRY. By R. M. Fox The Irish Free STATE AND DOMINION STATUS. By Denis Gwynn. THE EMPTY THRONE. By Walter Frewen Lord CONTENTS OF VOL. C ART AND THE CINEMA. By R. E. C. Swann AT ST. BENOÎT-SUR-LOIRE. By The Rev. W. J. Ferrar SOME POINTS IN the Development of the SAILING SHIP. By G. S. EMILY BRONTË'S POEMS. By Davidson Cook Keats and the GOLDEN Ass.' By Professor B. Ifor Evans The Time-Scheme of the First Series of Shakespeare's Sonnets. THE PASSING OF DEVONSHIRE HOUSE. By G. R. Stirling Taylor. THE TRADE UNION CONGRESS. By Brig.-General F. G. Stone SETTLEMENT IN SOUTH AFRICA. By Right Hon. the Earl of Selborne CHINA AND THE FUTURE. By George W. Keeton The Decline oF THE WEST. By H. L. A. Hart. THE NORTHERN CIRCUIT, 1872-1882. By E. S. Roscoe PATRONAGE IN THE DAYS OF JOHNSON. By A. S. Collins. THE REDISCOVERY OF ST. FRANCIS OF ASSISI. By Walter Seton CHURCH AND STATE IN MEXICO. By Lewis Spence REVISION OF THE PRAYER-Book. By The Rev. A. H. T. Clarke THORSTEIN VEBLEN. By R. M. Fox VOCATIONAL GUIDANCE and SelectION. FIREBALLS AND SHOOTING STARS. By W. F. Denning ROMNEY MARSH: AN IMPRESSION. By W. Walmesley White SOME STRANGE BOOK-COLLECTORS. By Herbert Wright THE PROBLEM of Empire WelfARE. By The Right Hon. Stanley THE UNITED STATES as seen by an AmerICAN WRITER. By G. R. THE PHILIPPINES. By G. C. Duggan. GREAT BRITAIN AND THE PERSIAN GULF. By Captain Guy Coleridge THE PSYCHOLOGY OF PUZZLE CRAZES. By Henry E. Dudeney Trade Unionism: An Explanation, a Condemnation, and an Entreaty By W. BASIL WORSFOLD 37 By GEORGE H. BONNER 47 The Archduke Charles and the Austrian Campaign of 1809: Unpublished Letters The Myths of War. By LIEUT.-COLONEL A. G. BAIRD SMITH, D.S.O. 'Tobacco' 148 . By EDWARD ANDERSON 158 LONDON: CONSTABLE & CO. LTD., ORANGE STREET, LEICESTER SQUARE, W.C.2 PARIS: MESSAGERIES HACHETTE, 111, Rue Reaumur. NEW YORK: LEONARD SCOTT PUBLICATION CO All rights reserved. PRICE THREE SHILLINGS Annual Subscription 36/- (Pre-paid), Post free NINETEENTH CENTURY AND AFTER THE NINETEENTH CENTURY AND AFTER July, 1926 The publication of the current number has been delayed owing to a disastrous fire which destroyed the type and the paper of the Review immediately before printing. TRADE UNIONISM: AN EXPLANATION, A CONDEMNATION, AND AN ENTREATY PERHAPS the least popular, at the present moment, of our national institutions is the trade union movement-more particularly that form of the movement which finds expression in and through the General Council of the Trades Union Congress. Those who criticise and condemn have justification-especially so if they confine their criticisms to the oligarchy which rules the Congress, to the ignorances displayed, the wrongs committed, and the losses imposed. Nescient, illegal, improvident, regardless, unreliable, are terms already applied to the body which, during the past few years, has dominated trade union policy and practice. The justice, or otherwise, of the condemnations cannot be determined unless one knows what the Trades Union Congress really is, how it is elected, what it has done, and how far, VOL, C-No. 593-B I |