4 THE MICHIGAN DAILY MAGAZINE SUNDAY, JANUARY 15, 1922 The Passing of the Great Race" Some six or eight months ago I re- viewed Madison Grant's "The Passing of the Great Race" (Scribners). Since then a seventh edition has been pub- lished, the fourth revised edition of the work. The reason I review it now is because of a remarkable "Documen- tary Supplement" of approximately 140 pages which had been appended. More about this later. In 1916, when the first edition came out, there was a small furor in limited circles, which grew greater with the second printing. When the second re- vised edition was issued there were a few worried looks on the faces of those who believed in the eternal equality of men, the Constitution of the United States, and in environment as the paramount factor in good citi- zenship, knowledge, art, and state- craft. As the fourth, fifth and sixth print- ings of the book came forth the Broth- erhood of Man, the Epworth League, and other overgrown Boy Scouts and Campfire Girls decided to drown Mad- Ison Grant with hallelujahs and hulla- baloo, with Marx, Rousseau, and the New Testament, with snivel, bibber, and yammer, and the Befreiungstrieg was on! Slowly the arguments of Grant's op- ponents took head, and in spite- of his incisive philosophy and argument, in spite of his;skillful adaptation of his- tory to his theme, in spite of his bib- liography, the socialists, sociologists, welfare organizations, primary school teachers, and other agents of Beelze- hub raised hue and cry, coronach and maudlin tears, saying that Grant had no basis for his arguments. Now comes the seventh printing, and in this Grant fortifies his stand with the aforementioned Documentary Sup- plement. He has made a jump to col- ors and gun, and is firing round after round with telling effect. He hurls his bibliography of 294 authors and nearly twice as many books, and in the Documentary Supplement down go the exact references. The mass of facts in this new ap- pendix is little short of amazing. If Grant's antagonists go through it with- out doubts and qualms they will au- tomatically separate themselves into two classes, the supernatural and the superstupid. In presenting _his refer- ences and sources, book for book, and page for page, Grant has given the best authorities the libraries can sup- ply in ,matters ethnological, anthro- pological, historical, and geological. Duds someoue question that there are different races? Then Grant has at hio with cephalic indices, frontal angles, and cranial capacities, supra- orbital ridges, and articulations of the femur. Does someone doubt Natural Selection? Then Grant hurls Darwin and Haeckel, Breuil and Osborn at him. Does someone question what Grant has to say about ancient his- tory? Then the doubter has Momm- sen thrown at his head, or Plutarch, or Flavius Josephus, and Herodotus. Does someone, with a little more eru- dition than the rest, dispute Grant's prehistoric reckoning? Then he gets Baron de Geer's glacial calculation straight to the paunch. I am eagerly awaiting the results of this terrible broadside. Will some- one go through Grant's bibliography? Will someone take him up, point for point? Will someone write a book of opposition with a counter list of au- thorities as long and as puissant? I doubt it. It calls for more than beati- By AMadison Grant (A REVIEW BY G. D. E.) tudes and the "bidding of beades"; it slowly out, that its strong character- distinction in "race, creed, or color," calls for downright study, hours and istics are recessive in the face of in- or else the native American must turn days of exhausting work, careful com- filtration by inferior peoples. The the Cage of histdry and write 'Finis pilation, shrewd analysis, and the foremost ethnologists agree with him Americae.' " massing of facts and arguments. In in general. Grant grows a bit pessi- What Mr. Grant partly overlooks is a word, it calls for brains and unre- mistic and gloomy, but I believe that that the Americans are but little bet- lenting industry that will probably not he is every whit justified. ter than the worst of the races for pay half as much as hack writing. Says he, in his introduction, "The allowing things to come to such a pass. I trust that I need not go over days of the Civil War and the provin- He overlooks again how badly our Grant's theme. He believes, briefly, cial sentimentalism which governed American Nordics have governed, how in the superiority of the Nordic race, or misgoverned our public opinion are utterly unscrupulous they have been physically and mentally, politically past, and this generation must com- at times, how the moneyed classes, and artistically. He believes further pletely repudiate the proud' boast of mostly of pure Nordic blood, have been that the blue-eyed race is passing! our fathers thatethey acknowledged no (Continued on Page 8) AV, INew Spring Frocks Designed by ie. Renauld M ME. RENAULD sends us some very charming new spring frocks for the coming season in both taffeta and hallie. These dresses are exceptionally well made and / .V ,guaranteed to fit without alterations. 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