Ohio History Journal


BOOK NOTES

BOOK NOTES.

**Any book mentioned in this department can be obtained through the Pub.

lisher of the QUARTERLY.

AMERICAN STATE CONSTITUTIONS; A Study of their Growth. By Henry

Hitchcock, LL. D. New York and London: G. P. Putnam's Sons, 1887.

This little volume is No. XXXVII of "Questions of the Day." It is an

interesting study of certain currents of political thought in the United

States, as seen in State Constitutions, and was originally delivered as an

address before the New York State Bar Association. Private conversation,

the utterances of public journals, party platforms, the speeches of party

readers, and particularly statutory legislation are a meter of the movement

of political thought; but, manifestly, this meter is a poor one as compared

with "the conclusions of a free people as to what changes in their organic

law will best promote the common welfare." " Wise or unwise, wholesome

or dangerous, these conclusions reveal, in some measure at least," says Mr.

Hitchcock, "the drift of that people's thought,-the goal to which, con-

sciously or unconsciously, it is tending; as Agassiz demonstrated from the

sluggish flow of the Mer de Glace past the stakes which he had planted at its

former verge, not only that the large glacier was a slowly moving river of

ice, but also the rate and direction of its irresistible drift into the valley

beneath."  Mr. Hitchcock finds that in the one hundred and ten years

since the Declaration of Independence, " the total number of distinct consti-

tutions, either newly adopted or completely revised, which have been pro-

mulgated in these thirty-eight states is one hundred and nine," and to these

constitutions "two hundred and fourteen partial amendments have been

adopted at different times, some of less and some of greater importance."

To measure the direction and volume of political thought is an important

office of history, and we are glad to commend this "study" to such of our

readers as are interested in such subjects as the appointment and tenure of

the judiciary, qualifications for the suffrage, and corporations. We notice

two minor errors. The first Constitution of Ohio was not submitted to the

people, as is implied on page 16; and in 1800 there were sixteen states in

the Union, not fifteen, as stated on page 47. It is strange, indeed, that a

New York man should forget Vermont, the admission of which to the Union

caused that State, first and last, so much trouble.

 

THE AZTECS; their History, Manners and Customs. From the French of

Lucien Biart. Authorized translation by J. L. Garner. Pp. 333. Chicago:

A. C. McClurg & Co., 1887.

In this book a brief history of the Aztecs is followed by a description of

their government, industries, arts, religious and social customs. While con-

taining little that is really new, the work will prove instructive to most

readers, and owing to its compact form will be useful, and as valuable,

probably, as any work that cites no authorities, and hence gives the reader

no guides for verifying or amplifying its statements.

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