An analysis of the part the English Aristocrat has played in caring, or rather not caring, for the "heart of the people" since the beginning of the Industrial movement.
The turning-point in English history. Charles I, the last to make a stand against the influences and tendencies which ushered in the present Age, our Age.
The exposure of a pious fraud. The Puritan as a moulder of men. The Englishman of the seventeenth century transformed and prepared for the shop-counter, the office-stool, the factory and the forge.
An investigation into the practice that makes for the rearing of exceptional families and men, and which renders higher man something in the nature of a carefully fashioned human product.
An examination of the problem of Heredity. The English House of Lords and its loss of prestige shown to be quite independent of the supposed evil results of in-breeding. Conclusion.