since that weird weekday in bleak Janiveer (yet how palmy date in a waste’s oasis!) when to the shock of both, Biddy Doran looked ad literature. (p. 112) It may well be that print and nationalism are axiological or co-ordinate, simply because by print a people sees itself for the first time. The vernacular in appearing in high visual definition affords a glimpse of social unity co-extensive with vernacular boundaries. And more people have experienced this visual unity of their native tongues via the newspaper than through the book. Carlton Hayes is most helpful in his Historical Evolution of Modern Nationalism (p. 293): Nor is it at all certain that the “masses” in any country have been directly responsible for the rise of modern nationalism. The movement appears to have gotten under way