BIOGRAPHY AND GENERAL LITERATURE.
BARLOW, J. W.-The Immortals' Great Quest. Translated from an unpublished manuscript in the Library of a Continental University. Pp. xiv +178. (Smith, Elder.) 3s. 6d. net. A philosophical jeu d'esprit.
BRADLEY, A. C.-Oxford Lectures on Poetry. Pp. x+396. (Macmillan.) IOS. net.
CHAUVET, P.-La Religion de Milton. Pp. vi+276. (Paris: H. Didier.) Thèse présentée à la Faculté des Lettres de l'Université de Paris.
CHAUVET, P.-J. Milton's Treatise on Education. Edited with a Preface and Notes. Pp. ii+46. (Paris: H. Didier.) Thèse Complémentaire. HAWKINS, SIR J. C., Bart.—The Use of Dante as an Illustrator of Scripture. Pp. 92. (S.P.C.K.) Is. 6d. Reprinted, with slight Additions,
from The Expository Times.
LEISHMAN, J. F.-A Son of Knox, and other studies Antiquarian and Biographical. Pp. xiv+122. (Glasgow: J. Maclehose and Sons.) 3s. 6d. net.
MASSON, J.-Lucretius, Epicurean and Poet. Complementary volume. Pp. xx+204. (Murray.) 6s. net.
VAN DYKE, H.-Le Génie de l'Amérique. Traduit de l'Anglais par E. STE.-M. PERRIN. Préface de A. RIBOT. Pp. xxii+334. (Paris: Calmann-Lévy.) 3 fr. 50 c.
WILBERFORCE, E.-Dante's Divine Comedy. Inferno, Purgatorio, Paradiso. Translated. Three volumes. Pp. x + 208, viii +210, viii +212. (Macmillan.) IOS. 6d. net.
ALLEN, J. LANE.-The Bride of the Misletoe. Pp. xii+ 190. (Macmillan.) 2s. 6d. net.
ALLEN, J. LANE.-The Choir Invisible. Pp. iv +252. (Macmillan.) 7d. net.
BROUGHTON, R.-A Waif's Progress. Pp. iv + 318.
(Macmillan.) CHOLMONDELEY, M.-Diana Tempest. Pp. iv +320. (Macmillan.)
CRAWFORD, F. MARION.-A Roman Singer. Pp. iv +318. (Macmillan.) 7d. net.
CRAWFORD, F. MARION.-The White Sister. Pp. iv + 348. (Macmillan.)
FOTHERGILL, J.-The First Violin. Pp. iv+316. (Macmillan.) 7d. net.
HEWLETT, M.—The Forest Lovers. Pp. iv + 302. (Macmillan.) 7d.net. MONTGOMERY, F.-Misunderstood. Pp. iv + 250. (Macmillan.)
PATERSON, A.—John Glynn. Pp. iv +312. WHARTON, E.-The House of Mirth.
(Macmillan.) 7d. net. Pp. iv+316. (Macmillan.)
Elizabeth and her German Garden. Pp. iv + 250. (Macmillan.) 7d. net. These sevenpenny Reprints are well bound and in most cases admirably printed in clear type.
AMERICAN DIOCESE, AN [by. AVEBURY, LORD, Peace and
Ethelbert Talbot, D.D., Bishop Happiness, 233 of Central Pennsylvania), 47 sqq.; Constitution of the Ame- rican Church : dioceses and BARTON, Dr. G. A., Commentary missionary districts, 48; elec-
. . Ecclesiastes, 428 tion of bishops : translations, BEECHING, Rev. H. C., D.Litt., 49; share of laymen in Church William Shakespeare, 480 affairs, ib.; composition of the BELIEF IN GOD, THE GROUNDS House of Clerical and Lay of : AN ESSAY IN APOLOGETICS Deputies : the General Con- [by the Rev. F. R. Tennant, vention and the diocesan con- D.D.), 102 sqq. : the meaning vention, 50; officers of a of 'grounds of belief,' 102; diocese, 51 ; duties of the faith must be rooted in know- standing committee, ib. ; lay ledge, 104; the idea of God is readers : object of the Lay- not innate in the mind, nor man's Missionary Movement, can it be directly intuited, 105 ; 52 ; salaries of bishops, and the present tendency to base formation of new dioceses, religion upon the individual's 53; work of domestic mis- immediate experience, 106 sq. ; sionary districts, 54 ; duties the obsolete argument e con- of bishops, ib. ; projected use sensu gentium, 107 ; the four of suffragan bishops, 55 ; * Proofs of the Being of God,' method of election to a vacant 108; the flaws in these : the see, 56; appointment and cosmological proof, 109; Kant's duties of the parochial clergy, and Hume's criticism, 110; 57 ; missionary work at home the teleological argument, and abroad, 58; the Board of 110 sqq. ; the nature of our so- Missions, 58 ; its officers, 59 ; called knowledge of the world, method of raising money for 113; what science consists of, missions, 60 ; foreign missions, ib. ; we literally live by faith, 61; place of the Sunday school in science as well as in theology, in diocesan work, 62 ; the 114 ; the cosmological and the Woman's Auxiliary to the teleological arguments may Board of Missions, ib.; the St. be stated in forms in which Andrew's Brotherhood, 63 ; they are not liable to Kant's the various problems confront- objections, 115 sq.; the Life
ing an American bishop, ib. and Personality of Jesus Christ ANDREWS, Rev. C. F., North are the most reliable ground India, 468
on which to base belief in a ANGELS, A BOOK OF (Anon.), 207
Personal God, 117 ASTLEY, Rev. H. J. D., Litt.D., BELL, Rev. G. M., Social Service,
Prehistoric Archaeology and the 226 Old Testament, 187
BENNETT, Rev. W. H., D.D., The
![[ocr errors]](https://books.google.com.qa/books/content?id=-3VIAAAAMAAJ&hl=ru&output=html_text&pg=PA501&img=1&zoom=3&q=%22certain+facts+in+the+distribution+of+the+inhabitants+of+South+America,+and+in+the+geological+relations+of+the+present+to%22&cds=1&sig=ACfU3U3X1_R-F4tMt1ucguLlTuYk7Gy94g&edge=0&edge=stretch&ci=444,1349,5,8)
![[ocr errors]](https://books.google.com.qa/books/content?id=-3VIAAAAMAAJ&hl=ru&output=html_text&pg=PA502&img=1&zoom=3&q=%22certain+facts+in+the+distribution+of+the+inhabitants+of+South+America,+and+in+the+geological+relations+of+the+present+to%22&cds=1&sig=ACfU3U0XrDvlqaOeqJuaw9srmeZQa7ruBg&edge=0&edge=stretch&ci=294,573,7,10)
Religion of the Post-Exilic Venerable Company,' the Prophets, 188
' Consistory' and its powers, BOND, Mr. F., Fonts and Font 296 ; Calvin claimed that he Covers, 456
could give an infallible inter- BOOKS RECEIVED, NOTES ON, 252, pretation of Holy Scripture, 494
297 ; the support he got from BOUSSET, Professor W., What is French lay refugees, ib. ; the Religion ? 442
' Libertines’: Calvin's victory BROWN, Mr. C. C., China in over them, 298; ministers Legend and Story, 464
afraid of the plague, 299 ;
Ameaux punished for speaking CALVIN, JOHN : AN HISTORICAL evil of Calvin, ib.; other
ESTIMATE (by the Rev. A. T. similar cases : trial of Bolsec, S. Goodrick), 275 sqq. ; two 300; account of Servetus, 301; former views of Calvin : recent Calvin's attempt to get him works on him, 276; his birth condemned by the Romanists, and early training : at the 301 sq.; his trial (prosecuted
Montaigu,' Paris, 277 ; source by Calvin) and death in tor- of his first Protestant ideas : ment, 303 ; social and religious dangers thence incurred, 278; tyranny of ' Protestant Rome' his first work, on the De Cle- (Geneva), 305; a point in Cal- mentia of Seneca : its reputed vin's favour: he was zealous and its real object, 279; for education, 306; evils which account of the Institutes, 280 ; followed the spread of Cal- the working out of his system, vinism, 307 ; why it has in- 'the scheme of damnation,' creased the moral vitality of 281 ; relations and correspond- every
nation which has ence with Duchess Renée of accepted it, ib. Ferrara, 282 ; legendary stories CAMBRIDGE MODERN HISTORY, of his flight from Ferrara, ib. ; Vols. V. and XI., 450 Calvin at Geneva : anomalous CHANDLER, Right Rev. A, constitution of the town, 283 ; (Bishop of Bloemfontein), Ara troubles of Geneva and Berne Coeli : an Essay in Mystical with Savoy, 284 ; Reforma- Theology, 208 tion firebrands : Farel and his ChrySTOSTOM, St. John, WORKS friends, 285; the moral con- ON (by Dom Baur, Dr. J. A. dition of Geneva : deplorable Nairn, T. A. Moxon, &c.), 214 excesses, 286 ; Farel's en- CLARK, Mr. J. Willis, Liber deavours to keep Calvin there, Memorandorum Ecclesie de 287; the scheme of Church Bernewelle, 218 Ordinances, and the Confession Cody, Rev. H. A., An Apostle of of Faith, 288; varied cha- the North (Bishop Bompas), 46 racter of the opposition to CRAIK, Sir H., Impressions of these : the Anabaptists, 289;
India, 240 Berne's position against Calvin and Farel, 290 ; their exile, 291 ; Calvin at Strassburg : DARWIN AND MODERN Thought, polemic with Cardinal Sadolet. 411 sqq. : celebrations of his 292; Calvin's treatment of centenary: a striking spec- his friends, 293 ; his want tacle, 411 ; his predecessors of
of humour, 294 ; who taught the doctrine of evo- the causes which led to his lution, 412; why he and Wal- recall to Geneva : the over- lace are now both honoured, throw of his foes, 295 details 413; the latter's lighting upon of his new 'Ordinances :' the the theory of natural selection
was independent of Darwin's, 414; origin of Darwin's con- fidence in his theory, 415; opinion of Lamarck, 416; Mendel's discovery as affect- ing Darwin, 417; significance of sports,' 418; adaptation and mutation, 419; the tele- ology of Darwin, 420; the Eugenic' movement, 421; Darwin's influence on psycho- logy, 422; on logic and episte- mology, 423; on ethics, 424; our indebtedness to his scien- tific method, 425 DATTA, SURENDRA KUMAR, The Desire of India, 472
![[ocr errors]](https://books.google.com.qa/books/content?id=-3VIAAAAMAAJ&hl=ru&output=html_text&pg=PA503&img=1&zoom=3&q=%22certain+facts+in+the+distribution+of+the+inhabitants+of+South+America,+and+in+the+geological+relations+of+the+present+to%22&cds=1&sig=ACfU3U24H0yzORPXm4OaEgwK2-uBD9UiGw&edge=0&edge=stretch&ci=179,387,6,8)
DE BARY, Rev. R., The Spiritual Return of Christ within the Church, 206
DIVISION, THE ETHICS OF [by the late Alfred Pearson, D.D., Bishop of Burnley], 92 sqq. : general manifestation of the desire for unity, 92; toleration unknown in Europe prior to the French Revolution, 93; need of the adjustment of perspective in our view of Church questions, 94; the Church's true attitude to- wards divisions, 95 ; the exist- ence of parties in the State is not a parallel case, ib.; the Church is the greatest effective agency for what is highest and purest in life, 96; the varie- ties of human character and thought that each of the Church's Schools' affect, 97; the Apostles' treatment of the sectarianism of their time, 98; can all schools of thought within the Church theologi- cally coalesce, without com- promise of personal conviction? 98 sq.; a continual obstacle : our incurable propensity to define, 99; the dissociation of religious faith and opinion: spirituality, 100; recent signs of the lessening of party bitter- ness, 101; increased desire to cherish a unity of spirit,
DOBSON, Mr. AUSTIN, De Libris -Prose and Verse, 236
ELWIN, Rev. E. F., S.S.J.E., Indian Jottings, 241 ENGLISH CHURCH EXPANSION, HANDBOOKS OF: Australia (by the Rev. A. E. David), 473; North India (by the Rev, C. F. Andrews), 468; South Africa (by Bishop Hamilton Baynes), 473
EUCKEN, Prof., The Life of the Spirit, 196
FAIRWEATHER, Rev. W., The Background of the Gospels, 432 FREEMAN, Miss F. L., Our Work- ing Girls and how to help them, 226
GAUSSEN, Miss A., Percy, Prelate and Poet, 229
GILBERT, Rev. G.H., D.D., Inter- pretation of the Bible, 189 GREEK CONTRIBUTION TO SPIRI- TUAL PROGRESS, THE [by Miss Hilda D. Oakeley], 384 sqq. : cause of revived interest in the subject, 385; kinship between carly Greek religious feelings and those of barbarian races, 387; ideas that Greek thinkers contributed to Christian theo- logy, 389; the philosophers, 390; tragic poets, 391; Euripi- des' teaching, 392; Heraclitus and Plato, 393; Aeschylus and Sophocles, 394; the Eleu- sinian mysteries, 395; Hero- dotus and Thucydides, 396 ; Plato's attack on poetry, 397; the gods and heroes of Homer, 398; Greek attitude towards the poets, 399; Platonic con- ception of education, 401; in- fluence of Socrates on Plato, 402; his obedience to the voice,' 403; aspects of Pla- tonism which are of chief religious interest, 404; rela- tion of Plato's Good' to his idea of God, 405; development of the monotheistic concep- tion, 407; religious meaning of
the early Greek philosophers' : 'Logos' of Heraclitus, 408; present need of courage in metaphysical inquiry, 410 GREEN, Prof. E. T., Towers and Spires, 458
HAIG BROWN, Mr. H. (Memoir edited by), William Haig Brown of Charterhouse, 230
tunities for public worship provided in Guernsey and Jersey, 133; recent awaken- ing of Church life, ib.; reforms needed, 134; suggested forma- tion of two dioceses following the lines of the civil divisions, 137
KEMPSON, Rev. F. C., The Future Life and Modern Difficulties, 198
KING, Dr. H. C., The Seeming Unreality of the Spiritual Life,
LEWIS, Mrs. A. S., and GIBSON, Mrs. M. D., Forty-one Facsim- iles of Dated Christian Arabic MSS. (' Studia Sinaitica,' No. XII), 211
M'NEILE, Rev. A. H., The Book of Exodus, 426
MARTIN, Dr. W. A. P., The Awakening of China, 464 MILLARD, Mr. B. A., The Quest of the Infinite, 203 MODERNISM [by the Rev. H. H. Jeaffreson], 1 sqq. attitude of Anglicans towards internal difficulties in the Roman Church, 1; character of the present contest, 2; perpetuity of dissension, 3; the older method of controversy, 4; Newman's theory of develop. ment,' 5; Rome's treatment of the growth of science and the spread of the democratic spirit, 6; lack of signs of progress, 7: M. Loisy's life and present teaching, 8; views about Christ and the Gospels, 9; his historical method is very dangerous, 10; his condem- nation by Rome, 12; the case of Father Tyrrell, 13; his ex- communication and its cause, 16; his views on Christianity, 17; case of Don Romolo Murri, founder of the Demo- crazia Cristiana, 18; religion degraded into a political mat- ter, 19; Papal documents
« ПредыдущаяПродолжить » |