Methodism and Literature: SERIES OF ARTICLES FROM SEVERAL WRITERS ON THE LITERARY ENTERPRISE AND ACHIEVEMENTS Methodist Episcopal Church. F. A. ARCHIBALD, D. D. WITH A CATALOGUE OF SELECT BOOKS FOR THE HOME, THE CHURCH, AND THE SUNDAY-SCHOOL. CINCINNATI : WALDEN AND STOWE. NEW YORK: PHILLIPS & HUNT. I88 3 . Copyright by WALDEN & STOWE, 1882. PREFACE. This book is believed to be a demand of the times, and especially in the denomination whence it emanates. Among the numerous agencies which Methodism has employed in her evangelizing labors, none has been more potent than the printing-press. This instrumentality was early recognized by the founders of the Church, who wisely took measures for its growth and perpetuity, and " builded better than they knew." With them a prime object was to create and foster a taste for reading, and to regulate the cost of literature, so that it might be brought within the reach of the great masses to whom they preached. Methodism was, indeed, the pioneer of cheap religious reading, organizing a system of col- portage before the term colporteur had been engrafted upon our Saxon stock. Mr. Wesley wrote books for the million, and sold them at rates which astonished the book-makers of his day. In 1782, seventeen years prior to the for- mation of the " Religious Tract Society of London," he organized, in connection with Dr. Coke, the " So- ciety for the Distribution of Religious Tracts among the Poor;" but forty years before that, while prose- cuting his evangelical work, he commenced printing and circulating tracts, and was the first to use, on an extensive scale, this means of popular information. 4 PREFACE. Asbury and his coadjutors brought the same spirit into America, and planted the germ of the present mammoth Book Concern, which has steadily grown from its earliest implantation, until now it has amassed a body of literature representing all phases of matured thought in the fields of systematic theol- ogy, moral philosophy, ecclesiastical history, religious biography, and Christian experience, and presenting to the world thoroughly digested systems, well-matured suggestions, and all needful appliances for the work of evangelization. The New York Evangelist, in re- ferring to its purely Methodistic publications, says: "No religious body in this country can present, we believe, so various and extensive a collection of de- nominational literature as the Methodist Church." That this work of the Church may be brought to the thoughtful notice of the public, and that its com- pleteness, adaptation, and due importance may be presented in a befitting and permanent form, the papers that constitute the body of this book have been carefully prepared; and the reader who shall give them a proper consideration will doubtless arise from their perusal as fully convinced as the editor hereof that the publication is not only timely but necessary. Nearly every phase of Methodism in lit- erature has here a comprehensive treatment, and the different fields have been so fully explored as to ren- der a formal introduction almost unnecessary. These papers begin, very appropriately, with the subject, " A Reading Church." The necessity for general information and mental culture is as true to-day as when Wesley, in his declining years, imbued PREFACE. 5 with deep solicitude for the permanence of the socie- ties he had raised up, wrote these words : " It can not be that the people should grow in grace, unless they give themselves to reading. A reading people will always be a knowing people. A people who talk much will know little. Press this upon them with your might, and you will soon see the fruit of your labors." If Mr. Wesley regarded the neglect of reading in his time a serious hindcrance to Methodist progress, how much greater does the impediment ap- pear when viewed in the light of a reading age ! The " Book Concern w itself, the reservoir and the conservator of the Church's best thoughts, as well as the medium whence they flow out to vivify and serve mankind, has its appropriate recognition in these pages, and is immediately followed by subjects of grave importance to the Church, — the methods for the dissemination of our literature, and the duty of the Church to our publishing interests. The time was when every itinerant minister was ex-officio a disseminator of the Church's literature; but the im- mediate and pressing cares of the pastorate, which have multiplied as the spheres of labor have become contracted and the Churches have increased in mem- bership, have been accepted, in many cases, as a release from what the fathers deemed an obligation ; but it must be admitted that the duty, in some form or other, still remains. To the consideration of these subjects the attention of the Church is now invited, and a proper discussion of the duties of all interested can not but result in good. The three papers which follow direct the attention 6 PREFACE. to a vital issue now forced upon the attention of the Church in general, and which must be answered speedily if disastrous consequences are to be avoided. What we read, and what we should read, as well as the pernicious literature and novel-reading of the day, open up questions that concern the patriot as well as the moral philosopher; and the prospect that rises in the future, when a generation of youth fed upon the husks, and worse than husks, of much of the popular literature of the present, shall come upon the stage of action, is appalling to every philanthropist. Some of the fruit has already matured, as an examination of these papers and the criminal records of the coun- try will amply show. Recent statistics disclose the alarming fact that not only in the large cities, but in the country places as well, nearly one-fourth of those arrested for crime of all grades are boys and girls between the ages of twelve and twenty. A secular newspaper, in discussing the subject, says : u That which has led many of these young persons into their unfortunate condition is the obscene literature so gen- erally read by the young people of this country." This is the crying evil of modern society. It is sapping the foundations of virtuous liberty. There is no concealing the truth uttered by the papers in this book. If the Church is to grow up a healthful, influential, and permanent institution, with its mem- bership fully equipped in the brain and heart, it must press out its literature everywhere, and seek to coun- teract the streams of death that are deluging the land. The biographical and historical literature of Methodism, as will be seen by reference to the articles PREFACE. 7 on these subjects, are by no means meager. It has been thought by some that our publishers have gone to an extreme in biographical publications ; but these are the materials out of which history is made, and there seems to be a satisfactory and sufficient reason for every book of this character. The most ancient book in the possession of mankind, the Genesis of Moses, has recorded for all time a series of biograph- ical memoirs, and upon the Christian Church the duty is enjoined by an express command to "remember them who have spoken to us the word of God," and to imitate their faith. A learned author of one of the biographies of Methodism says : " The providence and grace of God have, from age to age, raised up men whose lives should be a beacon of hope to them who come after. 'A true intellect stands like a watch-tower upon the shore/ The waves thunder against it, and vanish in spray. Its clear and steady lamp burns in the storm — a consolation and a guide, over the dark sea, to the haven of glory." The paper on the " Literature of Bible Study " is not intended to be exhaustive of the subject. Such books as Wiseman's "Sketches from the Book of Judges," which Spurgeon places among the comment- aries, and says is written " in a powerful style," have not always been introduced, although they might ap- propriately find a place in this department. In the " Literature of Sacred Song " we reach a subject vital to the success of the Church in the past as well as the present. The first Wesleyan hymn- book was published in 1738. It contains seventy hymns, twenty-seven of which are by Dr. Watts. 8 PREFACE. A number of other hymn-books were issued by the two Wesleys up to the year 1779, when the standard hymn-book was published by subscription. Seven editions of it appeared in John Wesley's life-time. He had taken immense pains with it, selecting the materials with care, methodizing them with charac- teristic exactness, and transcribing it with his own hand. It was his last great work — a bequest of ines- timable value to the Methodist societies and to the Christian Church at large, almost all the denomina- tions in England and in this country, both in and out of the national establishment, having availed themselves of it in their various hymn-books to a greater or less extent. That acute and captious critic, Isaac Taylor, has said of the hymns of Methodism : " It may be affirmed that there is no principal ele- ment of Christianity, no main article of belief as ex- pressed by Protestant Churches, that there is no moral or ethical sentiment peculiarly characteristic of the Gospel, no height or depth of feeling proper to the spiritual life, that does not find itself, emphatically and pointedly and clearly, stated in some stanza of Charles Wesley's hymns." This is the heritage which Methodism has had bequeathed to her, and which she is asked to cherish and sanctify to the glory of God. In the field of books and benevolence we enter upon a subject which we do well to ponder. Our material resources, which have grown with our growth, are to be consecrated to the advancement of truth ; and the issue is now upon us. A systematic method of giving the Church has always pleaded for; and something is now demanded which will not lessen our PREFACE. 9 benefactions in the older directions, but will superadd to them the newer demands arising out of our altered circumstances. The establishment and endowment of libraries in our Churches are duties clearly pointed out by the requirements of the times. No essential part of the cardinal doctrines of the Church has been overlooked by those who have had the care of the publishing interests. Even in regard to the teachings of the Church with respect to a higher Christian life, which some have thought re- quired separate establishments for their exclusive publication, it will be seen that the literature on the subject is ample and of no uncertain sound. The authorized agents of the Book Concerns have done their work so thoroughly, and the doctrines of the Church have been so clearly enunciated, that the sup- plementary efforts resorted to appear, if not superflu- ous, certainly not so absolute a necessity as to demand a resort to such extraordinary measures. But it is no part of our purpose to attempt an analysis of the book now in the reader's hands. That can only be had by its full perusal. That it is a unity in every minutia is not claimed. Writing on such kindred subjects, and without opportunity for previous consultation, if such a thing were desira- ble or possible, it is not to be wondered at that the writers should occasionally cross each other's paths, or even give utterance to some slight differences of opinion. But if the latter is true, it is true only in matters of non-essential import; while, on the other hand, the agreement is so hearty and emphatic as to furnish a proof that the Church is in essential har- 10 PREFACE. mony as to the baleful effects of much of the popular literature of the period, and that to counteract that influence a loud and urgent call is made for the diffusion of healthful spiritual reading matter, such as the publications which Methodism has always given to the world. The extensive catalogue of books which follows these papers has been prepared with great care. The aim of the editor has been to assist our Christian people in making choice of the most safe and valua- ble books in the various departments of literature, from which libraries may be selected for the home, the Church, and the Sabbath-school. CONTENTS. I. A READING CHURCH, 15 Rev. J. S. Broadwell, Mansfield, 0. II. THE METHODIST BOOK CONCERN, 19 Sanford Hunt, D. D., New York. III. CIRCULATION OF OUR LITERATURE, 28 John M. Walden, D. D., LL. D., Cincinnati. IV. WHY METHODISM PRINTS, 49 Arthur Edwards, D. D., Chicago. V. WHAT WE READ AND WHAT WE SHOULD READ, 57 Rev. N. B. C. Love, Central Ohio Conference. VI. PERNICIOUS LITERATURE, 64 James M. Freeman, D. D., New York. » VII. THE EVILS OF INDISCRIMINATE NOVEL- READING, 69 Ross C. Houghton, D. D., Indianapolis. VIII. METHODIST BIOGRAPHICAL LITERATURE, . 81 W. B. W atkins, D. D., Pittsburgh. IX. HISTORICAL LITERATURE OF METHODISM, . 125 Francis S. Hoyt, D. D., Cincinnati. X. THE LITERATURE OF SACRED SONG, 139 F. D. Hemenway, D. D., Evanston, 111. 12 CONTENTS. PAGE. XI. THE LITERATURE OF BIBLE STUDY, .... 149 Editorial. XII. THEOLOGICAL AND DOCTRINAL LITERA- TURE, 164 Editorial. XIII. BOOKS AND BENEVOLENCE, 178 Charles H. Fowler, D. D., LL. D., New York. XIV. CHURCH LITERATURE AND EDUCATIONAL ' WORK, 181 Mrs. Alexander Martin, Greencastle, Ind. XV. THE TRACT SOCIETY : ITS ORIGIN, AIMS, LITERATURE, AND POSSIBILITIES, ..... 188 Rev. Thomas Stalker, Port Huron, Mich. XVI. OUR SUNDAY-SCHOOL LESSON HELPS, ... 199 Rev. Newell S. Albright, A.M., Wooster, 0. XVII. THE IDEAL SUNDAY-SCHOOL LIBRARY, . . 204 Daniel Wise, D. D., Englewood, New Jersey. XVIII. RELIGIOUS NEWSPAPERS, 214 Editorial. XIX. THE CHURCH LYCEUM, 218 Bishop Henry W. Warren, D. D., Atlanta, Ga. XX. RELATION OF OUR CHURCH LITERATURE TO THE TEMPERANCE WORK, 221 Mrs. Sarepta M. I. Henry, Evanston, 111. XXI. LITERATURE AND ITS RELATION TO THE MORAL NATURE, 231 William W. Ramsay, D. D., Detroit, Mich. XXII. OUR LITERATURE AS A SOCIAL FORCE IN THE CHURCH, 244 John Atkinson, D. D., Adrian, Mich. CONTENTS. 13 PAGE. XXIII. LITERATURE OF THE HIGHER CHRISTIAN LIFE, 250 J. Alabaster, D. D., Detroit, Mich. XXIV. OUR LITERATURE AS AN EVANGELISTIC AGENCY, 203 Rev. Samuel A. Keen, M. A., Ohio Conference. XXV. A PLAN FOR ORGANIZING A CHURCH LIBRARY, 269 Editorial. CATALOGUE OF BOOKS, . . MISSIONARY LITERATURE, INDEX OF AUTHORS, . . . . 275 409 417 Methodism and Literature. i. A READING CHURCH. Christianity is a religion appealing to the reason. Wherever it goes, thought is quickened, literature is pat- ronized, inventive genius wins victories, and brings its products to the world's help. Every other system of re- ligion is overwhelmed by science and investigation. The inventions and discoveries that have been brought to light in the luminous pathway of Christ's kingdom, a kingdom that shines more and more unto the perfect day, would drive every other system to the wall. But though the prophecy of doubt has assigned the religion of Jesus to the same doom, yet Christianity has taken, and continues to take, the results of genius and thought for her own benefit. The Christian should never be afraid of truth ; and to read and study should be as much a sacred duty as to pray and testify for his Master. To do this he must study economy both as to means and time ; but he is the child of an economist who, though a king, suffers nothing to go to waste, and who, though he owns a universe, gathers and preserves every thing, so that not an atom is lost. He must practice self-denial both as to his appetites and his adornings, if he would fit himself for usefulness in the Christ-life. But he may remember, for his comfort, that he whose servant he is counted not his own life dear unto him, but whose joy was to do his Father's will ; and then 16 METHODISM AND LITERATURE. let him remember that the disciple is not above his Master or the servant above his Lord. The Christian thus seeking for truth and usefulness will be prepared against surprises and bold assaults of the enemies of his Lord. Knowing the armory of truth, familiar with its weapons, he will be able to repel or hold in check every attempt of unbelief to shake his confidence. He will not be discouraged when ignorant followers be- come faint-hearted and ready to retreat. His well-supplied arsenal will, by the Spirit's help and the light of the Word, make him ready to endure hardness as a good soldier. A well-informed Christian is not at all likely to desert his standard ; for he has read of the triumphs of that vast army of whom the world was not worthy. He has marked the miracle of the Church's progress in the past; he has read of her triumphs in the last half century, and watches with a lively interest her victories to-day, as she plan3 broadly and intelligently for the conquest of the world. In Christianity he sees a religion that unites in itself all that is of good report in the various systems of the ethnic religions, and, looking beyond the letter of the Word, he sees in its great and pure spirit, the manifested truth of God . Thus looking at the Bible, it is always for him a vase of most precious perfume, a casket of priceless pearls, a mine of inexhaustible wealth, a fountain of purest waters, a sun of surpassing brightness, an ocean of glory ; indeed, a universe in itself ; for all other treas- ures are indicated in it, and all other streams of thought and power and civilization flow to it and from it. There are many reasons w T hy a gathered society of reading Chris- tians may, indeed must, be a power. A reading Church will make an intelligent -ministry. The time has passed when, if it ever did, the Church may boast of its inspired ignorance. It has ever been an error to defend Christian- ity and its supernatural character and divine origin by assuming ignorance and lack of mental power in the early A READING CHURCH. 17 disciples, apostles, and writers of the primitive Church. Who shall surpass Paul and John, Luke and Matthew, with Mark, in massive greatness, in beauty, sublimity, simplicity, and strength ? They need no defense ; they were worthy of any age. Their honesty, experience, and inspiration can be established without assuming that they were without ability or intelligence. That God has used the unlettered and the ignorant is very true ; but it does not prove that he would have his children or his heralds remain in ignorance. He can use any and all weapons, any and all kinds of material ; but the order of his providence has, for the most part, chosen the best ; and the book he has given to us is a very mine of literary and philosophic and mental wealth, quickening the thought, and stirring the heart of every student. The greatest of thoughts, themes, and events are pre- sented in the simple style of the narrative, or clothed in the glowing figures of poetry, or in the majesty of eloquence almost unequaled. And a man or woman who becomes a student of that Bible as he or she ought to study it, will soon want to know more of those other volumes of the great Author, the universe and the soul. The minister who would preach acceptably to a reading Church must be a reading minister. While such a Church would not be captious or unkind, it would stimulate and appreciate its pastor, and would thus become the means and somewhat the occasion of his development and growth. To preach to such a Church the man of God would not need to preach philosophy or science. Such preaching would not meet their demands, while other lines of mere sensationalism would not answer. Having studied the Bible with such helps as they have, they recognize it as the all-containing book of their relig- ion, and Jesus Christ as the Alpha and Omega of the book, and so they would have preached Christ and him crucified. 18 METHODISM AND LITERATURE. A reading Church will be a believing Church. There is a condition of soul that sometimes passes for faith, but it is simply enthusiasm. An abiding faith knows in what it believes, and is able to give a reason for its existence. An intelligent faith has nothing to fear from rationalism. It knows that the religion of the Gospels is no cunningly devised fable, and, founded upon the rock of experience, it remains after the storm is past. A reading Church will, withouf doubt, be a benevolent Church. This needs only to be stated to gain the assent of every one whose observation includes such a Church. With breadth of information come breadth of sympathy, largeness of soul, a reaching out for the ignorant, needy, and unsaved. So that we may safely make the statement that they who read largely give largely. But in all this we are supposing that the reading Church has a pure, strong, and helpful literature, adapted to the cultivation of both the intellectual and emotional in man, and that there is a .purpose to use the knowledge for the glory of the great King. A reading Church will be an enterprising and pro- gressive Church. With eyes wide open, she will see the fields white, the gates ajar, the highways being cast up, and she will use her means wisely and at the fortunate time, entering fields of usefulness, and planting institutions of learning, missions for the saving of the masses, building churches for the needy, and scattering a pure literature where mental and moral blindness prevails. J. S. BRO AD WELL. THE METHODIST BOOK CONCERN. 19 II. THE METHODIST BOOK CONCERN. The Methodist Book Concern had its origin in the theory that a Church must furnish a religious literature for its people. The Church must not only be devoted, but to secure its highest good and usefulness it must be intel- ligent. This intelligence is necessary in accomplishing the work assigned it by Providence, and where intelligence has been allied to vital godliness, Christianity has moved for- ward with the steps of certitude. John Wesley early recognized the potency of the print- ing-press as an agency in the work of evangelization, and as early as 1739 began the work of publishing religious literature. From the beginning of his work in England, he was an author and a publisher ; first the tract, then the magazine, and afterward the stately volume. Notwithstand- ing the constancy of his travels and the countless sermons he preached, he wrote thirty-two solid volumes — which have been published — and abridged and edited one hundred and twenty more. His preachers were pledged to circulate books as an essential part of their work. At the confer- ence of 1749, arrangements were made by which every circuit was to be supplied with books by the assistant, and every society was to provide "a private room," and also books for the helper. A return was to be made quarterly of money for books from each society, and thus, says Dr. Stevens, ''began that organized system of book and tract distribution which has secured to Methodism a more ex- tensive use of the religious press than can be found in any other Protestant denomination of our day." To Wesley 20 METHODISM AND LITERATURE. must not only be ascribed the impetus and methods in circulating religious literature, but to him also must be attributed the earliest recognition of the power of the press as an auxiliary to the work of preaching, and by his example, "the first to apply on any large scale this im- portant means of usefulness to the ' reformation of the people." The theory which brought into use the press in Mr. Wesley's day is the theory of the Methodist Episcopal Church to-day, and the inspiration of her publishing- houses. The mind needs instruction and fortification against evil every day and hour. Like all other things, it will become impaired ; and spiritual truth must be its food and nourishment. As parents feed their children daily in order to secure growth and maintain health, so the Church must supply the reading which her children demand. Under this conviction, the Methodist Episcopal Church in 1789, only five years after her organization, appointed Rev. John Dickins, then stationed in Philadelphia, a former student of the celebrated English school at Eton, as the book steward or agent. With a capital of six hundred dollars, which he loaned the Concern, he laid the founda- tions of our publishing-house. He managed the business for ten years, and died in Philadelphia, where the Book Concern was then located, leaving an enduring monument of his sagacity. Previous to the establishment of the Book Concern, various works of Mr. Wesley had been republished in this country, chiefly by the ministers, among whom was Robert Williams, who realized some profits from the publication of a number of Wesley's sermons. Benjamin Franklin, whom Mirabeau called "the genius which had freed America," reprinted Mr. Wesley's Sermon on Free Grace, and gave it, a wide circulation. But as these irregular publications were unsatisfactory to the preachers, a more THE METHODIST BOOK CONCERN. 21 thorough system was determined upon, which has devel- oped into the preseut Book Concern. In the Discipline of 1787 the following record occurs: "As it has been fre- quently recommended by the preachers and people that such books as are wanted be printed in this country, we therefore propose: First, that the advice of the conference be desired concerning any valuable impression, and their consent be obtained before any steps be taken for the printing thereof. And, second, that the profits of the books, after all necessary expenses are defrayed, shall be applied, according to the direction of conference, toward the college, the preachers' fund, the deficiencies of our preach- ers, the district missions, or the debts of our Churches." The first book printed by the Methodist Book Concern gave token of the breadth and catholicity of the spirit which actuated its founders. It was Thomas h, Kempis's "Imitation of Christ," translated and published by Mr. Wesley in England, under the title of "The Christian's Pattern." This work which, next to the sacred Scriptures, has had the largest number of readers of which sacred lit- erature, ancient or modern, can furnish an example, al- though written by a devout Catholic, had had an important influence on the mind of John Wesley and on the origin of Methodism, and is still not only in the catalogue of Methodist publications, but is urged upon its membership as a book eminently fitted to be "in the hands of every Methodist." Among the other works published the same year were Baxter's " Saints' Everlasting Rest," the "Meth- odist Discipline, a hymn-book, Mr. Wesley's "Primitive Physic," and the Arminian Magazine. The following was the imprint of the latter: "Printed in Philadelphia by Prichard & Hall, in Market Street, and sold by John Dick- ins, in Fourth Street (east side), near the corner of Race Street." The preface, which consists of an address to the " subscribers for the Arminian Magazine" written in North Carolina April 10, 1789, and signed by Thomas Coke and 22 METHODISM AND LITERATURE. Francis Asbury, contains the following interesting declara- tion : "That the subscribers may not purchase polemical divinity at too great an expense, we shall insert in each number an original sermon on subjects curious, critical, in- teresting, and elegant, written by our well-known and much-respected friend John Wesley (all of them since he has passed the age of seventy, and some of them within the last year), which may convince those who are ignorant of him that he is not, as some have falsely advanced, in his second childhood ; and that his exercising the episcopal office for the forming of our Church in America was not the fruit of infancy in him or in us." The first sermon of Mr. Wesley's, perhaps, ever published by the Book Concern as such is found in this magazine, and is founded on 1 Tim., 6-9, the words being, "They that will be rich, fall into temptation and a snare," etc. In 1799, Ezekiel Cooper was appointed editor and gen- eral book steward, and during his agency (in 1804) the business was removed to New York. He resigned in 1809, leaving the Concern with a capital of a hundred and forty- five thousand dollars, the net earnings of nineteen years. In 1808, John Wilson was elected principal agent, and the term of service in the agency was limited to eight years. Until this period the agents were regularly stationed as ministers, but from this time forward they were entirely released from pastoral labors. Mr. Wilson died in 1810, and the assistant agent, Daniel Hitt, assumed the entire control, and was elected principal agent in 1812. The Methodist Magazine was commenced in 1818, but after the establishment of the Christian Advocate in 1826, it was changed to the Methodist Quarterly Review, and both period- icals have been uninterruptedly issued ever since. In 1820, Rev. Nathan Bangs, whose name was for many years intimately associated with Methodism in America, was called to the chief agency of the Book Concern, and in- fused into it a new vitality. He published " Benson's THE METHODIST BOOK CONCERN. 23 Commentary," a work which has met with a large circu- lation, and also published a revised edition of the Method- ist Hymn-book. Up to 1822 all the work of the Book Concern was done by outside parties, but during that year the first l)ook was bound in the office on Crosby Street. In September, 1824, the agents also commenced printing in their own house. In 1832 it became evident that the building on Crosby Street was too small for the increasing demands of busi- ness, and five lots were purchased on Mulberry Street. During the next year the front building was erected, and the business transferred to it. At this time Dr. John P. Durbin was editor of the Christian Advocate and Journal, and of Sunday-school books and tracts. Through his sug- gestion and wise foresight the Concern began the publica- tion of a Sunday-school library, an enterprise which has been continued ever since, and which has resulted in a col- lection of books, which for variety, adaptation, and num- ber is unsurpassed by any similar collection in the world. In 1836 the entire building and stock of the Bopk Concern were destroyed by fire, the loss reaching the sum of a quarter of a million of dollars. The fact that the Church promptly contributed nearly ninety thousand dol- lars to rebuild is a proof that the Book Concern had won general confidence. Out of the ashes a new building sprang up, well adapted at that time to the purposes of a publishing-house. The separation of the Methodist Episco- pal Church South, in 1845, gave rise to a law-suit in the United States Court, and the court ordered a pro rata di- vision of the property, which gave to the Church South two hundred and seventy thousand dollars in cash and all the presses and papers belonging to the Concern in the South. The Western Book Concern was established in 1820 by the General Conference of that year, and Dr. Martin Ruter, subsequently president of Alleghany College, was appointed 24 METHODISM AND LITERA TV RE. to its charge, acting under the direction of the agents at New York. This branch has gone on steadily increasing, and has now become a great and independent center of publishing interests, with several depositories under its con- trol. Although it has met with reverses, the chief of which was the Chicago fire in 1871, yet it reports a net capital of above three hundred and fifty-five thousand dol- lars, and sales during the year 1881 amounting to over seven hundred and fourteen thousand dollars. In the Spring of 1869 the building on the corner of Eleventh Street and Broadway, New York, was purchased for the joint use of the Book Concern and the Missionary Society, at a cost of about one million dollars. It is con- ceded that for architectural beauty this structure is not surpassed on Broadway. Here are the offices of the ed- itors, agents, and book-keepers. Here, too, are the whole- sale and retail stores and mailing department. The manual labor of type-setting, stereotyping, printing, and binding is still done at 200 Mulberry Street. Now, having looked at the outside of these buildings, let us step within, and see how the work is done. The book agents are appointed by the General Conference, but they are by no means independent. Whatever money they may see in a book, they can not bring that book out for the market without the indorsement of a censor ap- pointed by the same high authority. The General Confer- ence orders the publication of certain periodicals. Editors are also chosen to prepare the matter. The agents are obliged to print and circulate just what the editor provides. They have no right to dot an "i" or cross a "t." The two parties are independent of each other, though both are responsible to the same appointing body. In regard to books, the agents are at liberty to decline the publication of any one ; but if they publish at all, the book must have the sanction of the book editor, or it never sees the light. Every manuscript of our Sunday-school books must pass THE METHODIST BOOK CONCERN. 25 the scrutiny of the corresponding secretary of the Sunday- school Union. These editors have a keen scent for heresy, and if they find any thing dangerous to public morals they brand the paper, and it goes to the shades. In our markets there are inspectors of meats. Stale food is unhealthy, and the inspector stands as a guard to protect the public. So these editors are appointed to see that our children are not fed with dangerous and corrupting literature — a position vastly more important than that of the health officer. In our great ports are quarantine grounds and officers. Every ship must be boarded by the officer appointed, and it can not land its passengers until the certificate of the physician is obtained that there is no contagious disease on board. So all our books are quarantined until the guardians of the precious young souls in the care of the Church shall declare them healthful and saving. Here, we submit, the Methodist Episcopal Church has the advantage of those who have no official publishing-house. Independent pub- lishers are irresponsible in the matter of public morals. The temptation will be strong for them to publish that which will sell best. If they cater to a depraved taste, which clamors after sensationalism, there is no one to call them to account. This independent censorship of the Methodist press is the safeguard of our children. The guardianship of our press is not too rigid. As much as we sometimes feel the need of making books and papers that pay best, we do not desire to see the Methodist Book Concern spotted with the blood of young souls ruined by a pernicious literature. Let us now call attention to results. Let it be under- stood that the prime object of the establishment and main- tenance of the Book Concern was not, and is not, to make money, but to furnish religious reading for our people. And yet it is necessary to make money to secure the capital essential to the business. 3 26 METHODISM AXD LITERATURE. As a result of work in our Sunday-school department of the Church, the conversions reported in the schools for twenty-five years past are fully equal to the increase of Church members. If, as Churches, we lose our hold of the children, our aggressive power is gone. We can hold them permanently only by solid doctrinal instruction in harmony with our pulpits. The financial results have been remarkable. While money is not the primary object, we doubt if any other printing-house in the world can furnish a better financial record. There has been a constant drain upon the Book Concern for the general purposes of the Church. The theory has been, if no other provision is made for ex- penses, the Book Concern must foot the bill. During its existence, it has paid to the various interests of the Church, outside of its own business, a sum aggregating nearly two millions of dollars. Other houses may add their profits to their capital for the purpose of increasing their facilities, or divide them among the proprietors; but the Book Concern has paid out its profits for Church interests from year to year. If the world has a parallel in the history of religious or be- nevolent publishing establishments, we have never seen the record. The moral and religious results of a system which has sent out for nearly a century such a constant and full stream of devotional, instructive, and Christian literature can not be computed. The benefits are incalculable. Wielding the strongest arm ot modern moral influence, laving a contribution on the best minds of our own and other Churches, and reaching the youth with a pure litera- ture at the most plastic period of their existence, who can estimate its molding power, its edifying mission, its re- straining influences, or its glorious benedictions ? The Book Concern is a child of Church necessities, in complete harmony with its spirit and discipline. In its THE METHODIST BOOK CONCERN. 27 woDderfully compact and comprehensive "Book of Dis- cipline" all its preachers are enjoined, among other godly recommendations, to the ' 'reading of the most useful books;" and, it any should lack taste in this direction, they are urged to "contract a taste for it by use, or to re- turn to their former employment." And the laity, while prohibited the " reading of those books which do not tend to the knowledge or love of God," are expected to be a reading people; and to secure this end, it is made the duty of preachers " to take care that every society be duly sup- plied with books." The work of the Book Concern has been in harmony with the highest spiritual interests of humanity, and its methods and objects are open to all. It invites and chal- lenges examination. It aims to permeate society with its health-giving streams, and to reach all classes for their good. It asks the co-operation and friendly aid of all who labor for human weal. Shall the publishing interests not expect and receive it? SANFORD HUNT. 28 METHODISM ASD LITERATURE. III. CIRCULATION OF OUR LITERATURE. To supply Methodist people with Methodist literature is a Wesleyan idea ; the means and methods by which this has been done for more than a century form a part of the connectional system of Methodism. During the early period of the United Societies in Great Britain Mr. Wesley re- sorted to the use of the press in defense of the evangel- istic work to which he had been providentially called. Its utility as a means to extend as well as defend that work at once became apparent to his practical mind ; he re- garded it a providential agency, and employed it diligently in the production of a literature, the influence of which is manifest in both the doctrinal unity and connectional economy of Methodism. His " helpers" — the preachers — to whose loyal co-operation the success of the Methodistic movement is largely due, heartily joined him in his plans for the use of the press. With characteristic zeal they cir- culated the tracts, pamphlets, books, and magazine he published ; and the supply of the people with good books was soon named in the conferences as one of the specified duties of preachers. The system thus developed was in- corporated in the Wesleyan Church at the time of its organization, and has been carefully maintained and suc- cessfully operated by it for nearly a century. The Methodist missionaries who came to America, hav- ing learned the utility of the religious press from its use bvMr. Wesley, soon began to sell (and some even to print) books that were helpful in their work. During the colonial period conference action was taken as to the republication CIRCULATION OF OUR LITERATURE. 29 and circulation of Mr. Wesley's books, and the whole mat- ter became so interwoven with the operations of the young Church that five years after its formal organization the Conference (in 1789) assumed its control by appointing a book steward (the initial step in establishing the Book Concern), to superintend the circulation and sale of books through the preachers, and subsequently by appropriating the profits of the business to connectional purposes. The Methodist publishing system comprehends and pro- vides for both the publication and circulation of a Method- istic literature; it is a connectional plan under which tJie Meth- odist Episcopal Church owns her press, supervises her publi- cations, and produces and distributes a literature that is in harmony with her docirines, usages, economy, and mission. The capacity of the Book Concern to produce a litera- ture should be mentioned in connection with the plans and means for its circulation. The value of the lands, build- ings, machinery, material, etc., in 1881, exclusively de- voted to and employed in publishing books and periodicals, was as follows : In the New York Book Concern, $359,880; in the Western Book Concern, $301,122 ; total, $661,002. The remainder of the capital is chiefly employed in the circulation of the literature, as will be shown further on. The $661,002 of the capital represents, in one way, the material and mechanical facilities of our Church for the production of books and periodicals. Having had and now having in her ranks a large number of talented and scholarly men and women, she has successfully utilized her publishing facilities, and is still daily increasing the volume of Methodist literature. Fif- teen editors, chosen by the General Conference, and eight assistant editors, are constantly employed ; a large corps of writers with varied gifts are paid contributors to the peri- odicals ; and besides these there are authors, many in num- ber, preachers, laymen, and gifted women, Methodists, who devote time and talent to writing books. The 30 METHODISM AND LITERATURE. present catalogue of the Book Concerns gives a list of about three thousand different books: nearly all of these, and many earlier volumes now out of print, are from the pens of Methodist authors. Our Church is rich in her corps of writers and authors, and strong in possessing the means to publish the productions of their consecrated talents. The extent of the field she occupies and the diversity of her work, from that in the wealthy city church to that in the isolated frontier mission, requires a great variety in the form and kind of her literature. These wants have been fairly met with books, especially in the English, Ger- man, and Scandinavian languages, for the different classes of readers — for unaw 7 akened sinners, young converts, ad- vancing Christians, and the closest students of the Scrip- tures — books for the preachers, books for the people, and books for home, Church, and Sunday-school libraries ; and also with a periodical literature of great diversity in form and purpose. The money value of the books sold annually is nearly double that of the periodicals, yet a vast amount of reading matter from Methodist writers is furnished to the members of our congregations and Sunday-schools through the various periodicals published by the Church, ranging from the Picture Lesson Paper, for the youngest reader, to the scholarly Methodist Quarterly Revieio. The circulation of the publications of the Book Con- cern, as already stated, has, from the first, been a part of the publishing system of our Church. It could not have been otherwise for the leading purpose of the Methodist preachers, in devising and projecting that system, was to furnish the people with a literature that would be helpful in the extension of Methodism ; and in order to this it was as necessary to provide for the circulation as for the pub- lication of that literature. These preachers, with the ex- ample of Mr. Wesley and his coadjutors before them, nat- urally and wisely adopted the" Wesleyan plan, and became CIRCULATION OF OUR LITERATURE. 31 themselves the agents and representatives of the Book Concern to sell the publications approved by the Church. The General Conference of 1792 made it the duty of the preacher in charge 11 to take care that every society be duly supplied with books;" that of 1880 added, "and Meth- odist literature.'" (Discipline, 178, Sec. 7.) But for this plan and the zeal of the preachers in working it, it is quite certain the Book Concern could not have achieved its marked success. The circuit system carried Method- ism to villages and sparsely settled rural districts, as well as to cities; hence a large proportion of our people could not have procured Methodist books had they not been brought to their homes by the Itinerant preachers. These devoted men were quick to perceive their opportunity of doing good by selling the books of their Church, and they engaged earnestly in this, as in every other pastoral and ministerial work. For many years after the publishing system was fully established, there were few Methodist pastors who did not carry the books into their charges; and as a result there were few Methodist homes, even in the remotest circuits, in which some Methodist books might not be found; and, in time, there were libraries in most Methodist Sunday-schools. When, in 1826, the new era in our periodical litera- ture was inaugurated by the publication of the Christian Advocate, the preachers brought it before the people ; its circulation and that of the other Advocates, since estab- lished by the Church, to meet the wants of her ever- expanding field, has been chiefly secured and maintained through their efforts. From the first issue of the Sunday- school Advocate much has also been done by them to intro- duce and extend the circulation of our literature for the officers, teachers, and scholars in Methodist Sunday- schools. Depositories are a part of the system of our Church for the circulation of her books and periodicals. They are 32 METHODISM AND LITERATURE. distributing points rendered necessary by the growth of the Church and the extent of the country. The first was established at Cincinnati in 1820, and twenty years later created a publishing-house under a distinct charter, and entitled The Western Methodist Booh Concern. Deposi- tories have since been located at Boston, Buffalo, Pitts- burg, Chicago, St. Louis, Atlanta, and San Francisco. The stock of books, including those in process of binding, in the Book Concerns and Depositories was worth, in 1881, at a low valuation, $484,294; add to this the value of the buildings used for stores, stock-rooms, counting- rooms, etc., and the capital employed by our Church in carrying a necessary stock of her literature is at least a million dollars. By authority of the General Conference, special arrangements have also been made for the encour- agement of Methodist book-stores in Philadelphia, Balti- more, Detroit, and a few other commercial centers. A chief design of these depositories and stores was, and is, to reduce the cost of transportation to the purchaser, thereby enabling the preachers to supply their charges with books on the most advantageous terms. The money value of the literature sold through the seven Depositories in 1881 was 8549,694.15; namely, books, $375,023.72; periodicals, $174,670.43. The Sunday-school Union of the Methodist Epis- copal Church was formed for the gratuitous circulation of her Sunday-school literature. For many years its Corres- ponding Secretary has been the editor of Sunday-school li- brary books, and more than two thousand volumes thus pre- pared for the press and published by the Book Concerns are now found in their catalogue. The Sunday-school Union is better known now through the Berean system of aids for Bible study, the papers for the youth and children, and various helpful requisites for officers, teachers, and schol- ars ; but a very large number of books have been put into circulation by its donations to needy schools, and it is CIRCULATION OF OUR LITERATURE. 33 still doiDg this good work, especially in the pioneer and other mission fields of our Church. The Tract Society of The Methodist Episcopal Church was also organized for the circulation of Methodist literature in tract form. The tracts prepared by this society are published by the Book Concerns, and kept in stock, for donation by the several district committees, and for sale at a low price. The Depositories are parts or branches of the Book Concerns ; the Sunday-school Union and Tract Society are independent connectional societies. In the preparation and distribution of their special kinds and forms of literature they are intimately connected with the Book Concerns, but much of their work is distinct, of which a separate report is annually given to the Church. Methodist preachers, by circulating Methodist literature, have made the Methodist press a most potent adjunct of the Methodist pulpit. It is well known, however, that they are not as diligent in all forms of this important work as afore- time. Many labor with zeal to circulate the weekly Advocates and the Sunday-school periodicals, and few (if any) entirely neglect this ; but, on the other hand, they do not take so great care to supply their charges with the books. Where our people and Sunday-schools are convenient to the Book Concerns or depositories they, in many cases, supply them- selves with books and Sunday-school periodicals, instead of ordering them through the preachers, as was formerly done. In many localities, particularly in the East, some part of our books can be secured through book-stores ; so from one cause and another, it has come to pass within the past twenty or thirty years that a considerable portion of the book sales is direct to the people. It was formerly expected that the Sunday-school books would be ordered through the preachers; while this was generally done, a larger proportion of the schools was provided with libraries than at present. The multiplication of the kinds of Sunday- 34 METHODISM AND LITERATURE. school periodicals may account, in part, for this change, but will not explain the fact that perhaps in not more than one- half of our schools is there the semblance of a library, aocl that in a smaller proportion of them is there a good supply of our books. The number of our Sunday-schools having libraries is relatively less than twenty years ago, and the proportion of Methodist homes in which our new books, or even older standard works, are found is not increasing; as a consequence the youth in many of these Sunday-schools and homes are growing up, not only without the benefit of Methodist books, but also without even a knowledge of them. This fact is appalling, and considered in its rela- tions and bearings must occasion deep concern. Think of it ! The field of Methodist literature has enlarged and the corps of Methodist authors augmented ; the publishing facilities of the Book Concerns have been greatly improved, and the, number and variety of Methodist books increased ; our people have more means than ever before with which to purchase them, and yet there are hundreds of Meth- odist Sunday-schools without libraries, and thousands of Methodist homes in which there are no Methodist books ! Of course many of our people are able to buy but few books, and many of our schools are in poor communities, but this lamentable dearth of Methodist books is not con- fined to such homes and schools, but is too prevalent in the more favored sections and societies. For instance, a large conference, located within a well-improved part of the richest belt of the West, containing over two hundred pastoral charges and about five hundred Sunday-schools, with 39,806 scholars enrolled in 1881, reported one hun- dred and forty Sunday-school libraries in sixty-three of its charges, and no libraries in the remaining one hundred and forty-three charges embracing three hundred and sixty Sun- day-schools. After deducting the number in the infant classes, there were, by the report, about thirty-two thousand schol- CIRCULATION OF OUR LITERATURE. 35 ars, of whom less than Dine thousand had access to Sunday- school libraries ! Where the people are well-to-do, as they generally are in this section, the ratio of Methodist books in the homes is not likely to be much greater than it is found to be in the Sunday-schools. It is probable that in this as in other conferences many of the schools take our Sunday-school periodicals, and that some one of our weekly Advocates is found in many of the homes ; but these are no proper substitute for useful and instructive books. What can be done to increase the circulation of the books published by our Church? By what means can they be brought within the reach of our people, young and old ? In a measure by Church libraries ; also by Sun- day-school libraries ; and by collections in the home. The Church Library. — To the writer it has seemed that in many places it would be practicable to establish such libraries, and they would be eminently serviceable; and during the past ten years the matter has been presented to most of the conferences, in the West. The idea of a Methodist library is not new; the Sunday-school library has its recognized place, and years ago a " Methodist Fam- ily Library" was projected. The latter involved an expense that few families were disposed to incur ; the former, while valuable in its place, seems too limited in its scope to in- terest all classes ; hence the question naturally came up, Why not combine what would have been the Family Li- brary with the Sunday-school Library, and thereby create a Church Library, to meet the wants of all, old and young, in the Sunday-school and congregation? The suggestion has also been made that the books of such a library might be issued on a week-day evening, making it the occasion of an informal social meeting of the old and young in the Church. The influence of a good li- brary, to which all would be drawn, would be beneficial in every way. In the congregation it would come to be "Our Library" — aud through it all having any interest 36 METHODISM AND LITERATURE. in the Church, whether in the congregation or Sunday- school, would be brought into pleasaut association. The Church Library would combine economy with utility. The Agents of the Western Book Concern pre- sented this view several years ago, as follows:* "We again emphasize the importance of so enlarging the Sunday-school Library that it shall contain reading matter adapted to all persons who ought to be found in the Sunday-school, either as teachers or students of the Scrip- tures; and certainly these classes comprehend a large por- portion of every congregation. We mention the following among the advantages resulting from such a library: "(1.) Many of the best minds of the community will be attracted to our Churches and Sunday-schools, and be permanently benefited by the books such Libraries may contain. "(2.) It would be a great economy. A few hundred dollars thus invested, which would require from each family but a small sum, will afford an amount of reading matter to a community that it would take thousands of dollars to purchase and place in each family. "(3.) By thus timely putting suitable books within the reach of our more advanced Sunday-school scholars, we will save them from becoming ensnared by the ruinous pro- ductions of the irreligious press. "(4.) The acquaintance thus formed with the useful literature of our press will induce the selection of many valuable books for our homes which would otherwise re- main unknown to our people. "Sunday-school workers will appreciate the further advantage of bringing the school and congregation nearer to each other, by alike interesting them in the Library as existing for their common use and mutual benefit. It would seem that contributions for a Library of such gen- eral interest could be readily secured, at least in every town * Catalogue of 1873. CIRCULATION OF OUR LITERATURE. 37 and village ; and the Church that thus plans for the moral well-being of a community, and moves to meet so impor- tant a want, will strengthen its hold upon the people, and greatly increase its usefulness. "It would not be difficult to so arrange for the weekly distribution of the books as to make it a pleasant occasion both for the members of the school and congregation, and thereby avoid the interruption of the worship and Bible study occasioned by distributing the Library-books during the session of the school. "Why not make the Library the point in common about which the active workers in the Church and in the Sunday-school shall rally, that there may be unity and har- mony in all those efforts that have in view but the one object of Christian work — the salvation of the people, both young and old?" The necessity for the Church Library is not obviated by the existence of Public Libraries. These, as generally constituted, do not meet the wants for which the Church would provide a library. Certainly they do not foster a taste for the kind of reading that the Church should en- courage. Usually, in the Public Library works of fiction, especially novels, form the largest class of books, and whether by American or foreign authors, they are selected without apparent reference to either their moral or political teaching. The official reports show this class of books to comprise from sixty to seventy-five per cent of the entire circulation of these libraries. They are, in the main, ve- hicles for the circulation of fiction at public expense. On the other hand, the Church Library would not only bring good books within reach, but its very existence, as well as its whole influence, would encourage the reading of a pure aud wholesome literature. While publications of the Book Concerns would, of course, form an important part of such a library, it would also contain the best books of other 33 METHODISM AND LITERATURE. publishing houses, selected with special reference to the intellectual and spiritual benefit of its patrons. Several such libraries have already been formed in the West. Enough has been done to show that it is quite practicable for our Churches in many of the larger vil- lages and towns to establish them. But this will rarely be done except under the leadership of the preachers. The people will not be found indifferent in regard to the profit- able use of the press when their attention is earnestly di- rected to the matter. When the pastors become the ad- vocates of well-appointed libraries, and urge their claims with the zeal their importance demands, the people will respond and make them one of the appointments of the Church. The Sunday-school Library. — In many places it will not be deemed practicable to form Church Libraries, but there are few places where the people themselves, or aided by our Sunday-school Union, can not procure a Sun- day-school Library. In many of our schools there are libraries, or the remnants of libraries, to which no new books have been added for years, and these must be re- plenished before an interest in the books can be awakened among the scholars. No argument is required to prove that a good library may be of incalculable value to a Sun- day-school. Where this is recognized it is not difficult to enlist a community in a movement to purchase books. The preacher is the best leader in such a movement. If a school be without a good library because of a notion among officers and teachers that one is not needed, the pastor can do most to remove the fallacy ; if it be from a feeling that many so-called Sunday-school books have a pernicious tendency, the Disciplinary Committee (Discip- line, ^[ 257), of which the pastor is the head, can readily remove this objection ; if from a general apathy toward the Sunday-school and its work, an interest among the people will only be awakened when a deeply interested CIRCULATION OF OUR LITERATURE. 39 pastor presses the matter upon their consciences and hearts. Here the relation of our Sunday-school Union to the circulation of books is important. There are hundreds of schools in our Churches in the South and in the pioneer regions of the West which have never had a library book, and they are not able to purchase them. Books are not less needful in these schools than in the older and wealthier communities. It would be a great work, a truly missionary as well as connectioual work, on the part of our Church to supply them. If, when the claims of the Sunday-school Union are presented, the extent and impor- tance of this work were fully and earnestly set forth, would not our people furnish the means for so good a cause? Books in the Home. — Whatever may be done in the ■ way of Church and Sunday-school libraries, still some Methodist books should have a place in Methodist homes. They are unobtrusive witnesses of a cordial interest in the Church — a silent testimony in its behalf. The books be- longing to the home are among the things which go, in some way, to make up its individuality — that character which distinguishes it from others and impresses itself on every member, especially the young. Methodist books in the Methodist home I. Those old, familiar books — the biog- raphy, the history, the devotional, and even the doctrinal volume — how many remember them with a tender interest ! Read there they became associated in memory with the sacred place, and their teaching was invested with an en- during charm. And there are lingering, grateful thoughts about the preachers who brought these books into the home. This Wesleyan plan put Methodist books into thou- sands of homes which otherwise Avould have been without them. What of the other thousands within the wide domain of the Church in which no one of the valuable publications of the Church is found ! Notwithstanding the improved facilities of transporta- 40 METHODISM AND LITERATURE. tion, and the development of trade in our country, there are large sections in the Western and many Eastern con- ferences in which there are no regular book-stores ; the same is true of entire conferences in the South ; and, in all these sections our people can not buy Methodist books, not even Hymnals and Disciplines, through the trade. Post-routes reach every neighborhood and postage is cheap, but experience proves that only a few will order books by mail. It is out of the regular line ; other things needed in the home are not secured in that way. Many are not advised as to what books are published ; many who see them announced in the Advocates know little of their respective merits. So, in many ways, thousands of our people are as dependent upon the preachers in the matter of the best books for the home as was the great body of the Church half a century ago. In every pastoral charge in the connection there are some homes where Methodist books will not be found until they are introduced in some way by the pastors. It does not follow that all former methods are to be uni- formly pursued, that the saddle-bags are to be put into use again to circulate the books — though that might be done with great gain to the Church in not a few fields — but that, as the fathers supplied the people with books in the way best adapted to their circumstances, so now the same thing should be done in such ways as are most prac- ticable and likely to secure directly and with the least labor and expense the best results. Slow and costly trans- portation made it necessary for them to order the books in quantity, and keep them on hand ; but with railroads radiating in every direction from the cities in which the Book Concerns and Depositories are located, that necessity no longer exists, except it be in the remoter pioneer fields. The people are more likely to buy the books if they see them ; but the preacher may readily meet this condition by sample copies of what he thinks will be of greatest CIRCULATION OF OUR LITERATURE. 41 value in his charge, and a dozen or a score of volumes, at most, would be all the samples needed at a time in either a circuit or a station. A preacher may awaken some interest in the books by- placing a Book Concern catalogue in every Methodist home, from the wealthiest to the humblest, within his charge. He can mention in his pastoral visits, at prayer, class, and official meetings, and sometimes from the pulpit, some of the books he may think would be most useful. During the past year a presiding elder, believing that the circulation of " The Class Leader," by Rev. John Atkin- son, would do good, called attention to the book at his quarterly meetings, and sold copies to many of the class- leaders in his district. Revivals and other special meet- ings afford an occasion for the introduction of books especially adapted to them. Place in the hand of each convert and young Church member, at the beginning of a Christian life, either ''Counsels to Converts," by Dr. George; "Elements of Methodism," by Dr. Stevenson; "At the Threshold," by Dr. Houghton; "Aspects of Christian Experience," by Bishop Merrill, or some other book of this general class published by our Church for the instruction and encouragement of the young Christian, and who can estimate the effect upon them and through them upon the Church and world ! So there are times and seasons especially favorable for putting into the hands and homes of our people Methodist books adapted to almost every condition of the Church, every stage of Christian experience, every phase and form of Christian work. To the pastor who purposes to benefit his people by furnishing them the books needful for spiritual culture there will be no lack of opportunity for their introduction. There are many preachers who, whatever be the character of their appointment, invariably increase the circulation of the Church papers, because they feel that the people need these papers, and that they ought to have them. The same 42 METHODISM AND LITERATURE. feeling iu regard to the books makes a preacher succeed in extending their circulation. Those who have a mind for this work never fail in it. The German books pub- lished by the Church are sold almost exclusively through the German preachers. In 1881 the sales of our German books averaged a fraction above ninety-eight cents to each member of the German Churches ; of our Eng- lish books a fraction under sixty cents to each member of the English-speaking Churches ; the ratio of the circula- tion of the German periodicals quadruples that of the cor- responding English periodicals. The circumstances and condition of the people does not account for this ; the Ger- man preachers have Wesleyan notions of the importance of Methodist literature and of the advantage of conforming to the connectional plans; they have a mind for the work and it is done. Does not the wide circulation of our German books and periodicals have an important relation to the fact that the missionary collections in the seven German conferences in this country averaged in 1881 seventy cents a member, while the average throughout the other eighty-six confer- ences was only thirty-six cents a member? What has Been Dome. — While many Methodist Sunday-schools have never had libraries and many Meth- odist homes have been without Methodist books — many even without a Church paper — yet far more has been done in circulating Methodist literature than is generally known. It is not possible to ascertain how many books and period- icals have been printed and put among the people, but in the absence of exact data some idea may be formed from the financial results. The books and periodicals as com- pared with those of other denominations have been rela- tively cheap, and, a large proportion of them having been sold by the Book Concerns and Depositories at a discount from the retail or published price, the margin of profit has not been large, and yet the sales have been so great as to yield an aggregate profit of about three million dollars CIRCULATION OF OUR LITERATURE. 43 since the loss of the New York Book Concern by fire in 1836. During this forty-five years (notwithstanding the loss by fire in Chicago, in 1871 , and the losses on non- paying periodicals and depositories established by General Conference, aggregating about four hundred thousand dol- lars) there has been an increase of $1,136,196.54 in the net capital of the two Book Concerns ; and there has been paid out by order of General Conference, during the same period, above fifteen hundred thousand dollars for the benefit of the worn-out preachers, for the support of the bishops, and for other connectional purposes, including $366,909.62 to the Methodist Episcopal Church South under adjust- ment of the suit brought in the United States Supreme Court. The amount received for the books actually put into circulation in 1881 was $874,191, and for the periodi- cals $494,334; total, $1,368,525. During the past thirty years (since 1851) the sales of books and periodicals by the New York Book Concern and its Depositories have amounted to $16,997,331.28; of the Western Book Con- cern and its Depositories, $15,194,931.02; total in thirty years, $32,192,462.30. While there are relatively more Methodist homes and Sunday-schools without Methodist books now than afore- time, yet the circulation of the Church and Sunday-school periodicals is relatively much greater. In 1851 the circu- lation of the three Church papers (two English and one German) was 44,374 copies, one copy for every fourteen Church members; in 1881, that of the eleven Church papers (nine English, one German, and one Swedish) was 170,000 copies, one copy for every nine members. In 1851, one Sunday-school paper, the Sunday-school Advocate, had a circulation of 90,000 ; in 1881 the circulation of the six Sunday-school papers (three English, two German, and one Swedish) was 447,546 copies, and the circulation of the three English and one German Berean Lesson Helps, which have superseded the old-time Question Books, was 44 METHODISM AND LITERATURE. 1,437,122 copies (105,547 Sunday-school Journals, 1,081.775 Lesson Leaves, and 249,800 other Helps). This statement would not be complete without mention of the fact that all these periodicals have kept pace with the progress of the periodical press of the country ; it should be particularly noted that while the circulation of our Church papers has quadrupled since 1851, their size has been doubled, thereby affording the readers a far greater variety of reading- matter while its volume is eight-fold, possibly ten-fold, greater than thirty years ago. These facts, which indicate the progress of our peri- odical literature, gratifying as it has been, can not be separated from those which indicate that the circulation is below what it ought to be. Within the conferences in the Northern States and Territories our English Church papers average one copy for every eight members of the English-speaking Churches. No account can be taken here of the so-called independent papers; loyal as they may be to Methodist doctrines, they can hardly be loyal to the Methodist plan for a complete Church literature ; and they can not be a fitting and profitable substitute for the official Church papers. The circulation of our En- glish Church papers — one copy to eight members — com- pares favorably with that of similar papers of other de- nominations ; but the Christian Apologist averages two copies for every five members of the German Churches. The official Methodist papers, the home-papers of the Church, are just as helpful to English-speaking Method- ists as to German Methodists, and they are equally im- portant in the home, whatever language be spoken there. Surely, in view of the number of subscribers to the Apologist, it is possible to double the aggregate circulation of the nine Advocates, and it will be done when all the preachers put their hand to the work. One hundred and fifty thousand Church papers making their weekly visit to homes that are now without any thoroughly Methodistic CIRCULATION OF OUR LITERATURE, 45 literature — who can estimate the result on the benevolent enterprises and spiritual life of our Church ! The circulation of ■ the Berean Lesson Leaves compared with the average attendance of the scholars is relatively large; the Sunday-school Journal averages one copy for every two officers and teachers, and the Sunday-school papers one for every four scholars in our Sunday-schools. It is presumable that .most Sunday-schools are supplied with lesson-helps and papers of some kind ; hence, many have not those that are published under the careful su- pervision of the Church. If a Methodist Sunday-school should have Methodist teachers, it also should have Meth- odist lesson-helps and papers — not sectarian, but denomina- tional — those that uniformly and faithfully present the Methodist doctrinal view wherever the lesson contains a doctrine about which the denominations hold different views. The whole influence of a Methodist Sunday-school should be in harmony with the teaching of the Methodist pulpit and with the Church -life of the congregation, and this will be entirely so only when the literature of the school — the lesson-helps, the papers, the library-books, and the songs — are Methodistic in matter and spirit. The thorough denominational equipment of our Sunday-schools depends in large measure upon the practical interest of the preachers in the matter. There are few Sunday-school boards that Avill persist in using lesson-helps and papers from an irresponsible press after the pastor has presented the important reasons in favor of the trustworthy and su- perior publications of the Church. The Tracts of our Church have been carefully revised, new ones issued, and all put in attractive form, so the list furnishes what is needed to meet every kind of evangel- istic and pastoral work. The Discipline provides for their use in every pastoral charge and for the collection of means for their gratuitous distribution wherever opportu- nity offers. They can reach those who seldom or never 46 METHODISM AXD LITERATURE. hear the Gospel, and tell the story of the cross in homes iu which religious literature is unknown. Let pastors make their utility understood, and our people will provide means for their wider circulation. The increase in the sale of our books has not kept pace with the increase in the circulation of our periodicals. This may arise in part from the fact that books are necessarily more costly ; but is there not an opinion prevalent in many communities that the books may be dispensed with where there is a supply of papers? This is a capital, and too often a fatal, mistake ; valuable as Methodist periodicals are, they can not fill the place of our books, whether in the home or Sunday-school. With all the progress made by the secular magazine and newspaper, they at best furnish only a fragmentary literature, transitory in character as well as form ; numerous and popular as these have become, the press still teems with books, and public libraries are main- tained, solely because periodicals alone can not supply the wants of a reading and thoughtful people. This fact is not less marked in the field of religious literature, as is evi- dent from the number of books on religious and cognate subjects printed and sold, and as may be further seen by a comparison of religious books with religious periodicals, keeping in mind their respective scope, purpose, and pos- sible benefits. Methodist periodicals exert a potent influ- ence for good wherever they go, but every denominational interest requires that the books be circulated as well. Methodist books and periodicals together form the unit of Methodist literature ; they each have their mission and should have their place in every Methodist home, society, and Sunday-school. Why, then, is there a more active and general interest maintained among the preachers in the circulation of the periodicals than of the books? Some may underestimate the importance of religious books as means of edification; some may not consider how few persons are likely to pro- CIRCULATION OF OUR LITERATURE. 47 cure such books unless their attention be directed to them, and how limited are the opportunities of most persons to purchase them ; some may think that the periodicals are more directly helpful in the general work of the Church ; but, really, in most cases, does not the indisposition to push the sale of the books arise chiefly from a feeling that it is purely a business transaction? Have not many who were once quite active in this work become inactive because of this notion? Have not many spent years in the minis- try without offering to sell a book, because they have only thought of it as a secular matter, and have taken it for granted that the people regarded it in the same light? It is not a mere secular matter ; it involves some of the elements of business, just as does church building and the like in which the pastor usually is the most active person, and it is as eminently a Church-work. The Discipline dis- countenances every thiug that tends toward secularizing the ministry, but it makes it the pastor's duty to see that his society is supplied with books, as well as other Meth- odist literature. The preacher who labors to secure a Church library or a Sunday-school library, or offers the books for sale to the people, does so through a desire to serve the highest interests of those concerned. His motive makes it a pastoral, not a secular work. His chief aim is to do good to the young and old by bringing them into companionship with the best men and women of the past and present — those whose lives have blessed the world, and whose thoughts, treasured in the books, are the richest legacy of the Church. He is moved in this by the spirit of the true pastor, and thereby, as the Church rightly ex- pects him to do, brings into his own field of labor the un- dying inflence of what is strongest and best in the thoughts and deeds of the great and good. The amount of books sold show that not a few preach- ers appreciate and improve their opportunity of doing great good by inducing the people to supply their Sunday-schools 48 METHODISM AND LITERATURE. with libraries and their homes with good books. Other facts already stated show that not a few preachers are fail- ing to do what might be done, and in their fields there is a dearth of Church literature. Experience has demon- strated that the extent to which the people purchase books for their homes and Sunday-schools is usually determined by the preachers' interest in the matter. What would be the result in a single decade should all the preachers give to the circulation of our books only a reasonable share of their time and attention ? How much could and would be done in the organization of Church and Sunday-school libraries ; how few Methodist homes would there be with- out some of the books of the Church ; and as compared with the present, how much more securely w T ould our peo- ple, young and old, be guarded against a pernicious litera- ture by the presence of that which is pure and ennobling! The Book Concerns in New York and Cincinnati, owned and controlled by the Methodist Episcopal Church, form the largest denominational publishing house in America, if not in the world; they are the direct result of the far- reaching plans of the founders of American Methodism for the production and circulation of a Methodist literature. The facts show that this, the oldest of our connectional agencies, has kept pace with the general progress of the Church. Here she has the capital and facilities to pro- duce under her own supervision, all needful literature for her thirty-five hundred thousand communicants and Sun- day-school scholars. This literature is being produced in all necessary forms and in many languages. The extent of its usefulness depends upon the extent to which the books and periodicals are put into circulation, and this the Church, by her time-honored Wesleyan plan, has commit- ted to her preachers, those who are nearest to the people, who have their largest confidence and who may best under- stand their wants. J. M. WALDEN. WHY METHODISM PB1NTS. 49 IV. WHY METHODISM PRINTS. There is a providential reason why our Church is thor- oughly equipped for service. We believe that Methodism has by no means completed her mission. She is just en- tering upon her grand world-work. Fifty years ago " the people called Methodists" were simply tolerated by fellow- workers. The Church was organized as if no other Church cared to co-operate with her. We were compelled to pro- vide our own missionary, tract, Sunday-school, Church extension, aud Bible societies. The conduct of these soci- eties implied the printing-press. Inter-church toleration presently improved, so that the abolition of our Methodist Bible Society was expedient and safe ; but the Church is so large and her plans are so comprehensive that our sep- arate organization is as complete as if there were no other Church on the planet. This is defensible and philosophical, because providen- tial. Every Christian should thus hold himself prepared for all service, on the correct theory that God may at any moment call him to unanticipated duty in unforeseen directions. Consistent with the highest and frankest fra- y ternity towards all the hosts of Christianity, each separate Church should be equipped, like co-operating corps oVarmee, with infantry, cavalry, artillery, and munitions, and hold itself ready for instant independent yet related service. We love to speak of our Church as a child of Provi- dence. Nobody planned our body ecclesiastical in advance, as architects conceive a vast edifice before a stone is laid. Every one of our present vast departments of methodized 50 METHODISM AND LITERATURE. labor came as an original tentative hint to the men who asked God to give them generalship. Trial and experi- ment condemned some of our early devices, while the wiser items were approved by experience, and enlarged as God set his seal to the original conception. We boast not when we say that not even that huge engine of propagandism which gives coherence to Roman Catholicism in all lands is nearly so well organized as is our own Church machinery. Our comparative excellence lies in the fact that our sys- tem, as huge and commanding as it certainly is, has not a trace of absolutism in its genesis or later success. The entire organism is purely voluntary, and is indorsed and accepted by intelligent people because it succeeds on its merits. Those who doubt should look the facts over again before rendering a final adverse verdict. There is no manner of doubt that some people estimate their own Methodist Church too lightly, simply because they have not penetrated the providential theory of its rise and progress. Methodism -prints. There is no doubt of that fact. Why she prints is explained very naturally. John Wes- ley was a seer. When he was not praying or preaching, he was staring into the face of a printed page. Amid his prodigious labors for the Church, he did an immense amount of reading. Few men in literature have been such judges of books as was our founder. He knew the good by instinct, and repelled th©> bad book as an alert con- science rebukes advancing sin. The invented printing- press with its rude appliances came — but not by chance — in the very nick of time to make Luther's work possible. When God sent that greatest ecclesiastical event since the advent of Christ — Methodism — into the world, the im- proved printing-press and cheaper book made John Wes- ley's work practicable. Therefore, just as great railway magnates outfit their own "special cars," so Wesley fitted up his own private carriage that he might read comfort- WHY METHODISM PRINTS. 51 ably while he flew over the kingdom. Presently, dissat- isfied with books as they were, he began to write and re-write and edit books for his people. Next in order, he began to own presses, which he employed to carry help, suggestion, warning, and zeal to his rapidly multiplying societies. Some active minds then, as also in modern times, won- dered why Methodism did not content itself with what other people printed. When our Book Concern was in full operation nearly fifty years ago, it was proposed to abolish our Church presses and confine our reading to that which others would contract to print for us. Even now it is oc- casionally said that our Church might as well operate rail- roads and conduct banks as to own and superintend print- ing-offices. The suggestion would be valid if the financial results of railroading and banking and printing were the central thought and motive. We do print on the same philosophy that occasionally moves a Church or Sunday- school to charter a train for a specific excursion and for definite results. When a Methodist party makes its plans for a day, and wishes to control the hours of starting and return, and particularly desires to determine who shall be passengers and favored guests, it gees into the railway business, induced by the same motives that sanction the permanent existence of distinctive Methodist printing. We get a suggestive hint in the fact that two literary institutions in this country possess a catalogue of over seven hundred separate volumes of books written in oppo- sition to Methodism. We happen to know that this large list does not contain all extant anti-Wesleyan literature. These volumes were written under the stimulus of men who did not love our Church, and the physical fact of the printing proves that the kingdom of printing-ink must needs be taken by Methodist violence. Methodism was young, and Methodists were too poor to buy dear books written in their defense. A hundred considerations led 52 METHODISM AND LITERATURE. "Wesley to supply books from his English presses for our people, and equally led our early workers to organize printing facilities for American Methodists long before they began to build and dedicate houses of worship. We can not forget that the Frenchy flavor that tainted English society and literature after the restoration of Charles com- pelled Wesley to provide cleaner things for his people. The entire tide was against evangelical Christianity. If society and the press have pure features in this country, the credit must be shared with the influence of the Wes- leyan printing-presses which came to evangelize the New World. Scrutiny will sanction this broad claim. While we thank God, as Lincoln did, for all the Churches, we be- lieve that if Wesleyan influences were subtracted from the warp and woof of American civilization, the republic would be far less unlike the states of Europe, both in the instincts in its liberty and the tone of its society. Meth- odism came with the vanguard, and assisted quietly and almost unconsciously in shaping every campaign as the hosts flowed westward. Even then, as now, our power and influence were apparently more in the pulpit and on the platform ; but we believe the paramount influence was in the tract, leaflet, biography, hymn-book, and Scripture, which came from Methodist presses, and were read and read again when the itinerant was absent or asleep. We make this point coolly and confidently. Men, if asked to nominate the greatest of silent powers over modern mind, are apt to name the daily press of the republic. We are sure that the paramount power is in the hands of the weekly press, and claim that the weekly religious pres- is the potentate which the enemies of good would first strike down. Our claim is based both upon the larger number of issues of the weekly press and upon the clear-cut, inde- pendent, and better-toned deliverances of that press. In the interests of the very facts involved we make WHY METHODISM PRINTS. 53 this assertion. It is not true that the Church press is de- voted to dogma and is useless as an element in journalism for practical purposes. The average secular paper is con- fessedly devoted to a secular and competing purpose. It is the organ of a party or aspiring person. It seeks po- litical votes for political and party ends. As Christian citizens, we believe in God as the head of our nation, and, as our Father, he is regarded as the head of a particular family should be held by actual, loving children. If we are entitled to any respect, if we are ordinarily honest men and women, we dare not ask God to bless our na- tional American household unless we propose to sanctify his day, to make laws in harmony with his revelation, to discourage Sunday travel and riot, to limit and defeat the power of strong drink, to preserve the marriage relation, and to prefer pure men for public office. The facts are, while parties profess to respect the Churches, the whisky ring is practically more potent in nearly all States than is any single Church. Scarcely a single secular paper openly opposes the power of the slums and of the corrupt- ing saloon in party politics ; Sunday observance is sneered at by the average daily paper ; the most successful jour- nals and magazines dare not or care not expressly to de- fend evangelical doctrines, while the overshadowing uni- versities in the land openly teach nothing save that which discredits revelation. We do thank God for all Churches, and we honor their grand work ; but it remains true that we discharge the highest duties to catholic evangelicity by being sturdily true to the body in which God has cast our lot. The soldier serves best as artilleryman when he gives heart, soul, body, and substance to that arm of the grand army. The Church, as a Church, needs to fortify its schools and pulpits and presses as preparatory to the national struggle for truth and righteousness which is even now dawning upon us. 54 METHODISM AND LITERATURE. Passing, with an honoring salute and a " Thank God," all the Churches and all the other grand appliances in our own Church, we earnestly exhort every member to give room and heart to the magnificent press system which is the admiration of all sister Churches. Methodism is con- nectional. It prefers to administer in every locality in re- lations to Wesleyan world-work. The strong everywhere aids the weak ; the weakest man and the youngest Church are braced alike by relationship to the strongest and oldest. As a part of our system, we have books pledged to our Church in the name of the common King. We have a system of Christian Advocates which represent the most independent, progressive, alert, aggressive, and successful in modern journalism. They are a unit as "Advocates" of every thing " Christian." Some persons too hastily con- clude that, being " official," they are in bonds, and there- fore not "free." On the contrary, their very plan and surroundings make them the freest on earth. It is argued that they must please and praise the powers that be, or the editors will be deposed, and that, consequently, the bread-and-butter argument is too potent. Not so. The individual nominally "independent" paper is immediately sensitive to its subscription-list, which so quickly resents adverse opinion. It is not conscious that it has a broth- erhood of interlinked fellow-advocates to "strengthen weak knees." We know of not a single beneficent issue that has been carried in spite of the Church official press, or of a step in human progress that has not been grandly forwarded by our papers. In early days slavery was in some degree defended by the official papers ; but that came of their small numbers and the absence of Northern competing thrift in that particular. As between the dif- ferent official editors, no competition could be more thor- ough, and as between different systems the official editor can best afford to be personally independent. With re- spect to deference for the alleged powers that be, we make WHY METHODISM PRINTS. bold to doubt that " there be" any Methodist " powers" more powerful than the editors themselves. Our papers are already supported and patronized be- yond compare. It is no question whether, for the Church's rather than the papers' sake, there be not room for a new era of unprecedented Advocate-reading. We claim that no department of Methodist work is more successful than are our presses. Our papers keep pace with advancing popu- lation and national prosperity. Inferior prints cost a little less ; but when panic and hard times wither other ventures, the official paper goes straight forward, without increase of price or abatement of valuable contents. Our papers are entitled to patronage and Methodist favor because they are Methodist! In a manly, fair sense, the Methodist organ has a claim in a Methodist family as legitimate and valid as that held by a Methodist family in a Methodist Church. We are members one of another. Organization is as vital to an army as is powder. Methodist efficiency depends on glad loyalty to every item in Methodist methods. The man who sneers at the claims of individual Churches, and shirks specific obligation on the plea of his enlightened "catho- licity," has ceased to be valuable in any Christian work. As well might he desert his place in the organized line of battle, and go to shooting squirrels under pretense of serving his country. As well extinguish our light-house system on the sea-coast, and essay to save all mariners by burning tallow- candles held aloft by individual hands. The most devout man is useful in proportion to his knowledge of his just relations to his brethren. The man who reads is conscious that God is working mightily through the related, fraternal, co-operating Churches. From books he will gain the regulating philosophy, and from the paper he notes the progress of the visible king- dom. The man or Church that sees how God favors the Church yonder notes the employed means of success, and takes heart again. Our grand army should feel the touch 56 METHODISM AND LITERATURE. of individual marching elbows, and catch the inspiration of co-operating brotherhood. The argument that sanctions the wise introduction of Church printing-presses remains to defend and explain their continued employment. No problem is more vital to our Church than that which relates to the replanting of the old-time interest in the scheme in the hearts of our people at large. ARTHUR EDWARDS. OUR READING. 57 V. WHAT WE READ, AND WHAT WE SHOULD READ. We can tell more easily what we read than what we should read. Of making books and printing newspapers and other periodical literature, there is no end. The steam-press does its work speedily and well. It is a mighty agency for good and evil. Its leaves are not always for the heal- ing of the nations. It, however, preaches, teaches, prays, and sings. It has a thousand tongues and hands. It toils on and on, and day and night and Summer and Winter are all the same to it. The nations feed upon its words; kiugs and counselors fear it; and the tyrant trembles as he hears its fearful denunciations. It makes all professions, commerce, and labor contribute to its support. It reproduces for us the wisdom of the past, and lays by in store the results of the present for all future generations. The people read. b What do they read ? Literature, science, art; they also read politics, theology, and even, a few, metaphysics. Most of the people read fiction. All reading may be divided into two classes, — the solid and fictitious. Four-fifths, probably, read the latter. This conclusion is reached after considering the character of the books on sale in book-stores and the reports of custodians of public libraries. We do not here refer to school-books and reading in the line of the professions. The lawyer reads his text-books on law, the minister on theology, and the physician on medicine and surgery, while the merchant 58 METHODISM AND LITERATURE. reads the daily reports of the markets, and the agricultu- rist the prices of farm and garden products and pub- lications giving specific information in regard to their production. We ask, What do we read for amusement, pleasure, and of habit ? Only a few read the solid and the true, and not the ideal, fanciful, and imaginative. We call history, biography, geography, travels, works on art (such as painting, statuary, decorative, ceramic achieve- ments), and works on agriculture and science, solid. The- ology should also be included in this list. The publications of the Methodist Book Concern at New York and Cincin- nati, and those of other respectable publishers, may be found at prices within the reach of the poorest. All tastes are provided for, and may be accommodated in these rich depositories of wisdom. What better enjoyment can we have for a few hours each week, of an intellectual character, than reading the records of the past as given in the works of Kollin, Gib- bon (revised), Froude, Macaulay, and other standard his- torians of Europe, and those written in our own land by Hildreth, Prescott, and Bancroft? what better pleasure than reading the history of the Christian Church by Black- * burn, or of the Reformation by D'Aubigne ? Poetry comes under the head of solid reading when it is descriptive and instructive. What a list of acknowl- edged gifted ones could be given ! — Horace, Homer, Virgil, Chaucer, Spenser, Shakespeare, Milton, Young, Cowper, Pope, Watts, Wesley, Montgomery, Bonar; and Bryant, Longfellow, Whittier, Holmes, and many others who have sung sweetly and grandly. With the literary, scientific, religious, and artistic lore of the ages knocking for admission to our homes and hearts, w T e are guilty before God if we do not open to them. When we hear persons speak of history, travels, poetry, and the natural sciences as dry and uninteresting, we fail to understand the import of their words. OUR READING. 59 The daily and weekly newspaper should be in every home, due care being exercised that only the best enter. The world we live in is a great, active, progressive pres- ent, and only by reading a compendium of its doings can we keep pace with it. The Church is in the world, although not of it, and is moving forward, winning glori- ous conquests. Of its aggressive work, of its opposition, aud of its successes, we may read reliable and interesting accounts in our Church papers. The great majority of religious people read more or less fiction. A work is not always objectionable because it is " a novel," and we are not opposed to reading this class of literature as an amusement, provided the composition is good and a healthy moral tone pervades it. Fancy and imagination have much to do with the happiness of the mind, and an appeal to these is not nec- essarily wrong. If the controlling interest of a novel is love, it should not be condemned, for God is the author of conjugal love; and if the narrations and descriptions of it are pure and rational, and the ideal of it within the limits of fact, its contemplation may not only be a pleasure, but lead to happy results. It always needs the shaping influ- ence of Christian morals and restraints, and should be not only properly treated in literary productions, but in the pulpit and on the rostrum. Without the moral moulding of these influences, love becomes a degrading passion, not far removed from blind instinct ; with these, it gives dignity to the human form and elevation to the soul, creating an atmosphere of beauty in which to dwell. With this recognition of a natural desire for novel- reading, we must protest against the practice and tend- ency of the incoming generation. How few youths volun- tarily read history, science, biography, or poetry ! If they read history at all, fact must be diluted and attenuated with fancy to an extent that even the youthful reader is 60 METHODISM AND LITERATURE. compelled to ask, What is truth ? Because of this style of history, the names of the great and good in Church and State, by the most of our young people are considered no more historical than those of Sinbad the sailor, Robinson Crusoe, or Captain Kidd, the pirate. The young reader may ask, " Since you do not condemn novels, only those which are bad, how shall I know what is good or bad unless I read it ?" We do not find out what is poisonous in an apothecary's shop by tasting. This would be dangerous, and might prove to be a fatal mistake. It is not safe for a young person to select and read at will. But since the book -stores abound with novels, and they are peddled on every street-corner and on every train, and are found in abundance in some of our libraries, it may be best to give a few rules, the observance of which will be of great benefit, Do not read the cheap fiction- which is known as dime and nickel novels. They are, without an exception, pub- lished by unprincipled and base men, who only seek gain. The books are full of slang phrases, representations of bloody deeds, murder, theft, perjury, homicide, suicide, and horrible recitals in low, vulgar, and often obscene and profane, language. An examination of a large number warrants this statement. Ascertain from intelligent and cultured Christian men and women the names of good authors and of good books. A good man will not write a bad book. You can trust the opinions of our book agents and editors in the Meth- odist Episcopal Church. Not that we would limit to Methodist authors, but we would have our people receive the works that have gone under the review of the pure and cultured minds of the Church. We can not under- take in this chapter to give a list of the excellent authors whose interesting and often charming productions are on sale at the Methodist Book Concerns. OUR READING. 01 Works of fiction, even the best, are to be read as we take amusement. The rule should be to read solid litera- ture. The importance of this is evident when we consider how much there is to be learned by reading the best au- thors, and the brevity of human life. At least a dozen solid books to one of fiction should be read. Even this is too large a percentage of fictitious literature, if it causes a distaste for the solid. To form the habit of reading even the best novels is to stand on dangerous ground. The de- sire for this class of stimulants increases as the demand is fully met, so that the reader of fiction may become the victim of a morbid literary taste. Thus time is wasted, means misused, and talent brought into bondage. We hardly know which is to be pitied the more, the slave of novel-reading or of alcohol. Both stand in the pathway of life, and will inevitably lead their victims to moral death, unless rescued and redeemed by the merits of Christ. The persistent reader of novels is unfitted for the du- ties and realities of life. The leading desire is for more romance, more tragedy, deception, revenge, broken vows, and murder. Unless the cup is filled to the brim with these, it is not acceptable. The drinking of its contents never satisfies. This is excess, and brings sorrow. This kind of reading familiarizes with crime ; and, as a result, iniquity loses much that makes it repulsive. It weakens the sense of right and purity, so that temptation becomes formidable, and the power of resistance greatly weakened. Thus conditioned it is not unusual for individ- uals to become the subjects of unintentional imitation, and sin and ruin follow as results. We object to a very large proportion of light literature because it is written in a style that degrades the taste, and because it is usually illustrated by execrable art deformities, both in artistic execution and in the scenes described. Daggers, swords, guns, clubs, revolvers, fights, abductions, and all forms of crime are rudely portrayed. They often border on the G2 METHODISM AND LITERATURE. obscene, and would be so, were it not for the enforcement of the law. These pictures fasten themselves upon the youth- ful memory, and the regrets of after years will not erase them. They are specters haunting it through all the pe- riods of life. They are demons of darkness, pestilential with moral death. They are the conceptions of minds steeped in the odors of Gehenna. Much of crime is insti- gated by this class of illustrated reading. The testimony of one young man near the gallows could truthfully be said of very many suffering for crime, " The impure novel brought me to this." The approaches of evil, to be successful, must be grad- ual, and its true intention not apparent. It, like the cun- ning reptile hidden amid the beautiful foliage, first charms its innocent victim, and then devours. This serpent is in nine-tenths of the novels read by our youth. But what shall we read? The best answer we can make to this query is, Read the Bible; read any religious literature, but above all, read the Bible. The old poet well describes it : " If thou art merry, here are airs ; If melancholy, here are prayers; If studious, here are those things writ Which may deserve the ablest wit. If hungry, here is food divine ; If thirsty, nectar, heavenly wine. Read, then ; but first thyself prepare To read with zeal, and mark with care ; And when thou read'st what here is writ, Let thy practice second it. So twice each precept thine shall be, First in the book, and next in thee." Read carefully that which is recognized by the Chris- tian Church as the best in history, biography, science, art, and general and religious literature. Is it not the duty of parents and guardians, with the strong hand of authority, if need be, to protect their chil- OUR READING. 63 dren and wards from the poisonous literature which the sordid cunning of the enemies of virtue and religion thrust into our homes and schools? Let these retreats of our youth be cleansed as by fire ; let the godless, vile stuff be given, whenever found, to the flames. Children read, and they should ; and interesting and wholesome productions should be furnished them. Much of their success in after life depends upon the selection made for them. Upon this foundation they build for the future, and the question must be settled by the parent whether the foundations of character and life shall be laid in the sand of low sensualism and skepticism or on the solid granite of purity and eternal truth. N. B. 0. LOVE. 64 METHODISM AND LITERATURE VI. PERNICIOUS LITERATURE. It is as much the duty of parents to watch the books and papers read by their children as it is to be careful concerning the food they eat. No parent will knowingly give adulterated or poisonous food to his children ; nor will any wise parent allow them indiscriminately to gor- mandize on all sorts of edibles. He prefers to select their food for them, and to train them in those habits of eating which distinguish the civilized man from the savage. Yet many parents, wise in this, are not equally wise in selecting moral and intellectual nourishment. Their chil- dren are allowed to read whatever they can find, and it is sometimes boastingly said of them, " They read every thing they can get hold of." This is regarded as a mark of precocious intellect. It is rather evidence of extraor- dinary folly, as much so as if they were to eat every thing they could lay their hands on, wholesome or poisonous. The country is flooded with books and papers for chil- dren and young people. They are to be found not only in book-stores, but on the news-stands in the streets, and are peddled in the railway-cars. They are made attract- ive, not so much by good paper, printing, and pictures — for many of them are very inferior in this respect — as by taking titles, bold head-lines, and representations of excit- ing scenes. They are filled with blood-curdling stories, which tell of adventures with Indians, cannibals, pirates, highwaymen, burglars, murderers, smugglers, and other vile personages. These stories are illustrated by pictures in which the rifle, the pistol, and the knife are prominent. PERNICIO US LITER A T URE. 65 Lightning, storms, earthquakes, fires, water-spouts, wrecks, and every thing else horrible or grotesque in nature, are depicted. Ferocious beasts and still more ferocious human beings are seen in every possible position where hatred, revenge, or blood-thirstiness can place them. These stories thus illustrated are educating thousands of the children of the present generation. They cultivate a vitiated taste, so that history and truthful narratives and ordinary travels have but little attraction, lacking, as they must, the highly spiced flavoring of these more pop- ular stories. They prepare their readers for deeds of foolish adventure and of crime. Every now and then we read of youngsters from nine to twelve years old starting away from home, without parental knowledge, to hunt buffalo or to kill Indians. They have caught the fever from the popular and exciting stories they have read. Of course, these little fellows soon come to grief, and are glad to get home again ; but there are those a few years older and richer in resources who are not so easily discouraged. These have an ambition to imitate the bold burglars, smugglers, and pirates of whom they have read, and they do not hesitate to rob where they have the chance, and then retire to some recess in the woods, or some cave in the hill-side, to enjoy their ill-gotten booty. The police in New York City, a year or two ago, unearthed a nest of these young thieves, who had a hiding-place under one of the city wharves, where they deposited their booty and lived luxuriously. They were lads of from twelve to fifteen years of age, and were imitating the ex- ample of the older villains of whom they had read. The story of the Arkansas Railway train-robbers is still fresh in the public mind. These robbers were young men from eighteen to twenty-three years old, and they admitted that this sort of literature had been their inspiration. They were tried, convicted, and sentenced to seventy years imprisonment. An Arkansas paper states that one 6 66 METHODISM AND LITERATURE. of them, not long after entering the prison, became de- mented, the severity of his sentence having produced de- spair. After speaking for awhile of his father, mother, and sisters, among whom he imagined himself to be, his face suddenly grew dark, and, waving his hands wildly, he began to mutter broken sentences. 11 Seizing the bridle- rein, he sprang upon his antagonist's horse, and dashed away," said he. ' ' He 's reading one of those wild books that we used to steal away and devour," said one of his companions in crime. The poor, crazy fellow continued his recitation as fol- lows : "'Halt!' he exclaimed, drawing a revolver, and leveling it at the head of young Horace. Slowly and sadly they left the church, and walked along the worn path to the rude grave of Lawrence. Standing near the stone placed there by the Indian, Casper and his fair com- panion — " And he muttered incoherently, the sentence dying away with a deep groan. Suddenly he raised him- self, looked intently toward the door, and slowly sank back, dead. Thus, in the unconscious declarations of his dying hour, he bore witness to the nature of the mental stimulant which had gradually poisoned his soul and brought him to a felon's end. There is a kind of vile literature, too infamous to be particularly described, the sale or which is forbidden by law, though the trade is carried on secretly, in spite of law. The sensational books and papers which are pub- licly exposed for sale create a morbid taste, which finds its gratification in these baser publications. They are ad- vertised extensively, though secretly, sometimes by means of circulars sent by mail, sometimes by advertisements of an apparently innocent character inserted in the daily papers. Occasionally even the religious press is thus used, unknown by editors or publishers, as the following fact will show : PERNICIO US LITER A TURE. 67 Several years ago a friend of the writer saw in a relig- ious periodical an advertisement of a beautiful toy, which could be obtained by sending twenty-five cents to a certain Eastern city. He sent his money, and obtained the toy for his boy, a lad twelve years old. So far every thing was innocent and unsuspicious. But with the toy came a circular recommending a tobacco-pipe purporting to have certain advantages over ordinary pipes. As he did not care to have his boy use a pipe he kept the circular for himself, and began to wonder what would come if a pipe were sent for. He did not experiment in this direction ; but having occasion, a few weeks after, to visit the city from whence the circular issued, he consulted a friend, a government official, who told him what his boy would have probably received if he had sent for a pipe. With the pipe would have come a circular recommending a book; and if this book had been ordered, a circular con- cerning another book would have been sent, until, by this gradual method of advertising, the vilest publications issued would have been brought to his attention. Some of these circulars were given to our friend by this officer, and were afterward shown to the writer. The immoral character of the publications they advertise would clearly appear if we should mention their titles. This is only one of many means devised by the devil to scatter the seeds of vice, that they may one day grow up and produce a fearful harvest of desolation. Parents should know what reading their children have. The question should not simply be, What will please? but, What will profit? If pleasure and profit can be combined, it is well ; but pleasure without profit should be avoided. No sensible parent would permit his children to eat col- ored candies merely because they are pleased with the brilliant hues ; for he knows that this brilliancy but ccn ceals the subtle poison. Even our Sunday-school libraries need close inspection. 6n METHODISM AND LITERATURE. There are such libraries where the great majority of the books will be found to consist of novels, and very many of them of the trashiest sort. The taste for unwholesome literature is created in the very place where, above all others, there ought to be none but the healthiest influences. Those who use such libraries have no taste for useful read- ing. Whatever of good they may get from the study of the Bible is neutralized, in part at least, by the books they take from the library. There need be no danger feared from our Sunday- school libraries if the provisions of our Discipline are faithfully carried out. Its language is sufficiently clear: " It shall be the duty of the preacher in charge, aided by the superintendent and the committee on Sunday-schools, to decide as to what books shall be used in our Sunday- schools." (Discipline, 257.) Where this duty is faith- fully discharged, there is very seldom any ground for complaint. In many instances, however, the selection of library-books is left to a committee, appointed without any regard to the above-named requirement of the Discipline. Very often this committee consists of persons who are no judges of books, who will buy any thing that is " cheap ; " who are attracted by bright bindings and pictures and taking titles, and who thus, with the best intentions, oft- times buy a lot of worthless books which ought to go back to the paper-mill, or be thrust into the fire. Our families and our Sunday-schools should be pro- vided with a literature of the best and purest kind, so that their taste shall be cultivated and their spiritual nature improved. Above all, special pains should be taken to keep out every book or paper of an immoral or a merely sensational character. J. M. FREEMAN. INDISCRIMINA TE NO VEL -READING. 69 VII. THE EVILS OF INDISCRIMINATE NOVEL- READING. " A novel was a book Thrce-volumed and once read ; and oft crammed full Of poisonous error, blackening every page; And oftener still of trifling, second-hand Remark, and old, diseased, putrid thought, And miserable incident ; at war With nature, with itself and truth at war; Yet charming still the greedy reader on, Till done he tried to recollect his thoughts, And nothing found but dreaming emptiness." Although there are some noble exceptions, which I would by no means include in the following estimate, still the general tendency of novels is to evil. The average novel deals largely in tJw marvelous, and so puts a false coloring upon human life. Every one knows, who knows any thing in regard to this class of books, that they are, for the most part, but a compilation of startling adventures, strange coincidences, and hair-breadth escapes. The common life of mortals is an every-day affair, dealing with sharply defined realities, and as far removed as can be from the " romantic." But this popular literature aims to throw as fine a web of fancy and romance around every thing and every character as is possible ; and those novels which are strictly true to life, whose heroes, like Miss Mu- lock's "John Halifax, Gentleman," meet with no strokes of fortune save such as are the legitimate results of virtue and industry, are pronounced insipid and dull by the mass of novel-readers, no matter who wrote them, or what the 70 METHODISM AND LITERATURE. moral — no matter how masterly may be the delineation of life and character. An unnatural spice of the unaccount- able, the strange, will alone meet the demands of this per- verted taste ; and he who is the most skillful in preparing this mixture is, of course, the most popular. Writers of this class commonly represent every-day, good young men as dull and tiresome to a young woman of spirit, while pirate heroes are invariably frank, generous, attractive, and open-hearted ; so our novel-reading girls come to prefer pirate heroes to good young men. The flat, pointless tales of Peterson, Waverly, etc. , go to the other extreme of improbability, and delineate effortless lives, made up of love passages, picnics, parties, etc, inclining their young readers to be satisfied with such events, and to aim at nothing higher. In either case the young mind is unfitted for the common events and the practical duties of real life. The habit of novel-reading will inevitably enervate the manhood and dwarf the mind of its victim, and give him a disrelish for the common, but really great and grand, re- sponsibilities of our existence. The world wants men and women, not sickly sentimentalists ; it wants those who can rise above childish pursuits, and live in regions of lofty thoughts and worthy deeds. But the habitual novel-reader can not be such a character. He lives, like the opium- eater, in a sort of dream-land, and the realities of life fail to call forth his energies. Many a young man, after be- coming mentally narcotized by this kind of reading, imag- ines himself under the influence of a sort of destiny. He lives so completely in the atmosphere of romance that he imagines it to be somehow or other connected with his own history ; and with a listless scorn he looks upon the com- mon fortunes of men. He feels lifted above that dead level of life where industry and energy are necessary to success, and expects to be borne, by some sudden wave of good fortune, to the position he covets. So he comes to INDISCUIMINA TE NO VEL - RE A DING. 7 1 be, what the world least wants, a man of dreams rather than a man of deeds. Or, if he escapes this mental Scylla, on the other side yawns a moral Charybdis which is sure to ingulf him. As he studies these false characters — that with, perhaps, one or two noble qualities combine so many that are ignoble — first he admires, then he copies. Heading the adventures of men who are represented as having an extensive knowledge of the world, he gradually gets dissatisfied with his present surroundings, and begins to look for a change. Laboring under a sort of fascina- tion, he ventures into the broad and beautiful road that invites him. He passes through scenes of revelry and vice, and, wild with the boyish notion that he is "learning the world," he rushes on from evil to evil, until he is ruined by the wine-cup, the gambling-table, and the house of her whose " steps take hold on hell" Facts are our witnesses here. I well remember the thrill of horror that went through my young heart when I was told that a class-mate of mine had committed suicide by hanging himself to the limb of a forest-tree. He was a notorious novel-reader, of a brilliant but romantic turn of mind, and, as might have been expected, when his trunk was examined, on a pile of the worst kind of French and English novels was a note ascribing his rash act to disappointment in a love affair with a silly little coquette of sixteen. A young man who was recently hanged for murder as- cribed his downfall to the influence of the vilest kind of novels, which he was allowed to read when eight or nine years old. " If good books had been furnished me," he said, " and no bad ones, I should have read the good books with as great zest as I did the bad ones. Persuade all persons over whom you have any influence not to read novels," was the parting message of this young man to his brother. The chaplain of Newgate prison, in London, in his an- nual report to the lord mayor, referring to many fine- 72 METHODISM AND LITERATURE. looking young men of respectable parentage, in the city prison, says that he discovered " that all these young men, without one exception, had been in the habit of reading those cheap periodicals which are now published for the alleged instruction and amusement of the youth of both sexes." Indiscriminate novel-reading hardens the heart and perverts the sympathies. The young woman who sobs over the suffer- ings of some imaginary character, which never had an ex- istence save in the waste chambers of the author's brain, will spurn from her door the real hungry and naked — will gather her robes closely about her, lest they brush against the mean and wretched whom she meets. She will mourn over the death of some imaginary fair one, the fancied victim of lust and deceit, but will turn with horror and loathing from her who, the real victim of treachery, "Mad from life's history, Glad to death's mystery ; Swift to be hurled Anywhere — anywhere Out of the world,"— dies with a lacerated and broken heart — dies in shame and despair. And why is this? Simply because real misery has not the charm of romance thrown around it, Self-abnegation and charity are literally ideal virtues, if, indeed, they are virtues at all. The morbid mind, accustomed to over- wrought scenes of misery, has no interest in that which comes with the chill of reality rather than the warmth of imagination. Such persons have so often befooled their emotive natures that they have become stupid, and do not respond to the common suffering of common humanity. Novel-reading will greatly diminish, if not take away altogether, the horror which the virtuous feel against vice and crime. Almost all that is shocking in vice is com- bined in these books with some noble quality, so as to make INDISCRIMINA TE NO VEL -RE A DING. 73 the hero, on the whole, an attractive character. The thief, the fortune-hunter, and especially the rake, are often pre- sented as successful, elegant, and happy. Novels abound in immodest and profane allusions or expressions. Wan- tonness, pride, anger, hatred, and unholy love are the ele- ments of most of them. Indiscriminate novel-reading cultivates bad passions. In this case, " 'T is distance lends enchantment to the view." And as the beauties of imagination and the semblance of refinement are thrown around sin, the inexperienced mind is captivated ; by degrees the baser passions are aroused and become dominant, the heart is corrupted, and the whole life is defiled. Under pretense of illustrating social life as it is, the reader is made familiar with its worst and most exceptional developments. Under these favorable circumstances the poison works until the latent fires of sin begin to burn. Fuel is added to the flames ; fiercely and more fiercely they rage, until reason and judgment and conscience are consumed, and the man himself is destroyed. How many a young man, ruined by open and secret sin, and an outcast from virtuous society; how many a young woman, crushed and heart-broken with her burden of shame, spurned by those who should soothe, and cursed by those who should comfort, — could point to the false views of life given by indiscriminate novel-reading as the influence that led them astray, and the terrible power of such reading to arouse the passions as the influence that ruined them. I tell you this is no fancy sketch. On every side of us the subtle fiend is touching and blasting immortal souls. Men teach their children the pure truths of Christ's Gos- pel, and with a father's watchfulness and love shield them from corrupting and immodest society ; but, because par- ents are indifferent to this subject, at the same time the 7 74 METHODISM AND LITERATURE. loved daughter — the idol of the household — sits quietly at the fireside, drawing her ideas of society from such novels, and taking into her young heart falsehoods that shall poison all her future life. Under a pretense of photo- graphing real life, the young are let into the vile secrets of police courts, and made familiar with the foul details of every social sin. They gain a knowledge of human frailties — a precocious wisdom, which "makes them rotten before they are ripe." And this evil is not confined to second and third rate novelists. It sullies the otherwise fair fame of many a first-class writer of romance. For example, take Charles Eeade, .a man of noble genius, who, at the first, gave us some works that were powerful, pure, and healthy. In his later productions, through un- worthy attempts to cater to this vile, popular taste, he has descended to the lowest level of indecency. It needs but a glance at his books called "Griffith Gaunt" and "A Terrible Temptation" to show that they are not fit for cir- culation in virtuous homes. There is a grain of comfort for us in the fact that not only religious periodicals, but leading secular papers and magazines cry out against such a prostitution of this author's great powers. Some of Vic- tor Hugo's stories, so extensively circulated in this coun- try, as well as some of Mr. Swinburne's poems, outrage every principle of decency and humanity. And these are, in most respects, writers of the highest order. Indiscriminate novel-reading tends to destroy the taste for other and more substantial reading. Familiarity with pop- ular fiction gives a disrelish for simple truth, and engen- ders the pernicious habit of reading merely for amusement. This destroys the love of sober investigation ; it renders science, history, biography, critical essays, and books of travel (in which the healthy mind takes so much delight), tedious and unattractive ; it dwarfs the memory and reas- oning powers, and makes the imagination morbid and unhealthy by constant excitement. INDISCRIMINA TE NO VEL - READING. 75 Let a young man or woman accustom the mind to this unnatural excitement, and it will soon be evident that, when it is not under the influence of that stimulant by reaction, it sinks to such an insensible state that solid read- ing can not arouse it to interest. The mind is very like the body in this respect. Let a man accustom himself to the use of stimulants (such as wine, brandy, or tobacco), and soon he will be utterly unable to arouse himself to great exertions, and to call out all the energies of his nature without the aid of such stimulants. On the contrary, if he accustoms himself to a strong, healthy diet, without unnatural stimulants, he can at any time command his entire energies, bringing them to bear upon the accom- plishment of his object. So the mind of the habitual novel-reader is debauched by the wine, the brandy, and the tobacco of literature ; and it will take no interest in a book that does not contain these elements; it can not be aroused to activity in any other way. 1 have the proof of this in the experience of every confirmed novel-reader. The modern novel, with its false history (and how often we hear of history manufac- tured for the occasion by the novelist quoted as real his- tory!), its false biography, and its false morals, is an enemy to true mental culture. Most novel-reading is anti-religious in its tendencies. I know there is, among a certain class of literary or semi- literary minds, a sympathy for these moral defects, and they sneer at our demand for a respectable deference to religion in all literature as illiberal and puritanic. If there is any thing detestable, it is this cant about "orthodoxy" and "fanaticism" on the part of those who sneer at the sublime faith of Paul, of Calvin, of Wesley, of Newton, and of Washington, as a mere superstition, and who applaud those flings which men of more genius than grace make at religion, in their books, as marks of smartness and spirit. Such sentiments, however, show a 76 METHODISM AND LITERATURE. weakness of the head only equaled by the corruption of the heart. Popular novelists seldom, if ever, represent the sublime triumphs of Christianity, its purity, its heavenly mission to men ; but, on the contrary, if they notice it at all, they only show you its perversions, and in place of a really re- generate heart and sanctified life, they give you the hypo- crite. Many of them use religion as a cloak, to impart the greater perfection of cunning to their vilest characters. If they wish to represent a deceitful, wily villain , they will endow him with great pretensions to piety as a finishing touch to the picture. Or, if they assume to give a true Christian character, they make him a sort of weak-headed " goody," who only excites your laughter or your pity. I make these charges plainly and understanding]}-, and am fully prepared to substantiate them. Even the best romance-writers, whose works are classics in our language, are not entirely free from this charge. Charles Dickens, whose works of fiction are pronounced so healthful to mor- als, aud who really displays a noble sympathy with the poor and oppressed, is an example. Take his story of "David Copperfield." In this, the step-father of David, aided and abetted by a maiden sister, is guilty of all man- ner of meanness. He breaks the hearts and destroys the lives of two wives in succession, and treats little David with the greatest cruelty. This step-father and his sister are described as professedly pious and careful in all their out- ward religious duties. David's schoolmaster, who combines all that is tyrannical to his scholars with unfaithfulness as a teacher, is also described as a pious man. In short, all the characters of the story who awaken the abhorrence or the contempt of the reader are described as professors of religion, while nearly every worthy and attractive character is represented as holding himself aloof from religion, with an assumed superiority, or, at least, is shown to be wholly indifferent to it. INDISCRIMINA TE NO VEL -R EADING. 77 What reader of Dickens does not recall with disgust the saintly, conscientious villain Pecksniff, or the punch- loving preacher, Stiggius? In Scott's most popular tale of "-Rob Roy," a stern, cruel, unreasonable parent is represented as being made so by his religion, and one of the most grasping, dishonest business characters ever represented is a zealous Presby- terian. Now, although such writers as Scott and Dickens may, in general, be valuable, and, under proper circumstances, may be read with profit as literary masters, yet this charge of religious misrepresentation can be maintained against them, and is a blemish upon at least a part of their works. But the wrong does not end here. From such writers these contemptible third-rate scribblers take their tone, and, as imitators always reproduce the dejects rather than the excellencies of their models, by a natural process this evil has multiplied itself in every direction, and has blos- somed out, and gone to seed, in the periodical trash already referred to. Now, what will be the tendency of all this? Inevita- bly the young reader will learn to despise religion and to shun the Christian. When the novelist associates religion with the lack of all genial affections, with avarice and meanness, and connects irreligion with all that is socially or intellectually attractive, the inexperienced youth will come to regard religion as at variance with a true literary taste and as a matter of no moment to a man or woman of culture. Says an eminent writer, in speaking of three very pop- ular novels: "There is little hazard in v asserting that these three novels have done more to undermine the be- lief in a change of heart and spiritual communion with God, and to destroy reverence for the Bible, than has been done in the same time by Thomas Paine's ' Age of Reason.' We are reluctant to admit it. We know how 78 METHODISM AND LITERATURE. many of the admirers of these authors (and what genial minds are not admirers of them?; will revolt at the charge. We can not help it. We acknowledge all their excellencies, bat the charge of irreligion is a valid one. It is also a fundamental one; and, in the estimation of a right mind, it is a fatal one." Such, then, are the tendencies of this extravagant lit- erature ; and overrunning the reading world with such trash is only preparing the popular mind for worse forms of literary and moral corruptions. We begin already to reap the terrible consequences. A few years since such obscene illustrated papers as are now thrust in our faces at every railroad depot and every news-stand would have been impossible; but now the public mind has become so demoralized by these influences of which we have been speaking, that such literary rottenness is quietly tolerated. Unless men awake to this subject, soon the flood-gates of hell will be opened upon us, and Churches and schools and all good influences will be utterly powerless to stay the tide ot destruction. Solve the problem as you may, these evils of which I have spoken are the unequivocal result of indiscriminate novel-reading. Modify and evade the conclusion as you will, it is the same. This is a serious, a fearful question, that urges itself upon our attention with an increasing importance. It i3 a question that will tax all our wisdom and all our piety. How shall we read novels? Dr. Curry says: "While we are free to declare our conviction that, for the ,most part, fictitious literature is miserably poor provender for the mind, we can also attest the real value of some novels that we have read." None of us, probably, are prepared to say that under no circumstances should a work of the better kind of fiction be read. It may sometimes be a recreation, and the delineations of manners and customs in romance are INDISCRIMINATE NOVEL- READING. 79 often helps to details in history. Many works of fiction may be read with safety, some even with profit. But the very greatest care is necessary, in reading even the best of novels, lest too great familiarity with such literature should relax the mind, pervert its powers, and disqualify the heart for the active virtues of life. In attempting to give advice upon this point I am fully aware of the difficulties in the way, not the least Of which is the disposition of the young to take advantage of a reasonable license in certain things, and decidedly overdo the matter. But I am impressed with the fact that an indiscriminate condemnation of novel-reading is not wise ; such a course is too extreme. Such a course will cut off the ears of our } T oung people, so that they will not listen to what we have to say upon this subject. I am also impressed with the importance of careful advice to the young, by way of instructing their inexperi- ence and leading them to a wise course as regards light literature ; and the end to be secured is at least worthy the prayerful, thoughtful attempt. In offering some advice upon this subject, let me say : 1. Read no paper or magazine which is mainly devoted to stories and novelettes. 2. Never allow children to read novels. 3. Read works of fiction only as a recreation and relax- ation from severe mental labor. If you have but little time for reading and study, spend none of it in novel- reading. 4. Read only classics — those works of fiction that are of acknowledged merit, and are legitimate in their concep- tion and aim. Seek the advice of some person of good judgment, experience, and mental training in making your selections. 5. Read only such fiction as you feel is worth reading for its own sake, such as you feel you can read over again, at some future time, with both pleasure and profit. 80 METHODISM AND LITERATURE. 6. When you find that your limited reading of fiction interferes in the least with your mental or moral duties, then let it alone altogether. 7. Finally, that Ave may be right and act right in this important matter, let us seek a consecration of mind and heart to the Master's work. Let us look for the baptism of spiritual power, that we may so lift up Christ before the world that the old and the young will be drawn from sin to holiness, from Satan to the Savior. I would address those who are in the morning of life, especially those who have become addicted to this perni- cious habit. Let me urge you to think earnestly upon this subject. It concerns you intellectually and morally. It concerns your success in life and your safety in eternity. Beware, O beware of this evil ! It will poison your mind; it will ruin your soul. God purposes better things for you. The Church and the world want cultivated minds as well as regenerate hearts; and, with all your op- portunities, you have no time to spend on trifles, or in doing that which will have to be undone. All about you are the materials for a perfect intellectual temple. May you be so divinely directed in your choice that every stone you place in the walls may be worthy and enduring, while the whole shall constitute a fitting support for the top- stone, which shall be perfect love to God and men ! E. C. HOUGHTON. BIOGRAPHICAL LITERATURE. 81 VIII. METHODIST BIOGRAPHICAL LIT- ERATURE. PART I. Two thousand years ago, Terence, the great Roman poet, in embodying counsel for one who desired his philos- ophy of life, said: " My advice is, to consult the lives of other men, as he would a looking-glass, and from thence fetch examples for his own imitation." The late Thomas Carlyle suggested that " history is the essence of innumer- able biographies," and declared that " there is no heroic poem in the world but is at bottom a biography, the life of a man." The lives of those who have lived, not for themselves alone, but for humanity, unconsciously to our- selves influence our minds, govern our pursuits, and shape our destinies. No good or great man liveth to himself ; his influence, not limited to a narrow sphere, circulates through all the great channels of society. The great biog- rapher Plutarch wrote parallel lives. His biographies run in pairs, each pair placing before the reader two human characters, which, thrown upon different circumstances and a different age, had yet certain affinities. In Methodist biography, as the brief survey which Ave propose to pre- sent may demonstrate, there are closer affinities than the Plutarchiau characters, and yet an almost infinite variety in one comprehensive unity. "The biographies of the chief men of Methodism," says the Rev. Dr. Curry, " have the two great excellences of being valuable and trustworthy repertoires of our eccle- 82 METHODISM AXD LITERATURE. siastical history, and in presenting in concrete and living forms our peculiar doctrines of Christian experience." The chief office of biography, then, is to perpetuate what might otherwise pass away, to illustrate what might otherwise become uncertain, and ultimately fade into deep obscurity. It is to embalm the great and the good, so that they can not perish from the earth ; to enable us to gather within a single room a large part of the illustrious spirits of the past, to commune with them at our own pleasure, and even to become companions of their lives. In our Meth- odist biographies we converse with the illustrious dead of our communion by means which they themselves have fur- nished to us, or by narratives which, to general ability of treatment and to minuteness of significant detail, have added the charm of sympathy with the departed and the power to awaken and diffuse it. These characters of ex- alted Christian worth constitute an impressive heritage of the Church and the world. Until a comparatively recent period the Methodist Church in America did but little in this department of lit- erature, and nearly all the works of biography published by the Book Concern were reprints of European produc- tions. It was so in the early history of Methodism in England ; and must necessarily be so. The earlier preach- ers of the heroic age of the Church have other demands upon their energies, and it is only when they have made history that they can afford to pause long enough to record it. How brief is the mention made by Mr. Wesley in the Minutes of the death of his helpers! The " Cyclopaedia of Methodism*' says: "The first references to the death of ministers were matle by Mr. Wesley in 1777, and are remarkable for their brevity. They are as follows : 1 John Slocomb, at Clones, an old laborer, worn out in the service. John Harrison, near Lisburn, a promising youth, serious, modest, and much devoted to God. William Lumley, in Huxham, a blessed young man, a happy witness of the BIOGRAPHICAL LITERATURE. 83 full liberty of the children of God. William Minethorp, near Dunbar, an Israelite indeed, in whom there is no guile.' In succeeding years these notices were somewhat longer. But when the sainted Fletcher died, who was so remarkable for his personal piety, his intellectual power, and his force as a writer, the only notice is, ' John Fletcher, a pattern of all holiness, scarce to be paralleled in the century.' So fully had the example of Mr. Wesley influenced the preachers that, at the time of his death, in 1791, the only minute was the following: 'It may be ex- pected that the conference make some observation on the death of Mr. Wesley; but they find themselves utterly in- adequate to express their ideas on this awful and affecting event. Our souls do truly mourn for their great loss, and they trust they shall give the most substantial proofs of their veneration for the memory of their most esteemed father and friend by endeavoring with great humility and diffidence to follow and imitate him in doctrine, discij^line, and life.'" But, however "diffident" his brethren may have been in reference to these obituary notices, it was otherwise with the great masses beyond them, and subsequently even with themselves. It has been estimated that, until the year 1848, portraitures of Wesley and Methodism, and works on that subject, from the penny tract to the volume of high pretensions, appeared at the rate of about four pro- ductions a year, from the time of the organization of the society in 1739, and these publications have immensely exceeded that proportion during the last thirty years. It is almost impossible to refer to the ecclesiastical system without referring to its founder, and this, too, in more or less of a biographical sense. But the first distinctive biog- raphy of Mr. Wesley was written in 1791, and bore the following title : " Memoirs of the Late Rev. John Wesley, A. M., with a Review of his Life and Writings; and a History of Methodism, from its Commencement in 1729 84 METHODISM AXD LITERATURE. to the Present Time. By John Hampson, A. B." (Sun- derland. 3 vols., 12mo.) According to My Ws "History of the Methodists," the biographer entered the Wesleyan ministry in 1777, his father having become one of John Wesley's assistants twenty-two years previously, and they both left the connection in 1785, Mr. Wesley, in filling up the Deed of Declaration, having omitted both their names from that document. It was the author's intention to pub- lish his work during Mr. Wesley's life-time ; but this was not done. It has been said of this book, that "as a doc- umentary Life it has no value ; its incidents, manufactured for the occasion, are of a coarse character, and its crit- icisms are of the most petty kind." The narrative of John Wesley's last days by Miss Eliz- abeth Ritchie, who was present at his death, was printed and circulated throughout the connection immediately after his decease, and is the chief source whence Wesley's biog- raphers derive their information respecting the closing scenes of his life. The second Life of Wesley appeared in 1792, an octavo of 642 pages, printed in London, with the title, " Life of the Rev. John Wesley, A. M., including An Account of the Great Revival of Religion in Europe and America, of which he was the First and Chief Instrument. By Dr. Coke and Mr. Moore." This volume was published under peculiar circumstances. Mr. Wesley had named these two of his brethren and Dr. Whitehead as his liter- ary executors ; but a misunderstanding arising between Dr. Whitehead and the conference, the volume was alto- gether written by the two w T hose names stand in connec- tion with its authorship. Dr. Whitehead, who had been one of Wesley's itinerants for five years (1764-1769), and who had afterward rejoined the Methodists, and was a local preacher at the time of Mr. Wesley's death, had received the manuscripts and other documents necessary to the work, and had entered upon the work of preparing the BIOGRAPHICAL LITERATURE. biography. In an evil hour he determined to hold the copyright, for which it had been suggested to him he could receive two thousand pounds. The temptation proved too great, as he was only to receive two hundred guineas for his labor. He refused to give up what he had already written, amounting to 128 pages, and the other literary executors were compelled to proceed without all the data requisite for the work. But the book was prepared by them, was printed, and before the next conference was held ten thousand copies had been sold. Coke and Moore's life of Wesley must be distinguished from Moore's " Life of John and Charles Wesley, and Memoirs of the Family," as the latter was published in 1824. It is a valuable contribution to the history of Methodism ; but it is, in some places, tinctured with his own peculiar views, and especially with those of them which affected his personal position. The first volume of Dr. Whitehead's Life of Wesley appeared in 1793, and the second in 1796. As it was written during a period of alienation from his former friends, and at a time when his mind was engrossed in a desire to vindicate himself from the just suspicions his con- duct had aroused, it was hardly to be expected that the book would be unbiased in its character. Dr. Curry says that, " having the rod in his own hands, he did fail not to apply it, thus making his Life of Wesley a scourge to both him and his followers." Several editions of the book have since been published : one in Dublin in 1805, another in Boston in 1844, and another in Philadelphia in 1846, to the last of which the Rev. Dr. T. H. Stockton furnished an Intro- duction ; and a more recent one in New York (1881). The next biographer of Mr. Wesley was Robert Sou- they, poet laureate of George III, whose work originally appeared in 1820 in two volumes, reached a second edition, and was reprinted in New York the same year. In the third edition Mr. Southey purposed to make some import- 86 * METHODISM AND LITERATURE. ant changes in the tone of the work, having been con- vinced by Alexander Knox that he was in error in ascrib- ing ambitious motives to Mr. Wesley ; but the third edition did not appear until 1846, after Mr. Sou they had been dead three years, when it was edited by his son, the Rev. C. C. Southey, and no specific mention is made of his father's altered views. The next year (1847) an American edition was published by Harper & Brothers, edited by the Rev. Daniel Curry, and several editions have since ap- peared, the latest and best of which, carefully edited by " E. W. ," is that of Bonn's Standard Library, published in 1876. Mr. Southey was unfitted to be the biographer of such a man as Wesley ; not from any literary inability, but from inability to sympathize with his wonderful spirit and undertaking. Southey looked at things from a Church- man's point of observation ; he had no personal acquaint- ance with experimental godliness, if, indeed, he had any belief whatever in it, and all, that Mr. Wesley deemed vital and saving in Christianity he coolly explains away on philosophical principles. It must be admitted, how- ever, that in collecting material for his biography he ex- plored every accessible source of information, that he does justice to Mr. Wesley's great abilities, to his attainments as a scholar and his fine temper as a man and as a con- troversialist, and that he acknowledges the extensive moral good effected by his instrumentality. In his private cor- respondence with Wilberforce he says: "I consider him (Wesley) as the most influential mind of the last century, the man who will have produced the greatest effects cent- uries, or perhaps millenniums, hence, if the present race of men should continue so long." Yet his book has been variously judged by those inside as well as outside the pale of Methodism. Dr. Stevens speaks of its " question- able purpose and total misapprehension of the providential design of Methodism." Samuel T. Coleridge, who was his brother-in-law, says the book is "unsafe for all of unsettled BIOGRAPHICAL LITERATURE. 87 minds," notwithstanding he had found no book so unfailing a source of enjoyment. Bishop Heber, in the Quarterly Review for 1820, says that "few persons could have been found, we think, better qualified for the undertaking than Mr. Southey has shown himself to be;" and Lord Macau- lay, in his Essays, says: "The Life of Wesley will prob- ably live. Defective as it is, it contains the only popular account of a most remarkable moral revolution, and of a man whose eloquence and logical acuteness might have made him eminent jn literature, whose genius for govern- ment was not inferior to that of Richelieu, and who, what- ever his errors may have been, devoted all his powers, in defiance of obloquy and derision, to what he sincerely con- sidered as the highest good of his species." Mr. Southey's work was followed almost immediately by Richard Watson's " Observations on Southey's Life of Wesley," which is distinguished throughout by great force of reasoning, and contains many passages of superior beauty and eloquence. In 1823 appeared Dr. Adam Clarke's " Memoirs of the Wesley Family." This work was written in the short space of four months, and after its publication the copy- right was presented to the Wesley an Book-room. Dr. Clarke had, however, long entertained die idea of writing a biography of the founder of Methodism himself, and at the conference of 1820 had been officially requested to do so. The widely read memoir of the poet-laureate was then making a great impression on the public mind, and a number of influential persons, who dissented from the worldly-minded and sinister views of the character of Mr. Wesley presented in that biography, urged him, by earnest solicitations, to acquiesce in the request. Among these, Mr. Butterworth offered him fiye hundred pounds for the copyright. Nor was Dr. Clarke averse to the task, but greatly inclined to undertake it. He had, indeed, a feel- ing, produced by some incidents in conversations with him 88 METHODISM AND LITERATURE. while living, that such a thing would be agreeable to Mr. Wesley himself ; and he had been for many years accumu- lating materials for that purpose. The project, however, issued not in a distinctive Life of the founder of Method- ism, but in a memoir of the family from which he sprang. This was subsequently reprinted, with a large accession of matter, in two volumes. The London Watchman said of it: "To those who have read the Memoir of the Wesley Family, no recommendation of ours will enhance its value. To those, on the contrary, who have .that pleasure in re- serve, we can promise an exquisite treat." It is now pub- lished in a single volume at the Methodist Book Concern in a 12mo edition. The Life of Wesley by Richard Watson appeared in London in 1831, and was republished in New York the same year. It reached its sixth edition in London in 1839. This book, says Dr. Stevens, " has been the pop- ular memoir" of the great founder of Methodism. It was not merely a condensed review of Mr. Wesley's life, deduced from the works of his former biographers, but contained a large portion of original matter. The influence of Mr. Wesley's labors and plans upon public morals and happi- ness, and the conduct which he pursued in reference to the established Church, are largely and ably discussed in this volume, and the charges of inconsistency, of schism, and of other evils, so often urged against Jbim, are effectually repelled, while due respect is shown to the national Church, for which Mr. Watson cherished a sincere regard. The book is impartial, genial, judicious, and a devout recog- nition of the hand of Providence in the great Wesleyan movement. It well supplies the place of a species of phi- losophizing^ even if it were of less objectionable type than that which is furnished by Dr. Southey and Isaac Taylor. An edition of this Life was issued by the Southern Meth- odist publishing house in 1857, and an abridgment of Wat- son's Life of Wesley (" Ahwal i Padri Wasli Sahib") was BIOGRAPHICAL LITERATURE. 80 prepared by Rev. H. Mansell, and published from the Methodist Episcopal press in India. In 1851 appeared Isaac Taylor's " Wesley and Meth- odism," and was republished by the Harpers in 1852. Editions were also issued in England in 1863 and 1865, and the North American Review said of it that "in point of style and method it takes precedence of the entire series of Taylor's productions." The Methodist Quarterly Review, on its appearance, remarked: "In this work Mr. Taylor abandons the line of spiritual pathology, and takes to that of criticism and prophecy." It elicited "An Apology for Wesley and Methodism, in Reply to the Misrepresentations of Isaac Taylor and the North British Review,'' by Rev. R. Macbriar, the second edition of which was published at Edinburgh in 1852. In 1856-7 a Life of John Wesley by J. Beecham was published in London in connection with the eleventh edi- tion of Wesley's works, and in 1868 appeared in France, from the pen of Matthieu Lelievre, "John Wesley, sa Vie et son CEuvre" The next year (1869) an article on "Wes- ley and Methodism " was published in the Revue des Deux Mondes, from the pen of the eminent French statesman, Charles de Remusat, in which he says : " The temptation, and also the facility, for presenting the subject to the pub- lic were set before me by reading an excellent Life of Wesley by Pastor Matthieu Lelievre. The want of a pop- ular Life of John Wesley had been expressed among the French Methodist Churches, and this work was written in obedience to an order of their conference." In 1870-71 appeared in London, from the press of Hod- der & Stoughton, " The Life and Times of the Rev. John Wesley, M. A., Founder of the Methodists," by the Rev. L. Tyerman, in three large volumes. This was repub- lished by Harper & Brothers in 1872. The author says in his preface : 1 1 For seventeen years materials have been accumulating in my hands. My own mass of original 8 90 METHODISM AND LITERATURE. manuscripts is large. Thousands of Methodist letters have been lent to me. Hundreds, almost thousands, of publi- cations, issued in Wesley's life-time, and bearing on the great Methodist movement, have been consulted. Many of Wesley's letters, hitherto published only in periodicals, or in scarce books, have been used ; and not a few that, up to the present, have never yet appeared in print." He says he has tried to make Wesley his own biographer, and has not attempted what may be called a philosophy of his life. He adds: "The work has been arduous; but it has been a work of love. I have not done what I wished, but what I could." The Methodist Quarterly Review (Oct., 1871) said of this book: " By the power of accumulation, by the incorporation of characteristic extracts, and often of entire documents, by abundant details, animated by his own real interest in his subject, he has massed together, in lucid order, a body of materials to which the future his- torian will ever resort, and upon which a class of enthusi- astic readers will dwell with interest. He has done upon the whole a great and good work, for which abundant thanks are due him. But the standard life of Wesley is still a desideratum." Mr. Tyerraan had previously (1866) written the " Life and Times of the Rev. Samuel Wesley, M. A.," and in 1873 the Harpers republished his" Oxford Methodists," being memoirs of Clayton, Ingham, Gambold, Hervey, and Broughton, with biographical notices of others. In the same year (1870) appeared "John Wesley's Place in Church History," by R. Denny Urlin, and "John Wesley and the Evangelical Reaction of the Eighteenth Century," by Julia Wedgwood. Both books were written from the stand-point of the Established Church, but they add nothing to the biography of Mr. Wesley. In Miss Wedgwood's preface she thus refers to another of Mr. Wesley's biographers: "I can nut include in this list the work of the Rev. Thomas Jackson — by far the most inter- esting Methodist biography of the Wesleys — without a BIOGRAPHICAL LITERATURE. 91 brief allusion to an interview with this venerable man, from which I derived a sense of the vitality of the system of religion represented by him, which the following record, being wholly occupied with the past, could not attempt to embody." In 1874 the Rev. Dr. J. H. Rigg, principal of the Wesleyan Training College, Westminster, published his work entitled, ''The Living Wesley as he was in his Youth and in his Prime." Dr. Rigg had previously written "The Principles of Wesleyan Methodism" (1850), and in that work had exhibited a remarkable grasp of intellect. In 1851 appeared his " Wesleyan Connection and Congrega- tional Independency Contrasted." In a review of the " Living Wesley," Dr. Whedon expresses regret that Ty- erman could not have been the collector of facts, and Rigg the biographer of Wesley. He also instituted the following comparison between the two authors : " Tyerman gives facts as crude and uncouth as he finds them, with- out the slightest capacity for their interpretation. Few men ever undertook history with as little of genuine his- torical ability. Mr. Rigg understands the true import of facts ; he portrays character with truth and life ; his style is fresh and pictorial, and he would have given us the Wesley the world is longing to see. We have read noth- ing on the subject surpassing these graceful pages." Dr. Rigg is also author of " The Relations of John Wesley and Wesleyan Methodism to the Church of England." Numerous other biographies of Wesley, or works bear- ing on his life, have been published from time to time. Many of these have been the offspring of controversies, ecclesiastical or religious, pertaining to some particular period, and have been, consequently, ephemeral. Among those worthy of mention are the folio-wing : Prof. W. C. Larrabee's "Wesley and his Coadjutors," a series of graphic sketches of the prominent events in Wesley's wonderful career, with notices of the more remarkable of 02 METHODISM AND LITERATURE. his co-laborers (1859); Rev. J. B. Wakeley's "Anecdotes of the Wesleys," a work of which Dr. M'Clintock, who wrote the introduction for it, said: "Mr. Wakeley was happily inspired in the conception of this book, and the execution of the task has been felicitous* (1869) ; Rev. Edwin L. Janes's "Wesley his own Historian: Illustrations of his Character, Labors, and Achievements, from his own Dia- ries," a volume which Zions Herald declared to be "the best book of the season ; the mightiest man of ten centu- ries lives over his own life in these animating pages" (1871); and in 1881 Rev. R. Green's "John Wesley" (London, Paris, and New York), "a very admirable pop- ular biography of the great reformer of England." George Whitefield was one of the original "Holy Club," at Oxford, co-operated with Wesley for a time in evangelical labors, and afterward became the founder of the Calvinistic branch of the Methodists. Numerous biog- raphies have been written, the first being published in 1772, two years after his death. It was from the pen of the Rev. John Gillies, D. D., minister of the College Church at Glasgow. A second edition of this book, with large additions and improvements, was issued in London in 1813, and in 1854 it was published in Philadelphia. It was also reprinted at Lexington, Ky., in 1823, from the third London edition. The "Life of Rev. Cornelius Winter," by William Jay, was published in London in 1809, and Southey says, "this volume contains a much more interesting account of Whitefield than is to be found in any Life of him that has yet been published." Among other biographies of him are the following: "Life and Times of Rev. George Whitefield," by Robert Philip, D. D., (1838) ; by J. R. Andrews (1864) ; by Rev. D. A. Har- sha (Albany, 1866) ; " The Prir.ce of Pulpit Orators," by Rev. J. B. Wakeley (New York, 1871) ; and in 1876 the Rev. Luke Tyerman published "The Life and Times of the Rev. George Whitefield," a work of twelve hundred BIOGRAPHICAL LITERATURE. 93 pages, published in two volumes, for the materials of which the author "spared neither time, toil, nor money." It is the best biography of Whitefield extant. Like Wesley, he has been variously regarded. Garrick, who delighted to hear him, said that he could make his audience weep or tremble merely by varying his pronunciation of the word Mesopotamia. Sir James Stephen, in the Edinburgh Re- view, thus sums up his character and abilities : "From the days of Paul of Tarsus and Martin Luther to our own, history records the career of no man who, with a less alloy of motives terminating in self, or of passions break- ing loose from the control of reason, concentrated all the faculties of his soul with such intensity and perseverance for the accomplishment of one grand design. Whitefield was a great and a holy man ; among the foremost of the heroes of philanthropy ; and, as a preacher, without a superior or a rival." Lord Bolingbroke, in his life of the Countess of Huntingdon, says that he was " the most extraordinary man in our times. He has the most com- manding eloquence I ever heard in any person ; his abil- ities are very considerable ; his zeal unquestionable ; and his piety and excellence genuine — unquestionable." When preaching Whitefield's funeral sermon Mr. Wesley spoke of his Journals thus: "For their artless and unaffected simplicity they may vie with any writing of the kind. If Mr. Whitefield has left any papers of this kind, and his friends account me worthy, it will be my glory and joy to methodize, transcribe, and prepare them for the public view." This work has been done by Dr. Wakeley. The Kev. John Fletcher, whose original name was De la Flechere, and whose first religious exercise after ordina- tion was to assist Wesley in administering the sacrament at West Street- Chapel, was afterward very closely identi- fied with the Methodist movement, and his life is of the most exemplary character. Southey says that Wesley looked to him at one time as the fittest person to act as 94 METHODISM AND LITERATURE. his coadjutor, and succeed to as much of his authority as could be deputed to any successor. "The Life of the Rev. Jolm William De la Flechere," compiled from the Narrative of Mr. Wesley, and other authentic documents, particularly the "Biographical Notes" of the He v. Mr. Gilpiu, was published in London in 1817, and reached its eleventh edition in 1839. It was also published, edited by Dr. T. O. Summers, in Nashville, in 1857, and is now published at the Methodist Book Concern in a 12mo edi- tion. In 1786 a Life of Fletcher was written by Archi- bald Maclaine, D. D., the translator of Mosheim's " Ec- clesiastical History." Dr. E. Williams, in the Christian Preacher, says he was "one of the holiest men that the Christian Church has seen in modern times." A " Me- moir of Rev. John Fletcher" was published by Rev. Joseph Benson, in 1830. Fletcher's works contain an unanswerable defense of the doctrine of original sin, and of the Godhead of Christ ; with a " Portrait of St. Paul," which every minister should carefully study. "His writings are distinguished by uncommon clearness and strength of argument, an uninterrupted flow of sacred eloquence, and a benevolence of temper which has seldom been equaled." In 1806 appeared the " Life and Writings of the late Rev. William Grimshaw T , A. B., Minister of Ha worth, in the West Riding of the County of York. By William Myles." There had previously (1799) been published his " Memoirs," by the Rev. John Newton, rector of St. Mary Wolnooth, but this work all but ignores Mr. Grimshaw's connection with the Methodists. In 1859 the biographer of Jabez Bunting, in speaking of Grimshaw, exclaimed : " Would that some Birks, Hamilton, or Arthur would collect, arrange, and publish the materials still available for the biography of this intrepid churchman and Meth- odist!" At that very time, the Rev. R. Spence Hardy was preparing a work entitled " William Grimshaw, In- cumbent of Haworth, 1742-63," which was published in BIOGRAPHICAL LITERATURE. 95 1860. Mr. Hardy has rescued from oblivion the memory of this zealous laborer whom Dr. Stevens denominates " the catholic-minded Grimshaw, evangelically the arch- bishop of Yorkshire," and the volume forms a most cap- tivating and instructive chapter in the history of early Methodism. Charlotte Bronte's biography has, in our time, made his dwelling a place of fashionable pilgrimage; but a greater attraction to devout minds of that lone stone village on the Yorkshire moors is that there dwelt one of the bravest and most humble spirits that ever graced the Christian Church. In 1815 the < ' Life of the Rev. Dr. Coke," by Jona- than Crowther, was published. Two years afterward (1817) appeared another Life of Coke, by Samuel Drew, of St. Austell, Cornwall, which was republished in New York in 1837. In 1860 the Rev. Dr. Etheridge pub- lished his work on the same subject. Dr. Coke was un- questionably one of the mos> useful men of his eventful and stirring age. While he lived he commanded a large amount of public respect, and when he died it was felt that the world had lost one of: its ornaments and bene- factors; the consequence was, the two ample narratives of Crowther and Drew, the first of which consists mostly of official documents illustrative of Dr. Coke's publi* service, with the personal recollections of the author, and the other, prepared with great care, from the private papers of Dr. Coke, but written with the intent of producing an elegant and scholarly narrative, and lacking in deep sym- pathy with the burning ardor of Dr. Coke's missionary operations. In consequence of these two comparative failures, for nearly half a -century there was a yearning in the Methodist mind for a volume that should exhibit Dr. Coke as he really was in intellect and feeling, and give a full detail of the vast amount of evangelical labors which he was called to accomplish. Such a volume came at last from the pen of J. W. Etheridge, who produced a 96 METHODISM AND LITERATURE. narrative worthy of being placed by the side of the admir- able life of Adam Clarke, by the same author. Dr. Coke was originally a clergyman of the Church of England, and a member of the University of Oxford ; he resigned his curacy in 1776, and thenceforward connected himself with Mr. Wesley. Inheriting a considerable fortune, he gave more money to religion than any other man of his age, clergyman or layman ; voyaged and traveled more for the evangelization of the world than any other man of the last century, not excepting Whitefield or Wesley; the "greatest man of his century in ministerial labors," as Bishop Asbury, himself one of the greatest, declared ; the first Protestant bishop of the Western Hemisphere ; the founder of powerful missions in England, Wales, the West Indies, Africa, Asia ; and died himself a missionary on the Indian Ocean, and was buried beneath its waters. In 1816 the " Life of Samuel Bradburn," by his daugh- ter, Eliz. W. Bradburn, was published in London. Mr. Bradburn was for many years esteemed the Demosthenes of Methodism, and is placed by Dr. Wakeley among her "Heroes." A man of gigantic stature and of noble person, with an extraordinary amount of mingled humor and pa- thos, Dr. Adam Clarke said of him : ' k I have never heard his equal. I can furnish you with no adequate ideas of his power as an orator. We have not a man among us that will support any thing like a comparison with him. An- other Bradburn must be created ; and you must hear him for yourself." The biographer of Jabez Bunting says: "The biography of this extraordinary man, attempted by a daughter immediately after his decease, under circum- stances of great discouragemement, has yet to be written." Iso name in the history of Methodism, after John Wes- ley's, is more widely and honorably known than that of Adam Clarke. "His Commentary on the Scriptures," says Allibone, " will carry his name to the remotest gen- eration." A copious life of Dr. Clarke, including a curious BIOGRAPHICAL LITERATURE. 97 and characteristic autobiography, appeared in Loudon in 1832-34, in three volumes, 8vo, edited by his sou, Rev. J. B. B. Clarke, and was republished by the Methodist Book Concern in New York in 1833. Various members of his family, as well as some of his most intimate friends, had frequently and urgeutly pressed Dr. Clarke to publish, or prepare f ji* publication, a memoir of himself. This he steadily refused until he learned that a life of him was even then in preparation. This induced him to undertake its preparation, and in June, 1819, he writes from Liver- pool : " And thus have I brought myself on in my journey through life to the ninth year of my age ; and unless death do stop me, I shall not stop in it till this be finished. I have Avritten it in the third person as to the subject, and in the first person as to the narrator." On the 3d of July he writes: "I go on but slowly with the Life; and yet I get on. A few pages more might terminate what may be called my initial and religious history ; and here I might leave it, for all the purposes of illustrating either God's providence or his grace. My literary life, as it may be called, is another thing, and belongs more to the world than to the Church of God ; and I question if ever I shall attempt it." The remainder of his life was written by his daughter, Mrs. Richard Smith, from data furnished her by Dr. Clarke himself. But the book never supplied the wants of the general public as a life of Dr. Clarke. Too bulky for general and cheap circulation, and too minute and prolix for easy reading, it affords a repository of facts for the biographer rather than a biography itself. "The Life and Labors of Adam Clarke, LL. D.," was also writ- ten by Rev. Edward Hare; and in 1843 appeared "Adam Clarke Portrayed," by Rev. James Everett. The Rev. Dr. Deems has also written his life. But Adam Clarke, the conscientious and pains-taking student; the various scholar; the preacher, careful, plain when most profound, and al- ways evangelical, pointed, and earnest ; the diligent pastor ; 9 08 METHODISM AND LITERATURE. this great, colossal figure, whose bold outline and fine pro- portions can never be hid, has been placed by Dr. J. W. Etheridge on a fitting pedestal, and fixed in its true posi- tion, conspicuous in the gallery of connectional heroes. His Life of Adam Clarke appeared in Loudon in 1858, and was republished by Carlton and Porter in 1859. In this work Dr. Etheridge evinces that first requisite of a biographer, a true and hearty sympathy with the subject of his work, in a high degree. He discrimiuates well amid the vast mass of extant material, selecting the salient points of Dr. Clarke's varied career, and presenting them clearly and boldly. The American edition says: "Most of all is the work valuable as the history of a true and earnest Christian life, simple and modest in its profession, but manly and robust to the highest degree in its realities." The Christian Preacher said : " Dr. Adam Clarke has done more to promote the popular study of the sacred books in England than any other man whatever ; aud at the same time he has carefully applied them to the advance- ment of personal godliness." In 1820 was published a "Memoir of the Life and Ministry of William Bramwell," written by Rev. James Sigston, an old and valued friend, and a minister of the United Methodist Free Churches. This book has had an immense circulation both in England and America, and is still a popular work of Methodist literature. For more than thirty years Bramwell was one of the most successful preachers of Methodism — a revivalist, in the best sense of that term. Dr. Stevens says: "The records of Method- ism are crowded with examples of saintly living ; but from among them all no instance of profounder piety can be cited than that of William Bramwell." Another "Life of William Bramwell," by Thoma-s Harris, was published in 1855. The biographer of Jabez Bunting speaks of " his deep piety and fervent zeal," and says: "A biography might still be written of him which should exhibit his ex- BIOGRAPHICAL LITERATURE. 99 ample to the imitation of the Methodist people, without, on the one hand, any enthusiastic eulogy of his defects, or, on the other, too much effort to conceal them." In 1822 the "Memoirs of the Rev. Joseph Benson," by James A. Macdonald, appeared in London, and after- ward in New York (8vo), and in 1840 a Life by Richard Treffry, which was also republished in New Yoik. Adam Clarke calls Mr. Benson " a sound scholar, a powerful and able preacher, and a profound theologian." Besides his useful and elaborate " Commentary on the Holy Scriptures" (sixth edition, 1848), he was the author of several works on Methodism, such as "A Defense of the Methodists" (1793) ; " A Farther Defense of the Methodists" (1793) ; " A Vindication of the People called Methodists" (1800); and "An Apology for the People called Methodists" (1801). His deep and matured piety, great usefulness, sanctified learning, and disinterested zeal in giving the whole of his literary labors to the connection of which he was a member, procured for him the profoundest respect and most cordial affection, which extended beyond his own denomination. Very few men have been better read in the Greek Testament, and few commentators have given so clear an exposition of it. But it was in the pulpit that Mr. Benson brought those gifts and graces to bear upon the great end of all, the salvation of souls. While he preached, the scholar and the peasant bowed in common before the majesty of truth, which, in plain, unadorned English phrases, awoke them as with the thunders of Sinai, or melted them as with the voice from the cross. His sermons were attended, not only by the common clergy, but by bishops of the established Church. That great and good man, the Rev. Richard Cecil, greatly delighted to to hear him. He said that Mr. Benson seemed like a messenger sent from the other world to call men to ac- count. "Mr. Benson," says Robert Hall, "is irresistible, perfectly irresistible." A masterly delineation of his char- 100 METHODISM AND LITERATURE. acter, from the pen of the Kev. Dr. Bunting, appears in the Wesleyan Magazine for 1822. Mr. Benson was also the author of "Memoirs of Peard Dickinson," and several other biographical volumes. In 1829 appeared a " Memoir of the Life and Ministry of Rev. John Summerfield," by John Holland (8vo, New York), with an Introductory Letter by the poet, James Montgomery. Mr. Summerfield was one of the most elo- quent pulpit orators that has ever appeared in America; yet James Montgomery, who read some of his discourses in manuscript, observed, " The sermons are less calculated for instantaneous effect than for abiding usefulness." His Life was also written by Rev. W. M. Willett, and pub- lished in Philadelphia in 1857. Such was his peculiar and chastened eloquence that persons of all denominations and of all classes and professions in society flocked in crowds to hear him, and his services were sought for on all popu- lar religious occasions. He ran his race speedily, like the torch-bearer in the Grecian games, reaching the terminus with it still blazing. In the same year (1829) was pub- lished the Life of Rev. Freeborn Garrettson, written by Dr. N. Bangs. This is one of our best biographies, not only precious to the Church as a memoir of one of her □oblest preachers, but also valuable as a contribution to the history of Methodism. Freeborn Garrettson, says the North American Review, was " one of the most promi- nent and successful of the first generation of Methodist preachers." In 1834 was published the " Memoirs of the Life and Writings of the Rev. Richard Watson," by Rev. Thomas Jackson, which was republished by the Methodist Book Concern in New York in 1841. A generation has passed away since Richard Watson, author of the Theological Institutes, in the very prime of his strength, finished a course of honor and usefulness peculiarly his own, and which none who ever knew him aspired to emulate. But BIOGRAPHICAL LITERATURE. 101 neither his own published works, nor the funeral discourse delivered by Jabez Buutiug, nor eveu Mr. Jackson's com- prehensive Memoir, convey to the reader unfamiliar with Watson an adequate conception of the majesty of his per- son, demeanor, speech, and entire intellectual and moral character. As a preacher, his genius soared as high as that of the great Chalmers, and with a steadier wing ; he had more of profundity and breadth than the eloquent Robert Hall ; and with his pulpit exercises was mingled a strain of solemn and often pensive sentiment, reminding one of John Foster's best compositions. In 1838 appeared in London a "Life of Mrs. Mary Fletcher, of Madeley," wife of the Rev. John Fletcher, by Rev. Henry Moore. This work was subsequently published by the Book Concern, and has met with an extensive circu- lation. Samuel Burder, in his "Memoirs of Eminently Pious British Women" (1815), says: "Had she lived in the apostolic age she would have taken rank among the presbyteresses or female confessors of the primitive Church. Had she been born in a Roman Catholic country she would doubtless have been enrolled among the saints of the calendar." In the same year (1838) also appeared in London "The Life of the Rev. Alexander Kilham," for- merly a preacher under John Wesley, but in 1797 the founder of the Methodist New Connection. The work appeared anonymously, but it is understood to have been written by Black well. PART II. In the year 1839 appeared " A Sketch of the Life and Travels of the Rev. Thomas Ware," of the Philadelphia Conference, elected Book Agent in 1812, and a " Memoir of William Carvosso," written by himself, and edited by his son, Benjamin Carvosso. In 1879 the Rev. Dr. Wise published at the Methodist Book Concern, "A Saintly and Successful Worker," suggested by the experience and 102 METHODISM AND LITERATURE. labors of William Carvosso. He was sixty years a class- leader iu the Wesleyan Connection, and his memoir is one of the Methodist classics. His whole life was a wonder- ful illustration of the power of Christian faith, and his visits, prayers, and exhortations were the means of hun- dreds of conversions. His own record is that of a simple, earnest, and devout Christian. In 1840 was published the "Life of Bishop Emory," by his son, Rev. Robert Emory, author of the "History of the Discipline." Bishop Emory was characterized by "accuracy of scholarship, broad and comprehensive views, fertility of genius, and administrative ability." His writ- ings were mainly controversial, among them being a "De- fense of Our Fathers" (1827), and "The Episcopal Con- troversy Reviewed" (1838). In 1840 also appeared the " Life and Times of the Countess of Huntingdon." The anonymous author of this work has abused the Wesleys in many false details in his sketch of the separation of Wesley and Whitefield. In 1857 the Methodist Book Concern printed "Lady Hunt- ingdon Portrayed," published anonymously, but now known to have been from the pen of Prof. Z. A. Mudge. He has clothed the narrative with no ordinary grace of style. The subject of it, though remotely connected with the royal family and moving in the highest circle of aristocratic life, frequented the Moravian societies in London, and at the separation of Wesley from them, co-operated with the Methodist party. " Her Calvinistic opinions led her to patronize Whitefield when he separated from Wesley, and her talents, wealth, and influence placed her at the head of Calvinistic Methodism." The first distinctive biography of Charles Wesley, the hymnist of Methodism, was written by the Rev. Thomas Jackson, and published in London in 1841, and in 1844 it was republished in New York, slightly altered. Previous to that time his biographies were written in connection BIOGRAPHICAL LITERATURE. 103 with his brother John, Whitehead having in 1793, and Moore in 1824, written the " Lives of John and Charles Wesley." These were followed, in 1849, by the "Journal of Charles Wesley," edited by Jaekson, with selections from his correspondence and poetry, and an Introduction ; "The Poet Preacher," by Charles Adams, D. D. (1859); Rev. John Kirk's " Charles Wesley, the Poet of Method- ism " (1860); Rev. Frederick M. Bird's "Charles Wesley, Seen in his Finer and Less Familiar Poems" (1867) ; and George Stevenson's " Memorials of the Wesley Family" (1876), a work pronounced " invaluable," and made up of papers originally in the possession of Rev. Henry Moore, but never used by him. The Wesleys issued fifty-seven publications of hymns, of which Charles Wesley composed over four thousand. Bird calls him " the prince of En- glish hymnists," and James Freeman Clarke says " for the union of love and light, spiritual insight and poetic free- dom, there is nothing to be compared to the best hymns of Charles Wesley." In 1842 was published "The Life of the Rev. Wilbur Fisk, D. D. ," written by the Rev. Dr. Hoklich, and in McClintock's "Lives of Methodist Ministers" there is a sketch of Fisk by the Rev. O. H. Tiffany. Dr. Holdich was his chosen biographer, and this Life " is a deeply in- teresting portraiture." Dr. Fisk may be pronounced the founder of the educational provisions of New England Methodism, and in the " Centenary Memories," published in The Methodist, it is said that when he entered the min- istry in 1818, " there was not a single institution of any note under the patronage of the Church. . . . The North- ern and Eastern Conferences united to found the Wcsleyan University at Middletown, and Dr. Fisk naturally, and without a rival, was chosen its president in 1830. . . . And when, in 1836, he was elected bishop, he declined the office." He had previously declined the episcopal office in the Canada Conference, to which he had been elected in 104 METHODISM AND LITERA TUBE. 1828. "As a preacher," says McClintock and Strong's Encyclopaedia, " few surpassed him in eloquence, none in fervor." Dr. Whedon says, "His friends have compared him for his gentle piety to Fenelon ; but it is certain that when aroused he could assume something of the im- perious type of Bossuet." In 1847 the Rev. William Reilly published in London his "Memorial of the Ministerial Life of the Rev. Gideon Ouseley," which was republished . by Lane & Tippett, in New York, in 1848. The author w T as requested by the Irish AVesleyan Methodist Conference, in 1839, to prepare these Memoirs, but the work did not appear for several years afterward. In 1876, Rev. Dr. Arthur, author of "The Tongue of Fire," wrote a Life of Ouseley, which was published in London and New York. The minutes of the conference characterize Ouseley as "the most dis- tinguished, efficient, and successful Irish missionary ever employed by our religious community," and Dr. Stevens says he " will be forever recognized as the Protestant apostle of Ireland." Thousands among the Roman Cath- olics listened to his ministrations, and the fruit of his labors are still abundant. In 1848 the Rev. David Dailey, of the Philadelphia Conference, published a book entitled "Experience and Ministerial Labors of the Rev. David Smith," which he compiled chiefly from a journal kept by Mr. Smith. It is a record of a wonderful series of Gospel triumphs. In the same year also appeared from the Southern Methodist press "The Life and Times of the Rev. Jesse Lee," the apostle of Methodism in New England. It was written by his nephew, the Rev. Leroy M. Lee, D. D. (recently de- ceased), who realized some difficulty in its preparation. Jesse Lee left a very copious journal of his life and min- isterial labors, and these were given to the Virginia Con- ference, and by that body placed in the hands of a commit- tee to be prepared for publication. In the burning of the BIOGRAPHICAL LITERATURE. 105 Methodist Book Concern in New York, in 1836, the man- uscripts of Mr. Lee, which had been deposited there for safe keeping, were entirely destroyed. But the " History of the Methodists" (1809), written by Jesse Lee, con- tained many important passages of his own personal his- tory, and the story of his labors and triumphs in New England, constituting one of the most interesting periods of his life, was detailed at length in Dr. Stevens's ani- mated " Memorials of the Introduction of Methodism in the Eastern States." A brief and rather meager Me- moir of Jesse Lee, by Kev. Minton Thrift, was published in 1823 ; but this work was not only unsatisfactory to the immediate friends of Mr. Lee, but it disappointed the expectations of the whole Church. At one period Mr. Lee filled the office of chaplain to Congress, and in 1800 he received a tie vote for bishop on the ballot preceding that which elected Whateoat by a majority of two. In 1850 Judge McLean, of the Supreme Court of the United States, published a " Sketch of the Life of Kev. John Collins, late of the Ohio Conference." Mr. Collins was one of the pioneer preachers of the West, and preached, in 1804, the first Methodist sermon that was ever preached in Cincinnati. In 1854 the same author, turning aside from the preparation of two large volumes of the " Statesman's Manual," wrote and caused to be pub- lished a "Sketch of Rev. Philip Gatch " (Cincinnati, 18mo). Dr. Sprague, the eminent Presbyterian minister, and au- thor of the " Annals of the American Pulpit," says of the author of these books: "Judge McLean was, during his whole life, a Methodist ; but a Christian of nobler type, or one who was more at home in heavenly places, than he you would have to search for a long time before you would find him." In 1851 the Rev. John F. Wright, of the Ohio Con- ference, published " Sketches of the Life and Labors of the Rev. James Quinn," who was for nearly half a century 106 METHODISM AND LITERATURE. a successful minister of the Gospel, and labored in connec- tion with other early pioneers of Methodism on the Amer- ican frontier, suffering and achieving in behalf of religion and civilization. And in that year also appeared the "Life of Rev. Orange Scott," by Rev. L. C. Matlack, printed at the AVesleyan Book-room, New York. Mr. Scott was the founder of the "Wesleyans" in America, having with- drawn from the Methodist Episcopal Church in 1842. The memoir characterizes him as a faithful pastor, a bold reformer, and a godly man. In 1852 Dr. Arthur published his " Successful Mer- chant," an attractive biography of Samuel Budgett, a man who commenced trade at ten years of age by picking up a horse-shoe and selling it for a penny, and ended at the age Of fifty-six as one of the largest merchants of the West of England ; and in 1851-2 the Rev. B. St. James Fry pub- lished the Lives of the three bishops, " Whatcoat, McKen- dree, and George." These men left such meager materials behind them that all previous attempting biographers were able only to produce sketches a little more detailed than are allotted to all deceased ministers in the minutes of the conferences. Dr. Fry used the materials very skillfully, and the three lives, bound in a single volume, form an in- teresting record. The " Life and Times of Bishop McKen- dree" has also been written by Rev. Robert Paine, one of the bishops of the Methodist Episcopal Church, South. Judge McLean says of McKendree : " He was in the high- est sense an eloquent man. With great simplicity and grace of delivery he united a force and beauty of illustra- tion that approached nearer to the Sermon on the Mount than I ever heard from any one else." In 1853 Harper and Brothers published " The Life and Letters of Stephen Olin, D. D., LL. D.," in two volumes. The book was edited by Drs. McClintock, Holdich, and other friends of the deceased. The intellect of the subject of this book was of that imperial rank to which few only BIOGRAPHICAL LITERATURE. 107 can lay claim. At ouce acute, penetrating, and profound, he lacked none of the elements of true greatness. In over- mastering power in the pulpit it is doubted whether, liv- ing, he had a rival, or, dying, he has left his like among men. The late Bishop Wightman, of South Carolina, was deeply impressed with Oliu's pulpit eloquence, and recorded his admiration in terms the most enthusiastic which the language affords. Rufus Choate said that " his -preaching was characterized by the same rare combination of forcible thought and deep feeling that gave the preaching of Chal- mers its great power." The North Amerieaii Review said " he was a great man in the best sense of the word." In 1854 Morton and Griswold, of Louisville, Ky., pub- lished "The Life of Henry B. Bascom, D. D. ," by Rev. M. M. Henkle, D. D., and a memoir was also written of Bascom by Bishop H. H. Kavanaugh. Although Dr. Bascom never went to school until he was twelve years of age, he became one of the most distinguished orators of the nation, was elected chaplain to Congress in 1823, called to the presidency of Madison College in 1827, became profes- sor of morals in Augusta College in 1832, was president of Transylvania University in 1842, elected to the editor- ship of the Quarterly Review of the Methodist Episcopal Church South in 1846, and bishop of that Church in 1850. Henry Clay pronounced him to be the most elo- quent man he had ever heard open his lips. In that year also (1854) was published at the Western Book Concern the " Sketches of Western Methodism," by Rev. James B. Finley, who had the year before published his "Autobiog- raphy ; or, Pioneer Life in the West." The latter was edited by Dr. Strickland, and is a book full of the stirring incident that marks every truthful record of American pioneer life. Besides the history of Mr. Finley's early life and ministry, the work contains memorials of Asbury, McKendree, Young, John P. Finley, Christie, and the two Wyandot chiefs, Mononcue and Between-the-logs. 108 METHODISM AND LITERATURE. In 1855 the New York Book Concern issued "The Life and Times of Rev. Elijah Hedding, D. D.," written by Rev. D. W. Clark, D. D. From an intimacy con- tracted during the last years of his life, Bishop Hedding requested Dr. (afterward Bishop) Clark to take his papers and prepare his biography, if any should be demanded ; and this book is the result. The original intention of the biographer was to make a personal biography ; but find- ing Hedding's life so intertwined and blended with the early history of Methodism in New England, he enlarged it, and the title was made to conform to this idea. Bishop Hedding, in his life and death, has left to the Church of Christ one of the richest legacies ; his life was a triumph of goodness, his death a triumph of faith. It has been said of him that, as "a theologian and divine, his views w T ere comprehensive, logical, and w T ell-matured. Not only had they been elaborated with great care, but the anal- ysis was very distinct ; and the successive steps were not only clearly defined in the original analysis, but distinct even in the niinutise of the detail." He was mainly instru- mental in the establishment of Zion's Herald at Boston, the first journal published by the Methodist Church in the United States ; and no minister in the Church labored more zealously and efficiently in promoting the cause of general and theological education than he. In the same year (1855), John Mason, book steward of the Wesleyan Methodists in London, published "The Life of the Rev. Robert Newton, D. D. By Rev. Thomas Jackson." The story of that long, laborious, and triumph- ant course has been so admirably told, that any attempt to epitomize it would seem to be presumptuous. In 1839 he visited America as a delegate from the British Confer- ence, and his popularity was so great that he attracted vast crowds wherever he preached. He was, indeed, one of the most eloquent ministers of Methodism, was four times president of the British Conference, and during his BIOGRAPHICAL LITERATURE. 109 labor of forty years addressed, from year to year, a greater number of people, probably, than any other man of his time. The London Review (1856), in speaking of his "Sermons on Special and Ordinary Occasions" (edited by Dr. Rigg, 1853), says: "That Dr. Newton possessed, with other essential but inferior mental qualifications, great mental vigor we find ample evidence in nearly every page of this volume; and we are at no loss to comprehend the causes which enabled him, for nearly half a century, to gather around him, wherever he went, listening and ad- miring crowds, and which made him the greatest preacher among a body of ministers unequaled for the power and success of their ministry in any period of the Christian Church." "The Life, Labors, and Travels of Rev. R. Newton, D. D. , by a Wesleyan Minister," was published in the same year (1855). In 1856 Carlton and Porter published " The Life of Rev. John Clark, by Rev. B. M. Hall ; with an Introduc- tion by Bishop Morris." The subject of this biography was at first a poor apprentice-boy in a tan-yard, and after his conversion was dismissed by his master to become an itinerant preacher, which he did by entering the Troy Con- ference. He subsequently labored among the Indians in the Northwest Territory, became a missionary in Texas, and was the adviser of Mrs. Garrett in founding and en- dowing the "Garrett Biblical Institute." In 1856, also, was published by the New York Book Concern the " Autobiography of Peter Cartwright, the Backwoods Preacher," edited by Rev. W. P. Strickland. The third London edition, from the twenty-first American edition, was published by Heylin in 1859, and reached its seventh thousand in 1862. The Methodist Quarterly Review, on its appearance, said : " Peter Cartwright, judging from his many re-elections to the General Conference, from the popular stories of which he is the hero, and from the laud- atory notices of some of our editors, has many admirers. 110 METHODISM AND LITERATURE. Such will doubtless buy, read, and admire his self-drawn picture. We are not, and never have been, among that number of laudators." Notices of the work appeared in the North American Review, Dickens's Household Words and the London Athenaeum; and Parton, in his "Life of Jack- son," calls it "the wondrous autobiography of glorious old Peter Cartwright." In 1873 the Methodist Quarterly Re- view published two favorable articles on " Peter Cart- wright," which were written by M. Cucheval-Clavigny, and published in the Revue des Deux Mondes of Paris. In those articles the French reviewer deplored that Peter Cartwright had abandoned the early practice of keeping a journal, and says: " It would have shown us the preacher in his every-day life, brought us to the scene of his labors, his joys and sorrows, and would, at the same time, have presented a picture, taken on the spot, of material and moral life of the West at the opening of the century." Of the book itself, the writer adds: "With the intent of moral edification, h is pen a bounds in anecdotes. He makes record of obdurate sinners suddenly converted, of wicked men stricken by the judgments of God, hypocrites unmasked, heretics or atheists confounded." When Peter Cartwright's " Fifty Years a Presiding Elder" appeared in 1871, the Methodist Quarterly Review had somewhat modi- fied its opinion, saying: "Whatever differences of view a large share of the Church has entertained, all are, at the present hour, unanimous in kindly recollections of the great services rendered by Peter Cartwright to Methodism and to our country. Plis history and character, typical yet unique, have impressed the public mind, without as within our pale, in Europe as well as in America. Even the most eminent review of Paris some years since gave a full article upon his history, as a phenomenon worth the study of the present day." In the same year the New York Book Concern published Strickland's " Pioneers of the West." BIOGRAPHICAL LITERATURE. Ill In 1857 the Western Book Concern published four books of a biographical nature: "Brief Recollections of Rev. George W. Walker," by Rev. M. P. Gaddisj "Rec- ollections of a Superannuate," by Rev. David Lewis, of the Ohio Conference, a book which can scarcely be called a biography, as eminent characters of Methodism, such as McKendree, George, Mcrwin, and Ostrander figure in its pages; "Biography of Samuel Lewis, First Superintendent of Common Schools for the State of Ohio," by William G. W. Lewis — a noble memorial from a son to the character of a great, a good, and a heroic man; and the "Autobi- ography of a Pioneer," by Rev. Jacob Young, with an Introduction by Bishop Morris. In 1858 Carlton and Porter published "The Pioneer Bishop; or, the Life and Times of Francis Asbury," by Rev. W. P. Strickland. Bishop Janes, who furnished a "Prefatory Letter" to the book, says: "In my early acquaintance with the history of our Church I was led involuntarily and frequently to inquire, Why has no biog- raphy of Bishop Asbury been furnished to the Church? I have heard brethren, both in the ministry and in the laity, express deep regret at this omission. My time did not permit me to examine the manuscript of this work sufficiently to justify me in analyzing and describing it; but I know that the author has the intellectual and liter- ary ability, and I believe he has the persevering industry, the Christian candor, and the religious sympathy to exe- cute the work with fidelity; and when thoroughly executed it will place another star of first magnitude and of richest effulgence in the biographical galaxy of the Church." Dr. Bangs, who wrote the Introduction, in referring to the practice which obtains with some biographers of padding their books with accounts of great men and other equally irrelevant and extraneous matter, says: "If an apology could rightfully be made for this kind of biography for any public man, it might be made for Bishop Asbury, for 112 METHODISM AND LITERATURE. certainly he stood up before the community as a giant in intellect, and as a saint of the first magnitude, having professed and exemplified the ' heights and depths ' of 1 perfect love,' and displayed the zeal and diligence of an apostle in the work of the Christian ministry. Dr. Strick- land, however, has not availed himself of this privilege, but has confined himself strictly to the life and labors of Bishop Asbury, calling him, very appropriately, the ' pio- neer bishop.'" Dr. Whedon said of the execution of the work : "It had seemed a fatality for any one to undertake the task of portraying our founder bishop for history. Dr. Strickland has conquered the fatality, whether of death or failure, and he has with great industry and ability col- lected the scattered material, traced the mighty labors and triumphs of the hero, and delineated the lineaments of the man with a true and life-like pencil." The American Tlie- ological Review described it as an " interesting volume." The ' 1 Journals of the Rev. Francis Asbury" (3 vols., 8vo), appeared first in the Armiman Magazine in 1789, and one volume was published during his life-time. The remainder were not published until 1821, five years after his death, when the whole were issued by Bangs and Mason, then Agents of the Book Concern. But the edition was imper- fect, and they were republished in 1854, with corrections. Until then, although Bishop Asbury had been dead thirty- seven years, a full memoir of his life had not been written. "Asbury and his Co-laborers," by Prof. W. C. Larrabee (2 vols.), was published in 1853, and the Rev.F.W. Brig about the same time that Strickland issued his work, pub- lished in England " A Study of Bishop Asbury." The Re- vue des Deux Mondes (Paris) calls Asbury " the real founder of American Methodism, and says: "Asbury, Lee, McKen- drce, by their truly evangelical works, by their perseverance through every trial, by their poverty and their sufferings, must have appeared to their contemporaries worthy suc- cessors of the apostles. In fact, it was impossible to carry BIOGRAPHICAL LITERATURE. 113 to greater lengths the renouncement of self, and to devote themselves more completely to the salvation of their fellow- men." Of Asbuiy, McClintock and Strong's Cyclopaedia says: "In diligent activity, no apostle, no missionary, no warrior ever surpassed him. He rivaled Melancthon and Luther in boldness. He combined the enthusiasm of Xavier with the far-reaching foresight and keen discrimin- ation of Wesley." In 1859 Derby and Jackson, New York, published "Ten Years of a Preacher's Life : Chapters from an Autobiogra- phy," by Kev. W. H. Milburn, known as "the blind preacher." Mr. Milburn had published two years pre- viously his " Rifle, Axe, and Saddle-bags," and in 1860 his " Pioneers, Ministers and People, of the Mississippi Val- ley." Mr. Milburn became a Methodist itinerant at the age of twenty, and his early ministry was spent chiefly in the Southern States. He became a popular and elo- quent lecturer and chaplain to Congress, was subsequently ordained in the Protestant Episcopal Church, but returned in 1872 to Methodism. In 1859 also appeared the "Life of Jabez Bunting, D. D. , with Notices of Contemporary Persons and Events, by his son, Thomas Percival Bunting." The American edition was issued by the Plarpers. The author says that his father, while in active service, felt a deep repugnance to having his biography written, but as old age crept on, other thoughts took possession of his mind. In his will, dated in 1852, he desired his two elder sons to examine his papers and destroy such portions as it might be expedient to dispose of, and he left his executors to exercise their discretion as to what use should be made of the remainder. The result was this book, the record of a man who, since the death of Wesley, has been more felt in the economy of British Methodism than any other. " He became," says Stevens, " the recognized leader of the Connection. Its most important measures were either conceived or > 10 114 METHODISM AND LITERATURE. chiefly effected by his unrivaled ability and influence." Dr. Leifchild, an eminent divine of another communion, said at his grave, that "in the extent of his information, the comprehensiveness of his views, the conclusiveness of his reasoning, and the urbanity of his manners, I never saw his equal and never expect to." In 1860 at least four Methodist biographies were pub- lished — two of American, one of English, and one of Irish Methodism. Dr. W. P. Strickland was the author of "The Life of Jacob Gruber," a man whom the North American Review characterized as "a devoted, laborious, and successful minister, possessing much influence with the ministry and the laity. His wit was of a satirical charac- ter, and not particularly palatable to the objects of it." Wakeley puts him among the "Heroes of Methodism," and he was alike remarkable for "strength and originality of mind, energy of character, depth of piety, prodigious labors, power of endurance, extensive usefulness, and sim- plicity and regularity of life." The other book, edited by Strickland, was " The Autobiography of Dan Young, a New England Preacher of the Olden Time," who entered the itinerant ministry in 1805, traveled a few years, then removed to the West, where he subsequently entered upon a legislative career in Ohio. The London biography of 1860 was " The Life of the Rev. John Hunt, Missionary to the Cannibals of Fiji," by G. Stringer Howe. Mr. Hunt was one of the early missionaries to the Fiji Islands, and translated the New and parts of the Old Testament into their language. The book is worthy of the subject, and tends to deepen the favorable impressions of the piety and intellectual gifts of a man who was largely instru- mental in the moral revolution of Fiji from a state of can- nibalism to a state of Christianity. The Irish book of contemporaneous publication is the "Life and Labors of Rev. Fossey Tackaberry, with Notices of Methodism in Ireland," by Rev. Robert Huston. For piety and zeal, for BIOGRAPHICAL LITERATURE. 115 vigor of mind and loftiness of purpose, the subject of this memoir was a mau of whom Irish Methodism may well be proud. In 1861 Robert Carter and Brothers published " Annals of the American Methodist Pulpit; or, Commemorative Notices of Distinguished Clergymen of the Methodist De- nomination in the United States, from its Commencement to the Close of 1865. With an Historical Introduction. By William B. Sprague, D. D." (8vo. Pp. 848.) The North American Review, in reviewing this book, said: "That compiling the annals of the American pulpit was a work eminently proper to be done, none will deny. That no fitter man than Dr. Sprague could have been selected for its performance, will be scarcely less than unanimously conceded. The volume whose title is given above is the seventh in his series." The Methodist Quarterly Revieiv said: 4 4 The best critics in Methodist history pronounce the work remarkably accurate, approving the faithfulness of Dr. Sprague in the performance of his arduous work." The " Life and Times of the Rev. Dr. Nathan Bangs," by Rev. Abel Stevens, LL. D., bears date 1863, and in 1864 the American Literary Gazette said that " the author has performed his labor faithfully and zealously." No name was more fully identified with American Methodism for the sixty years of his ministerial life than that of Nathan Bangs. There was no department of labor in which he did not serve; and in them all, as missionary, preacher, editor, and author, his devotion, diligence, and success were alike conspicuous. His biography is, to a large extent, the history of the Church, and his unspotted life, his simplicity of character, and his earnest devotion to goodness and truth, gained him the love and esteem of all denominations. In 1866 the New York Book Concern published " Reminiscences, Historical and Biographical, of Sixty- four Years in the Ministry. By Rev. Henry Boehm, 116 METHODISM AND LITERATURE. Bishop Asbury's Traveling Companion, and Executor of Lis Last Will and Testament. Edited by Rev. Joseph B. Wakeley." The author tells us that, in 1847, the New Jersey Conference appointed a committee to confer with him in respect to his journals and other papers, and aid in preparing them for publication. But the committee was too widely separated for any effectual result, and Dr. Wakeley and he, at intervals during a space of twelve years, revised his manuscript journal of two thousand pages, and produced this book. In 1876 Dr. Wakeley published a revised edition of the work entitled, "The Patriarch of One Hundred Years: Being Reminiscenes, Historical and Biographical, of Rev. Henry Boehm." In 1866 appeared, from the New York and Cincinnati Book Concerns, the "Life and Letters of Leonidas L. Hamline, D. D. , one of the Bishops of the Methodist Episcopal Church. By Walter C. Palmer, M. D. With Introductory Letters by Bishops Morris, Janes, and Thom- son." In 1869 the Rev. F. G. Hibbard, D. D., edited the -works of Bishop Hamline, the first volume of which was - published at that time ; but the second volume did not appear until 1871. Dr. Hibbard also wrote the biogra- phy of Bishop Hamline. Of him Henry Clay, himself a prince of orators, said: "I have never seen such dignity in human form before." This is the testimony of one fully capable of judging, and who was intimately associated with him, the Rev. Dr. Elliott: "As preacher he was in the first rank in all respects that regard the finished pulpit orator. His style as a writer would compare favor- ably with the best writers in the English language. He had no superior for logic, argument, or oratory." Dr. Kidder, in reviewing the biographies of Palmer and Hib- bard (January, 1881), says: "The Methodist Episcopal Church has always manifested a commendable interest in properly written memoirs of her deceased bishops. But, unfortunately, in several instances there has been either a BIOGRAPHICAL LITER A TURE. 117 lack of data attainable for the production of such memoirs, or a lack of interest or industry in preparing them. Bishop Hamline has had two excellent biographers, while of eight others of our deceased bishops no adequate memoirs have as yet been published." Bishop Hamline was one of the agents in the conversion of Dr. Nast, the apostle of Ger- man Methodism, and was in deep sympathy with the work of Methodism among the Germans in this country, ren- dering it great service. Dr. Nast says: "I have often tried to express my gratitude for what, under God, we Germans owe to that great man of God, Bishop Hamline." The Church Review, an organ of the Protestant Episcopal Church, pronounces Hamline to be " the most extraordi- nary man for exquisite culture, manly grace, impassioned eloqueuce, and saintly piety that Methodism has produced on this continent, and who, in grasp and brilliance of genius, has had scarcely a superior in America." In 1869 also appeared "The Bold Frontier Preacher. A Portrait- ure of Rev. William Cravens, of Virginia. By Rev. J. B. Wakeley." The subject of these sketches was a bold - preacher in Virginia against slavery and intemperance. On his removal to Indiana he entered the traveling con- nection, and did effective work on the frontier settlements. In 1871 Hitchcock and Walden published the " Life and Times of Rev. Thomas M. Hudson," written by him- self. Rev. C. A. Holmes, D. D., who furnishes the intro- duction to the book, says: " For fifty years he has been a minister of the Methodist Episcopal Church. From the organization of the Pittsburg Conference, in 1825, he has been a member of the conference ; and none will question that its present high position is as much due to him as to any one man. None has done harder work, been more abundant in labors, been wiser to plan, or gathered higher honors." The book is interesting and valuable. In 1872 appeared the first volume of "The Western Pioneer ; or, Incidents in the Life and Times of Alfred 118 METHODISM AND LITERATURE. Brunson." The second volume was published in 1880. Dr. Brunson preached, during the period of seventy years cov- ered by the book, about ten thousand times, and was in- strumental in the conversion of about six thousand souls and the erection of forty churches. The book is specially valuable as a picture of the past times in the progress of Methodism and of our country, as furnishing testimony in regard to some important characters and events, and as the record of the services of an able and faithful pioneer in our aggressive movements. In 1872 also was published " Incidents and Anecdotes of the Rev. Edward T. Taylor, for over Forty Years Pas- tor of the Seamen's Bethel, Boston. By Rev. Gilbert Haven, editor of Zion's Herald." This book, besides the graphic delineations of its author, embodies vivid descrip- tions of Father Taylor by Miss Harriet Martineau, Miss Hosmer, Charles Dickens, John Ross Dix, the Rev. Dr. Bellows, and the Rev. James Freeman Clarke, the latter of whom remarks of him, "He was a genuine Methodist, and no one wished him to be any thing else." Tie Rev. Dr. Whedon, that prince of book reviewers, says of this biography: "Our American Methodism is not poor in bi- ography. It is rich, and will be richer, in a great variety of character. Men of statesmenlike capacity, like Asbury and Hedding ; men of rare eloquence, like Summerfield and Bascom ; men of rich accomplishments, like Fisk and McClintock, — have lived memorable lives, commemorated by competent hands. But no biography, in our whole catalogue of England or America, after Wesley and Fletcher, is more abounding in matter to touch both intel- lect and heart than Father Taylor portrayed by Gilbert Haven." In 1873 there was issued from the Wesleyan Confer- ence office, London, " Recollections of My Own Life and Times. By Thomas Jackson. Edited by the Rev. B. Frankland, B. A. With an Introduction by G. Osborn, BIOGRAPHICAL LITERATURE. 119 D. D." Mr. Jacksou was twice elected president of the British Conference, was nineteen years connectional editor and nineteen theological tutor. The London Quarterly Review says that to him alone must be attributed the im- petus among the Wesleyans which so much elevated their .Sunday-school instruction, and threw a hedge of a more direct ministerial oversight around multitudes of their youth. Harper and Brothers printed in the same year " The Life of the Rev. Alfred Cook man. With Some Account of his Father, the Rev. George G. Cookman. By Henry B. Ridgaway, D. D. With an Introduction by Bishop Foster." He was a man of unusual pulpit power, and " among the names which the Church, with humble, grate- ful joy, inscribes upon her tablets as examples of the puri- fying, elevating power of divine grace, there is a place for the name of Alfred Cookman." His father was an emi- nent pulpit orator and a preacher of great ability and success. In 1838-39 he was chaplain to the American Congress, and the " hall of representatives at Washington never echoed more eloquent tones than during his chap- laincy to Congress." In 1874 was published in New York ' 'The Life and Times of George Peck, D. D. Written by Himself." This is the book of a distinguished minister, editor for four years of the Methodist Quarterly Review, arid for the same length of time editor of TJie Christian Advocate. One of his contemporaries, quoted by McClintock and Strong, wrote concerning him: "I view him as one of the most remarkable men of our times — one whose genius and piety are indelibly stamped on the ecclesiastical polity and won- derful growth of the Church — whose wise counsels and Herculean labors are interwoven in its development. For the past fifty years of his whole life he has been distin- guished by a devoted love to the Church and unswerving loyalty to honest convictions of truth." 120 METHODISM AND LITERATURE. " A Life-story of Rev. D. W. Clark, D. D., Bishop of the Methodist Episcopal Church. Compiled from Original Sources. By Rev. D. Curry, D. D.," was published also in 1874. Bishop E. O. Haven said of the fitness of the biographer for the work : "Of nearly all the great enter- prises in which Bishop Clark participated as leader or asso- ciate, Dr. Curry could say, 'Magna parsfui;' and while generally he was so fully in accord with him as now in receiving them, so as to give the work much of the fresh- ness of an autobiography, he is at the same time so indi- vidualistic as not to be in danger of laying aside the crit- icism and analysis of a genuine biographer." " The Life of the Rev. James Dixon, D. D., by his Son, Rev. R. W. Dixon," appeared also in 1874. Dr. Dixon was president of the British Conference in 1841, and in 1848 he visited America as the representative of the Wesleyan Methodist Church. "His ministry was practical, tender, and searching ; his eloquence sententious, racy, and epigrammatic, full of originality, and never failing to enchain his hearers." In 1874 also appeared the " Memoir of the late Rev. Benj. G. Paddock, with Brief Notices of his Early Minis- terial Associates," by his brother, the Rev. Z. Paddock, D. D. Besides the. biography proper, the book contains an appendix, with extended sketches of George Gary, Abner Chase, Seth Mattison, Isaac Puffer, Charles Giles, and others. The book is called a Memoir, but it is rather the Life and Times of its subject, who was one of the pio- neer Methodist preachers of Western New York. In 1875 appeared " The Wesleyan Demosthenes. Com- prising Select Sermons of the Rev. Joseph Beaumont. With a Sketch of his Character, by Rev. J. B. Wakeley." The sermons and record of a natural orator, which carried all before them in their delivery, the discourses being "characterized by brilliancy, earnestness, and impetuosity." In 1875 also appeared the "Life of Rev. Thomas A. BIOGRAPHICAL LITERATURE. 121 Morris, D. D., late Senior Bishop of the Methodist Epis- copal Church. By Rev. J. F. Marlay, D. D. With an Introduction by Bishop Janes." His biographer says it was the wish of Bishop Morris that the story of his life should be written by his friend and colleague, the late lamented Bishop Clark, who not only consented to under- take the work, but had made considerable progress in gathering material for it, when failing health, together with the incessant and exacting duties of the episcopal office, compelled him to relinquish the engagement. " At his request, and under his appointment as literary executor of Bishop Morris, I have endeavored to carry out his orig- inal plan of the work as nearly as possible." Dr. Went- worth says the biographer "has done his work well, and the thanks of all good men are due to him for this edi- fying contribution to the ever-swelling volume of Christian biographical literature." As one of the last in the long line of Methodistic heroes, and as, perhaps, the very last of the pioneer bishops, Thomas A. Morris must ever hold a high place among the leading men of the Church. It has been said of him : " To the charming simplicity, both of taste and manners, which eminently characterized him in all the. walks of life, he added the graces of a genuine nature and beautiful Christian character. As a preacher he was chaste, sincere, and many times greatly eloquent. As a bishop, he was considerate, careful, and judicious, never forgetful of the most humble of his brethren in the administration of his high office." In 1876 the New York Book Concern published the "Life and Letters of the Rev. John McClintock, D. D., late President of Drew Theological Seminary," by George R. Crooks, D. D. This book has been called a labor of love and a tribute of reverence to a noble character. "The task was," says Dr. Whedon, " no doubt, easy, from the freshness of the writer's recollections, from the contri- butions of McClintock's friends, such as Longacre, Biglow, 122 METHODISM AND LITERATURE. and Mrs. Eobinson, and from the habits of copious jour- nalizing and epistolizing." Dr. McClintock was a profound scholar, a successful author, an influential patriot, and a preacher who swayed the minds of his hearers by his fer- vid eloquence, and satisfied the understanding by the clearness and scientific precision with which he arranged and set forth the stores of his varied learning. In 1877 was published by W. C. Palmer, Jr., "The Life and Letters of Mrs. Phoebe Palmer, by Rev. Richard Wheatley." This is the record of an active and fruitful life. The materials have been so arranged by the author as to present what he calls "an accurate portrait of Mrs. Palmer's inner life." Quite a different work is another, issued in that year by Nelson and Phillips, entitled, " Scenes in my Life, Occurring during a Ministry of nearly Half a Century in the Methodist Episcopal Church, by Rev. Mark Trafton, D. D." An entertaining glance at the Methodist itinerancy of the last fifty years. In that year, also, was published by the Southern Methodist Publishing House the " Life and Papers of A. L. P. Green, D. D.," by Rev. William M. Green, and edited by T. O. Summers, D. D., a very interesting book. In 1879 appeared the "Life of the Rev. Thomas M. Eddy, D. D.," by Rev. Charles N. Sims, D. D., with an Introduction by Bishop Simpson. This is a deeply inter- esting and edifying narrative, and presents the character of Dr. Eddy in its most engaging and impressive traits. Zions Herald calls it " the picture of a truly manly man, an earnest Christian, an eloquent pulpit orator, and a faithful and eminently successful minister of the Gospel." The National Repository says: "Dr. Eddy was a man of the present time, a real, living character, in fullest sympa- thy with his age and environments; active, earnest, and of sufficient abilities to make his career in life worthy to be recorded and studied. The author has honored him- self in honoring his departed friend." BIOGRAPHICAL LITERATURE. 123 In 1880 appeared " Memorials of Gilbert Haven, one of the Bishops of the Methodist Episcopal Church," edited by W. H. Daniels, with an Introduction by Rev. B. K. Peirce, D. D. ; and "Gilbert Haven: A Monograph," by Rev. E. Wentworth, D. D. The latter is a 12mo., of forty-two pages, an address delivered before the Troy Con- ference in 1880, and published by request of that body. "The ' Monograph ' is, perhaps," says the Methodist Quar- terly Review, * 1 the best of the many tributes that have been paid to the memory of our deceased bishop. No departed personage of our Church ever received so unan- imous and loud a volume of eulogy and elegy at his de- cease." Of him it has been said that none of the men who have been identified with American Methodism com- bined in themselves greater powers, nobler sentiments, better purposes, wider judgments, or greater efficiency than Gilbert Haven. " The friend of the black man, the lover of his country, the devotee of his God and the Church, the advocate of all that is good and true and beautiful, he died too soon for the happiness of his fellows and the prosperity of the Church militant." In 1882 appeared "The Life of the Rev. Edmund S. Janes, D. D. , late Senior Bishop of the Methodist Epis- copal Church," by Rev. H. B. Ridgaway, D. D. The author closes his book by saying: "It is yet too early in history to assign the comparative place of our bishop among his contemporaries, or among the holy worthies of the past. Nor is it important to do so. His position is somewhat unique. No man certainly since Asbury has made a stronger or more distinctive impress upon Amer- ican Methodism ; his wise sayings, holy example, heroic services, sweet charity, and self-denying piety, will be honored by generations to come." Besides these, a great many memoirs, biographies, and autobiographies of the early preachers and others have been written, some of which gained only a limited local 124 METHODISM AND LITERATURE. circulation and others Lave passed entirely out of print. Among others are : " The Life of Kev. Benjamin Abbott," by John Ffirth, the record of an extraordinary man (1809) ; "The Methodist Memorial," by Charles Atmore (1813); "Memorials of the Rev. John Henley," by John G. Avery" (1844) ; " Recollections of an Old Itinerant," by Rev. Henry Smith (1848); "Memoirs of Joseph Entwisle," by his son Rev. J. Entwisle, a truly edifying memoir (1848); "Memoir of Rev. S. B. Bangs," by Magruder (1853); "Footprints of an Itinerant," by Rev. Maxwell P. Gaddis (1855); "Life of the Rev. Valentine Cook," by Rev. E. Stevenson, D. D. (1856); "Memoir of Rev. Wm. Gurley," by Rev. L. B. Gurley (1861) ; " Mother of the Wesleys," by Rev. John Kirk (1865); "The Boy Preacher ; or, the Life and Labors of Rev. Thomas Harri- son," by Rev. E. Davies (1881) ; " Life of Bishop Roberts," by Rev. C. Elliott ; "Biography of Rev. W. G. Caples," by Bishop E. M. Marvin; "Life of Bishop Capers," by Rev. W. M. Wightmau, D. D.; "Fifty Years a Presiding Elder," by Rev. W. S. Hooper ; "The Man of One Book," a Life of Rev. Wm. Marsh, of Maine, by his daughter; "Memoir of Rev. Isaac Smith," in 1822 missionary to the Cherokee Indians; Osburn's " H. C. Wooster;" Dr. Frazer's "Rev. John Lindsay;" Dr. Hibbard's "Abner Chase;" Vail's "Zenas Caldwell;" E. W. Sehon's "Sam- uel A. Latta, M. D.;" Rev. John Lancaster's "Lady Max- well ;" "Memoir of Mrs. Mary A. Mason," with Introduction by Bishop Janes; "Life of Hester Ann Rogers," of which many thousands have been sold; "Memoir of Richard Williams;" and autobiographies of Thomas Rankin, George Shadfbrd, Thomas Ware, Martin Ruter, and Billy Hib- bard, the last an eccentric, but successful, early New England preacher. w. B. WATKINS. HISTORICAL LITERATURE. 125 IX. HISTORICAL LITERATURE OF METH- ODISM. The historical literature relating to Methodism in Europe and America is, considering the comparatively brief period since it had its origin, remarkably copious and of a remarkably varied character. This results from several causes. 1. The religious movement known as Methodism has, from the beginning, been one of great activity and intense earnestness. It has set in motion agencies that have had great influence throughout large portions of Christendom, and in many countries of the heathen world. The devel- opment and operation of these agencies have been, as was natural, reported and chronicled in various publications and to an extent which has greatly enriched the historical literature of Methodism. The deeds of heroic toil and patience have awakened admiration, and inspired the pens of ready writers to record them. 2. The evangelistic work of the Wesleys and of the preachers whom they employed and directed was from the beginning a startling innovation upon the methods and usages of the established Churches in England, Ireland, and Scotland, and of the dissenting denominations as well; and, as a consequence, they excited prejudices and oppo- sition of the most determined and often of the most vio- lent character. The new tf sect" was everywhere spoken against, and, for a long time, everywhere persecuted. From a very early day in the movement the press began 126 METHODISM AND LITERATURE. to teem with publications of various kinds, having for their object to impede or to destroy the work carried on by the Wesleys and their coadjutors. The system of warfare thus inaugurated was kept up, with more or less perti- nacity, against nearly every feature of Methodism, whether of government, doctrine, or usage, down to the middle of the present century. H. C. DeCanver, in 1846, priuted a catalogue comprising a list of two hundred and seventy- seven such books, most of which have already been for- gotten, and are wholly useless except to the mere anti- quarian. As the publications in refutation of Methodism involved, to a greater or less extent, the history of Meth- odism, the replies to them, when replies were deemed necessary, partook of the same character. It is to this cause is due that very considerable portions of Methodist literature are of a historico-polemic cast. 3. It has been the misfortune of Methodism, up to within a recent date, to suffer from divisions and seces- sions in consequence of difference of opinion among its ministers and lay members upon questions of government and policy, or, as in the case of the Canadian separation, in consequence of considerations of expediency. The re- sult of these divisions has been the formation of a very considerable number of organizations almost identical in doctrine and usage, and differing principally in govern- ment. Each of these bodies has its history, both of the causes which led to its organization and of its establish- ment and growth. 4. Methodism has not only had a large development in those countries in which it had its origin or an early plant- ing, but, through emigration and the indefatigable labors of its missionaries, it has taken deep root and produced very important results in many other lands, as in France, Germany, Italy, Switzerland, India, China, Australia, Ja- pan, New Zealand, Mexico, and South America. One of the most important, as it is one of the most interesting, HISTORICAL LITERATURE. 127 departments of our historical literature, and one which ere- long will be exceedingly prolific of publications, is that which will comprise the records of these aggressive move- ments in the most distant, and, not long since, the darkest portions of the earth, but now, thanks be to God, fast being irradiated with the light of the best Christian civil- ization. 5. The periodical literature of Methodism, begun at an early day, and fostered with sedulous care, chiefly as a means of defense and as a helpful advocate of its institu- tions and enterprises, has naturally become the chronicler of its doings, its plans, and its purposes, as well as the ad- vocate and the helper of its growing undertakings. In this way it has done much to create as well as to record history. 6. The last, but not the least, of the sources of Meth- odist historical literature to which we will refer is the jour- nals kept by Methodist official bodies of their own doings, and the journals kept by ministers who have occupied prominent positions in their respective organizations, and have recorded their experiences and observations. In a large degree these journals have been among the richest of the sources from which the historical writers of Meth- odism have gathered their most entertaining and most trust- worthy information. Until one has thoroughly explored all these depart- ments, all these sources of knowledge, he can not justly claim to have made himself conversant with the field of the historical literature of Methodism. Our limits will not allow us to speak minutely of all the works which Methodism and its antagonists have pub- lished in the various departments here named, and we must content ourselves with a brief survey of the principal ones which are accessible to the general student of our history. I. The rapid progress of the evangelistic movement 128 METHODISM AND LITERATURE. begun by the Wesleys and Whitefield demanded not only apologetic tracts from the early Methodists, but, in process of time, historical narratives of the results attained. The first full account of that great movement was " A Chrono- logical History of the People called Methodists, from their Rise in the Year 1729 to their Last Conference in 1802," by William Myles, London, 1803. One great excellence of the work is the many original documents which it eon- tains. "The economy of Methodism," says the Methodist Magazine, "on account of the numbers and respectability of many of its adherents, becomes more and more a sub- ject of inquiry. Many wish to know by what means the Methodists, in the course of about seventy years, have be- come so numerous a people. Some, unacquainted with their economy, are wont to attribute their rapid increase to either laxity in discipline or falsity in doctrine. A little attention to the contents of the volume before us will con- vince them that the growing prosperity of the Methodists can not possibly be attributed to either of these causes." The earliest history in this country was Jesse Lee's " History of the Methodists," published in 1810. Mr. Lee issued a prospectus and took up subscriptions for this work before he put it to the press. The list of names at the close, of those who subscribed for it, shows the places vis- ited by him personally, and the interest taken by the Church generally in the enterprise. " If Mr. Lee," says his nephew, Dr. L. M. Lee, recently deceased, who wrote a narrative of his life and times, "contributed nothing to the literary wealth or credit of Methodism, he has brought it under great and lasting obligations for his collection of facts ; constituting, as they do, the materials out of which the early history of Methodism in America, if ever better written, must of necessity be composed. Every subsequent laborer in this department of the Church will be compelled to resort to Mr. Lee for authority as well as information ; and in proportion to his fidelity here will his work be true HISTORICAL LITERATURE. 129 and valuable. And while the credit of being the first his- torian of Methodism belongs to him, his industry in col- lecting facts, and his fidelity in recording them, will entitle him to the respect and gratitude of Methodism to the latest period of its history." In the year 1807 Joseph Nightingale published at London " A Portraiture of Meth- odism," which he claimed to be an impartial view of the rise, progress, doctrines, discipline, and manners of the Wesleyan Methodists. Nightingale had been a preacher among the Wesleyans, but had left them before writing this book, which is rather a caricature than a portraiture. It, however, suggested the preparation of another work, by Jonathan Crowther, which was issued at London in 1811, and reprinted in this country in 1813. It is entitled "A True and Complete Portraiture of Methodism; or, The History of the Wesleyan Methodists, including their Rise, Progress, and Present State." This work is alto- gether trustworthy. In 1838 Nathan Bangs issued the first volume of his " History of the Methodist Episcopal Church," and com- pleted it in four volumes in 1841. For many years this was the standard history of the Church, and must always be regarded as a monument of the diligent research and painstaking industry of the author. It is a repertory of facts, many of which fell under the author's own observa- tion, and from which all subsequent writers have drawn. Dr. Robert Baird says of it in his " Religion in America," that "it is an invaluable work, written in a truly calm and Christian spirit, and displays a sincere desire to pre- sent every subject which it treats in an impartial manner." Nor is this praise undeserved, as any one may verify by examining the work itself. A brief " History of the Rise and Progress of Method- ism" in England and America, by James Youngs, A.M., was published in New Haven in 1830. It reached a sec- ond edition ; but its circulation was confined mainly to the 130 METHODISM AND LITERATURE. New England States. A fuller account of our ecclesias- tical work in England is "The History of the Religious Movement in the Eighteenth Century, called Methodism," by Dr. Abel Stevens, in three volumes, 12mo. This work was issued in New York in 1858-61. The style is picturesque and the narrative deeply interesting. For this undertaking Dr. Stevens collected ample materials — and the materials are not scanty. His was already a practiced pen. He had acquired an easy and correct style by his former publica- tions, "Sketches and Incidents; or, A Budget from the Saddle-bags of a Superannuated Preacher" (2 vols., 18mo, 1843) ; " Memorials of the Introduction of Methodism into the Eastern States " (first series, 1846 ; second series, 1849); "Sketches from the Study of an Itinerant" (16mo, 1847) ; and " An Essay on Church Polity" (1847). As editor (of Zion's Herald, The National Magazine, and the Christian Advocate and Journal), he wrote much and well, and Hon. Wm. McArthur (since lord-mayor of Lon- don) said of this work, which was reprinted in London, that " what Macaulay has done for England, Stevens has done for Methodism." His history of Methodism was followed by a " History of the Methodist Episcopal Church in the United States of America," in four vols., 12mo, 1864-67. Of this history there is no end to the praise, both in the Church and without. The Atlantic Monthly says: "As a history, the work is not only creditable in a denomina- tional and ecclesiastical point of view, but it is a valuable contribution to our national literature. Any ordinary abil- ity would have made a readable story out of such mate- rials ; but to make a history worthy of the name required the hand of a master." This work has been condensed by the author into one volume, 8vo. Dr. Stevens's histories were followed by "American Methodism/' by M. L. Scudder, D. D., in a portly 8vo volume, published as a subscription book (1867); "A Comprehensive History of Methodism, in one volume," HISTORICAL LITERATURE. 131 (12mo), by James Porter, D. D. (1876); "A History of Methodism, for Our Young People" [and a good one for older persons, too], by Win. W. Bennett, D. D. (1878) ; "Methodism, Old and New, with Sketches of Some of its Early Preachers," by J. R. Flanigen (1880) ; and by a " History of the Methodist Episcopal Church in the United States," by Rev. P. Douglass Gorrie (1881). Rev. Wm. H. Daniels also prepared for the Methodist Book Concern, as a subscription book, an "Illustrated History of Methodism," which is published in one large volume, 8vo. It has had a remarkable success, and several edi- tions have already been printed. In addition to the histories above mentioned there are several of a character somewhat different, designed to show rather the inside workings of the Methodist movement, and to present its statistical results. Of this class we name "A Compendium of the Laws and Regulations of Wesleyan Methodism," by Edmund Grindrod (London, 1842); "A Compendium of Methodism, embracing the History and Present Condition of its Various Branches in all Countries," by James Porter, D. D. (Boston, 1852) ; " Centenary of Wesleyan Methodism : a Brief Sketch of the Rise, Progress, and Present State of the Wesleyan Methodist Societies throughout the World," by Rev. Thos. Jackson (1839) ; " Methodism in its Origin, Economy, and Present Position," by J. Dixon, D. D., ex-president of the British Conference (18mo, 1848); "Ireland and the Centenary of American Methodism," by Rev. William Crook (12mo, London, 1866) ; " Methodism and the Cen- tennial of American Independence," by Rev. E. M. Wood (12mo, 1876) ; " A Hundred Years of Methodism," by Bishop M. Simpson (12mo, 1876) ; " Statistical History of American Methodism during its First Century," by Rev. C. C. Goss (16mo, 1866) ; " Centenary of American Meth- odism," by Abel Stevens, LL. D. (12mo, 1866); "Fox and Hoyt's Quadrennial Register of the Methodist Epis- 1 32 ME T HOD ISM AND LIT ERA T URE. copal Church," by Henry J. Fox and W. B. Hoyt (1852); 4 'History of the Discipline of the Methodist Episcopal Church," by Robert Emory, revised and brought down to 1856, by W. P. Strickland; " History of the Revisions of the Discipline," by David Sherman, D. D. (12mo, 1874) ; and the " Cyclopaedia of Methodism, embracing Sketches of its Rise, Progress, and Present Condition," by Bishop M. Simpson (large 8vo, 1878). Of local histories, or those relating to portions only of the territory occupied by Methodism, there is no lack. We name the more important of these in the order of their locality rather than of their date. " Memorials of the Introduction of Methodism into the Eastern States" has already been mentioned. Others relating to the East- ern and Central States are, "Troy Conference Miscellany, containing a Historical Sketch of Methodism within the Bounds of the Troy Conference," by Rev. Stephen Parks, (12mo, 1854) ; " Memorials of Methodism in New Jersey," by Rev. John Atkinson (12mo, 1860) ; "Reminiscences of Methodism in West Jersey," by G. A. Raybold (18mo, 1849) ; " History of the Wesley M. E. Church of Brook- lyn, L. I.," by Gilbert E. Carrie (12mo, 1876); "Early Methodism within the Bounds of the Old Genesee Confer- ence, from 1788 to 1828," by George Peck, D. D. (12mo, 1860) ; " History of the Methodist Episcopal Church in Canada," by Thomas Webster (12mo, 1870) ; " Methodism within the Bounds of the Erie Conference," by Rev. S. Gregg (1865) ; " Sketches of Western Methodism, Bio- • graphical, Historical, and Miscellaneous, illustrative of Pioneer Life," by James B. Finley (12mo, 1854) ; "Pages from the Early History of the West and North-west, with Especial Reference to the History of Methodism," by Rev. S. R. Beggs (12mo, 1868) ; '"Indiana Methodism : being an Account of the Introduction, Progress, and Present Posi- tion of Methodism in the State," by Rev. F. C. Holliday (8vo, 1873) ; " Reminiscences of Early Methodism in In- HISTORICAL LITER A TURK. 133 diana," by Rev. J. C. Smith (12mo, 1879) ; " Protestantism in Michigan: being a Special History of the Methodist Episcopal Church, and Incidentally of Other Denomina- tions," by Elijah H. Pilcher, D. D. (8vo, 1879) ; " History of the Organization of the Methodist Episcopal Church South," by A. H. Bedford (8vo, 1845); " Memorials of Methodism in Virginia, from its Introduction in 1772 to the year 1829," by Rev. W. W. Bennett (12mo, 1871) ; " The History of Methodism in Kentucky," by Bev. A. H. Bedford (3 vols., 12mo, 1868); ' 'Western Cavaliers," a continuation of the history of Methodism in Kentucky to 1844, by the same (12mo, 1876) ; " History of Methodism in Tennessee," by J. B. McFerrin, D. D. (3 vols., 12mo, 1875); "The History of Methodism in Georgia and Flor- ida, from 1785 to 1865," by Rev. George G. Smith (12mo, 1877) ; "Annals of Southern Methodism for 1855," 1856, and 1857; by Charles F. Deems, D. D. (3 vols., 12mo, 1856-58) ; " History of the Great Secession, eventuating in the Formation of the Methodist Episcopal Church South," by Charles Elliott, D. D. (large 8vo, 1855). II. The early controversies through which Methodism passed were chiefly those of doctrine. Calvinism was the dominant creed of the established Church and of the ma- jority of the dissenters. When Mr. Wesley accepted and began to preach Arminian theology, he was at once antag- onized by such writers as Hervey, Toplady, Whitefield, Warburton, and others ; hence the publication of his " Doc- trinal Tracts" and "Sermons." These were followed by other polemical and apologetic treatises, notably among them those of Benson and Fletcher. Methodism attracted to itself many strong minds. The founder of the Methodist system was himself an acute dialectician, and Mr. Fletcher is unsurpassed in the clearness of his statements and the force of his arguments, as shown in his " Checks." Bich- ard Watson's "Institutes of Theology" have never yet been surpassed. Adam Clarke's " Commentaries" and 134 METHODISM AND LITERATURE. " Sermons" are strongholds of defense; and from the days of the first planting of Methodism at home and abroad, it has been compelled to give an account of itself. In this country the early printed controversial works were more of a doctrinal than of an ecclesiastical character, though all along both have been necessary to maintain sound doctrine and establish the principles of Church gov- ernment. After the organization of the Methodist Epis- copal Church in 1784, it was called upon to defend itself from the attacks of high-church prelacy on the one hand and of the presbyterian economy on the other. The former were not so much, however, to be feared as the latter, as those came from without, these from within. The adher- ents of James O'Kelly were bitter and unscrupulous in their statements and reasonings, as he was himself. One of the fruits of the secession which he led was ' 1 A His- tory of Episcopacy in four parts" (with special reference to American Methodism), by William Guirey (1796). Guirey was admitted on trial as a preacher in 1795, but soon withdrew. Other works, in opposition to the Church doctrines or economy, are, "Episcopal Methodism; or, Dagonism Exhibited," by Rev. Joshua L. Wilson (Cincin- nati, 1812) ; "A Plain Exhibition of Methodist Episco- pacy," by Rev. Asahel Bronson, an Episcopal minister (Burlington, Vt., 1844) ; "Difficulties of Arminian Meth- odism," by William Annan (fourth edition published in 1860); "The Government of the Methodist Episcopal Church Anti-republican and Despotic," by Rev. William McMichael (Pittsburg, 1855) ; " The Great Iron Wheel ; or, Republicanism Backwards and Christianity Reversed," by Rev. J. R. Graves, Baptist (Nashville, 1855); "The Little Iron Wheel : a Declaration of Christian Rights and Articles, showing the Despotism of Episcopal Methodism," etc., by the same (1857). When the lay movement and the mutual rights of pas- tors and people were first agitated, especially between 1820 HISTORICAL LITERATURE. 135 and 1830, various publications, offensive and defensive, appeared. Those of the polemic character we name first : " The History and Mystery of the Methodist Episcopacy," by Alexander McCaine, elder in the Methodist Episcopal Church (1827) ; " An Exposition of the Late Controversy iu the Methodist Episcopal Church," by Samuel K. Jen- nings, M. D. (Baltimore, 1831); "Essays on Lay Repre- sentation and Church Government," by Rev. Nicholas Snethen (Baltimore, 1835) ; " View of the Economy of Methodism," from the Christian Spectator (1829); "Brief View of the Government of the Methodist Episcopal Church," by Rev. W. B. Evaus (1829) ; " Essay on the Invalidity of Presbyterian Ordination," by John Esten Cooke, M. D. (1829) ; " Tribute to Our Fathers," by Rev. R. F. Shinn (1853) ; and " History of the Methodist Prot- estant Church," by A. H. Bassett (1882). The works written in defense of our Church economy and government are more numerous and accessible to the reader. Among them are, " Defense of Our Fathers and of the Original Organization of the Methodist Episcopal Church," by Bishop John Emory (1827). This was writ- ten in answer to Alexander McCaine and others, and was followed by " The Episcopal Controversy Reviewed," wiitten by the same pen. The latter treatise was published posthumously in 1838. "An Original Church of Christ," by Nathan Bangs, D. D., is in the same line, as also " Methodist Episcopacy," a tract by the same author. " Ecclesiastical Polity of Methodism Defended," by Rev. F. Hodgson, D. D., was suggested by attacks made in the Calvinistic Magazine and other periodicals. " The Great Iron Wheel Examined," by Rev. W. G. Brownlow, is a refutation of the work named above. " Methodism in its Origin, Economy, and Present Position," by J. Dixon, D. D., of the British Conference (1848) ; " Inside Views of Methodism," by Rev. W. Reddy (1859); "Platform of Methodism," by Rev. M. M. Henkle (Louisville, 1851); 136 METHODISM AND LITERATURE. " Present State, Prospects, and Responsibilities of the Methodist Episcopal Church," by Nathan Bangs, D. D. (1850); " Essay on Church Polity," by Abel SteveDS, LL. D. (1847) ; " Economy of Methodism Illustrated and Defended," by Thomas E. Bond, M. D. (1852), consisting of articles written during the " Radical" controversy from 1828 to 1830, and collected into book form ; "Methodism Explained and Defended," by Rev. John 8. Inskip (Cin- cinnati, 1851) ; " An Essay on Apostolical Succession," by Thomas Powell, AVesleyan minister (London, 1838) ; "Apostolic Succession," by Rev. Richard Tydings (Louis- ville, 1844), — are all valuable contributions to our doc- trinal and governmental history. The connection of the Church with slavery and its subsequent divorcement were the occasion of a protracted controversy. The abolition sentiment " would not down," and was productive of at least two schisms, one of great magnitude. The first, because the Church would not purge itself of all connection with slavery, took place in 1842, and eventuated in the formation of the " Wesleyan Connection the other, because the General Conference would not countenance slaveholding in its ministry, caused the withdrawal of all the Southern conferences and the organization of the Methodist Episcopal Church South. In this connection we can name only the larger or more important publications on this subject, in addition to those already given relating to the Church South : " Slavery and the Episcopacy," by George Peck, D. D. (1845) ; " Slavery in the Methodist Episcopal Church," by Rev. E. Bowen (1859) ; " Methodism and Slavery," by H. B. Bas- com, D. D. (1845); "The Methodist Episcopal Church and Slavery," by Rev. Daniel DeVinne (1857); "An Appeal to the Methodist Episcopal Church on Slavery," by Abel Stevens, D. D. ; "Stevens Answered in his Ap- peal," by J. K. Peck; "The Impending Crisis of 1860," by Hiram Mattison, D. D. (1858); "The Antislavery HISTORICAL LITERATURE. 137 Struggle and Triumph in the Methodist Episcopal Church," by L. C. Matlack, D. D* (1881). Several important works defending slavery were published in the South, and a number of transient publications on both sides of " Ma- son and Dixon's line." III. The missions sustained by the Church have an interesting history. From the time when Dr. Coke urged the Wesleyan Conference to establish missions abroad, and especially the one in India, Methodism has been on the alert to enter every open door. As she was herself the child of Providence, so have her missions been. Now they occupy stations in every quarter of the globe. Through her agency " The Western empires own their Lord, And savage tribes attend his word." In the catalogue of books at the close of this volume a large list of works on the subject of missions is given. Though by no means complete, not even for those of our own Church, a careful study of any one section will give the reader a vast amount of information concerning the origin, history, and present condition of our foreign or domestic missionary work in the particular department comprehended. IV. The periodicals of Methodism are numerous. Mr. Wesley early recognized the importance of disseminating useful intelligence among his societies, and in 1778 estab- lished the Arminian Magazine (afterward called The Meth- odist Magazine, and now TJie Wesley an-Methodist Magazine). It has been published uninterruptedly for one hundred and four years. In this country an Arminian Magazine (mainly a reprint of Mr. Wesley's) was undertaken, and one or two volumes were published about 1779 and 1780; but the time had not arrived for a successful venture in this line, and the undertaking was given up. In 1818 The Method- ist Magazine was commenced, and eleven volumes were printed in monthly numbers. The work was then changed 138 METHODISM AND LITERATURE. to a quarterly, and is still continued as The Methodist Quar- terly Review. The Ladies' Repository was published from 1841 to 1876 inclusive (36 volumes) ; The National Magazine , from 1852 to 1858 (13 volumes) ; and The National Repos- itory from 1877 to 1880 (eight volumes). The Church South has had its QuaHerly Review, Ladies 7 Some Compan- ion and Home Circle. The Methodist Reformers (Method- ist Protestant Church) had their IV&sleyan Repository and Mutual Rights, in answer to which The Itinerant was pub- lished under the editorship of Melville B. Cox. The pa- pers established and issued by the Church are numerous, and we can not specify them. The oldest are Zion's Her- ald, Christian Advocate (New York), and the Western Chris- tian Advocate (Cincinnati). V. Lastly, among the sources of Methodist history are the general " Minutes of Conferences," the " Journals of the General Conference," " The Methodist Almanac and Year- book" (from 1834) ; and the published diaries of Method- ist preachers. As these last are referred to under the head of "Methodist Biography," we need not name any of them here. The first separate "Minutes" printed of the indi- vidual conferences were those of the Pittsburg Conference in 1826. The same conference issued a second number of its minutes in 1836 ; and since the year 1850 the example thus set has been followed by nearly all the conferences in the connection. These are now recognized as the official records of their proceedings, when properly attested by the secretaries and presiding bishops ; and as they contain the reports of conference committees, and many of them the memoirs of the deceased wives of the traveling preachers, they are important sources of information to the students and writers of our Church history. F. S. IIOYT. THE LITERATURE OF SACRED SONG. 139 X. THE LITERATURE OF SACRED SONG. I like very much the anecdote, true or apocryphal — and I care little which — of an East Indian prince who came to England for the purpose of studying her people and her institutions. After some time spent in becoming acquainted with the most salient facts of our Western civ- ilization — the shipping, the docks, and the wharves; the shops and the warehouses; the tramways and the railroads; the schools, libraries, museums, and churches ; and, above all. the happy homes filled with comfortable and cultured people, he was finally admitted to an interview with Eng- land's Christian queen, when the question which had been shaping itself in all the mouths leaped forth into eager expression. 4 'Tell me," said he, "if you can, what is the the secret of all this wonderful prosperity and power?" And it is said that the queen placed her hand on a Bible lying by, and replied: "This is the secret of England's greatness.'' Never was all that is worth knowing of polit- ical philosophy more successfully condensed into a single sentence. The fact that there are to-day in the English language alone probably not less than a hundred millions of copies of the Bible in whole or in part, is the one all- comprehending secret of the rapidly augmenting power of English-speaking peoples. Now, wherever this Bible has gone, another book has gone too, waiting upon it as the moon upon the sun, and shining by its reflected light — " Leaving that beautiful which still was so, And making that which was not." 140 METHODISM AND LITERATURE. Of course I mean the hymn-book — a book which to-day waits for recognition, and intelligent and loving study almost as much as the Bible itself. The fatal ignorance by which men are "alienated from the life of God" is doubtless the ignorance of his Word and his »Son ; but closely related to this is the almost universal indifference to those voices of the Christian life which are heard in sacred song. Not that there is no delight in Christian hymns ; on the contrary, they sometimes gather up in their history the sweetest and intensest experiences of the peo- ple of God. There are not a few into whose memories verses of hymns entered earlier than verses of Scripture, and they will be more likely to repeat them with their dying breath. And yet many of these hymns which are most precious wait for an intelligent recognition. They have never been made the subject of study. It has never been taken in hand to inquire as to their origin, their meaning, their character, their history, and their uses. Though the most articulate and adequate, as well as beautiful and harmonious, of all the utterances of the Christian life, they are not by the masses thoroughly un- derstood. And it is because of this too general neglect and indifference that I select, for the few pages which I may here fill, the task of calling attention to some of the more important aspects of this subject. 1. As we contemplate lyric poetry in general the first thing which arrests our attention- is its antiquity. The earliest of extant literature comes to us in this form. The oldest bit of literature in the Hebrew Bible,, and in all probability the oldest in the world, is the song of Lamech, which is given in the fourth chapter of Genesis. This seems to have been preserved in its original form, and is a very per- fect specimen of Hebrew and Oriental poetry, illustrating parallelism, assonance, and the strophical structure. Ho- mer, the earliest of Greek writers whose works have come down to us, is scarcely more thau half-way to the time of THE LITERATURE OF SACRED SONG. 141 this ancient song. It goes more than two thousand years beyond Moses, though he very greatly outranks every other known author in extant literature. And Moses is represented by several notable lyrical compositions; one of which, the ninetieth Psalm, has been the great funeral hymn in all the Christian centuries. The oldest literature of the Hindoos is the collection of lyric poems known as the Vedas. Very extravagant claims have been made as to their antiquity; but it is quite impossible to fix with certainty, or even strong prob- ability, their absolute date. The one thing which is cer- tain is, that Hindoo literature, like Hebrew, is stratified, and that these Vedic hymns constitute the lowest stratum, and it is believed by those most competent to form an opinion that they may safely be set down as about three thousand years old. Similar is the date of the Chinese " Book of Odes," also a collection of lyric poems. It is not only the oldest of the Chinese classics, but one of the very oldest books in all literature, probably ranking in this regard with the Vedas and the Davidic Psalms. Nor is this form of literature obsolete. It is as well suited to an enlightened as a barbaric age, and is as much at home in the life of the cultured as in the tent of the ' nomad. In no previous period in the history of Chris- tianity has lyric poetry been so multiplied as in the cent- uries of Protestantism. When Luther arose, it is esti- mated that there were in existence in all languages about one thousand Christian hymns ; now there are probably one hundred and fifty thousand. Then, too, they were largely ecclesiastical in their character, the exclusive prop- erty of the priest, the choir, and the Church ; now they constitute a liturgy of the people, so that wherever there is a worshiper there is likely to be a hymn. 2. This leads me to say that the enormous volume of hymnic literature claims attention. It is estimated that 142 METHODISM AND LITERATURE. there are in the German language alone not far from one hundred thousand hymns, and in the English language about one-half that number. As early as the year 1751 J. Jacob V. Moser collected a register of fifty thousand printed hymns in the German language. One single au- thor in the English language, Charles Wesley, wrote about eight thousand hymns; another, Watts, more than one thousand. Count Zinzendorf wrote about two thousand hymns, and Schmolke more than a thousand. The Mora- vian hymn-book, with its appendices and additions, as early as 1759, contained two thousand three hundred and fifty- seven hymns. Six years earlier Count Zinzendorf had published a collection of German hymns comprising two thousand one hundred and sixty-eight, to which in the fol- lowing year he added a thousand more. In more recent years such men as Doddridge, Cowper, Newton, Stennett, Keble, Bonar, and a host of others, have made such large additions to the body of our hymnology as to be deserving of special mention. Now, when it is considered that among these one hundred and fifty thousand hymns there are some of the most exquisite gems in all literature, pro- ductions recording the deepest convictions of the human mind and the richest experiences of the human heart, and such, too, as have been admitted to the most sacred offices in human life, it will most certainly appear that here is a field of literature which no lover of God or of man can afford to be w r holly ignorant of. But all this is only a part, and the less important part, of the case. Aside from the Christian Scriptures, nothing in literature has been so multiplied as copies of Christian hymns. Nothing else is so familiar to human utterance, nothing so deeply engraven on the memory and on the heart ; nothing so perfectly befits human experience in all its aspects and conditions. The multiplication of certain choice and popular books, such as the " Imitatwm" the "Pilgrim's Progress," the 44 Thousand and One Nights," THE LITERATURE OF SACRED SONG. 143 and others which will readily recur to our thought, in many languages and in every conceivable style of print and binding, cheap and popular as well as sumptuous and costly, is something wonderful, and attests most conclu- sively their vitality and their adaptation to the soil in which they have been planted. And yet in this very re- gard they fall immeasurably short of Christian hymns. Some of the most popular of these — such as ' 1 Rock of ages," "Jesus, lover of my soul," "Just as I am," etc. — have been multiplied and scattered, and engraven on hu- man hearts and memories as nothing else has been. They have been multiplied literally by the million. They have be- come a part of the common life of the people, free and uni- versal as air or water or light. It would be a hopeless task to attempt an enumeration of the copies of that precious hymn, " Rock 01 ages," which have been made in the last hundred years ; but they have gone rapidly toward, if not actually beyond, a hundred million. Now, a literature which has become so wonderfully diffused must be a most potent and significant factor in human life, and fully com- mends itself to the attention and study of every Christian scholar. 3. This suggests how important hymns may be as a means of influence. A hymn is the most subtle and spiritual thing- a man can create. It can go where nothing else can, and do what nothing else can. When re-enforced by harmonious and soul-stirring music, it is sometimes almost irresistible. Sung by thousands of human voices, and thus becoming a channel through which the full tide of human sympathy is made to flow, it is perhaps the best suggestion of the worship of heaven which we may ever receive in this earthly state. Many a soul has been borne aloft on the wings of holy song into an experience which, in all essential particulars, is identical with that of those who worship before the throne in heaven. And many a cal- lous sinner has been reached and called back from his 144 METHODISM AND LITERATURE. apostasy and rebellion by Christian song when nothing else could have gained access to him. In the time of the Wesleys the little Methodist society in Wexford, Ireland, was so persecuted by the Catholics that it was obliged to hold its meetings by stealth in a closed barn. One violent opposer, finding it out, arranged to conceal himself in a sack in the barn, so that he might open the door to his comrades so soon as the worship should begin. The singing began, and the man was so much charmed with the music that he waited to hear it through before he should begin his disturbance. And then he waited to hear the prayer, in the midst of which he was seized with remorse and trembling, so that he roared with fright, and emerged from his strange concealment a trembling penitent, and was soon genuinely converted. Southey calls this " the most comical case of instantaneous conversion that ever was recorded." There is a familiar incident connected with one of Phoebe Cary's hymns which may well be taken as repre- sentative of a very large class of similar instances show- ing the power of sacred song. A few years since two men, Americans — one middle-aged and the other a young man — met in a gambling-house in Canton, China. They had been engaged in play together during the evening, and the young man had lost heavily. While the older one was shuffling the cards for a new deal, his companion leaned back in his chair and began mechanically humming Miss Cary's exquisite hymn, " One sweetly solemn thought." As these words, so tender and beautiful, "fell on the ear of the man hardened in sin, dead memories in his heart came to life again. He sprang up excitedly, exclaiming, "Where did you learn that hymn? I can't stay here!" And, in spite of the remonstrances and taunts of his companion, he almost dragged him from the place, and poured into hie ear the story of his long wanderings from a happy Chris- tian home. He expressed his determination to lead a bet- THE LITERATURE OF SACRED SONG. 145 ter life, and urged his companion in sin" to join him. The resolution was kept; the man was reclaimed, and the story of his recovery came back to bless Miss Gary before she died. This hymn, God's sweet-voiced but invisible angel, had gone with the man through' all these weary years of sin, and finally led him back to life and purity and sal- vation. 4. The function of song as an instrument of expression needs to be considered. This is by no means unimportant, though in this utilitarian age it may less engage attention. The realm of art is higher than that of mere instrumental efficiency. It is most intimately related to the noblest ca- pacities and activities of the human spirit. These are essentially creative, and do not find their full scope in the mere adjustment of means to utilitarian ends. In the per- fect life of the eternal future it is possible that these two forms of activity may blend in indissoluble unity ; but in the life that now is, the question " Qui bonof" is sometimes allowed to crowd out the very best things in human expe- rience. The highest exercise to which the soul can ever come — and it is one which shall occupy it in the ages of the eternal years — is that of expression ; and in this will be embodied our proper selfhood, together with the impres- sions by which our individual natures have been developed and enriched. Here, then, comes into view a function of song which allies it most intimately with the highest possibilities of human experience, even with those of the perfect life. When the soul afrmes to its divinest heights song is sure to be there. If it is not already in waiting it is created, as were the Magnificat and the Nunc Dimittis. Not that any expression may be adequate. He has had little of what should be called experience who has not known emotions " too deep for tears." There is a " peace that passe th un- derstanding" and a "joy that is unspeakable and full of glory." But song and music go with the spirit to the 13 146 METHODISM AND LITER A T URE. uttermost limit of rational expression, and so minister to its highest needs. It used to be said of Luther that his soul could never find full vent " except through his flute amid tears." Good old George Herbert was wont to say that "the time he spent in prayer and cathedral music was his heaven upon earth ;" and on the last Sunday of his life he sprang from his couch, seized his violin, and exclaimed : "My God! my God! my music shall find thee, And every string shall have its attribute to sing." And then, after tuning his instrument, he sang a verse of his own hymn : "The Sundays of man's life, Threaded together on Time's string, Make bracelets to adorn the wife Of the eternal, glorious King. On Sundays heaven's door stands ope ; Blessings are plentiful and rife — More plentiful than hope." 5. Finally, we must recognize the function of song as a record of individual and national life. This is involved in its origin and nature, as well as in its uses and associa- tions. That which most distinguishes lyric poetry is its subjectivity. If genuine, it must bear the stamp of per- sonal experience; and so it becomes one of the most im- portant records of human life. The history which lies imbedded in the poetry of the world is more comprehen- sive and more minute than any other written history. The great hymn of Luther, "A stro»g tower is our God," was- written at the time of that grand historical pro- test in which the name "Protestant" originated, and so it is monumental of this name as nothing else is. That precious hymn of Christian trust translaced by John Wesley, " Com- mit thou all thy griefs," from Paul Gerhardt, was written when its author, with his wife and little children, was mak- ing his toilsome journey on foot back to his native Saxony, THE LITERATURE OF SACRED SONG. 147 having been driven out from his church at Berlin because of his uncompromising adherence to the Lutheran doctrine. The lines were called forth by his wife's tears, though they were doubtless addressed as much to himself as to her. Anne Steele's best hymn, " Father, whate'er of earthly bliss," is the outcome of an experience of sorrow from be- reavement and hopeless invalidism such as few are called to know. Very similar is the history of that most pathetic hymn of Schmolke, " My Jesus, as thou wilt." The one universally familiar hymn of John Fawcett, " Blest be the tie that binds," reflects the affectionate importunity of his little flock, by which he was led to forego London, to a church in which he had received a very flattering call, and thus, through this hymn, to become a citizen of the Christian world. That hymn of Charles Wesley which has, from the first, held the place of honor in all the lead- ing Methodist hymn-books, " O for a thousand tongues," was written on the first anniversary of his spiritual birth ; and its opening line is an echo of a remark of the good Peter Bohler, " Had I a thousand tongues I would use them all in celebrating the praises of Jesus, my Savior." Another hymn of his, which is pronounced by Southey "the finest lyric in the English language" — "Stand the omnipotent decree" — has for its historic background the Lisbon earthquake and the prevailing consternation pro- duced by this appalling calamity. That most beautiful hymn of Henry Francis Lyte, and one of the most beauti- ful in our language, reflects the experience of a devoted pastor on the Sabbath of his final parting with his affec- tionate people, when the darkness of fatal disease and swiftly coming death was gathering fast about him. "Rock of Ages," as every body knows, is a monument of the thor- ough misunderstanding into which a belligerent Calvinist had come of the Methodist doctrine of Christian perfection ; for it at first bore this controversial title, " A Living and Dying Prayer for the Holiest Believer in the World ;" and 148 METHODISM AND LITERATURE. the heartiness with which Methodists have taken up this hymn, written to refute one of their most cherished and most vital beliefs, proves most conclusively that in all mat- ters of heart experience real Christians are one. And, to mention but one more — but that shall be the most ecumen- ical hymn of this century — "Just as I am," of Charlotte Elliott, stands in the very heart of evangelical Protestant- ism. The Haldanes, the great revival in Geneva, and especially that eminent man of God, Dr. Caesar Malan, are all commemorated in this hymn. Miss Elliott had come to a spiritual awakening, and realized her need of a posi- tive religious experience. For months her one prayer was that she might know Christ as her personal Savior. But for some reason she felt herself unable to lay hold of him by faith, and so this sense of spiritual comfort was denied her. Her sister, who had been in a similar state of mind, had come to the comfortable assurance of sins forgiven, and this served to deepen Charlotte's despondency. At this time (May, 1827) Dr. Malan visited at Miss Elliott's home, and became acquainted with her spiritual state. One day he suddenly turned to her and said: " Cut the cable, dear Charlotte. It will take too long to unloose it. Cut it; it is a small loss;" and then exhorted her to " give one look, silent, but continuous, to the cross of Jesus." Challenged thus abruptly, she was driven from herself into Christ; and the result was that she found the assurance she had so long been seeking. All this is reflected in this most intensely and felicitously evangelical hymn : "Just as I am, without one plea, But that thy blood w r as shed for me, And that thou bidst me come to thee, 0 Lamb of God, I come !" F. D. HEMENWAY. THE LITERATURE OF BIBLE STUDY. 149 XI. THE LITERATURE OF BIBLE STUDY. Throughout its entire history the Methodist Church has given " attendance to reading." On that very passage of Scripture its founder made this comment in his "Notes on the New Testament :" " Give thyself to reading, both publicly and privately. Enthusiasts," he exclaims, " ob- serve this ! Expect no end without the means." With this principle announced as a fundamental truth in Chris- tian economics, and realizing the potency and value of Christian literature, Mr. Wesley at once inaugurated a system of comprehensive and extensive publication, the chief object of which was to aid in the study and under- standing of the Sacred Scriptures, and to promote the spiritual life and growth of the soul. He practiced upon his own precepts, and was a most voluminous reader and writer. As early as 1754, when Methodism as an organization had been only fifteen years in existence, Mr. Wesley com- menced writing his "Notes on the New Testament," in the hope of employing them as an evangelical agency, and designing them, as he says, "chiefly for plain, unlettered men, who understand only their mother tongue, and yet reverence and love the Word of God, and have a desire to save their souls." In the Preface he tells us that for many years he had contemplated such a work as this ; and, as evidence of his preparation for such a task, it may be stated that in ten weeks after he began the work the rough draft of the translation and notes of the four Gospels was completed. 150 METHODISM AND LITERATURE. In 1755 it was published in quarto form, entitled, "Explanatory Notes on the New Testament." Two years afterward a second edition appeared, and in 1760, in con- nection with his brother, he carefully compared the trans- lation with the original, and corrected and improved the Notes, and published the whole in a new and enlarged edition. The translation used in the Notes, and on which he makes his comments, is one that Mr. Wesley himself made ; and, as an evidence of his advanced scholarship, even at that early peiiod, it may be stated as a remarka- ble fact that many of the verbal changes made in the Re- vised Version of 1881, and which are claimed by its friends to give it a special excellence, were anticipated and pub- lished by John Wesley one hundred and twenty-seven years ago. It was also published in paragraphs, and no im- provement on Mr. Wesley's paragraphing has been made by the committee of the Jerusalem Chamber. He says that he did not alter the authorized version for altering's sake, but only where the sense was made better, stronger, clearer, or more consistent with the context, or where the sense being equally good, the phrase was better or nearer the original. These Notes won approval from many eminent scholars for their conciseness, spirituality, acuteness, and soundness of opinion, and it is a question with many even yet whether their value has really been superseded by the productions of later scholarship. Dr. Etheridge, a modern scholar, says that " Wesley expresses more in a sentence than many writers in whole pages," and Dr. Adam Clarke wrote that, "though short, the notes are always judicious, accu- rate, spiritual, terse, and impressive, and possess the happy and rare property of leading the reader immediately to God and his own heart." In 1765 Mr. Wesley published his "Explanatory Notes on the Old Testament," in three quarto volumes, in which he gave the pith of Matthew Henry's Exposition, THE LITERATURE OF BIBLE STUDY. 151 with selections from Poole's Annotations, to which were added copious observations of his own. The next important undertaking in this department of literature among the Methodists was not published until 1801. In that year Dr. Thomas Coke issued the first volume of his " Commentary on the Old and New Testa- ments," and this was followed by five other volumes, the last of which appeared in 1803. In the preparation of this work Dr. Coke was assisted by Samuel Drew, well known as the author of a work on the " Immortality of the Human Soul," and the subsequent biographer of Dr. Coke. Although this work drew largely upon a previous one by Dr. Dodd, it was nevertheless a thoroughly good and useful exposition of the sacred text. The plan of the work varied from the usual order. After the exposition, which was rather practical than exegetical, there followed what he called inferences, and, last of all, reflections. In 1810 appeared the first volume of Adam Clarke's magnum opus, the " Commentary on the Bible," a bequest to the race. The eighth and last volume was not issued from the press until 1826. Concerning the preparation of this work the author says: "I have labored alone for twenty-five years previously to the work being sent to the press, and fifteen years have been employed in bringing it through the press; so that nearly forty years of my life have been so consumed." This was one of the greatest lit- erary achievements of that age, and it has since become the most widely circulated commentary, perhaps, ever written. It is permeated throughout with the living spirit of our holy religion. By its luminous expositions of divine truth it presents to the masses a book adapted to their in- struction, while to the scholar it offers the mature fruitage of critical sagacity and philological learning. Dr. Ether- idge, the scholarly biographer of Dr. Clarke, says that the Commentary is " one of the noblest works of the class in the whole domain of sacred literature. It is a thesaurus 152 METHODISM AND LITERATURE. of general learning ; and, as the exposition of an Eastern book, it abounds, very properly, with a great variety of Oriental illustrations, philological, ethnic, and antiqua- rian. . . . When we consider that this great under- taking was begun, continued, and ended by one man, and that man engaged in the zealous and faithful discharge of so many public duties, instead of reasonably complaining that here and there it has a blemish, or that its general plan is not in all respects filled up as completely as could be desired, our wonder is rather excited that he should have brought it so far as he did toward perfection. . . . The man who accomplished it achieved immortality, his name having become identified with an indestructible mon- ument of learning and religion." The last edition of the "Encyclopaedia Britannica" characterizes it as "a work of much learning and ability, and it still possesses vahie, though it is in great part superseded by the results of later scholarship." In 1811-18 the Rev. Joseph Benson published his Com- mentary, under the direction and patronage of the Wes- leyan Methodist Conference. It took rank at once as a sound and learned exposition of Holy Scripture ; and, in the opinion of those competent to judge, this work still perpetuates the usefulness of its author. The Rev. Dr. Bunting, who stood for years at the head of Methodism in England, frequently and strongly expressed the high esti- mation in which he held this work, combining, as he said, more largely than any other, and in better harmony, all the excellences of a sober and thoroughly Wesleyan expo- sition of the sacred volume. This opinion represents very largely the general estimate in which Benson's work is at present held by the Methodists of Great Britain. Outside the denomination the book has met with considerable favor. The Rev. Dr. Horne, author of the "Introduction," says of it : " An elaborate and very useful commentary on the Sacred Scriptures, which, independently of its practical THE LITERATURE OF BIBLE STUDY. 153 tendency, possesses the merit of compressing into a com- paratively small compass the substance of what the piety and learning of former ages have advanced, in order to facilitate the study of the Bible. Its late learned author was particularly distinguished for his critical and exact acquaintance with the Greek Testament." In 1833 was published Richard Watson's "Exposition of the Gospels of Matthew and Mark, and of Some Other Detached Parts of Holy Scripture." This work was writ- ten during the sickness of its author, was cut short by his lamented death, and published posthumously, first in Lon- don, and in 1837 in New York. It is a work of masterly disquisitions, and evinces a deep and comprehensive knowl- edge of divine truth. Dr. Horne says: "The sole object of this learned and original work is the elucidation of the Scriptures, and by this means to lay the foundation rather than suggest those practical and pious uses to which they must be applied if they make us wise unto salvation." And another eminent critic of a different communion, the Rev. Dr. Williams, author of the "Christian Preacher," speaks of Watson's exposition as "an admirable specimen of sacred interpretation, replete with sound divinity, and well adapted to promote the piety of the reader." In 1834 the Rev. Joseph Sutcliffe, A. M., published a Commentary on the Old and New Testaments, in two vol- umes, a work abounding in reflections of the greatest unc- tion and beauty. The text of the authorized version is not given, and the Commentary is equally adapted for the fam- ily and the study, embodying, as it does, the results of the author's labors for about forty years. Home says of it: "Many valuable elucidations of difficult passages will be found in this work, which are passed over in larger com- mentaries. The reflections at the end of each chapter are characterized by simplicity of diction combined with earnest piety." The Rev. Joseph Roberts was sent as a missionary to 154 METHODISM AND LITERATURE. the East in 1818, and remained there nearly fourteen years. In 1835 he published "Oriental Illustrations of the Sacred Scriptures," collected from the customs, etc., of the Hindoos. This work not only serves to show the truth of Scripture, but it is eminently adapted to the elu- cidation of its meaning. On its appearance the British Critic declared it to be "replete ^\ith instructive matter," aud Dr. Home said it supplied "a most important desid- eratum in Biblical literature." In 1831 the Rev. James Wood had published a " Treatise on the Nature and Use of the Tropes of Holy Scripture." In 1840 the Rev. George Cubitt, for fourteen years connectional editor of the Wesleyan publications, published his " Parables," and in 1844 his " Scriptural 'Expositions." Iii 1863 the Rev. W. J. Shrewsbury's "Notes on Ezekiel" were published, edited by his son ; and in 1865 appeared his "Notes on Daniel and the Minor Prophets." In 1869 the Rev. W. H. Rule, D. D., published an "Histor- ical Exposition of the Book of Daniel the Prophet," and in the same year appeared the "Exposition of Paul's Epistle to the Romans," by H. W. Williams, D. D., who also published, in 1871, an "Exposition of the Epistle to the Hebrews." In 1877 the Rev. Joseph A. Beet printed his "Commentary on the Romans," intended for popular use, the author being an eminent Wesleyan scholar. The Methodists of England have published numerous instructive and valuable works in the department of Bible dictionaries. As early as 1804 the Rev. James Wood pub- lished his " New Dictionary of the Holy Bible," in two volumes, which has since passed through numerous editions, the latest being published by Tegg, in 1863. In 1831 the Biblical and Theological Dictionary of Richard Watson appeared, a work that reached its tenth edition in Eng- land in 1850, and has been republished in this country at the Methodist Book Concern in New York, and at the Southern Methodist Publishing-houje. THE LITERATURE OF BIBLE STUDY. 155 The Rev. John Farrar was a voluminous author in the line of Bible dictionaries. In 1844 he published his " Proper Names of the Bible ;" in 1852, his " Biblical and Theological Dictionary ;" in 1853, an " Ecclesiastical Dic- tionary ;" in 1857, " A Key to the Pronunciation of Scrip- ture Names;" and in the same year, "A Manual of Bib- lical Geography." Samuel Dunn was also the author of a " Dictionary of the Gospels," and James Creighton of a " Dictionary of Scripture Proper Names." The Primitive Methodist Book-room published, in 1854, a " Biblical Die-" tionary," by J. A. Bastow, a member of the Syro-Egyptian Society. The American Methodists have emulated the example of their Wesleyan brethren, and have published numerous valuable works, which invite and contribute to the better understanding of the divine Word. For a long time they relied almost exclusively upon their English republications, and Clarke's and Benson's Commentaries were to be found in almost every Methodist library, the circulation of these works being far greater here than in England. Among the earliest books of an exegetical and practical nature was Joseph Longking's "Notes on the Gospels." This work was largely introduced into the Sunday-schools, and met the wants of the Church at the time, so far as the Gospels were concerned. In 1848 the " Notes on the Acts of the Apostles," designed for Sunday-schools, Bible-classes, and private reading, was published by Rev. Bradford K. Peirce, now editor of Zion's Herald. In 1851 the Rev. Dr. McClintock, in commenting, in the Methodist Quarterly Review, on the Rev. Andrew Car- roll's " Critical and Exegetical Notes and Discourses on the Gospels," which appeared in that year, said : " A com- mentary upon the Scriptures is the great want of our Church in these times. Those that we have, however ex- cellent they may be in many respects, are so far behind the present state of knowledge, especially with regard to 156 METHODISM AND LITERATURE. the geography of Palestine, as to be useless, or even worse, so far as the illustration of Scripture is concerned." The next year (1852) appeared Dr. James Strong's "New Harmony and Exposition of the Gospels," which consisted of a parallel and combined arrangement, on a new plan, of the narratives of the four evangelists, ac- cording to the authorized version, and a continuous com- mentary, with brief notes subjoined. It also possessed a supplement, containing extended chronological and topo- graphical dissertations, and a complete analytical index. Every page gave evidence of unsparing labor, and the ex- positions were terse, vigorous, and eminently suggestive. The Quarterly j which had previously complained of the de- fectiveness of our commentaries, now pronounced this book, as a whole, an honor, not merely to Methodist denomina- tional literature, but to the Biblical literature of the age. Dr. Whedon, in his Preface to his Commentary on Matthew and Mark, says that several of his most valuable illustra- tions were appropriated from this work. This was subse- quently abridged, and followed, in 1854, by a Harmony of the Gospels in Greek. In 1856 the Rev. Dr. F. G. Hibbard published at the New York Book Concern his " Psalms Chronologically Arranged, with Historical Introductions, and a General Introduction to the Whole Book." The author, by the learning and ability evinced in this work, rendered a great service to the Church. It brings this part of the Scrip- tures before the people in an attractive form, and is, as the author asserts, an attempt to place the reader in ex- act sympathy with the author of each Psalm at the time of writing. Four years before (1852), the Book Concern published Clement Moody's "New Testament Expounded and Illustrated, according to the Usual Marginal Refer- ences, in the Very Words of Holy Scripture," together with notes and translations, and a complete marginal harmony of the Gospels. THE LITERATURE OF BIBLE STUDY. 157 In 1860 the Western Book Concern published a Com- mentary on the New Testament, by Rev. William Nast, D. D., the apostle of German Methodism in America. This work, which first appeared in the German language,, was commenced at the instance of the General Conference of 1852, for the use of the German Methodists. It was originally issued in numbers, but is now altogether fur- nished in bound volumes. The English translation, the first volume of which appeared in 1864, from the pen of the author, has the following comprehensive title: "A Commentary on the Gospels of Matthew and Mark, Crit- ical, Doctrinal, and Homiletical ; embodying for Popular Use and Edification the Results of German and English Exegetical Literature, and designed to meet the Difficulties of Modern Skepticism. With a General Introduction, treating of the Genuineness, Authenticity, Historic Verity, and Inspiration of the Gospel Records, and of the Har- mony and Chronology of the Gospel History." The most considerable and scholarly of American Meth- odist enterprises in this direction is Dr. Whedon's Com- mentary, the first volume of which appeared in 1860. The project of a brief commentary was first suggested to the learned editor of the Quarterly Review by the Rev. Dr. Stevens, the historian of Methodism, and at his urgent request it was undertaken. Dr. Whedon himself thus ex- plains its origin in his Preface to the first volume: "The preparing of a commentary on the New Testament was first suggested to the author in behalf of the tract depart- ment of the Methodist Episcopal Church. Its extent was then limited to a single volume, and its object to the tract circulation. When, however, that volume was completed as far as the Apocalypse, it was on all hands concluded that a work of a larger extent was more desirable, so as to be brought within the requisition of a resolution of the General Conference of 1856, directing a commentary suit- able for general popular use to be prepared. The task of 158 METHODISM AND LITERATURE. reconstructing was immediately commenced, and the pres- ent volume is thus far the result." When the second volume (on Luke and John) ap- peared in 1866, the Bibliotheca Sacra, the judicious and scholarly Congregational review, said: ''This Comment- ary, not less than the previous volume on Matthew and Mark, evinces the acuteness and perspicacity of the au- thor." On the appearance of the next volume (Acts — Eomans), in 1871, the same authority said : " Dr. Whedon writes in a perspicuous, precise, and forcible style. His thoughts in this volume are closely condensed. His views of the Epistle to the Romans, as they are here presented, are particularly deserving of study. He must have made special exertion to crowd so much matter in so brief a space." In 1875 this volume was translated into the Hin- dustani language by Rev. T. J. Scott, D. D., and pub- lished by the American Methodist Mission press. When the fourth volume (Corinthians — 2 Timothy) was pub- lished, the Canadian Methodist Magazine said: "By this invaluable Commentary on the New Testament, Dr. Whe- don worthily crowns the labors of a useful life. He brings to his task a ripe scholarship, a cultured critical faculty, and a keen insight into the meaning of sacred truth. The present volume is every way worthy of its predecessors, which have already achieved so distinguished a reputation both in the Old World and the New." The fifth volume is from Titus to Revelation. In the meantime the idea of the work expanded into a Commentary on the entire Bible, and Dr. Whedon called to his assistance several of the most erudite men of the Church to aid him in its further prosecution. When Joseph Benson was appointed editor of the connectional publica- tions in London, he was allowed three assistants in his office, so that he might pursue the preparation of his Com- mentary with as little interruption as possible. But Dr. Whedon, having the care and editorship of the Quarterly THE LITERATURE OF BIBLE STUDY. 159 Review, besides the editing of the denominational publica- tions at New York, had prepared the whole of the New Testament Commentary alone, with the single exception of the Notes on Philippians and Colossians, which were fur- nished by his nephew, the Kev. D. A. Whedon, D. D., and was henceforth to occupy more the position of an editor than an author. The first two volumes on the Old Testament have not, as yet, appeared. One of these, on Genesis and Exodus, will be from the pen of Dr. F. H. Newhall ; the remainder of the Pentateuch is in the hands of Drs. Newhall, Steele, and Lindsay. The third volume includes Joshua, from the pen of the Rev. Dr. Steele, and the Books of Judges to Second Samuel by Kev. M. S. Terry, D. D. Volume fourth, from Kings to Esther, is also by Dr. Terry ; and the fifth volume, on the Psalms, is by Rev. F. G. Hib- bard, D. D. This is an entirely different work from the " Psalms Chronologically Arranged." The sixth volume includes Job, by the Rev. J. K. Burr, D. D. ; Proverbs, by the Rev. William Hunter, D. D. ; and Ecclesiastes and Song of Solomon, by Rev. A. B. Hyde, D. D. The re- mainder of the book is in the hands of able and learned expositors, one of whom, the Rev. J. Horner, D. D., who is to write on Daniel and the Minor Prophets, is known to be one of the most scholarly and critical writers of the Church. When completed, this Commentary will form a repertory of the latest and most thorough scholarship, fully abreast of the demands of the age, and will doubtless amply justify the declaration of the Wesleyan Methodist Magazine, of London, when it says: "Of the numerous popular and portable commentaries which have appeared, this is undoubtedly the best." In 1876 Dr. Henry A. Buttz, now president of Drew Theological Seminary, published the "Epistle to the Ro- mans in Greek," in which the text of Robert Stephens, third edition, is compared with the texts of the Elzevirs, 160 METHODISM AND LITERATURE. Lachmann, Alford, Tregelles, Tischendorf, and Westcott, and with the chief uncial and cursive manuscripts. On this work the editor of the Quarterly Review made these interesting observations : " This, the first-fruits of Professor Buttz's scholarly labors in New Testament Greek, is also the first production of a Greek text from any of our three leading theological seminaries, and the first specimen of a Greek book ever, we believe, issued from a Methodist press in England or America. It is a noble, if not a large, commencement." It is also published by the Book Con- cern in an interleaved edition. In 1878 the Methodist Book Concerns published "The People's Commentary," including brief notes on the New Testament, with copious references. The National Reposi- tory characterized it as a " very concise, very clear, and truly evangelical Commentary." The author, the Rev. Amos Binney, of the Providence Conference, had previously pub- lished a "Theological Compend," a work which has had an extensive circulation, reaching in its old edition to over forty thousand, and has also been translated into Urdu, Chinese, German, Swedish, Arabic, and other languages. A new and improved edition, with the Rev. Dr. Steele as co-author, appeared in 1875. The Methodist Book Agents at New York announced, several years ago, their purpose to issue in original treat- ises a comprehensive " Library of Theological and Biblical Literature," under the editorial supervision of Drs. Crooks and Hurst, to which, beside the editors, who also under- take a part of the work, Dr. Harman, of Dickinson Col- lege ; Dr. Bannister, of Garrett Biblical Institute ; Drs. Bennett, of Syracuse, and Whitney, of Hackettstown (con- jointly) ; Bishop Foster (two volumes) ; Dr. Ridgaway and Dr. "Winchell, were to contribute each a treatise on his des- ignated subject or department. The first volume, Dr. Har- man's " Introduction to the Study of the Holy Scriptures," appeared in 1879. This work is not a compilation, but a THE LITERATURE OF BIBLE STUDY. 161 composition. Its matter, in its entirety, has passed through the author's mind, and so become his own, thus securing its originality and freshness, and rendering all its parts harmonious among themselves. " The vast and varied erudition which he brings to his task makes him master of the situation, while his indomitable patience and per- severance never tire in exposing error and in tracking truth to its source." Methodist authors have in a number of instances ren- dered material help in the publication of commentaries with which the Church has not been connected. In the preparation of Dr. SchafF's " Popular Commentary on the New Testament" (Edinburgh, 1879), Drs. Pope and Moul- ton, of the English Wesleyan Church, had committed to their joint labors the epistles of John, and Dr. Moulton, in connection with Professor Milligan, had charge of Rev- elation. In Lange's Commentary (1864) Bishop Hurst translated the Epistle to the Romans, on which the labors of both editors and translator were very great. " Upon no other book," says Dr. Schaff, " except Matthew and Genesis, has so much original labor been bestowed." In that Commentary, also, Dr. Strong translated the Book of Esther. He translated the frequent Latin citations, added the textual and grammatical notes, enlarged the list of exegetical helps, and furnished an excursus of the apocryphal additions to Esther, and another on the use of the book among the Jews. In the department of Biblical dictionaries and hand- books on Bible instruction the issues from the Methodist press have been numerous, and a few only can be noticed. Rev. James Covel's " Bible Dictionary" appeared in 1839; a Concordance was published by Rev. George Coles in 1847; Dr. Hibbard's " Palestine, its Geography and Bible History," in 1851 ; the Rev. Dr. Akers' Chronology in 1855, and C. Munger's book on the same subject at a later period ; Dr. Buck's ' 1 Closing Scenes in the Life of Christ," 14 162 METHODISM AND LITERATURE. being a harmonized combination of the four Gospel histo- ries of the last year of the Savior's life, in 1869 ; Holli- day's Bible "Hand-book," in the same year; Whitney's " Hand-book of Bible Geography," in 1871 ; and Dr. J. M. Freeman's " Hand-book of Bible Manners and Customs," a scholarly and exhaustive work. The most thorough and extensive of modern works of this kind — McClintock and Strong's "Biblical, Ecclesias- tical, and Theological Cyclopaedia " — though not a distinc- tive Methodist publication, was issued under the direction of Methodist editors. The work was commenced in 1853. From that time the editors were engaged, with the aid of several regular collaborators and of numerous contributors of special articles, in its preparation. The aim of the work, the editors say, is to furnish a book of reference on all the topics of the science of theology, in its widest sense, under one alphabet. There is no dictionary in the Euglish language which seeks to cover the same ground, except upon a comparatively small scale. For the treat- ment of all the topics in systematic, historical, and prac- tical theology, Dr. McClintock was responsible. But his death occurred previous to the publication of the fourth volume in 1872 ; yet he left numerous articles, which were used by Dr. Strong as far as they were practicable. The first volume was issued from the press of Harper and Brothers in 1867, and the tenth volume, completing the alphabet, in 1881. A supplement is to follow. This work is not only a Bible dictionary, but a universal reference- book on all subjects of religious interest. On the appear- ance of the second volume the Bibliotheca Sacra said : " Although this work is published under the patronage of the Methodist denomination, it is by no means a sectarian cyclopaedia. It is instructive to scholars of all denomina- tions. Many of its articles are written with great care, and evince a multifarious scholarship." The Rev. Dr. J. H. Vincent is the author of numerous THE LITERATURE OF BIBLE STUDY. 163 minor books, which have been successfully employed as aids in the study of the Bible. Among these are his "Pictorial Bible Geography" and "Berean Lessons," to the latter of which must be ascribed much of the impulse to the modern study of the Bible in Methodist Sunday- schools. To him, also, are we indebted for the germinal concept which resulted in the adoption of the uniform international lesson system, an arrangement that gives us regularly, in almost every species of periodical, whole col- umns of Scriptural commentaries and religious instruction, a system that finds its culmination in the development of the ''Chautauqua idea," which seeks as its object the uni- versal diffusion of a wholesome literature, a God-enthroned science, and a pure, sound, and stalwart evangelism. EDITOR. 164 METHODISM AND LITERATURE. XII. THEOLOGICAL AND DOCTRINAL LITER- ATURE. Methodism claims to be a faithful teacher of the whole compass of theological science. As has been shown by the Rev. Dr. Rigg, in the London Quarterly Beview, it has its system of theology complete in all its parts, basing its ex- istence and its work in the world, not upon any one or two specific doctrines, but upon the one broad foundation of Christian truth. Methodism, whether in England and her dominions or in America, has never given birth to a her- esy; her annual conferences in various parts of the world exhibit the spectacle of thousands of pastors who are of one accord and of one mind as to the fundamental doctrines of Christianity. But there are doctrines which she has specially empha- sized ; and the extent of their influence on the success which has attended Methodist preaching has been a matter of grave speculation among many thoughtful and philo- sophic observers of moral and mental developments be- yond her pale. A few of these authorities we refer to. In the North American Review for January, 1876, the Rev. Dr. Diman, a professor in Brown University, thus accounts for what he calls " the enormous growth of Methodism" in this country: "The vital power of Methodism must be sought, not in its form, but in its spirit. It is impossible to account for its rapid growth save on the hypothesis that it met a great popular want. And it is equally impossible not to recognize the fact that this adaptation lay in the sharp contrast which it presented to the prevailing faith. THEOLOGY AND DOCTRINE. 165 Tbe immense popular influence of Methodism lay in its bold appeal from 'the theology of the intellect' to 'the theology of the feelings.' Calvinism, throughout all its camps, ' lay intrenched in the outworks of the under- standing;' but to souls sated with theological formulas Methodism, with its direct intuitions of divine truth, came like springs of water in a dry and thirsty land." In a notice of a sermon preached before the Old-school Presbyterian Assembly in 1851, by the Rev. Dr. Hum- phrey, the New Englander for January, 1852, says^that Dr. Humphrey thus accounts for the growth of Method- ism : "It might be clearly shown, as I humbly conceive, that its past success is to be referred, not to those doc- trines which are peculiar to itself, but to those which are common to both theologies." Whereupon the reviewer remarks: "But will Dr. Humphrey deny that one of the chief causes of the spread of Methodism is the an- tagonism of its preachers to a notion of predestination, which served in the popular mind to cast doubt on the sincerity of God in the Gospel invitations? Is not their success very much due to the emphasis with which they have insisted on the truth of God's unwillingness that any should perish — on the truth that none who will seek God are cut off from the hope of salvation, and that all may seek him ; nay, that all are commanded and entreated to do so? The vitality of Methodism sprang from its asser- tion of these truths of the Gospel. So far, its power is the power of the Gospel." The British Quarterly for August, 1852, in discussing this subject, says: "Methodism was evidently a reaction against the influence and authority of the high-and-dry people in the established Church. It seized on the ortho- dox doctrines ; but it did so that they might be made to produce their proper spiritual fruit. The Methodist ele- ment soon diffused itself freely through other religious bodies. The pulpits both of the established Church and 166 METHODISM AND LITERATURE. of the Nonconformists came very perceptibly under its in- fluence.' The Contemporary Review for Januar) r , 1880, in an article by Hillebrand on " T. e Eighteenth Century," makes this influence greater, perhaps, than is claimed by Methodist writers themselves. He asserts that "the High and Low Church of to-day are the outgrowth respectively of the Wesleyan movement, of the last century," and adds : " Wesleyanism as a historical fact was abundantly fruitful. It gave new life to the State Church, roused it to resist- ance, and discovered to it its own weak points." At first the influence of these doctrines was not recog- nized and admitted by the higher literary and ecclesias- tical authorities of England ; but in later times due credit, in many instances, has been awarded to the Wesleys and their coadjutors even by those who do not adopt their theological views. The Westminster Review, long in reach- ing its conclusions, in its issue for January, 1851, in speak- ing of Wesley, gives utterance to the following: "The sequel is well known : how he took up the labors, while others boasted of the privileges, of apostleship; civilized whole counties ; lifted brutal populations into communities of orderly citizens and consistent Christians ; and in gran- deur of missionary achievement rivaled the most splendid successes of Christendom." In speaking of the influence of Wesleyan doctrines on Devon and Cornwall, the wildest and most ferocious people of England in Wesley's time, the Edinburgh Review of the same date as the one just quoted said: "No partiality for old-world investigations, no distrust of the self-opinion of modern times, will tempt us to affirm that the history of former ages affords any thing comparable to the phenomena of an existing society such as this, the last achievement of political progress." And Lord Mahon, afterward Earl Stanhope, in his History of England, in speaking of the improved character and usefulness of the Anglican Church, says: "Nor let any false shame hinder us from owning that, though other THEOLOGY AND DOCTRINE. 167 causes were at work, it is to the Methodists that great part of the merit is clue." It has been said that the doctrines of the founder of Methodism were drawn from Scripture, and that to it every article of the Methodist creed points and submits. Among the earliest of the controversies that Wesley participated in was that in reference to the doctrine of predestination. In this he was long and earnestly engaged. The secession of Mr. Whitefield from Arminianism to Calvinism gave rise to the controversy, and the war was begun by Mr. Wesley preaching, and afterward printing, his remarkable sermon on Free Grace, at Bristol, in 1740. In this publi- cation he declares that he abhors the doctrine of predesti- nation. To this sermon Mr. Whitefield replied, and the polemic war was thereafter waged for fifty years. Mr. Wesley's next publication on the subject was, ' 4 Predestina- tion Calmly Considered ;" and this was followed, among others, by " Serious Thoughts on the Perseverance of the Saints," " What is an Arminian?" "Thoughts upon God's Sovereignty," " Some Remarks on Mr. Hill's Review of all the Doctrines Taught by Mr. John Wesley" (1772), and "Some Remarks on Mr. Hill's Farrago Double Distilled" (1773). Mr. Wesley wrote on all the doctrines of the Bible, and more particularly on those distinctive doctrines of Methodism which were assailed by the theology of the period. The list of the separate publications of John and Charles Wesley occupies sixty pages of Osborn's " Wes- leyan Bibliography," and can not, of course, be recorded here. The principal works of John Wesley on practical divinity, however, may be mentioned as: 1. "An Address to the Clergy" (1756) ; 2. " A Plain Account of Christian Perfection" (1777) ; 3. "An Earnest Appeal to Men of Reason and Religion" (1744); 4. "A Further Appeal to Men of Reason and Religion" (1745); and, 5. His Ser- mons (one hundred and forty -one in number). 168 METHODISM AND LITERATURE. John Fletcher's works were principally directed against Antinomianism and Calvinism, and stand to-day unanswered and unanswerable. They justify the remark that " Method- ism has been the standing advocate of the doctrine of free- will as a subjective and immutable attribute of the human soul." His works were originally published in eight volumes in 1803, but new r editions have frequently since appeared. The Christian Preaelier (English publication) says that "his works contain an unanswerable defense of the doc- trine of original sin and of the Godhead of Christ, several pieces in vindication of general redemption and other points with w r hich it is connected, and are distinguished by uncommon clearness and strength of argument." Besides the works of Dr. Adam Clarke, Bishop Coke, Richard Watson, Joseph Benson, and others, all of w T hom entered con amove into the Calvinistic discussion, in 1817 the Rev. Edward Hare published three works of a contro- versial nature, namely: "A Preservative against the Errors of Socinianism," "A Caveat against Antinomian- ism," and a " Treatise on Justification." In 1824 appeared Nicholls's "Calvinism and Arminianism Compared." The controversy was carried to this side the Atlantic, where Calvinism had deeply intrenched itself, and where, per- haps, Mr. Whitefield's preaching had largely served to confirm its teachings. In the Eastern States Dr. Wilbur Eisk entered into the conflict with all the wealth of his noble intellect, and became an heroic and able defender of Arminianism. In 1837 he published "The Calvinistic Controversy," and at another date his " Reply to Pierpont on the Atonement." He had been preceded by Dr. Nathan Bangs, who, as early as 1809, began his career as an au- thor by a volume against " Christianism," an heretical sect of ISTew England. In 1815 he published his "Errors of Hopkinsianism," in 1817 his "Predestination Examined," and subsequently a "Life of Arminius" (1843). In the Middle States the Rev. Francis Hodgson, D. D., THEOLOGY AND DOCTRINE. 1G9 entered the controversy by publishing his "New System of Divinity Examined," and subsequently, in 1855, "The Calvinistic Doctrine of Predestination Examined and Re- futed." In 1813 the Rev. Asa Shinn, a controversial writer of considerable power, published his "Essay on the Plan of Salvation" (republished in 1831), and in 1840 his " Benevolence and Rectitude of the Supreme Being." Bishop Foster also published "Objections to Calvinism as It Is." In the South, where the doctrinal differences re- lated chiefly to other phases of theology, the pulpit gave forth no uncertain sound on the subject, and the press sent forth such works as Dr. L. M. Lee's " Great Supper not Calvinistic," "Methodism and Calvinism Compared," by Rev. C. Collins, D. D., and Rev. J. E. Cobb's " Philoso- ophy of Faith" (1853), which treats rather of the nature, fruits, and relations of faith. In 1853 there was published at the Methodist Book Concern at New York, a work written by Dr. Albert T. Bledsoe. It was entitled, "A Theodicy; or, Vindication of the Divine Glory as Manifested in the Constitution and Government of the Moral World." It was divided into two parts, the first showing that the existence of moral evil is consistent with the holiness of God, and the second that the existence of natural evil, or suffering, is consist- ent with the goodness of God. At the time of its appear- ance the Methodist Quarterly Review, then under the direc- tion of Dr. McClintock, commended it "as one of the clearest and ablest expositions of the moral government of God that has ever appeared." Seven years later, Dr. Whedon, who had in the meantime succeeded to the edit- orship of the Quarterly Review, in noticing an article in the New Englander reviewing Dr. Taylor on Moral Govern- ment, in which Dr. Bledsoe is said to sympathize with the views of Mr. Wesley, says: "As to Mr. Bledsoe, he ' sympathizes with Wesley' just so far as he agrees with Wesley, and no further ; but, agreeing or not, he is no 15 170 METHODISM AXD LITERATURE. Wesleyan authority." AdcI Dr. Curry, in an article in the Methodist Quarterly Review for April, 1854 : " The fact that this volume [Bledsoe's Theodicy] bears the imprint of the principal Arminian publishing-house of the country may lead some to suspect that it is but a re-statement, in a new form perhaps, of that side of the interminable contro- versy of the 1 Five Points.' Such a conclusion, however, would be not only premature, but unjust to both the au- thor and the publishers ; for while he holds himself quite independent of all previous systems, whether theological or philosophical, the publishers are not to be held accountable for the opinions he advances." In 1845 Dr. Bledsoe pub- lished his "Examination of President Edwards's Inquiry into the Freedom of the Will," which is " a full, direct, and incontrovertible refutation." In 18G4 the Rev. Dr. Whedon, editor of the Methodic Quarterly Review, published his "Freedom of the Will as a Basis of Human Responsibility," etc. From the well- known ability of the author, but more especially from the character of the book itself, it was at once accepted as a standard authority, which rank it is likely to maintain. Dr. Whedon has also written able and elaborate articles on the Calvinistic controversy, contributing to the Biblio- theca Sacra a discriminating and scholarly paper on "The Doctrines of Methodism," and is the author of the article on " Arminianism" in Johnson's Cyclopedia, from which the following extract is taken : " Arminian Methodism has, in little more than a century of her existence, apparently demonstrated that the Augustinian 'systematic theology* is unnecessary, and what it deems the primitive theology amply sufficient for a production of a profound depth of piety, a free ecclesiastical system, an energetic missionary enterprise, and a rapid evangelical success. . . . The problems she has thus wrought suggest the thought that the free, simple theology of the earliest age may be the universal theology of the latest." THEOLOGY AND DOCTRINE. 171 In 1853 the " Complete Works of James Arminius, D. D.," were published by Derby, Orton, and Mulligan, partly from Nichols's translation, and partly in a new translation by the Rev. W. R. Bagnall, A. M., of the New England Conference of the Methodist Episcopal Church. The Methodist Quarterly Review said of these three volumes: " Our denomination, whose creed accords so completely with the teachings of this learned and accomplished and holy man is bound to maintain the freshness of his precious memory." "The Reformation needed to be reformed, and that work was performed by James Arminius doctrinally, and by John Wesley spiritually." Of the larger systematic works on Methodist theology the first place is accorded to Watson's "Theological Insti- stutes." They originally appeared in 1824, and have been since issued in many editions. They are, says Dr. Ste- vens, " an elaborate body of divinity, and have elevated the theological character of Methodism, which has every- where recognized them as standards in its ministerial course of study." The elder Hodge speaks of this work as "ex- cellent, and well worthy of its high repute among Meth- odists." In 1852 Dr. John Brown, of Edinburgh, charac- terized Watson as "a prince in theology, and the 'Insti- tutes' as the noblest work in Methodism, and truly valu- able." Drs. Bangs and Cocker reviewed the apologetics of the "Institutes" in the Methodist Quarterly Review, which called forth Levington's " Watson's Theological Institutes Defended" (1863). Dr. McClintock prepared an elaborate "Analysis" of the "Institutes." In 1847 appeared the "Elements of Divinity; or, A Course of Lectures comprising a Clear and Concise View of the System of Theology as Taught in the Holy Scrip- tures," by Thomas N. Ralston, D. D. The author says that the design of the work is to present a clear and com- prehensive outline of the general system of Bible theology in a smaller compass and a form less intricate and per- 172 METHODISM AND LITERATURE. plexing to private members, young ministers, and students in divinity than the more critical and voluminous works heretofore published on the subject admit. In 1853 the Rev. Asbury Lowrey published his "Pos- itive Theology : being a Series of Dissertations on the Fundamental Doctrines of the Bible." This work, also, was designed to set forth the leading doctrines of Chris- tianity in plain and untechnical language. In 1853 the Rev. Luther Lee, D. D., then a minister of the American Wesleyans, published his "Elements of Theology," and five years later appeared £< A Complete Sys- tem of Christian Theology ; or, A Concise, Comprehensive, and Systematic View of the Evidences, Doctrines, Morals, and Institutions of Christianity," by the Rev. Samuel Wakefield, D. D. This work has since been republished in a somewhat altered edition, and can justly lay claim to the praise accorded it by the Methodist Quarterly Review, which said: "As a whole, as to the main outlines of our Arminian Christian theology, we know of no work which can be pronounced better than the volume before us." In 1874 the Rev. Dr. L. T. Townsend, of the Boston Theological Seminary, issued his "Outlines of Theology," the first part treating of general, and the second of Chris- tian, theology. Dr. Townsend is the author also of "Credo" (1869), "The Controversy between True and Pretended Christianity" (1869), "God-Man" (1872), and "Lost Forever" (1875). In 1875 appeared "A Compendium of Christian The- ology, being Analytical Outlines of a Course of Theolog- ical Study, Biblical, Dogmatic, Historical," by ~\V. B. Pope, D. D., theological tutor in Didsbury College, Man- chester ; and two years afterward was published "System- atic Theology," by Miner Raymond, D. D., professor in Garrett Biblical Institute. Both these works at once took high ground as theological standards, and have been incor- porated into the ministerial course of study. McClintock THEOLOGY AND DOCTRINE. 173 and Strong's Cyclopaedia, in referring to Watson's "Insti- tutes," says: "Although the works of Professors Pope and Raymond fill a niche in the temple of more recent litera- ture which, of course, the 'Institutes' can not fill, the lat- ter work can never be superseded." R. Treffry, Jr., issued his "Lectures on the Evidences of Christianity" in 1839; in 1872 the Rev. Edward Thomson, D. D., his work on the " Evidences of Revealed Religion," and in 1880' the Rev. Dr. Curry his " Fragments, Religious and Theolog- ical." In 1848 William Cooke, of the English Wesleyan New Connection, sent forth his " Christian Theology Ex- plained and Defended," and afterward his " Theiotes," an antidote to Atheism, Pantheism, Unitarianism, etc. The Rev. B. F. Cocker, D. D., was the author of "Lectures on the Truth of the Christian Religion," published in 1873. They were originally delivered before the students of the Michigan University, the author filling the chair of men- tal and moral philosophy. He was the author, also, of " Christianity and Greek Philosophy " (1870), of the " The- istic Conception of the World," and of several other valua- ble works. In 1869 John Locke, English Wesleyan, pub- lished "A System of Theology." Dr. Adam Clarke was author- of a work on " Christian Theology;" Dr. Hurst, of a work entitled " Our Theological Century," and Dr. John Hannah, "Lectures on the Study of Christian Theology." The doctrine of the atonement has been a source of great controversy, the Methodist Church having combated from the beginning the limitedness assigned to it by Cal- vinistic denominations. In 1848 the Rev. George W. Clarke published a work entitled, " Christ Crucified ; or, A Plain Scriptural Vindication of the Divinity and Re- deeming Acts of Christ." In 1857 the Rev. Dr. J. H. Rigg, of England, issued a work called " Modern Anglican Theology," a contribution on the doctrine of sacrifice and atonement against the laxity of the Broad Church theol- ogy of the day. The British Standard said of this book : 174 METHODISM AND LITERATURE. "It may be doubted whether any other man in Great Britain has so complete and strong a grasp of the entire theme." Dr. Pope also published works on "The King- dom of Christ" (1869), and "The Person of Christ" (1877). In 1858 the Rev. Dr. Whedon delivered a dis- course at the annual commencement of the Biblical- Insti- tute at Concord, which was published in accordance with a resolution of the corporation, and entitled, "Substitutional Atonement, Admissible by Reason, Demonstrable by Scrip- ture." In 1878 was published Dr. D. Dorchester's "Con- cessions of ' Liberalists ' to Orthodoxy," a work that treats of the Deity of Christ, the atonement, and endless pun- ishment. In 1879 the Rev. Dr. J. Miley, professor of sys- tematic theology in Drew Theological Seminary, published "The Atonement in Christ," Bishop E. M. Marvin, of the Methodist Episcopal Church, South, was the author. * also, of a work on " Christ's Atonement." Numerous works on Justification, the Witness of the Spirit, Sanctifieation, and other distinctive doctrines have been published from time to time. The " literature of the higher life" will be found treated in a distinct chapter. John Wesley was early led to believe that it was the priv- ilege of a real Christian to have a comfortable persuasion of being in a state of salvation, through the influence of the Holy Spirit. In modern times the doctrine of the direct witness of the Spirit may be considered as pe- culiar to the Wesleyans and Moravians, as Churches; yet it has been distinctly stated and enforced by distin- guished theologians of different countries, periods, and denominations. Several of Mr. Wesley's sermons are clear exponents of the doctrine. Among the works published on this theme are: "The Witness of the Spirit: A Treatise on the Evidence of the Believer's Adoption" (1847), by Rev. Daniel Walton ; " The Witness of the Spirit" (1848), by Rev. Charles Prest; "The Mission of the Spirit; or, Tne Office and Work of the Comforter in Human Redemp- THEOLOGY AND DOCTRINE, 175 tion" (1871), by the Rev. L. R. Dunn, and " Aspects of Christian Experience," by Bishop Merrill. Among the works pertaining to the resurrection, immor- tality, annihilationisni, and Universalism, we have the fol- lowing, among others : Samuel Drew on " The Immortality of the Soul " and " Resurrection of the Body ;" Dr. Wilbur Fisk's " Sermons and Lectures on Universalism ;" " Resur- rection of the Dead : a Vindication of the Literal Res- urrection of the Human Body ; in Opposition to the Work of Prof. Bush" (1847), by Calvin Kingsley, afterward one of the bishops of the Methodist Episcopal Church; "The Human Body at the Resurrection of the Dead" (1853), by George Hodgson; "Spirit Life and its Relations" (1859), by Rev. T. Spicer, D. D. ; " The Resurrection of the Body" (1859), by Rev. H. Mattison, D. D., also author of " The Bible Doctrine of Immortality ;" " Man all Immor- tal ; or, The Nature and Destination of Man as Taught by Reason and Revelation" (1864), by Bishop D. W. Clark; "Battle of Calvary; or, Universalism and Cognate Theo- ries against Jesus of Nazareth" (1873), by Rev. J. W. Chaffiu, A. M. ; " Universalism not of the Bible" (1873), by Rev. N. D. George, author of " Annihilationisni not of the Bible" (1870) ; " Annihilation of the Wicked," by Rev. W. McDonald; "The Separate and Continued Existence of the Soul after Death," by Rev. Eli M. H. Fleming, of the DesMoines Conference; and "Beyond the Grave" (1879), by Bishop R. S. Foster. This book is composed of three lectures delivered before the Chautauqua Assem- bly in 1878, with papers on recognition in the future state, and other addenda. This book created considerable com- ment, and called forth a volume entitled, "The Resurrec- tion Life; or, ' Beyond the Grave' Examined" (1881), by Rev. I. Villars, of the Illinois Conference of the Methodist Episcopal Church. Among other Methodist works that may be mentioned are: The "Catechisms, Nos. 1 and 2" (1852), by Rev. 176 METHODISM AND LITERATURE. D. P. Kidder, D. D. ; "Studies in Theism" (1879), by Borden P. Bowne, professor of philosophy in Boston Uni- versity ; "The Doctrine of the Trinity" (1846), by Rev. Dr. Mattison ; ' ' An Exposition of the Articles of Religion of the Methodist Episcopal Church" (1847), by Rev. S. Comfort ; ' 1 Letters on the Eternal Sonship of Christ " (1849), by Rev. William Beauchamp ; "Philosophy and Practice of Faith" (1853), by Lewis P. Olds; "Saving Faith : its Rationale, " by Rev. I. Chamberlayne, D. D. ; "The Eternal Sonship of Christ" (1865), by Rev. R. Treffry, Jr. ; and "The Foreknowledge of God, and Cog- nate Themes" (1878), by Rev. L. D. McCabe, D. D. In this work the author argues that foreknowledge leads to foreordi nation, and hence he proposes to revolutionize Wes- leyan theology by the introduction of the denial of God's foreknowledge of future contingent events. Against the doctrine that foreknowledge necessitates foreordination, says the Methodist Quarterly, " John Wesley fought all over Eng- land with every Calvinist and fatalist in pulpit and philos- ophy, with Whitefield no less than with Toplady. Against that Fletcher wrote his brilliant pamphlets. Against that Watson rolled out his great sermons and treatise." Among those who have written controversial and spe- cial works on the subject of baptism may be mentioned the following: Rev. C. Elliott, D. D. , N. H. Lee, Rev. F. G. Hibbard, D. D., Bishop S. M. Merrill, William Phillips, L. Rosser, D. D., Rev. H. M. Shaffer, H. Slicer, D.D., Joseph Travis, Moses Hill, D. D., Rev. Wesley Smith, Rev. N. Doane, and Rev. T. O. Summers, D. D. The last is the author of "Baptism: a Treatise on the Nature, Perpetuitv, etc., of the Initiatory Ordinance of the Chris- tian Church" (1853). This work argues, while discussing the subject of baptism as a whole, that baptism is not re- generation nor its necessary condition or instrument ; and it rejects the Calvinistic theory that only the children of believing parents are to be baptized. THEOLOGY AND DOCTRINE. Ill Having thus, as briefly as possible, taken a general sur- vey of the " theological and doctrinal literature of Meth- odism," we close the chapter with a sense of gratitude that while, in times past, our fathers were compelled to meet and combat heresies in multiplied forms, to expose errors, and save the Church from imbibing false notions, these controversies were nevertheless conducted in a Christian spirit, and have ever been, as a centripetal force, drawing all Churches and all Christians toward Christ, their com- mon center. So that to-day, as never before, Christians see eye to eye, and, gathering around the common cross, they join in singing, " Blest be the tie that binds Our hearts in Christian love. n EDITOR. 178 METHODISM AND LITERATURE. XIII. BOOKS AND BENEVOLENCE. A book is the outside spot for which Archimedes searched so anxiously. There is no measuring its power. Throw the spelliDg-book and a New Testament into a country, and revolution is only a question of time. They will lift up the roofs of the cabins, and add stories on sto- ries, till the cabins are mansions. They will push the jail aside for the school-house, and hide the gallows behind the church. They will widen the six-foot streets of China into the Broadways of commerce. They will patch up all the rents, and rend all the "patches." They will elevate every home, and envelop every inhabitant. They will leave their transfiguring power upon all the community. There is no measuring the power of books. A book is a condensed and revised author. The au- thor puts himself at his best. He is out for a purpose. He prepares his presence for a given result. Thus attired in his best, he has access to our inner selves. He has ad- mission to our most secret hearts. In the form of a book he does not awaken antagonism as a person who seeks to instruct or correct us. We take up the ideas and suggestions of a book a little as if they were our own discoveries. We have been search- ing for them, and when found we pass judgment upon them, adopting or rejecting them according to our sweet will, without any feeling that we are yielding to the supe- rior strength or knowledge of another. Books take us in our solitude. The difficult thing in making a case with most business and public men is to BOOKS AND BENEVOLENCE. 179 get an undisturbed audience, sufficiently protracted to pre- sent the whole matter. This a book can secure by coming when there is no one to interfere. We are at leisure ; we look over the matter, and feel the argument and see the presentations. Thus books furnish our convictions. We do not adopt the conclusions of the book, but we accept the information of the book, and this becomes a part of our opinion, and finally crystallizes into a conviction. The benevolent causes of the Church depend upon conviction. The money to save the world must be con- science money. Impulse dies out like the flame from a wisp of straw. The boilers that feed the world's engines must be heated over stone-coal fires to make the world move. The aggressive power of a Church is in proportion to the consecrated brain of the Church. The people that keep abreast with the great movements in popular thought or in the public mind are the people to plan and execute campaigns against actual foes. Put into a family a well- selected library touching the great fields of the Church's labors and triumphs, and that family will grow into the first rank in the Church. This solid information is found in the books. A smattering may be picked up from the conversation of well-informed people. Outlines may be borrowed from the weekly papers, but accurate and in- structive knowledge can be found only in the books. Thus it happens that one does not find the most intelli- gent audiences in the great cities. Some men, the most in- telligent in their departments of labor, may be found ; but the mass do not average up with country audiences. In the country home, where the daily seldom finds its way, the family is trained on the books distributed by the pastor or through the Sunday-school. These become the staple for doctrine and for opinion. These make up the ground of conviction. When we furnish books that master and unfold the 180 METHODISM AND LITERATURE. ground and work of our benevolences and secure their wide circulation, we shall raise a generation that will stand by the great Church benevolences. Given intelligence, and benevolence will be limited only by ability and piety. Put the mission-fields upon the mind of the Church, and the Spirit will press them upon the heart and pocket-book. In great organizations, as well as in individual accounta- bility, knowledge is conviction. C. H. FOWLER. LIT ERA T URE AND ED UCA TION. 181 XIV. CHURCH LITERATURE AND EDUCA- TIONAL WORK. Methodist education begins in the family, and is con- tinued in the Sunday-school and the Church. Besides the more formal work of instruction, a large and varied ele- ment of social influence permeates all these. It is carried on in seminaries, academies, colleges, and universities. Of late annual assemblies, having this largely in view, have been inaugurated ; while, from the beginning, the mighty influence of the press has been employed to strengthen, direct, and supplement all other agencies. The work of education has a most intimate relation to the evangeliza- tion of the world. It goes hand-in-hand with the preach- ing of the Gospel. The evils of ignorance are, in number and magnitude, beyond estimation. In all its dispensations the Church has made earnest efforts for their removal. God complains, " My people are destroyed for lack of knowledge." " O that they were wise, that they did un- derstand !" embodies the desire of his heart. To obviate these evils kings were required to write out copies of his law, and parents and teachers to inculcate its truth on the hearts and minds of the young. The apostles enjoyed for years intimate fellowship with the Great Teacher, and the Holy Ghost was given to bring all his sayings to their re- membrance. Thus they were led to commit to writing the things most surely believed, and in which they would have the world instructed. The translation of the Bible and the writings of Luther and his coadjutors were mainly in- strumental in the great Reformation. Wesley and his 182 METHODISM AND LITERATURE. followers used the press on a large scale as a most efficient auxiliary ' ' in spreading Scriptural holiness over the world." In God's good providence the Methodist Episcopal Church has been led to employ ample means in promoting education, and in always elevating the character and con- dition of its members and friends. The fathers made it abundantly evident that they desired the improvement of the people in intelligence as well as in religion, in knowl- edge as well as in holiness. They well knew that as men were able to acquaint themselves with God, his character and government, the wreck of their own nature by sin and rebellion, and the fatal consequences arising therefrom, with the marvelous provision for recovery from this state of pollution and guilt, and the blessed results secured by those who, with penitent and grateful hearts, accept the overtures of divine grace, — in short, that as they enjoyed and illustrated the presence and power of the Holy Spirit as the revealer of truth and sanctifier of the soul, in that proportion would they be joyous and stable in their own profession and active and successful in more firmly estab- lishing and more widely extending the triumphs of the Redeemer's kingdom around them. They knew that relig- ion is a wonderful awakener of the human faculties, and that to a growing Church our schools and literature, rightly conducted, would furnish in large degree the food required for mental and moral health and strength. So various institutions of learning sprang up, and under their foster- ing care increased in usefulness and strength. The Meth- odist Year-book for 1882 gives an aggregate of at least thirty-three classical seminaries, thirty-eight colleges and universities, eleven female colleges, and eight theological schools connected with the Methodist Episcopal Church. These ninety or more institutions had not less than 86,652,- 200 invested in grounds and buildings, and $5,019,388 in their endowments. They employed a staff of 850 professors LITERATURE AND EDUCATION. 183 and teachers, and supplied the means of study and instruc- tion to 18,516 young men and women. The number of students taught in their halls from the beginning reach a grand aggregate of 342,311. It will require the unfold- ings of eternity to reveal the aggregate of good accom- plished through the educational department of our Church work. If we turn to our literature, as represented by the products of the press, we find a magnificent supply in the way of weekly, monthly, and quarterly publications, and of books and book establishments rivaling the largest pub- lishing interests in the world. The number, character, and influence of these, and their claims, will be more fully discussed by another hand. It is enough here to observe the wonderful providence which led the fathers of Meth- odism to enter on this field of labor, and the invaluable blessings which have been secured to the Church and the world. There is nothing more truly sublime in the his- tory of the American Church than, that presented by our pioneer preachers. Believing that people should search the Scriptures for themselves, they loaded their saddle- bags with Bibles, tracts, hymn-books, and works of relig- ious biography, devotion, and doctrine. The literature of the Church as it then was, was scattered freely among the people as a matter not merely of propriety, but of principle and binding obligation. They firmly believed that for "the soul to be without knowledge is not good;" and so, while yet the Church had a hard struggle against ignorance, prejudice, and every form of opposition, they not only planted schools, but, by the circulation of good books and of all wholesome literature, cultivated a taste for reading. They secured among many thousands of the people that lived in humble cabins a much deeper ac- quaintance with the real master minds of the world and with the pure fountain of all learning than is now to be found in some lordly palaces. That more books may be 184 METHODISM AXD LITERATURE. found on the shelves of the latter is no proof that their owners are better acquainted with the Bible doctrines of the Church, or with its apostolic polity, or that they have any deeper love for that which constitutes the essence of its spiritual life. Indeed, the fear is that the Church is in danger not more from laxity of doctrinal statement in its pulpits and from a mere formal and worldly spirit in its pews than from the flood of un-Methodist literature that has, of late years, crowded itself in every way into our families and Sunday-schools and Church libraries. Seduced by boastful and often untruthful representations as to cost and quality, and by promises of liberal rewards — promises often made only to be broken — Sunday-school officers, and even pas- tors sometimes, lend themselves to the work of introducing a literature that ignores, if, indeed, it does not directly antagonize, the pure truth of God as held by the Method- ist Church. In such cases our children grow up, to a large extent, ignorant of the distinctive doctrines of the Church. The spirit and usages that characterized its he- roic days are laid aside as obsolete or something to be ashamed of. The life of the Church is enfeebled and ex- posed to serious inroads of evil in every form. That this humiliating state of affairs is not more general is cause of profound gratitude. That in some places, through negli- gence or something worse, it does obtain, is cause of sin- cere sorrow, and calls for prayerful consideration. In an age characterized by so many and such success- ful efforts to extend knowledge among all classes, on every subject and in all directions, the Church should see to it that in these two great lines of work — the planting and nurture of Christian schools 01 the highest and widest learning, and the preparation and dissemination of a sound Christian and Methodist literature — she not only keeps pace with, but marches in advance of, other agencies and organizations. Her ardent zeal and perseverance in these LITER A TUBE AND ED UCA TION. 185 directions mark her past history with an almost marvelous success, and enable her to point to a long and honored line of men and women distinguished as scholars, speakers, and writers among her ministers and laity. Their produc- tions in daily, weekly, monthly, and quarterly publications, in lightest tracts and weighty volumes, have gone out, and still continue to go, benefiting and blessing the Church and the world. Other denominations have been, by her example, provoked to love and good works in this direc- tion. As a consequence, many run to and fro, and knowl- edge, even the highest and best, is increased. Is it not pitiful that any in her pale should be ignorant of her noble record in this regard, and, of course, have no practical sympathy or desire to co-operate with her? In such houses no papers published by the Church are found. Good books are extremely rare. Their place is occupied by vulgar and pernicious literature, tending to lower the tone of the mind and to defile the soul. Any miserable pretense, inspired by ignorance or short-sighted selfishness, serves to excuse their owners from spending money or from taking interest in such things as are of real value. If circumstances seem to force them to do so, they listen eagerly to claims of pretended cheapness or superior advan- tage of institutions or publications entirely foreign, if not directly hostile, to those of their own Church. Their sons and daughters know little of what Methodism has done or is doing, or about the venerable men and women who, under God, have made and are making it what it is. The holy, zealous, self-denying, faithful lives of saints on earth and in heaven are but little know T n, and the inspiration of their teaching and example is scarcely felt. No wonder such are wavering, halting, unreliable, and bring forth no fruit to perfection in any line of Christian effort. No wonder their children have no tender regard for or attachment to the Church of their fathers, and are easily led or driven in other directions. They live, and die, and are forgotten. 16 1S6 METHODISM AND LITERATURE. They have no inheritance among those who find God's covenant blessings descend, entailed upon them and their children. By availing themselves of the advantages within their reach, and by the reasonable encouragement of their own Church schools and the publications of their own Book Concern, so superior in most valuable respects, they might have been enrolled among those who have their memory and their virtues fondly cherished and their lives of pure and elevated piety embalmed among the benefac- tors of mankind, and reproduced in their children's chil- dren to the latest generations. In this discussion it is assumed that the relation of lit- erature and education is one of reciprocity. They act and react each on the other, and both lie at the foundation of and pervade all our civilization, and enter every depart- ment of modern thought, activity, and influence. No branch of the Church can perpetuate itself and do its own proper work if it does not assiduously conserve and culti- vate these two great interests. To depend on outside par- ties, and to let others attempt to do this important part of its work for it, is to manifest not only indifference to its own well-being, but to pursue a course that will certainly end in its destruction. Especially is this true in the higher walks of Christian literature and education. And if so now, it is destined to be even more so in the not remote future. The age is one of books, reviews, magazines, and tracts and newspapers. These are destined more and more to mold the vital forces of humanity, and to give them strength and direction. To do this wisely and well re- quires the ripest thought and the best possible culture. Conjoined with divine grace, these are destined to wield the destinies of our world. Error and falsehood, in diverse and often insidious forms, are diligently at work to mislead the mind, corrupt the heart, and keep mankind away from God. Can the Methodist Church dare to neglect the po- tent influence of truth and purity and love — in short, the LITERATURE AND EDUCATION. 187 power of literature and education, in their best forms — and yet be innocent before God ? Can any member be a true follower of Christ, and at the same time be indiffer- ent as to the pleasure and the power these may supply in personal experience, and their marvelous formative and controlling power over others? Grateful for the good accomplished and the still greater good within reach, let Methodists everywhere rally to the support of these interests. Let every man, woman, and child among us feel themselves to be co-partners in the great work of fostering and extending their influence far and wide in blessing humanity, and in making manifest the glory of God. No Church has a richer heritage in these respects, and never was it more worthy of support and more likely to be productive of good. Let our able au- thors be encouraged to write. Let all foster and strengthen our educational institutions. Let the Church not only be kept abreast with all that is best in the spirit of the age, but let her take her appropriate place in the very front of those who lead Immanuel's hosts, and then may we, with confidence, hope for the most blessed and glorious resultSo MRS. ALEXANDER MARTIN. 188 METHODISM AND LITERATURE. XV. THE TRACT SOCIETY. ITS ORIGIN, AIMS, LITERATURE, AND POSSIBILITIES. The Christian religion is essentially and pre-eminently a missionary religion. It is a vast missionary scheme that aims at the subjugation of the world to the dominion of right, truth, and purity. But for this fact it never would have left Palestine to seek and save the lost in other lands. Its great Founder, after having announced himself the Light of the world, theu died for its redemption, commis- sioned his apostles to " go and teach all nations," to preach his "gospel to every creaturer" In this "great commis- sion " we see the present duty of the Christians of to-day, and in its spirit we have the germ of Methodism with all its Christianizing agencies. Methodism was, and is, a ne- cessity as an agency for the regeneration of the world. It is essentially missionary in its spirit, methods, and aims. The missionary spirit is bound up in its unique and mag- nificent economy. We wonder not, therefore, that John Wesley and his colaborers were much given to tract distri- bution. We wonder not that Mr. Wesley not only prayed and studied to find out the wants of the world, but planned, wrote, and labored to supply them. He lived and breathed and had his being in an atmosphere of culture and relig- ion ; hence, all his time and energies were consumed in bringing souls to Christ and helping them to develop into intelligent and useful Christians. He manifested an utter abhorrence of that old, fanatical, unphilosophical, and un- biblical adage that " ignorance is the mother of devotion" THE TRACT SOCIETY. 189 by instituting schools, writing tracts and books, circulating them through his preachers and in other ways. Gladly do we recognize that one of the grandest facts connected with the origin and growth of Methodism is its efforts to diffuse the blessings of education, and thus aid in establishing an intelligent and solid Christian civilization. From the be- ginning its ministers have been solemnly obligated to cir- culate tract: and books among the people. To aid them in this much-needed work the Tract Soci- ety was organized. The germ of its existence is in Chris- tianity. The development of this germ into its present form can not be given in detail. A few facts only can be named. The Society was formed to meet a felt want, to aid in solving the problem, "How can the Church reach the thousands of n on -church -goers, and bring them under the influence of the Gospel ?" It was clearly seen that as they would not come near the Church, the Church must in some way draw nearer to them. To aid in accomplish- ing this work a Tract Society was organized in New York in 1817, which, after a few changes, resulted, in 1833, in the formation of a Society that undertook the management of three benevolent enterprises of the Church; namely, ' 4 The Bible, Sunday-school, and Tract Society." In 1836, however, the work of the Bible Society was turned over to the American Bible Society ; and, after some other changes, the General Conference of 1872 brought all the benevolent societies of the Methodist Episcopal Church into organic unity. The Tract Society in its present form is, therefore, the growth of years, and is one of the grandest products of the missionary spirit of the Church. The sublime aim of the Tract Society now is " to diffuse religious knowledge by the circulation of the pub- lications of the Methodist Episcopal Church in the English and other languages, in our own and foreign countries." It will be seen that the field of its operations is as wide as its aim is Christly and grand. Were these facts studied •190 METHODISM AXD LITERATURE. by. the ministers and members of our Church with that careful and prayerful spirit which their importance and relations demand, the results would be increased collec- tions and a persistent purpose to make this agency effective in the accomplishment of its mission. The world's great want is correct religious knowledge. Its present state of degradation and ruin, its barbarisms and defective civiliza- tions, with their tyrannies, cruelties, intellectual and moral darkness, and vile abominations, are largely owing to its false views of God and man. The object of our Tract Society is to diffuse the kind of knowledge that it most needs. That is, our Church proposes to send books, pa- pers, and tracts to every mission-field, as well as to furnish books and tracts to supply the necessities of our work at home. Here is certainly a vast and momentous work — a work that is positively overwhelming in its magnitude and import, and one that demands much thought, wisdom, en- ergy, sympathy, and money for its accomplishment. And we verily believe that all these would be forthcoming if our membership only saw the nature, grandeur, and Christly character of the work. The prin ting-press, if rightly used, can greatly aid the Church in saving the world. Of the work already done by it we can form no adequate conception. The reports of our Tract Society tell us that our own press, during the past twenty-eight years, has issued about 700,000,000 pages of tracts, besides publishing for the benefit of the freedmen "a beautiful little weekly paper called Good Tidings." This work has been done by the Tract Society, except as it has been aided by the Sunday- school Union in the publication of the above-named paper. Then, in addition to this, it has published a large number of pamphlets, weekly papers, and books for our foreign fields of labor. Since 1854 it lias expended over $50,000 in our foreign fields. The vast' aggregate of work done at home and abroad is simply amazing. Tracts, papers, and THE TRACT SOCIETY. 191 books published in foreign languages, to aid missionaries in their work, constitute one of the grandest monuments of the Church's foresight, wisdom, and energy, to say noth- ing about the work done at home. Foundations have been laid for building purer and loftier civilizations in many pagan lands. Then think of the many that this agency has brought to Christ, directly and indirectly ; of the drunkards that have been saved, backsliders reclaimed, wavering ones confirmed, despairing and doubting ones in- spired with faith and courage, sorrowing ones comforted, and inactive ones stirred and aroused to live earnest, use- ful lives, through the visitations of those little evangels called tracts. Many of those silent messengers have histo- ries which, could they be seen and read, would thrill our souls and fire them with zeal to make their visits to un- saved souls and prayerless homes more frequent and pow- erful for good. Looking at past achievements, ought we not to keep before the minds of the people the very pal- pable fact that, without the aid of the Tract Society, neither the Church at home nor the Church in foreign lands can do its work as it needs to be done ? Whence could come the books, tracts, and papers needed by the missionaries? And how can the non-church-going part of our home population be brought to Christ? Let us not forget that, in other departments of thought and labor, the tract is a recognized power. Its power in the skeptical, educational, and political world is simply marvelous. Nearly fifty years ago Macaulay said, "Men are not converted or perverted by quartos." There is a prodigious power in a well-written, attractively got-up tract. Our Baptist friends have used it to make converts to their peculiar views, with marvelous success. Advent- ism could not have grown to its present proportions with- out it. Skepticism in all its forms has proved its power. Who does not know that worldlings, doubters, skeptics, sensualists, lovers of pleasure and worldly amusements, are 192 METHODISM AND LIT ERA TV RE. greedy after books and tracts that condemn the Bible, the Sabbath, the Church, and all those who love them, as fanatics and old fogies, who are foolishly clinging to a worn-out delusion. Now, how can we counteract the mis- chief done by skeptical and semi-skeptical publications ex- cept by the publication and circulation of tracts? Then, is there not a cheap and pernicious literature that can not here be described or characterized, that is scattered broadcast over the land? No mind but the mind of the Infinite can see the subtle and insidious workings of this poison in the minds of the youth of our land; and no mind but his can see how it pollutes their imagination and inflames their lowest passions, and thus ruins them for time and eternity. How, then, can these streams of a poisonous literature be stemmed? Not by our quarterlies, monthlies, and weeklies alone, nor by our Sabbath -schools and pulpits. These have their work; but they do not reach the thousands who never, or seldom, attend our churches. There is but one way to reach them, and that is by tract distribution. If the kingdom of evil sends out its poisonous missives, the kingdom of God must send out its millions of little evangels to counteract their destructive work. To write such tracts as the times need demands the very best talent of the Chucrh. We have some, but there are not enough of first-class tracts. Y» r hen we survey the battle-field, we see that in this country, Europe, and Asia there is a great conflict of thought, a great battle, raging between the forces of a spiritualistic and material- istic philosophy. The very foundations of revealed relig- ion are threatened. " God or no God," mind or no mind, a personal immortality or an impersonal one among the gases of the universe, are the great questions now agitating the great sea of human thought. In view of these facts, is there not work for the Tract Society to do? — a work that no other agency can accomplish ? Is it not true now, as in the past, that the children of this world are wiser in THE TRACT SOCIETY. 193 their generation than the children of light? O, if the Church would but use her agencies as she might, she could speak to the stormy seas of human thought and feel- ing, and there would be a great calm. For it does seem, when we simply glance at her agen- cies, as if she possessed almost measureless possibilities. Her moral forces are simply vast, grand, and mighty. Her pulpits, press, Sabbath-schools, missionary, and tract societies furnish an equipment that can not be paralleled. It is the marvelous outcome of eighteen centuries of plan- ning, suffering, and working. But mere possession accom- plishes nothing. It is of no use publishing to the world that we have grand machinery unless we set it in motion. It is of no use saying that we have "tracts for the masses" unless we circulate them among the masses. These talents must be used, or they will be taken away. They are used by our missionaries in India, China, Mexico, Germany, and other foreign lands, with good results. "What Dr. Vernon says with regard to the benefits of tract distribu- tion in Home and other parts of Italy is true of other mission-fields. The missionaries of all lands can unite with him in saying that "tracts, papers, and books are im- mensely important to us." The tracts which they distrib- ute " in public places, railroads, steamboats, and at the homes of the people," reach thousands that no other agency could reach so effectually. Many, through the earnest warnings, exhortations, and invitations of those little angels of light and salvation, are brought to the public service of God's house. They visit not only the homes of pov- erty, crime, and want, but the homes of the rich and the mansions of the great. Now, if tracts can do such a glorious work* for God and his cause in other lands, why may they not accom- plish a similar work at home? The conditions are widely different, no doubt; but ignorant, debased, sinful, and suffering humanity is in as much need of the Gospel at 17 194 METHODISM AND LITERATURE. home as abroad. If, therefore, tracts can aid missionaries in bringing souls to Christ, and laying the foundations of a Christian civilization in other lands, why may they not aid in the work of soul-saving at home, and in building a purer and loftier civilization in our own land ? Can any one deny such a possibility ? Missionaries in their preach- ing tours, by the use of tracts, papers, and books supplied by the Tract Society, disseminate truth, scatter seeds of eternal life that will ultimate in a rich harvest of souls, and produce changes in the thought life of the people that will aid in overturning hoary and colossal systems of error and forming a purer and grander social fabric. This is no imaginary idea, as the work is now going on. And when we stop long enough to think of the almost numberless opportunities that the Church has for doing good at home, and of her vast organized agencies, we are ready to ask, What could she not do if those agencies were baptized with the Spirit of Christ, and wisely directed along needed lines of action ? Think of her pulpits, press, Sabbath-schools, and her social means of grace. What, if these were all used, in addition to a well-organized sys- tem of tract distribution in the circulation of our "tract literature," what might not be accomplished toward reach- ing the thousands of non-church-goers, and quickening the spiritual life of our membership? Have we not tracts adapted, by their almost infinite variety of subjects, to accomplish this twofold work ? Certainly we have. They contain truths that are suited to all conditions of life and experience — truths that antagonize every form of error and evil ; truths that expose the sophistries, worldliness, and selfishness of those who advocate a tribe of amuse- ments that sap the very foundations of Christian life and usefulness, besides preventing many from becoming Chris- tians. We have tracts that expose the wickedness of liquor making and drinking as a beverage, as well as against other wily, subtle, persistent enemies of our civili- THE TRACT SOCIETY. 195 zation, who are aiming at the secularization of the Sab- bath, and other enemies who are attacking the sanctity of marriage and seeking the destruction of our Christian homes. We have also tracts that defend, as well as ex- plain, the distinctive doctrines of Methodism and its unique and unequaled economy, besides those that lift up their voice of warning against the sins of covetousness, indiffer- ence, selfishness, inactivity, and love of worldly pleasures and amusements that are so prevalent in the Church and so fatal to its spiritual life and progress. Let me ask, Can any thoughtful minister or layman doubt that a judi- cious distribution of such tracts would render substan- tial aid in giving to the Church an inspiration after a purer and more aggressive life ? Would not such labor help to solve the yet unsolved problem, " How can the thousands who never attend Church be brought under tlie saving influence of the Gospel of Christt" And would it not furnish " labor in the Lord" for thousands who are anxiously wait- ing for some field of usefulness, and are wishing that the ministers would open one for them? Brother ministers, you know that in all our charges there are those whose souls are being shriveled by a marvelous inactivity ; and are not we at fault for this lamentable fact ? How many, during the past quarter of a century, have abandoned the path of duty, fallen into the meshes of doubt, or lost them- selves in the endless mazes of infidelity, if not in the deep, dark waters of vice and sensuality, simply because their pastors failed to give wise direction to their thoughts and energies ! They perished in the ways of unrighteousness, because they were not given something to think about and something to do. They were left under the direction of skeptical thought and vicious influences, when a few well- chosen tracts would have met their mental wants, and a little work of tract distribution would have settled their doubts and developed their spiritual life, and thus saved most of them, at least, to Christ and his cause. 196 METHODISM AND LITERATURE. In looking, therefore, at the work to be done and at the agencies for its accomplishment, is it not time for our Church to take on a new life, and occupy a broader field of usefulness? The necessities of the times demand that she should " take a new departure," or she can not " preach the Gospel to every creature." Some systematic labor of the membership of our Church is demanded ; for, talk and write as we may about ministers " visiting from house to house," there stands before us the palpable fact that such are the conditions of the world of labor and commerce that it is utterly impossible (even if they had the time and en- ergy) for them to come into personal contact with half of those who are seldom or never seen at divine service. Then, there is the fact that spoken words are often evanes- cent in their influence. The varied conditions and the multitudinous temptations and forces in society soon blot out the impressions made by an occasional visit of the minister. This is the rule. The power of the printed page can do a much more extensive and permanent work ; therefore, the Church is under the most solemn obligation to use this power. What shall be the history of the Methodist Episcopal Church in the future? It is for us to determine. The Tract Society has made it possible for the Church to fulfill its mission, and it is in our power to move it along lines of action that shall develop its life and increase its ag- gressive and regenerating power as the years come and go. The possibilities of this Society, if properly developed, are almost infinite. Surely, if Romanists, skeptics, spiritual- ists, Adventists, and other organizations use the tract so skillfully, zealously, and with such amazing effect, we should not fail to use it for higher ends and diviner pur- poses. " If, under the adornments of rhetoric," the tract is used to circulate the poison of infidelity, sensuality, and an emasculating sentimentalism through the life-currents of society, we shall use it to stem those currents by circu- THE TRACT SOCIETY. 197 lating a pure and an ennobling literature. We are already fighting Romanism all over the world, Morraonism in the far West, Buddhism, Brahminism, Hiudooism, and Con- fucianism in the East, and materialism in Germany and France, in Europe, by the use of the tract. Why, then, should we not develop the grand possibilities of the Tract Society by a systematic and persistent use of the little messenger of truth, for evangelistic purposes, in every place where it is practicable ? What the Church needs is light on this department of her work ; then she will furnish the money and energy needed for its accomplishment. The circulation of a living, energetic, sanctified tract literature would make many wildernesses of sin and deserts of relig- ious ignorance bloom like Eden, and become fruitful as the Garden of the Lord. Souls are perishing for lack of knowledge within the sound of our church-bells, but they will not come to our Church services. What shall be done ? The answer is, The people must be instructed with regard to the necessity and feasibility of tract distribution, then urged to organized effort, so as to utilize the forces of the Church under a system of pastoral direction. If this was done, we would soon see a marked change both in the spiritual condition of the Church and in the size and composition of our congregations. Sabbath desecra- tion would be greatly diminished, and the number of worldly, non-spiritual, dance-loving and theater- going mem- bers of the Church would grow far less. Only let there be prompt, extensive, and energetic action, action upon a scale commensurate with our abilities and opportunities, then money would flow into the treasury of the Society, and its possibilities for good be multiplied to an amazing extent. Much, however, will depend on how tracts are distrib- uted. There should not, as a rule, be any sly or cowardly dropping of them in saloons or anywhere else. The work is Christian work ; therefore, let it be done openly, bravely, 198 METHODISM AND LITERATURE. and prayerfully. A tract, to some, may seem an insig- nificant thing ; but, when given with a warm heart and loving hands in the name of Jesus, it will be a messenger of life and salvation to the thoughtful. Howard visited the prisons, and Florence Nightingale ministered to wounded soldiers with her own loving hands, and Christ laid his hands upon the sick and suffering, and healed them. Let, therefore, Christian workers visit from house to house, and go among the lost everywhere, and carry them words of comfort, hope, and salvation. Let them seek to bless their neighbors and friends by 1 ' leading them to the place where Christ is" preached. Then let our Sabbath-schools, prayer-meetings, business-men, as well as ministers, aid in this blessed work. Let there be auxiliary societies organ- ized wherever practicable, for the purpose of sending out men and women constantly to circulate a pure and ele- vated literature among the poor, the sick, and unsaved ; then God will crown their efforts with abundant success, and the world will be lifted nearer God and heaven. What is needed is the utilization of existing agencies, and it will be done. May God help both ministers and people to do their duty ! THOMAS STALKER. OUR SUNDAY-SCnOOL LESSON HELPS, 199 XVI. OUR SUNDAY-SCHOOL LESSON HELPS. The present phases of the Sunday-school movement are eminently characteristic of the times. L The sanctity of learning is a vanished dream. The voice of the people, and doubtless the voice of God, is, that there shall no longer be a mysterious sacredness wall- ing in knowledge from the people. Community of knowl- edge, if not of goods, is the doctrine of the day. The popularization of knowledge is, above all things else, the greatest secular achievement of this century. The sover- eign people demand that all knowledge shall be for all the people ; all that is known to the learned is required for common use by the masses of the unlearned. The igno- rant and the penniless claim, at least for their children, the dissemination of all science through the free common school. This communistic spirit is pre-eminently exhibited in the latest developments of the Sunday-school work. The clergy no longer hold a monopoly of religious learn- ing, to be meagerly and circumspectly dispensed to the laity, but laymen seek and are granted free range through all the long secluded paths of religious inquiry. All Bib- lical and theological and ecclesiastical knowledge, accumu- lated through ages of devout research and reflection, is now offered to the children of the poorest without charge or stint. The utmost meaning of Greek or Hebrew root is opened to the merest child. The profouudest reflection of the most learned father is communicated to a street Arab in the mission-school. The latest result of Biblical criticism is laid before a bevy of smiling girls. The stores 200 METHODISM AND LITERATURE. of history and travel and science and art are ravished to illuminate and adorn the lesson for infants. Every thing that is known or has ever been conceived is rehearsed to the pauper's child. II. International comity, coming into the place of per- petual war, is evidencing the power of Him through whose power, also, sectarian bigotry and exclusiveness are giving place to harmonious combinations of the Churches against unbelief, ungodliness, and heathenism. The extreme doc- trine of the day is pseudo-liberalism, creedless, formless, indefinite, void ; but the Church is not going over into that absurdity and suicide. The Churches are emphasizing to-day their points of agreement, and making secondary their points of difference. The spirit of unity is becom- ing prevalent in Christendom, and harmonious organiza- tion against Antichrist is the ecclesiastical achievement of the age. The great Bible societies, composed of all the Churches consenting to distribute throughout the world the Word of God, " without note or comment," as nearly as possible unadulterated by any admixture of human opinion or doctrine, remarkably illustrate this spirit of unity. Even more strikingly is this spirit of the age ex- hibited in the adoption of an international series of uni- form lessons for the Sunday-school. The Churches agree- ing together to study and teach simultaneously the same portions of Scripture, seem, now as never before, to see eye to eye. This is not merely an outward, formal com- bination for mutual defense, for common attack in the face of a common foe, but an inward, ingenuous, hearty agree- ment that the thought and heart of Christ's Church shall take a common rhythmic movement harmonized by the Master's voice. So now the intellectual resources of all the Churches are made a common stock for the enrichment of the common mind ; and all that men know or think upon any portion of God's Word is simultaneously dissem- inated to every part of Christ's Church. The essential OUR SUNDAY-SCHOOL LESSON HELPS. 201 unity of the Christian faith and purpose is coming forth as the brightness of the sun before the delighted Church and the astonished world. III. As the industry of the day is marked by an econ- omy of power secured in the skilled division of labor, so religious and intellectual activity economizes power by sys- tematizing work and organizing workers ; and this, too, ap- pears in the latest Sunday-school methods. The common schools are now graded in separate departments, according to the age and capacity of the pupils, conducted by teach- ers trained each for his special department, and using books, apparatus, aud methods adapted to the peculiar wants of his work. In the Sunday-school will be found the same gradation of scholars and the same adaptation of teachers and teaching to special departments. We find normal classes, adult classes, young people's classes, inter- mediate classes, and primary or infant classes ; we shall find also, we trust, teachers qualified to succeed in these several departments. These considerations show that the question of Lesson Helps involves in their preparation a broad Christian schol- arship, a spirit of catholicity in harmony with the preva- lent spirit of unity among Christians, and a clear view of the varied wants of the several departments of Sunday- school instruction. These demands are certainly kept in view in the preparation of our Lesson Helps. The man- agement of our Sunday-school literature is known for its catholicity as much as for its Methodism. The founder of Chautauqua is the chief spirit in the production of our Lesson Helps, and every part of the series exhibits his genius for Sunday-school work. In the Lesson Comment- ary we have for pastors, superintendents, teachers, adult scholars, and studious young people a compendious compi- lation of the choicest thoughts in all literature bearing upon the particular passages in hand, all fused and illumi- nated by the glowing spirit of a prince among teachers. 202 METHODISM AND LITERATURE. Again, in the Sunday-school Journal will be found every needed explanation, together with invaluable hiuts guiding to the most effective teaching of the lesson. The Lesson Leaf, for intermediate scholars, presents an astonishing amount of helpful direction for profitable home study and success- ful class recitation. The infant classes are, if possible, even better provided for in the artistic Picture Lesson Paper, and the Leaf Cluster supplementing the Hints to Primary Teachers in the Sunday -scl tool Journal. If, now, we add The Study — a quarterly magazine for superintendents, primary-class teachers, the Bible class, and normal class — a magazine paclced with hints, facts, sugges- tions, outlines, and concise papers on needed topics, we have a series of Lesson Helps intended to meet the wants of all our Sunday-school workers. And what is lacking may almost certainly be found in the Normal Guide. Our Lesson Helps are equal in matter, arrangement, convenience of handling, beauty of appearance, to the very best in the field. They will meet the wants of Meth- odist Sunday-schools incomparably better than any others. They are our helps. They present the catholic faith from our Methodistic stand-point. They familiarize our Sunday- school scholars with our statements of Christian doctrine. They recognize the Methodistic method of saving souls. They inculcate the Methodistic definitions of religious be- lief, experience, and duty. They are none the less Chris- tian and catholic for being positively Methodistic ; for Methodism is an insistance not so much upon non-essentials of creed as upon the essentials of Christian life. In our helps we need not so much to dogmatize upon our doc- trines as to assume them and apply them in the teaching to save the scholars from sin. There is much current sentimentalism concerning unde- nominational lesson helps. However, few are more taken by this sentiment than such as have these undenomina- tional wares for sale. It requires little astuteness to dis- OUR SUNDAY-SCHOOL LESSON HELPS. 203 cover that even undenominational lesson helps must have a bias of their own. Dr. Whedon once wrote, " None but an idiot's brain can approach a subject blank of pre- possessions." Even an undenominational writer must ap- proach his theme from some point of view. Undenomi- national notes on Scripture must either be confined to threadbare truisms, or allowed to run into the absurdities of liberalism, of all dogmatisms the baldest, or they must fail to maintain the undenominational character. No man holds the Catholic faith completely and purely ; we have not yet attained that perfection of knowledge ; infallibility is not yet apparent among us; and while we are "com- passed with infirmities," it is safer, it is wiser, it is more honest to avow each his stand-point, that all may know the limitations of his view by which his thought and doc- trine are determined to be thus and thus. True undenom- inationalism is an impossible attainment for any positively Christian man, and is not found in any human production. As Methodists, exercising our undoubted right to be Meth- odists, granting to all others equal liberty in perfect char- ity, we may and we ought to use our own Lesson Helps. Our denominationalism should not degenerate into secta- rianism ; denominationalism, truly so called, is the chari- table exercise of denominational beliefs and methods for the saving of souls ; undenominationalism is not unity, but confusion ; not agreement, but disorderly commingling of ill-adjusted elements. Using our Lesson Helps, we shall strengthen ourselves and our children in the doctrinal be- liefs of our fathers, we shall accept their positive convic- tions of religious truth, and we shall, we trust, enter into their definite experience of salvation. N. S. ALBRIGHT. 204 METHODISM AND LITERATURE. XVII. THE IDEAL SUNDAY-SCHOOL LIBRARY. In the Sud day-school libraries of the Methodist Epis- copal Church there are about two millions of volumes. These books are kept in unceasing circulation, and are constantly read by certainly not less than three million souls. Most of their readers are children and youth. In not a few instances, as jn sparse country populations, they furnish nearly all the reading of the families to which the children and youth of the Sunday-school belong. Hence, if it be true that every book which has sufficient life in it to command readers is a sower of good or evil seed, of noble or ignoble sentiments, of true or false conceptions of life and duty, then the fact that these libraries are act- ive forces incessantly working good or ill in a field which contains the hope of Methodism, is not to be treated lightly, thoughtlessly, or indifferently, but is of grave im- portance, demanding the serious consideration, not only of Sunday-school administrators, but also of Church officers, pastors, and bishops. It can not be truthfully affirmed that the Methodist Episcopal Church has been inattentive to this- question. True to her Wesleyan lineage she has made large, even liberal, provision through her Book Concerns and official editors, for supplying her Sunday-school libraries with such books as are best suited to their legitimate purposes. Her publications in this department may safely challenge both examination and comparison with those of any other American or European Church. Were her libraries gen- erally composed of these issues there would be small occa- THE IDEA L S UN DA Y-SCHO OL LIBRA R Y. 205 sion for anxiety. Un fortunately it is far otherwise. There is a spirit abroad which, especially since our late war, de- mands a lighter, less serious, less instructive, more exciting, and more miscellaneous literature for children and youth than is either healthy for young minds or fitting for a Church press to produce. Very naturally such produc- tions, like sweetmeats and richly seasoned food, are more relished by the young than healthy mental food. And, very foolishly in a vast number of schools, their false taste finds sympathy among the youthful librarians and teachers to whose management the library is too often consigned. These parties, no doubt, mean well; but being governed more by the clamor of the scholars for what they call " in- teresting books" than by the high considerations Avhich ought to control the selection of books, and which the Church herself is bound to respect, they have become, in this matter, a power greater than the Church. They scout her authority by rejecting her publications, rush to the general book-market, and fill their libraries with works, many of which, though sweet to the taste of the unre- newed heart, are, like the prophet's roll, productive of bitter results in the hearts of their readers. This state of things is, to quote a passage from a speech by the profound Milton, " of greatest concernment in the Church. . . . For books are not absolutely dead things, but do contain a potency of life in them to be as active as that soul whose progeny they are ; nay, they do preserve as in a vial the. purest efficacy and extraction of that living intellect that bred them. I know they are as lively and as vigorously productive as those fabulous dragon's teeth ; and, being sown up and down, may chance to spring up armed men." Granting the truth of these weighty words — and who will dispute it ? — the Church is bound by her ob- ligations to the Christ, and by her hope of continued life and purity, to do what she rightly can to curb the spirit which is filling her school libraries with books that do 206 METHODISM AND LITERATURE. not make either for righteousness or for Methodism, but which do make, if not for positive wickedness, yet for the strengthening of that disrelish for a pure ethical and spiritual life which is the bane of human nature. But what can the Church do ? Under a system of pure voluntaryism like ours, she can not regulate this or any other question touching the laity by compulsory authority. But she can speak with a persuasive authority that every loyal Methodist will feel bound to respect. She can so place the question before the brethren who manage her Sunday-school libraries as to induce them to regulate their purchases of books, not by a desire to gratify the senseless clamor of unreflective minds, but by the only sound prin- ciple on which a Sunday-school library can be properly founded and maintained. What is that principle? What is the true idea of the Sunday-school library? The Sunday-school as an institution is sui generis. There is nothing like it on earth. Born of that divine love which finds delight in feeding the lambs of the flock of Christ, it is the organism, the sphere, in which the Church seeks to impart a religious education to the young. Its text-book is the Word of God. To make the meaning of that Holy Book clear to the understanding, to impress its precepts on the conscience, and so to present the ever-living Christ to the affections as to awaken love to his person and submis- sion to his will are the leading points included in its con- ception of the religious education it aims to impart. Thus the end it seeks for each of its pupils is his intelligent Christian discipleship, and through that discipleship to train him up to the highest type of manhood. Now, the ideal Sunday-school library, being of and for this institution, must also be sui generis. Unlike the com- mon-school library, the public circulating library, or even the college library, it must not be secular and miscella- neous, but religious. It has no right to be in a Sunday-school except as an auxiliary for promoting its great end. Every THE IDEAL SUNDAY-SCHOOL LIBRARY. 207 book on its shelves not conceived and written in the spirit of Christ, but in the spirit of the world, is an intruder, because antagonistic to the spirit which animates, or should animate, the school. Every volume that breathes a tainted ethical tone, or suggests rationalistic doubts, or gives dis- torted portrayal to virtuous character, or a favorable aspect to wrong action, or presents the spiritual life as an unreal and superstitions fancy, is utterly out of place in it, because every such book is hostile to the principle on which it is founded. Nor have strictly secular books any right in it, inasmuch as they can not subserve the religious ends sought by the school. The strictly secular volume, even though moral and truthful, is as much out of place in the library as secular studies would be in the class. In short, the auxiliary relationship of the library to the school excludes from it every book which is not in harmony with the pur- pose of the Church to make her Sunday-schools the places in which she strives to give religious education to her youth. On the other hand, the Sunday-school library should be composed of books which may be properly called religious, and of no others. By religious, however, we do not mean books on experimental godliness only. We use the term in its broader sense as including every topic which relates to the interpretation of the Word of God, to the explana- tion and enforcement of its doctrines, precepts, and expe- rience, to the history of the Church of Christ, to the deeds of the great leaders, the faithful confessors, the heroic martyrs, the courageous reformers, the devoted missiona- ries, and the saintly souls who have kept and spread the faith through the ages. Thus an ideal Sunday-school library would include books on history, geography, biog- raphy, travels, moral science, the conduct of life, Chris- tian civilization, poetry, art, and natural science, so far as these topics have relations to the divine Word and to the Church of Christ. Books on those topics are germane 208 METHODISM AND LITERATURE. to an institution organized for the promotion of Christian education, provided they are written in a Christian spirit and with a clearly defined purpose to commend revealed truth to the faith and affection of their readers. This latter point can not be too strongly emphasized by every purveyor for the Sunday-school library, inas- much as the world is deluged with books on the above- named topics, which, though ably, eloquently, attractively written, are adulterated with the poison of skepticism, worldliness, and hostility to spiritual religion. Happily for the Churches, their authors and presses during the last half-century have brought forth an abundant supply of books on those themes, which, for the purposes of religious education, are equally able, and are imbued with the spirit of Christianity. So that they who place poisonous books in the Sunday-school library are without excuse. " They have no cloak for their sin." Does this theory exclude fiction from the ideal library? Not all fiction absolutely. To exclude every tning that may be included under the word fictitious would shut out those portions of Holy Writ which, though true in sub- stance, are fictitious in form. The sublime book of Job, though true in substance, is dramatic, and therefore, ficti- tious, in form. So are the allegories and parables and some of the poetical books of Scripture. Yet they are preg- nant with inspired truths, and consequently very full of authoritative instruction. Bunyan's inimitable " Pilgrim's Progress" is fictitious in the same qualified sense. So are, by no means all, but very many of the religious stories written for children and youth by modern Christian waiters. Hence, fiction in form, which in substance is not fiction, but substantial truth aiming to elucidate and en- force moral precepts, and to impart high ideals of char- acter, is not to be wholly rejected. But fiction not written to instruct, to awaken noble impulses and aspirations, to promote reflection on the THE IDEAL SUNDAY-SCHOOL LIBRARY. 209 duties and true ends of human existence, but merely to amuse, should be sternly rejected. The Sunday-school is not a playground. Its administrators, while bound to make its instruction attractive, dare not, if intelligent and conscientious, make the amusement of its pupils oue of its objects, either in teaching, in addresses or by means of books which are only amusing fictions. Such books injure the intellect, because they require no effort of attention, and beget the enervating habit of reading, not for self- improvement, but only for amusement. This habit dwarfs the mind, is fatal to mental growth, because it creates disinclination to that concentration of thought which is essential to the acquisition of knowledge. Hence, such fictions beget distaste for solid reading. Most of them contain false pictures of life, monstrous improbabilities, highly wrought incidents, that aim simply to excite emo- tion. The effect of such excitation is necessarily injuri- ous to character in that, not being caused by real objects, and not being made the stimulus to right action, it pro- duces nothing better than a sickly sentimentality, which substitutes the heaving of a sigh or the shedding of a tear for the practice of real virtue. Surely, to place books so injurious both to brain and heart in a Sunday-school library is to pervert it, to make it the instrument, not of religious, but of irreligious education. It is profanation. But children and youth demand such books, it is said. This is no doubt true of most who have been permitted to taste such poisoned fruit. But are such demands to be accepted by the" Sunday-school as substitutes for the grand principles on which it is based ? Rather is not the correc- tion of such vicious taste one of the purposes of the relig- ious education it professes to impart ? It is true, as Words- worth remarks, that " delight and liberty is the simple creed of childhood." But why are the young gathered into the school but to be taught that their creed is misleading, that their " liberty" is not to become licensed like the colts 18 210 METHODISM AND LITERATURE. of wild asses, but a gift from God, which they are required to regulate with the bridle of duty ? and also that their "de- light," to be real aud lasting, must be derived, not from sip- ping poisoned sweets, but from drinking rich draughts of the fountain of life ? No ; the library must not be governed by the children's creed of liberty and delight, but by the obligation of the Church to use it as an instrument of religious education. Still it may be urged that if exciting fictions are ex- cluded, and none but substantially truthful books admit- ted, the library will be neglected, that pupils will refuse the latter class of books. If this were true, it would be better to place a seal on the door of the library or to ban- ish it forever from the school, than to give books tainted with moral or spiritual poison to the young. But is it true? May not much of this demand for exciting fictions be traced, as suggested above, to the sympathy with such works felt by the young men who usually act as librarians, by many Sunday-school teachers, and even by some worldly minded or unthinking pastors ? Instead of correcting the false ideas and tastes of the scholars, too many such parties have supported their demand by saying of useful books, " Yes, they are dry and uninteresting;" or, " They are goody goody books." Had they attempted with intelli- gent kindness to point out the value and healthful attract- iveness of such works, would they not have silenced this clamor and induced their pupils to read with pleasure and profit books they now reject because their teachers and others have unwisely censured them? Such is our opin- ion ; and we estimate that teacher very low who can not, by a few decisive words, set an entire class to reading any properly written, useful book. Any right-minded superin- tendent, worthy of his responsible office, can, in like man- ner, move a w T hole school to ask for any such volume by a few judicious words spoken from his desk. Still more influential are the words of pastors commending religious THE IDEAL SUNDA Y-SCHOOL LIBRAR Y. 211 books in weighty words to the parents of his Sunday scholars. Let the Church, therefore, zealously set herself to the task of banishing all unwholesome fiction from her Sunday- schools. Let her also set her face against the excessive use of even such qualified, and in themselves unobjectionable, fictions as, in response to the demands of public opinion, her presses have already produced. A dinner should not be all dessert ; neither should stories, however excellent, constitute the staple of any one's reading. The body of our libraries should be composed of books that contain living words, truths that " perish never." O blessed books, "That combine in one All ages past, and make one live with all: By you we do confer with who are gone, And the dead-living into council call; By you the unborn shall have communion Of what we feel and what doth us befall." In the ideal library of a Methodist Sunday-school there will be a selection of the books pertaining to our Church history and to the lives of our Church fathers sufficient to make our young people not bigots, but familiar with the devout spirit and successful zeal which gave birth and growth to Methodism. It may be truthfully said of our Church that "Great men have been among us; hands that penned, And tongues that uttered wisdom — better none." Therefore, though we should not glory in men, yet we may rejoice in the fact that we have in our history a record emi- nently honorable, filled with glorious achievements, attract- ive to the imagination, and full of spiritual inspiration. As Bishop Jewel said of the deeds of the Reformers, who were Methodists in spirit though not in name, so may we properly say of the works of our Church fathers, 1 'Let these never be forgotten ; let your children remember them 212 METHODISM AND LITERATURE. forever." To secure that remembrance, and to aid in transmitting their spirit to posterity, a goodly number of our Church biographies and Church histories should be constantly kept in our libraries. And may it be truth- fully said that no Methodist Sunday-school library possesses ideal completeness unless a liberal number of such works is on its shelves! It scarcely needs saying that in an ideal Sunday-school library the books should be properly classified. The extent of such classification, like the size of the library itself, must be determined by the magnitude of the school. Hence, no rule can be given applicable alike to the school of twenty children on the frontiers and to the highly or- ganized city school of a thousand or more pupils, ranging from the infant class to adult students of Holy Writ. It must suffice here, therefore, to say that there should be departments in the library for the simple literature of childhood ; ibr books written down to the newly awakened intellectual capacities of boys and girls; for the partially developed minds of young people; and for the more thoughtful readers of the adult classes. But the princi- ples already stated respecting the religious character of the Sunday-school book should be as rigidly applied to the adult as to the infant department. From all, not merely the anti-religious but also the irreligious volume should be conscientiously excluded. ■This fidelity to the principle and aims of the Sunday- school in the higher department of the 1 ibrary will be objected to by those who think it desirable for the Church to furnish its adherents with books sufficient to meet all their intellectual requirements. But whoever views the question broadly and practically will see that this theory is Utopian. It is not clear that its object is even desira- ble, because there will always be unnumbered books needed by professional men, by artists, by mechanics, by men of special culture and of marked idiosyncrasies, which the THE IDEAL SUNDAY-SCHOOL LIBRARY. 213 Church could not supply for lack of means, and ought not to furnish if she could. To attempt it would be idle, if for no other reasou than the unwillingness of the people to submit to any such curtailment of their intellectual liberty. The sphere of the Church is limited to men's spiritual nature and moral action. And when her libraries are well furnished with literature which is ample to meet the demands of the higher nature of her adherents, to excite and gratify a taste for solid, useful reading, with a corre- sponding distaste for sensational and corrupt reading, she has reached the limit of her obligations in this direction. She has then performed the high duty of providing an antidote to the vile books which, like the frogs in Egypt, come from the Satanic press, seeking admission into every unguarded household in the land. DANIEL WISE. 214 METHODISM AND LITERATURE. XVIII. RELIGIOUS NEWSPAPERS. This is justly called the age of the printing-press. The dissemination of printed matter is a growing wonder. It can not, however, be taken for granted that the reading public demands printed matter in the permanent form of books, or even in the comparatively durable form of mag- azines. It is but rarely that a book reaches a sale of even one hundred thousand in our population of fifty millions. Making a large estimate for the private circulation of a book once sold, it will be seen at once that even a popular author is not actually read by one in a hundred of his fellow-countrymen. The people read but few books, and those few not books of reflection, of science, of history, or of devotion, but rather books of travel, of adventure, of romance, and the lighter forms of fiction — books affording to the occasional thoughtful reader needed diversion and recreation, but actually dissipating mental and moral power in the habitual reader. So of the better class of literary and scientific magazines ; their limited circulation proves that they are practically unknown to the common people, and are not habitually read by the majority of even intel- ligent people, so called. Scholars, professional men, and the exceptionally thoughtful, read valuable substantial books and magazines ; but the common people — indeed, all the people — are informed, if at all, through the newspaper. The reflective, the originative, the inventive, the schol- arly, write books of value, thus permanently preserving knowledge for the world's use. But in books alone this knowledge would never be popularly disseminated. It is RELIGIOUS NEWSPAPERS. 215 not the author of books, but the paragraphist, writing often second-hand matter, who finally brings knowledge to the people. The people are not acquainted with books; they regard books as luxuries, the last things to be pro- cured (unless almost forced upon them by agents person- ally pushing the circulation); they are not accustomed to read books, they tire at it ; they find the chapters too long and the book too large, and defer the reading to days of leisure that never come. The people are, nevertheless, not content to be ignorant. The great middle class, the vast majority of the people, is resolutely bent upon informing itself by reading; but the reading, to be acceptable, must be attractive, stimulating, even sensational, and, above all things else, it must be fresh. In cities and towns reached by the telegraph and daily mail news of yesterday is no news, discoveries of last month or last week are old, opinions of last season are stale; and this craze for novelties invades the rural dis- tricts — many a farmer insists upon having a daily news- paper. No doubt there is much in all this that is un- heal thful. This constant and irrepressible demand for the newest news, the very latest novelties in science and opin- ion, all to be served to the public in sensational head-lines, is evident sign of a feverish and fickle public taste, and can not become the permanent mental habit of a truly great people. However, while it lasts, the Church, in no way responsible for its existence or its evil results, must not regard it with imbecile laments and denunciations, but must wisely make the best of it. In the order of Prov- idence this has become a newspaper age ; and it is not of faith to lament it, but to acknowledge it, and to utilize it for the saving of the world. The secular newspaper is at best secular in spirit ; it is well if it be not atheistic or immoral. The province of the secular newspaper is to publish the news in which its constituency is interested, and to disseminate such infor- 216 METHODISM AND LITERATURE. mation as will serve the purposes of its reading patrons. Every thing is published from the secular stand-point, cer- tainly not the Christian stand-point — well if it be not anti- Christian ! Unless the popular mind is to be thoroughly secularized and de-Christianized, if not anti-Christianized, the Church must undertake the work of informing the publie of passing events and current opinion from the Christian point of view. This, the Christian assumes, is the true stand-point whence to observe men, their deeds, and their doctrines. If one is a Christian at all, he holds that there is a divine origin and control of nature, a divine hand in the government of human society, and a divine purpose and meaning in human history; and it is neither bigotry nor superstition to demand the recognition of God and his Christ in the treatment of current history and opinion. The spirit of the times is eminently secular, though the reaction from materialism and false liberalism is fast setting in. The religious newspaper is a necessity in an age of secular newspapers, as much as the Sunday, or Bible, or religious school is a necessity in an age of common-schools, as much as the religious book is a neces- sity in an age of infidel books, as much as the religious oration or sermon is a necessity in all the ages of secular eloquence. The Church can not dispense with this pow- erful arm of offense and defense. The Christian needs it for his own armament in a secular age; he needs it for the defense of those he is providentially set to guard from the evils of the world ; he needs it for urging the truth of Christianity in a practicable form upon the indifferent or the inimical. As there is no adequate estimate to be put upon the influence of the secular newspaper, so widely disseminated, so eagerly read, so it is impossible to overstate the urgency of the requirement laid upon the Church to carry the re- ligious newspaper into all Christian homes, into all homes. Even where the Bible is left unread by a worldly and in- RELIGIOUS NEWSPAPERS. 217 different or infidel household, the religious newspaper may- find a reading; for its news is as reliable and ought to be as fresh and as concisely stated as in the secular paper. The Church, however, can not push her papers any more than her books upon the people. The Christian public ought to demand the Christian newspaper, the re- ligious family ought to require a religious information. No man of the world can afford to be without his secular paper, giving the state of the market in his particular line, furnishing the information needed in the prosecution of his public or private aims, and bringing from all over the world the news interesting him. No Christian, awake to the providential character of the age, alive to his duty in an age of Christian missions and charities, engaged in the urgent prosecution of the Gospel publication throughout the world, can afford to be without his religious newspaper, informing him of the current tendencies of religious life and doctrine, of the current events of religious enterprise and benevolence and evangelization, of the current news of the Church at home and abroad. The secular news- paper is indispensable to the business man, to the politi- cian, to the well-informed man of every rank and calling; so indispensable is the religious newspaper to every Chris- tian who has an interest in the coming of Christ's kingdom and would gladly know of its progress through the world. 19 EDITOR. 218 METHODISM AM) LITERATURE. XIX. THE CHURCH LYCEUM. I believe the Methodist Episcopal Church is the only one that has the plan of a Lyceum, and the means of its successful inauguration and maintenance incorporated into its Book of Discipline. This Church has ever been consid- erate of the temporal and intellectual condition of its mem- bers. Beginning among the poor, the broken-hearted, the captives, the blind and bruised, it began at once to con- sider how physical evils could be abated, and then how ignorance could be enlightened . The vast literature of the Church shows how faithfully it has wrought for this end. The Lyceum meets a real want. The mind yields the best results to training. The body gets strength to lift two thousand pounds, the voice ability to give all the fifths between two adjacent notes, the eye clearness to discern TT2V00 of an inch, and the hand skill to measure saooooo ff of an inch, but the mind is the best field for care- ful culture. The Lyceum is one of the gymnasia for its exercise. The mind especially needs to be trained to quickness of action, so that all its treasures shall be at any instant under control. It was one of the secrets of Napoleon's power that he could instantly form new combinations to meet sudden emergencies. As the fencer must have an eye quick as light, and a hand for defense quick as a thrust, so must the man in the quicker realm of thought be instantly ready. How provoking is that habit of mind that gives only what the French call esprit d'escalier — the bright replies one thinks of after he has left the company THE CHURCH LYCEUM. 219 and is on the stairs going home. Many of our possible Miltous are mute and inglorious for want of training. The Lyceum is admirably adapted to develop this quickness of mind. It has been so used in all ages. The Greeks taught by the Socratic method. In the earlier English universities the first scholars were called wrang- lers because of their discussions. They have since degen- erated into contestants for mathematical prizes. Henry Clay said, " I owe my success in life to one single fact, namely, that I commenced and continued for years the process of daily speaking, not unfrequently in some distant barn, with the ox or horse for my auditors. It is to this practice of the great art of all arts, that I am indebted for the leading impulses that shaped my entire destiny." Some preaching has degenerated into orations and essays; not so was Christ's, but word answering word until men could no longer dissent, nor even ask questions. There is no country that demands ability to speak like America. Every man is a sovereign, and may utter his decrees; every man is a citizen, and may influence every one in the city to adopt his views. The best positions await the man able to speak wisely and well. Encyclopedia wisdom may rest in the brain of a man, and be as useless as the unmined gold in the Black Hills. The owner of millions starves. But the man able to utter his wisdom, be it ever so little, in persuasive speech, has the useful coin that supplies his every want. It is the privilege of many Americans to say with Mrs. Browning — "I have known the pregnant thinkers of this time, And stood by breathless, hanging on their lips, When some chromatic sequence of fine thought In learned modulation phrased itself To an unconjectured harmony of truth." This is the age of ideas, and every man should seek a forceful utterance of them. Especially should the Church see to it that the young have every advantage of training. 220 METHODISM AND LITERATURE. The Church is the school of all schools, teaching health, cleanliness, temperance, hardihood, wisdom, holiness — that is, perfect manhood. The perfect man approximates the unity of thinking, speaking, and embodiment that God has. Sin separates feeling from action, so that men may see peril and weep, but not moye to safety. Christianity makes speech and deed to be instantly responsive to feeling and thought. The very instincts find quick expression in a character so pure that it has nothing to conceal. All the right instincts of youth should find full gratification under the sanction of the Church. Childhood inclines to abundant — some may say superabundant — speech; youth is the time to associate it with wisdom, so that it shall not always be a babbling brook, but a broad river, freighted with the intellectual wealth of all ages. A full discussion of the Lyceum, its origin, aim, ob- jections, value, disciplinary methods, course of study, etc., may be found, in an admirable work, "The Church Lyceum," by Kev. T. B. Neeley. H. W. WARREN. CHURCH AND TEMPERANCE. 221 XX. RELATION OF OUR CHURCH LITERATURE TO THE TEMPERANCE WORK. The literature of an organization is its voice; and it is through her literature that the Church speaks to the million, in a manner more persuasive and convincing than even through her pulpit. The ministry of the consecrated pen is second to none ; not even the clergy can present a commission more di- rectly from God thau that which endows the hand and brain which fashions the literature of his Church. The Church is known better through this medium than any other. It does not matter so much what her pulpit utters as what her press scatters abroad ; and it is reserved for her pen to indorse or condemn every word which falls from the preacher in the pulpit or the minister at the altar. The position of the Methodist Episcopal Church on the temperance question does not need to be defined, at this day, by any living man or woman. She has already gone upon record in terms which can not be mistaken. The temperance law of the Church regulates the sentiment of her people and ministry, and speaks through her tongue and pen, so that her pulpit everywhere, and every page of her literature, utters the one truth that the Gospel of the Lord Jesus Christ antagonizes not only sin in general, but in particular, and counts the drink traffic and use in every form as among the works of the devil which He came to destroy. The Methodist Church is a unit on this question. She may be divided into branches on many other points ; but 222 METHODISM AND LITERATURE. on the temperance question she stands as one, and always in the vanguard. Among the first principles laid down for the guidance of those who would walk with her people is this, namely : "It is therefore expected of all who con- tinue therein that they should continue to evidence their desire of salvation ... by avoiding evil of every kind . . . such as . . drunkenness, buying or selling spirituous liquors; or drinking them, unless in cases of extreme necessity." As early as 1787 personal habits of temperance (which was interpreted to mean " using only that kind and degree of food" and "drink which is best for both body and soul," using " water fijr common drink," and wine only " medic- inally or sacramentally ") were strictly enjoined upon all ministers. In 1792 members were prohibited from treat- ing, and in 1796 the following was placed upon the records and became a part of the law of the Church: k 'If any member of our society retail or give spirituous liquors, and any thing disorderly be transacted under his roof on this account, the preacher who has the oversight of the circuit shall proceed against him as in the case of other immoral- ities; and the person accused shall be cleared, censured, suspended, or excluded, according to his conduct, as in other charges of immorality. N. B. Far be it from us to wish or endeavor to intrude upon the proper religious or civil liberty of any of our people ; but the retailing of drams to customers when they call at the stores are such prevalent customs at present, and are productive of so many evils, that we judge it our indispensable duty to form a regulation against them. The cause of God, which we prefer to any other consideration under heaven, absolutely requires us to step forth with humble boldness in this respect." In 1828 the Rev. Wilbur Fisk presented to the Gen- eral Conference a preamble and resolutions, which were adopted, expressing the strongest sentiments against the CHURCH AND TEMPERANCE. 223 use of and traffic in strong drink, and in favor of reform in every respect; and these resolutions have been added to by every General Conference, and nearly every annual and district conference, from that day to this. In 1832 a conference committee on temperance was appointed, and has since become one of the regular committees appointed as a matter of course at the opening of every Methodist conference, and its report is annually added to the litera- ture of the Church, and is, like a voice, constantly reiter- ating the truth that there can be no fellowship between us and the demon of rum. A temperance address, delivered before the General Conference of that year, was ordered to be printed in a tract for circulation ; and in 1836 the preachers and mem- bers were recommended by the General Conference to pro- cure a copy of a volume which had been prepared by the Kev. Dr. Edwards, secretary of the American Temperance Society, consisting of a compilation of facts concerning the rum traffic, and effects of total abstinence. We might glean from all the journals of the Church, and occupy the entire space allotted to this article with extracts from the utterances of the men who laid broad and deep the foundations of our Church literature in the truth of God, as revealed in the human body and in his law, as well as in the Gospel of Jesus. We will content ourselves, however, with the record of the General Conference at Cincinnati, May, 1880. Ac- tion was taken concerning the sacramental wine as follows, "Let none but the pure unfermented juice of the grape be used in administering the Lord's-supper, whenever prac- ticable ;" and to be inserted in the Discipline the following as "expressive of the general sentiment of the Church on the temperance question:" "Temperance, in its broader meaning, is distinctively a Christian virtue, Scripturally enjoined. It implies subordination of all the emotions, passions, and appetites to the control of reason and con- 224 METHODISM AND LITERATURE. science. Dietetically, it means a wise use of useful articles of food and drink, with entire abstinence from such as are known to be hurtful. Both science and human experience unite with the Holy Scriptures in condemning all alcoholic beverages as beiug neither useful nor safe. The business of manufacturing and vending such liquors is also against the principles of morality, political economy, and the pub- lic welfare. We therefore regard voluntary total abstinence from all intoxicants as the true grouud of personal tem- perance, and complete legal prohibition of the traffic in alcoholic drinks as the duty of civil government. We heartily approve of all lawful and Christian efforts to save society from the manifold and grievous evils resulting from intemperance, and earnestly advise our people to co- operate in all such measures as may seem to them wisely adapted to secure that end. We refer to our General Rule on this subject, and affectionately urge its strict ob- servance upon all our members. Finally, we are fully persuaded that, under God, hope for the ultimate success of the temperance reform rests chiefly upon the combined and sanctified influence of the family, the Church, and the State." This body further resolved : " 1. That we recommend the organization of juvenile temperance societies in all congregations and Sunday- schools. " 2. That we recognize the necessity of healthy tem- perance literature, and therefore recommend the publica- tions of the National Temperance Association, of New York, to the patronage of our people and Sunday-schools. " 3. That we gratefully recognize and heartily com- mend the ministry of the gifted and godly women of the Churches in the work of temperance, and in their crusade against the liquor traffic." But the fathers of the Church have not stopped here in their teaching. As ever, they plant their standard on CHURCH AND TEMPERANCE. 225 the outposts ; and they have dared to speak against a vice even more widely spread and more insidious than that of driuk. And to-day every candidate for the ministry of the Methodist Episcopal Church is expected to answer in the affirmative the following question, " Will you wholly abstain from the use of tobacco?" I have dwelt thus at some length on the teaching of the fathers, and have given this bit of Church history, because these principles have been built, like precious stones, into the foundation of our literature, and fastened, like nails in a sure place, beyond the reach of even Church legislation. It is from such root as this that all the branches of our wide-spreading system of books, papers, periodicals — books of poetry, history, essay, and story — text-books, and leaflet, and pictured page — all the foliage, blossom, and fruit of our literature, and its seed for future sowing, have sprung. As is the Church, so is her literature; and as the relation of the Church to the temperance reform, so is the relation of her literature to the temperance work. The Church is radically opposed to the liquor traffic; therefore, the nature of the literature of the Church is to help the work of tem- perance reform everywhere, in the home and state,- as well as in the hearts and lives of men ; and I believe fully - that if the press of the Church could reach the masses with its influence, if this continent could be " sown knee- deep" with the pages written with her truth, that the days of the drink traffic would be numbered. All that has been done thus far in furnishing the people with correct temperance information, scientific, po- litical, statistical, as well as moral, has been done, directly or indirectly, by the Churches, and a large share has passed over our own denominational lines. Let us look for a moment at the extent of our Church literature, and from this estimate compute, if we can, its value, and consider its relation to the temperance work. 226 ME THODISM AND LIT ERA T TIRE. "We publish, of weekly newspapers, annually, more than two hundred thousand copies ; of monthly period- icals, about two hundred thousand ; of Sunday-school helps, at least two millions ; and have thirteen hundred and sev- enty-five books in our catalogue. Look at this vast agency, whose lines of communication seem to extend to the uttermost parts of the earth, and estimate, if you can, its power, if properly applied. In the work of reform the pen is surely mightier than the sword, and possesses a power in molding the morals of the masses such as can be claimed by no other. It is because the popular literature of the age has been corruj)t that vice has so strong a foothold among the people. It is because the literature of the Church has not been taken out, sent out, crowded out, scattered every -where, that her principles of purity and truth have not as yet prevailed among the majorities; because her seed-corn has been kept too much in the barn, that the harvest does not yet meet the need of a hungry world. We are painfully conscious of a need, not that the Church should speak more truly, more positively, more convincingly, but that her words should be carried out to those who have never yet heard her voice or language ; and, also, that she should speak in a tongue that will be comprehended by those who know only the dialect of vice. It is often needful that the Church should expound to the men of the w ? orld the text of the truth, which is like household words to those whom she has brought up, so that the careless, the profane, the drunken, and the illiterate shall not be able to misunderstand her meaning. "Tem- perance" should never be left with an ambiguous signifi- cation, which may or may not be "license" or " prohibi- tion," moderate self-indulgence or total abstinence. Every term employed needs to be clear cut, comprehending all of truth, antagonizing all of error. To some of those for whom the temperance work of to-day is done, the whole CHURCH AND TEMPERANCE. 227 scheme of the Gospel needs to be translated, as into a foreign tongue. The importance of meeting this need will be understood when we remember the influence of the Church in the world. She is recognized, even by the unthinking and the impure, as the representative of God; and she speaks with an authority that has been awarded to no other. That which she unloosens is unloosed ; that which she binds is bound in the consciences of men. That which she or one of her teachers sanctions is quoted as lawful, even by the unbelieving. Her teachings are the foundation of all gov- ernments; it is the sentiment of her votaries that makes or unmakes the law of the land. Hence the absolute ne- cessity that the sword of her written word, than which no weapon is more mighty in this battle with rum, should be charged into every hiding-place of the power of her foe. It is essential to the success of the temperance reform that her literature should meet the needs of the whole people; not simply those who come to her for instruction, who buy her books and take her periodicals, but those upon whom they must be thrust in the haunts of sin. She must pre- pare to meet all shades of thought and imthought, all classes and grades of intellect, all degrees of ignorance, with the clear aggressive force of well selected and plainly spoken truth, which shall be, in its influence, like the con- stant shining of a light that grows into the cloudless glory of perfected day. There are places where the voice of the Church is not yet heard ; and, wherever she is silent, there vice and un- belief are heard, tainting the air with the decaying fruit of corrupt thought. There are such places even in our own land, under the shadow of our own temples; such places in our own pews, and in the garden-spot of our Sunday-schools ; places where her voice for prohibition and total abstinence has not been heard or understood, because the truth was not translated into the language they knew. 228 METHODISM AND LITERATURE. And to-day the real relation of Church literature to the temperance work must be that of a missionary, going out into fields that might at first seem altogether foreign ; learning languages which she had not known before — the language of utter need, hopeless, helpless need, of souls bound in the prison of vice with strong chains of depraved appetites and fiery passions ; not the appetites and passions of the human body simply, but those planted therein by the demon of rum, and which so far outrank all others that the same terms do not seem to apply to both, and so that it almost seems that the same Gospel remedy which meets the one can not touch the other. This need found expression one day on the lips of a man in these terms : " You talk about God being able to save folks; but I tell you it 's one thing for him to be able to save you and the ladies of the Temperance Union, and it 's another thing for him to be able to save a fellow like me. I guess if I'm ever saved he'll have to invent some new way." A woman said to me, "But I'm such a toiv down sinner God '11 find it a dirty job to do any thing for me, I reckon." The Gospel teaching which reaches the understandiug of such men and women must be such as takes cognizance of burned-out nerves, vitiated blood, cooked brains, all in the leading of overgrown passions and of appetites of mon- strous proportions ; of a fettered soul in a poisoned body, which must wait the slow processes of elimination and up- building, through natural functions, for deliverance. The devil of rum has taken his work, on the human body, outside the region where God's grace, as commonly taught, operates. He will do his work in spite of God's grace, if lie can get the chance; and this fact renders necessary a line of Gospel exposition for the victims of vice such as we have never had, which shall emphasize the doctrine of the "redemption of the body" even in this life, which shall reveal Christ as him who cleansed the defiled temph, as well as raised the dead. CHURCH AND TEMPERANCE. 229 A minister once said to me: "I am learning, in this work for these men, that the most of what I had learned for use in my ministry has to be entirely laid aside, or translated to meet the necessities of the case. I have nothing in my library, outside my Bible, that is of any practical use — absolutely nothing that I could hand to such a man as F , with any faith that it would meet the want, unless I should sit beside him and expound as I read." We find this often true ; and we need a literature in which the most common terms of our religion shall be simplified, in which the most familiar doctrines, and the plainest truths of salvation shall be so illuminated that the most darkened mind shall comprehend, and the most de- graded shall find room for hope. We need especially to double our forces along the lines of our Sunday-school work; for it is here that our great enemy makes his most persistent attcak. ' 'Line upon line, line upon line, precept upon precept, precept upon pre- cept, here a little and there a little,'' something with every Sunday-school lesson, something in every leaflet and book, which shall plead for purity, and reason of righteousness and temperance. Let the boys and girls of our Sunday- school know every thing that science, or philosophy, or political economy, or the law, or religion— every thing that polite culture, or beauty of face and form, or success in life — can teach or require concerning the drink use and traffic. Compel them to enter the path of vice, if at all, in such a blaze of light and knowledge that no responsi- bility shall remain with any tongue or pen for unrevealed truth. One thing we must never forget. But for the Church there would have been no temperance reform. Nobly has she thus far met her obligation to the world of letters and the reformers of every age ; and the past and present are auguries for the future. Her literature has been like good seed sown beside many waters ; sown early 230 METHODISM AND LITERATURE. and late ; sown, often, without hope of any increase for her own reaping, but only that God's kingdom might be enriched. Her literature lias been the nursing mother, the faithful guide with staff and lantern, to the temperance reform. It was because her pen had written, in learned treatise, in history and song and story, keeping God's truth always before us like an angel in the way, and ringing in the air above us like a clear-toned bell, that the women of the Church had the courage and faith to march and pray and organize against the saloon. And if the day ever dawns when the power of the demon is broken, and home and state are free, it will be because the Church has been faithful to her trust as the representative of Him who was " manifested to destroy the work of the devil." S. M. I. HENRY. THE MORAL NATURE. . 231 XXI. LITERATURE AND ITS RELATION TO THE MORAL NATURE. Literature and the moral nature Lave in their history evinced a very intimate relationship ; but the thinking world is divided upon the question as to which is the cause and which the effect. The Christian occupies a point of view from which, he feels justified in affirming that the brightest culture is favored and developed by the highest moral attainments, while the opposer insists upon it that " ignorance is the mother of devotion." The inductive process of reasoning should here be considered satisfactory and convincing. If in different ages and in widely separated parts of the world the same plant be found growing in a soil with identical chemical constituents, we should be war- ranted in concluding that the soil was indispensable to the plant. So we find that the best civilization is identical with the highest moral culture on both sides of the ocean and in the isles of the sea, and, at the expense of vast treasure and many cultured and precious lives, the Church lias demonstrated that the shades of ignorance recede before the widening horizon of Bible light. Nor is this result contradicted by the distinction of classic lands in ancient times ; for while it is freely admitted that in poetry and art they excelled, it will be insisted that the highest civilization consists not so much in faithful imi- tations as in noble and elevating ideals ; not in art crea- tions, but in the sacredness with which human life is regarded. No civilization is worthy the name which does not protect the life. Herein is a crowning glory of ours. 232 METHODISM AND LITERATURE. It stands by the cradle of infancy and steadies the steps of age, while for the sick and orphaned it founds the hos- pital and the asylum. These and kindred humanitarian institutions were unknown to Roman senator and Grecian philosopher. On the other hand, life with them was with- out value. Self-destruction and gladiatorial combat were the legitimate results of their one-sided culture. But we are answered that the pre-eminence of our civ- ilization is attributable to the increase of the centuries. But we have only to point to China for the fallacy of this assertion. The unchanging current of its national life ap- pears to issue from the very portals of Noah's ark — if we credit their pretensions, though none will dispute the claim to a very high antiquity — and yet its thousands of years have not been able to relieve its waters of their slimy im- purities. It demands something more than time, and that something is a proper culture of the moral nature. No clearer proof of any proposition can be adduced than is afforded of this in the mission of Luther. It was to unchain the Bible, and open its pages; it was to swing conscience on the highest pivot of the soul — a conscience enforcing a judgment enlightened by the truth of God's Word. Now, what was the result to literature. Take Germany alone : in six years from the promulgation of the ninety-five theses at Wittenberg the number of annual publications increased twelvefold. The dark ages were past, and the morning had come. AVe have said that literary and moral relations are interactive, and while deep-seated and enlightened moral convictions are agencies by which the race is lifted up to higher planes, these same convictions are susceptible of strengthening and culture. Ours is a day when every idea has its literature. The press stands at the center of thought and influence. Its impressions may well be called leaves, since they are scarce excelled in number by the decorations which Spring hangs THE MORAL NATURE. 233 upon our trees. These are classified by certain moral qual- ities. Some are religious, some agnostic, and others infidel. It is worthy of emphasis that every system has its press, and that its activity and the sacrifice and consecration by which it is run are not always proportioned to the purity of the system or its direct contribution to the welfare of the race. Our Christianity is thus thrown upon the defensive. It must use enlightened natural means, and not depend exclusively or generally upon its supernatural origin. A cool and discriminating age will listen to and weigh the asserted claim very much as it would form an opinion con- cerning any temporal enterprise, without considering the claim to a divine origin. True, the appeal must be finally made to the conscience ; but the heart can not be reached while obstructions crowd the head. It will be remembered we do not claim that all Christian literature should be apologetic and on the defensive ; for after it has taken the parapet it will advance and plant the cross in the very citadel, the heart. Thus we find that a religious litera- ture is a necessity. Our people will read and be im- pressed, and one of the most important of all questions is, What shall they read ? This depends upon the answer to another question, namely, Why should they read? Our reply is, Read for discipline, information, and culture. In each of these departments are two general classes of books, similar, it may be, in intellectual strength and facility of expression, but widely different in reference to their moral spirit. One will ignore all reference to the agency, and even the name, of God. -These books abound with compli- ments to nature ; nature is their deity. Its affinities are omniscience, its force is omnipotence, and its law is justice. Nature builds the world, educates its animals, and fur- nishes its men. These opinions are paraded by men who have observed widely and thoughtfully. They are skilled in the laboratory, and are all the more insidious because 20 234 METHODISM AND LITERATURE. of their familiarity with the elements, forces, and organ- isms, of nature. Their facts can not be denied, their brill- iant discoveries must be recognized, and still the problem remains as to the best means of counteracting their implied and intended disrespect to religion. There are a half- dozen men who, because of their brilliant endowments and bold championship, make the impression that they are vastly more numerous and important than they are, while the truth is that for every one of them there is a score of patient and skillful observers, who become equally familiar with nature, and twine their most brilliant discoveries into garlauds for the Savior's cross. Isaac Newton, who lifted a ladder to the stars upon which the latest astronomer mounts to observe, was a devout Christian. Tyndall tells us that Faraday, the acknowledged high-priest in the tem- ple of nature, who was at home in the most intricate lab- yrinths, and was familiar with her most profound chemical mysteries, with the simplicity of childhood, asked the Father's blessing on the food as the guest and he were seated at the table. Then, if it be true that Christian scientists are more numerous and equally well informed, we are not under the necessity of drinkiug from these god- less sources ; for, though clear as icicles, the latter will be found unnaturally cold. How fortunate if the realm of truth can have the sheen of God's glory resting upon it ; if, with our geology, we can have Dana's faith ; if by the author of " Ecce Ccelum" the heavens be flooded with a brilliancy unequaled since the day of Chalmers, unless we except our own Bishop Warren, whose study of the sky is but pleasing ' ' Recreations in Astronomy!" We can not write a catalogue, but insist that works of this spirit should displace such as are manifestly unfriendly to the higher wants of the soul. It is a matter of glad surprise that books of this class are daily multiplying, and proposing to supplement the ab- sence of early educational opportunities. Science and art THE MORAL NATURE. 235 have been popularized ; they have beeu relieved of tech- nicalities and tedious repetitions, and yet left intact so far as essentials for a general acquaintance with the truth is concerned. They are adjusted to all years and every ca- pacity. They broaden the outlook of age, and sharpen the curiosity of youth for a closer intimacy with the priests in nature's wonderful temple. Another important purpose to be served by our litera- ture is the culture of the faith. We refer to faith in its widest and also in its usual significance as the soul's accept- ance of Christ. The swirls of conflict are about centers of religious dogma. Matter or spirit, immortality or annihilation, hap- piness for all or retribution for sin, inspiration of the Scrip- tures or a low plane of Bible origin, are live questions. Their discussions fill the magazines and the more evanes- cent periodicals. Our young people become more or less infected by the heresies. They appear to be called to pass through a period in life when a false pride and strange confidence tend presumptuously to discard the old beliefs. They forget that many experiments have demonstrated that there can be no morality without a religion. They fail to remember that these old convictions are intuitive, and not simply the result of education. It is well for the Christian world to stop and ask what is to be done. The danger is not imaginary. The air is full of the spirit of skepticism. It is boastful and threatening, and because of its though tfulness is deserving of attention. Older per- sons acquainted with history know that these vaunts have stood on the coins of the old Roman Empire, were ex- pressed by Celsus, Porphyry, Julian, and in recent times by Hume, Paine, and the latter's faithful shadow ; and that each in its turn has failed to materialize, and so should have at least become more modest, though they have never been more obtrusive and clamorous than now. This field has not been neglected by tauetified learning. 236 METHODISM AND LITERATURE. It has traveled amid the ruins of fallen empires, and delved among the foundations of buried cities. It has scanned the prophetic, and hearkened attentively for the historic echo. It has unearthed the leaves of earth's buried tablet, and traced its ancient history in the light of the Mosaic revelation. It has waited patiently for a light from scientific discovery to shine upon " the wheel broken at the cistern," " the sweet influences of the Pleiades," the weight of the winds. The patient waiting has been rewarded ; for comparatively recent discoveries make clear the anticipations of those oldest Scriptures. Daniel waited long for the vindication of his history, but in 1854 it was unearthed at Ur of the Chaldees. The same testimony explained why he took the third instead of the second chariot. Thus we find an abundance of truth with which to counteract the tendency to unbelief. There is Bishop Newton, with his satisfactory testimony to the spirit of prophecy ; and Bishop Watson, with his clear refutation of the coarse cavilings of Thomas Paine, which are equally forcible as a reply to his faithful shadow. There is a modern work by Chancellor Dawson, which, with a very wealth of learning, establishes the beautiful harmony between the earth and Genesis. We fearlessly affirm that he who has mastered the contents of these three books will have the modern skeptic at his mercy, since they furnish his quiver from the armory of God's Word, and show him how skillfully to use the same. But who sees these volumes? On what shelves are they found? What young people have so much as read their titles? And why not ? for not only are they convincing in the realm of the spiritual, but they add largely to one's fund of general information. In them Herodotus tells us what occurred beyond the realm of Bible lands ; the explorer lifts the veil from buried cities, while scientists give us the clearest interpretation of the wonders which belong equally to nature and revelation. W r e need to go back to a more THE MORAL NATURE. 237 solid literature, something which will challenge the powers of mind, and contribute toward that intellectual store in which is true imperial dignity. The volumes we name are only typical. I would not stop with them, but others should add their treasures to mind, and so sway the heart before the power of truth. No person disposed to work the mines of truth need be at the mercy of inflated skepticism. But judicious selections may greatly strengthen the hand which grasps the cross. Many persons neglect their faith as though it was necessarily an evergreen w r hose na- ture would endure the fiercest blasts of sarcasm and rid- icule. Why any Christian professor should pay a brilliant rhetorician to abuse him is mysterious, and specially when we remember that the faith is a delicate exotic, which can not thrive short of the care one bestows on a rose or ge- ranium. The faith must be cultured. And here again the response to our persistent need will lead us to the library; always remembering, however, to "pray without ceasing." Keligious biography is of incalculable advantage in this regard. The Church of Christ has a marvelous history, extending through the ages, into all climes, and among people of every tongue. Every feature of history interlinks with this. Its leading characters have towered into the heights of influence and power, and made a valu- able contribution to the world's imperishable records. But it is not of valor in directing the energies of sanctified will to which we now so specially refer as conveying the lesson through which the faith may be cultivated. The world may challenge even these in comparison with its proud achievements. But when we touch the conflicts and struggles of the spiritual life we survey an uninvaded prov- ince. Here we find the impulses of a hidden life, a path of conquest marked out and trodden by faith. Take the history of Huguenot and Puritan. See them in the mount- ain passes, trustful and rejoicing, and catch from their 238 METHODISM AND LITERATURE. sublime faith a new enthusiasm. Come to the New World, and suffer yourself to be borne aloug on the pio- neer fringe of advancing civilization, and you will find the grandest exhibitions of faith as spiritual foes fall, one after another, before the weapons which are " mighty through God to the pulling down of strongholds." Repentance and conversion presented sharply outlined characteristics. For some reason convictions were intensely deep, and often protracted. It was like the gloom of the night, unrelieved by " a spark of glimmering day." The soul was in no condition to be deceived. Pain is the best judge of the efficacy of pretended solace. But as we linger near, faith has its triumph, gray tints announce the dawn, the brooding shadows flee away ; for the Sun of righteous- ness has arisen with healing in his wings. These super- natural transformations have ever had a strong attraction for the masses ; they flock to see and to hear, as on the day of Pentecost. These scenes are now matters of his- tory. Like unfading pictures, they will adorn the walls of the mighty temple with spiritual beauty, for the delight and culture of the Church through the ages. This is " A faith that shines more bright and clear When tempests rage without, That when in danger knows no fear, In darkness feels no doubt." God's Church of to-day needs such a faith as this ; for the soul and repentance and conversion are ever the same. There are other means for the quickening of this faith ; but I am of opinion that our literature must be an im- portant factor in the largest results. Take a beautiful and renowned life, and trace it back to its beginning, and see its glory bursting forth under the touch of faith with more than the wonder of magic wand, and the desire for such a faith, with its wonderful results, becomes intense. In China the priests say, " When ye pray, think of Bhuda [Buddha?], and you will be transformed into THE MORAL NATURE. 239 Bhuda [Buddha?]." So we think it impossible to read of the rills of experience which flow from the touch of faith, without becoming more spiritual and devoted. Why is the eleventh chapter of Hebrews one of the most attract- ive of the Bible? Because it is a cluster of trophies. The noblest and best names of history are there — men made great by their faith in God and in the power of his might. Read the record, and feel the inspiration. I im- agine the Grecian warrior as he casts his eye over his shield embossed with the glorious deeds of his fathers, is reminded of what valor has done, as he plunges into the fight to prove himself worthy of such sires. Let the Church to-day take the shield of faith, the burnished shield, and while the beams of the Spirit's favor kindle upon it, read its pictured record of those " who, through faith, subdued kingdoms, wrought righteousness, and at- tained the promises." The Church and the individual life needs to be called away from false notions of this conflict. We have followed the enemy of rationalism and science, falsely so called, into an ambush, and have lost the cov- eted advantage. We have forgotten to distinguish between the reason and the emotions; in fact, we have allowed contempt to be expressed for the emotions without a pro- test. We have read of force till we have failed to remem- ber that "it was not by might nor by power, but by my Spirit, saith the Lord." We have crowded miracles into the smallest corner of a shrinking credulity. We have substituted an external propriety for the mysteries of god- liness. And while, in spite of such numerous and general concessions, there is still some progress, it is not a tithe of what the appliances of the God-given and heaven-endowed machinery are capable of. What is the remedy? More spiritual associations; in the flesh, if possible. "Forsake not the assembling of yourselves together ;" and since we are the result of the intellectual food of which we partake, again we advise, Read books of religious experience. 240 METHODISM AND LITERATURE. Benjamin Franklin says his thought and conduct received their direction from some tattered leaves of Cotton Math- er's " Essay to Do Good." Christians, there is an upper department in your spiritual nature. It demands moral and spiritual culture. Will you seek it? A literature has been provided. It abounds in the most wonderful phases of history, ancient or modern. Magic wand never caused shrub to bud and flower more promptly than have the Sandwich Islands with Sharon's beautiful rose. Aladdin's lamp never beamed its bright light with more power or greater wonder than has our Lord's religion in India and China. Never has the Lord's going marked a plainer patli than in the movement called Methodism. Read its his- tory, become familiar with its pioneer characters, trace its development, and remember that its present proportions are largely the result of the permanent record of the de- votion of its departed heroes. But do not forget the Bible. For all the purposes mentioned we find a wonder- ful adaptation in the Holy Scriptures, ranging as they do between the eternities, embellished with the most beautiful lives, the purest sympathies, and to the soul's most anxious inquiries offering the most satisfactory answers. Here is poetry in the rhythm of the skies, history that goes back further than the first human footprint, prophecies that, going before and perching on the summit of a future cen- turv, await the certain coming of the slow-moving foot of human history. "Search the Scriptures, for in them ye think ye have eternal life," and they are they which testify of Christ. Our subject has another important bearing in view of the floods of pernicious literature which threaten to ingulf and destroy the young and impressible minds of our homes and society. This is the day of objectionable fiction, pub- lished in every variety and at any price. It adjusts itself to every state, and promises not to burden the mind with thought. Much of it is weak and silly, the variety Bishop THE MORAL NATURK 241 Thomson had in mind when he framed the following recipe : "Take of words one hogshead, Of understanding one drop, Of human depravity and coloring matter sufficient quantity; Mix, and filter through green or yellow paper." Much of this trash is shamelessly obscene, and is with- out higher aim than to pander to the depraved taste of the ignoraut and sensual. These will debase the manners, inflame the passions, and send young people, dissatisfied with the staid ways of home and society, on the restless search of an ideal happiness, which has no existence out- side the disgusting scenes of its own disordered imagina- tion. Authors may be divided into three classes, — irre- proachable, doubtful, and dangerous. The last revels in base creations, the second introduces an occasional decoy, while the first has written no line that will fail to stand the delicate test of the most cultivated and chaste home circle. You must avoid suspicious characters, or be con- taminated by the association. They become to the enfee- bled mind the veriest realities. They leap from the paper, take shape, and become living beings. Who will wonder at their influence, especially upon the inexperienced and unsuspecting? If these imaginary characters are evil, they lose no moment, opportune or otherwise, in honey-combing virtue and anticipating its fall. And if, on the other hand, they are good and noble, we may expect the reader to go forth breathing a magnanimous and pure spirit. We are asked, May we not read for recreation? I answer, How few know any thing of mental weariness ! But even though hour after hour has felt the impress of patient thought creeping slowly over a tired brain, all this is no excuse for poisonous stimulus. If a weary body is an apology for the feverish quickening of alcohol, then we may rekindle the fires of thought with the blue blazes of objectionable fiction. Not that we indiscriminately con- 21 242 METHODISM AND LITERATURE. demn all fiction ; for certainly he is healthier and stronger whose brow is cooled by the ocean breezes of Virgil and the mountain air of Knowles, who has reveled in the Palestine imagery of Willis or the wonderful creations of Milton, Young, Bunyan, Shakespeare, Tennyson, and Longfellow. We would suggest a wider latitude than we can here define ; but it must be determined carefully by those who are older and more experienced. Parents should supervise the reading of their children, and furnish the library as carefully as the larder and dining-room. It will cost something to do so; it will cost more to neglect it. If books were simply a superficial luxury, we might ap- plaud his wisdom who filled his library with painted blocks in imitation of costly volumes, or the inexpensive Patent- office Reports. Books are the teachers of the home and a principal factor in its happiness or misery. By them irre- pressible activities may be wisely directed ; hours of idle- ness, which are always fruitful with temptations, sweep by only too rapidly on the wings of cheerfulness, when employed in useful reading. There are books for the chil- dren. They abound in adventure, describe the traits of animals, and repeat the events of the past. There are books of biography, and others where a few marvels of science may impart a taste for that which is stranger than fiction. These are the teachers who will make the wisest and happiest impress on character. Parents must not excuse themselves for want of time, expense, or taste. The necessity is imperious, like that for bread. To neg- lect it is to dwarf mind and enfeeble the moral powers. To refuse to supervise the books and reading of young people is to license the devil in his worst and deadliest work. We close by emphasizing our suggestion. Books are the sources and channels of knowledge, and the inspira- tion and encouragement to virtue. They are the best aid to parents in the effort to quicken the intelligence, THE MORAL NATURE. 243 restrain the passions, and culture the emotions. Thus humanity, regenerated and informed comes to its highest possibilities, and the home becomes the shrine of all that is good in the heart and "worthy and great in the life. W. W. RAMSAY. 244 METHODISM AND LITERATURE. XXII. OUR LITERATURE AS A SOCIAL FORCE IN THE CHURCH. What should we be without society? Life would in- deed be a dreary isolation. God has shown his goodness to man by providing that he shall not be alone. "He setteth the solitary in families." When we come into the world welcoming arms receive us. Throughout infancy smiling faces, beaming with tender love, meet our gaze, and voices, musical with gladness sing to us the soothing and sweet lyrics of the heart. Home is the dearest and happiest place on earth, because it is the realm in which the social nature reigns. Home would not be home were its lips dumb, its faces immobile, its sympathies frozen. It is the blissful place it is because there the heart, unre- strained, pours out its best treasures in speech, in smiles, in laughter, and in tears. As our duties begin but do not end at home, so our social life projects itself beyond the hearthstone. They who neglect home for the sake of outside society are rec- reant to sacred obligations ; they who give all their thought and time to the home circle, to the exclusion of all other social interests, are selfish. Some of the most intimate and tender friendships of Jesus were beyond the circle of his relatives. Religion does not stifle the social instinct, but strengthens it. Christianity is in harmony with man's nature, and develops and adorns that nature, instead of crushing it. It makes society pure, elevating, and helpful. It makes social life, by excluding from it the base passions, together with deceit and tale-bearing, a source of perennial A SOCIAL FORCE. 245 enjoyment. Were Christ's religion universally diffused, and society completely under its dominance, our social fellowship would indeed be a high source of pleasure, even " like to that above." I once heard a Christian of advanced years say in a meeting that a sanctified person never or rarely laughs. He was no doubt sincere, but sadly ignorant. His repre- sentation of Christian piety in its highest stage was a most abhorrent caricature. A sanctified Christian never laugh ! Then why did God give us the power to laugh ? The very fact that our Maker made us with a capacity for laughter is evidence positive and certain that he intended us to laugh. The trouble is not with the laughing, but with the occasion or cause of the laughter. A Christian can not innocently laugh in derision. He may not laugh at the expense of another's rights or feelings. He must not laugh at sin, however ludicrous may be the shapes it assumes. But in the enjoyment of the gladness of a true, healthful nature, in the circle of friends, amidst "the feast of reason and the flow of soul," he may smile — aye, he may laugh — and be the better for it. It is a sad pity that people, however pious, but who are afflicted with jaundice, should ever attempt to depict religion. It is brilliant with every bright and celestial hue ; but to their eyes it is altogether yellow, and they think that the people who say it is not yellow, but aglow with more than diamond splendors, are ignorant of the genuine thing. The world is full of heart- ache ; religion brings to it good cheer. It is full of frowns; religion illumines it with smiles. It is full of groans ; re- ligion gives it notes of joy. God means that we shall be happy; sin has made us miserable. He has given to us a religion whose office it is to restore to us the bliss of van- ished Eden. Let us receive it as the beautiful, glorious, glad thing that it is, and rejoice in its blessedness. As religion is adapted to our social nature, so it en- encourages and promotes the exercise and gratification of 246 METHODISM AND LITERATURE. the social feelings. It bids us not to forsake the assem- bling of ourselves together. It requires us to visit the widow and the fatherless. It enjoins us to rejoice with those who do rejoice, and to weep with them that weep. It charges us to be kindly affectioned one to another with brotherly love. No man can be a healthy Christian and be morose, and shut up all the good he gets within him- self. Christians, on the contrary, are "given to hospitality." This explains why some ministers, whose gifts are ordi- nary, are notably popular. They are social. In other words, they pour out the kind and generous sympathies of their hearts in smiles that are like sunshine breaking through the clouds that hang over the hearts of their people. They have a gentle, soothing, appreciative, help- ful word for every one. They haste to the chamber of sickness and to the abode of sorrow. And while they have no special attraction as preachers, they are walking bene- dictions among their people all through the week. Hence they are loved, and the Churches clamor for them as pastors. The same is true of many laymen. The people love them, and they are very influential in the Church. It is not because of their wealth or talents, but because they help and comfort many by kind words and pleasant atten- tions. And when in a town there is a Church whose members are largely of that kind, that Church will not lack for adherents, but it will be " the people's Church." The Church ought to be the most pleasant place. Its society ought to be the most agreeable. In a good degree, this is the case. The most delightful people, the most engaging and helpful associations on earth, are found in the Christian Church. But wherever it is possible to make the Church more attractive and useful, by improving and enlarging its social facilities, it should be done. An efficient means of doing this is the enlisting of the members of the Church in the work of mental improve- A SOCIAL FORCE. 247 ment by means of pure and profitable reading. The man or woman who never reads will never be able to exercise a wide social influence. There will, first of all, be a lack of the power of expression. He who does not habitually read will have a deficient vocabulary, and, therefore, will not be ready in speech. Words are to thoughts what the setting is to the jewel. However good, or even brilliant, the thought may be, if it is not presented in fitting lan- guage its beauty is obscured. Words fitly chosen can alone set it off* at its best. Reading familiarizes us with such words, and enables us to use them with readiness and skill. Every intelligent person has felt the difficulty of con- versing with some people. They have so little knowledge of any thing beyond the daily range of their routine lives that they are unable to enter into any conversation that reaches at all outside of it. Hence a brief chat exhausts their resources. And this is not uncommon. A very in- telligent lady remarked to me that very few gentlemen whom she meets in society ever say any thing to her that has any sense in it. She thought that men in social gath- erings indulge in only vapid talk to women, and reserve all their weighty speech for their own sex. But the fact is that they do not find railroads and stocks and business affairs generally suitable for the staple of conversation with ladies ; and, as too often they know but little about any thing else, they are not able to entertain a lady of intelli- gence in the drawing-room. Speak to a lady of some notable character of either sex of whom you have read ; or of some piquant article or striking fact contained in the magazine or newspaper; of a beautiful poem whose sentiment and rhythm gave you pleasure ; of a fresh and pleasing line of thought you have been pursuing as the result of the last new book you have read ; and she will be interested and gratified, and never will she say that your conversation was futile. 248 METHODISM AND LITERATURE. Speech is a great faculty. Man is the only being on earth that God has gifted with it. What man would be without it we can infer from seeing those whose lips are dumb. They can think, and convey their thoughts rudely by motions, and even by writing, but they can not pour them forth in words. The mind is the fountain of ideas. Speech is the stream that gushes from it, carrying blessing or blight wheresoever it flows. By the right use of speech our social natures are grat- ified, our religious affections are improved, and our influ- ence for good increased. The man or woman who in a Church can converse sensibly, attractively, and instruc- tively is, if consistent in conduct, a living power and blessing in that Church. The social gatherings which every Church ought to have from time to time, may be made, by the skillful use of conversation, a means of pro- moting its interests. That which we need to make our conversation what it ought to be, is something to talk about. A very eloquent preacher, now deceased, who had a marvelously fine voice and a superior presence, once told me that after one of his first efforts in public, if not his very first, the brother at whose house he stayed told him that he had a good voice, and that the thing he needed now was something to say. And he assured me that he never forgot that significant suggestion. Many and many a time that preacher held and charmed audiences of thousands, and moved numbers to God ; but he never forgot the necessity of having something to say. What every Church needs is not only ministers, but also members, who have something to say, and something worth the saying; something to say in the prayer-meeting and class-meeting; and also something to say in the mul- tifarious occasions of social intercourse. And an important and essential means of making sure of this is habitually to read good books — religious books — and the periodicals, at A SOCIAL FORCE. 249 least the weekly paper, published by the Church. Iu uo other way can he know any thing of the great enterprises carried on by the Chureh for the conversion of the world. The social force of the Church would, I think, be much increased were every congregation provided with a library and a reading-room. Let the latter be open every evening for the men who are at work during the day, and for the women every afternoon. Let the religious papers be pro- vided in abundance. Let all our Book Room volumes be in the library. In this way our people will be drawn to books and to reading. Their minds, hearts, and man- ners will be improved thereby. Their conversation will be suited to minister grace to the hearer. At the same time the Book Concern will become an auxiliary to the pulpit in a larger degree. Then, instead of vapid nonsense, which too often drivels from silly lips in our social gatherings, the conversation will be charming, refreshing, improving, because it will flow forth from minds stored with profitable thoughts and instructive facts. Then new converts will be helped, rather than hindered, by the society of older mem- bers, and the Church will enjoy a genial, winning, intelli- gent piety. JOHN ATKINSON. 250 METHODISM AND LITERATURE. XXIII. LITERATURE OF THE HIGHER CHRIS- TIAN LIFE. This is an age of books. In material with which to make them, in facilities for their rapid and extended multi- plication, in means for their easy and wide distribution, and in the opportunities afforded for their composition, no age ever equaled our own. In such a time it is but part of the logic of events that literature shall assume, to a large extent, the form of monographs. Accordingly, we find nearly every possible theme known to our day worked up in this form. Books, ably written, on single topics is a prominent feature, as it is also one of the most satisfactory characteristics of the literature of the day. It is well that religious literature is rapidly assuming this form. It may thus hope for better treatment, wider circulation, and a more profitable reading. There is a literature of the higher Christian life. I need scarcely say that in this department Methodism is exceedingly rich, or that the Methodist Episcopal Church has upon the shelves of her great publishing-houses works upon this important subject which, for thoroughness of treatment, variety of style, and richness of experience by which they are illustrated, are not anywhere excelled. And we have not only good books which treat this subject directly, so that, in the language of Bishop Merrill, " the literature is exceedingly rich, and in it are found ample vin- dications of the doctrine and clear and worthy representa- tions of every aspect of the experience," but the higher life THE HIGHER CHRISTIAN LIFE. 251 in its teachings and experiences is found in the biographies of such precious characters as Bramwell, Carvosso, Mrs. Fletcher, Lady Maxwell, Hester Ann Rogers, Madame Guy on, Fisk, Olin, Hamline, Cookman, and others. And in the published journals of such as Wesley and Asbury do we find it, while our theological standards teach and defend it, our denominational histories record its struggles and victories, our periodicals never fail to give it place in their columns, and our hymns are fairly aglow with the glory of this -exalted experience. What a hymn is the " W r restling Jacob" of Charles Wesley — a very epic of the higher life ! It should be no matter for surprise that we, as a Church, possess such a literature, or that we make it so prominent. Did we not we would be untrue to our history and untrue to our birthright; for while all the Churches now practically admit this experience, each using its own language, it has to us a peculiar relation. There is not and never has been a form of faith, whether Christian or heathen, which does not teach the necessity of purity in order to heaven. But Methodism seemed to have for her distinctive mission the bringing to light anew the old Gospel truth that man may be "holy in heart in this life." The embryo of Methodism was the Holy Club of Ox- ford. The aim of those struggling souls was purity of heart and life, and the avowed purpose of the Wesleys was " to spread Scripture holiness." Methodism was not an ecclesiastical movement, not a contention for doctrinal formulae, but a restoration of spiritual life and a revival of religious experience. And Methodism went out upon her mission with this one purpose, and this alone, to lead men to a holy life ; and her whole economy was developed about this one idea. Her Church polity, her symbols ot faith, her various prudential regulations, her peculiar means of grace, the matter and manner of her pulpit 252 METHODISM AND LITERATURE. ministrations are in general harmony with this thought. It is well for us as a people that all through our history we have kept in such prominence the " only one condition previously required of those who desire admission into these societies" — "a desire to flee the wrath to come and to be saved from their sins." Just as we depart from the spirit of this "one condition" shall we be in danger of schism and fierce contention. Here at least must we stand, whatever may be the questions which are now upon us, or which may arise in the future. Methodism must hold her people, and hold a common Protestantism, up to the standard which, under God, she had the honor to raise anew, — "Holiness unto the Lord." All other questions are incidental to this; all polity is worthless which does not work to this end. She must hold to this against the misrepresentations of her enemies and against the false representations of this glorious ex- perience among those supposed to be her friends. She must hold to it against the strong current of worldliness which sets upon her; nor must she be ashamed of it in the midst of an idolatry of culture, an idolatry of intel- lect, or an idolatry of mammon. This culture of the higher life, this science of salvation, this treasure of the kingdom, must be held as needing apology to nothing earthly and as man's noblest pursuit and choicest posses- sion. If the "signs of the times" may be read, do they not indicate a better day for the doctrine of the higher life? There is unusual and wide-spread interest in it among all the Churches. A healthy reaction has already begun from what must historically stand in the records of our Church as a period of decline with reference to this phase of doctrine — a decline brought about by the sad handling it has received at the hands of those whose zeal was disproportionate to their knowledge and prudence. We hail this reaction, and firmly trust that, baptized with new life and clothed with new T power, the doctrine and THE HIGHER CHRISTIAN LIFE. 253 experience of the higher Christian life may be exalted in the Church and by all who serve at her altars or thereon lay the consecrated offerings of their hearts. But it becomes a question of vital moment as to what agencies are best able to promote the true and clear un- derstanding of this doctrine, and stimulate its experiences. Among the chief must ever be the preaching of the Gos- pel. What is not taught and honored in the pulpit will not long remain in the pew ; nor can the pew long remain unaffected by the earnest, Scriptural, and judicious pre- sentation of truth. The ordinary channels of grace may each be made an agent in this work. The testimonies of those who have attained, and especially their consistent lives, are not least of these agencies for teaching men that there is an upward path, and in leading them to seek it. And literature has its power. There are few more po- tent agencies than books, good or bad, silently yet surely to form character and lead to action. Among the publica- tions of our denominational press we find ample assurance that there has not been left to ephemeral articles in our periodicals or to outside and somewhat irresponsible publi- cations the care of an interest which deserves the best treatment. We have a standard literature of the higher Christian life, one carefully written, and which deserves the highest commendation, largest confidence, and widest patronage. This literature deserves to be in the homes of all the people. It should be read and re-read, until the sentiments and aspirations contained permeate the thoughts and feelings. What untold results for good might follow the perusal of these books by all the people ! What problems of min- isterial inefficiency, of discouragement in Church work, of spiritual weakness, of want of revival power, and want of faith, and want of means to carry on the work of the kingdom, would such reading solve! How the Church would be energized, and how her spiritual life would be 254 METHODISM AND LITERATURE. kindled anew! It is doubtful whether it is generally known, even among Methodists themselves, to what ex- tent the Church is ready to supply works on this subject. With Wesley's "Christian Perfection" and Fletchers works the Methodists of half a century ago were quite familiar ; but it is to be feared that even these invaluable little volumes are known to few outside the ministry. To these standards have been added others, some of which deserve special mention that they may be brought to the attention of the people. A valuable contribution is the work entitled " Saving Faith," by that sturdy logician, Dr. Israel Chamberlayne, which, while it does not deal directly with the theme of holiness, lays a foundation for its more intelligent under- standing. " Walking in the Light," by D. D. Buck, D. D. , is a convenient little volume, which develops in a manner at once attractive and practical that choice saying of John, " If we walk in the light as he is in the light, we have fellowship one with another, and the blood of Jesus Christ his Son cleanseth us from all sin." It will repay a close perusal. The great duty and high privilege of entire consecra- tion to Christ is most fully treated in Dr. Thomas Carter's volume entitled, "All for Christ." It is a book to stir the soul, and cause it to desire harmony with God. See how the author himself pleads for the use of this literature and for the verity of this experience : " What shall we say of Fletcher, Bramwell, Abbott, Carvosso, Nelson, Hester Ann Rogers, Mrs. Fletcher, Lady Maxwell, and a thou- sand others? Were they all mistaken, and did they per- petuate a base falsehood when they said they enjoyed the blessing of perfect love? Who can read that noble mon- ument of untiring research and literary talent, Stevens's 1 History of Methodism,' without being convinced that herein lay the strength of the founders of our Church ? If every family would possess themselves of these volumes THE HIGHER CHRISTIAN LIFE. 255 and read them, we have no doubt the result would be a grand revival throughout all the Church. How few of us in these modern times have allowed our souls to be quick- ened and inspired by the perusal of the lives of Fletcher, Bramwell, and the other heroes of faith to whom we have referred ! If the apostle Paul, in the eleventh chapter of Hebrews, cited the worthies who preceded the era in which he lived to inflame the zeal and strengthen the faith of the early Christians, how appropriate it is that we should seek incentives to a closer walk with God by an acquaintance with the courage, the struggles, the sufferings of those to whom we owe the institutions under which we dwell! And then, as we look farther back upon the era of the great Reformation, and behold Luther, Knox, Cobham, Savonarola, Huss, Lefevre, Gustavus Adolphus, and the great army of reformers and martyrs in England, Scot- laud, France, Germany, and Italy, giving all for Christ, many of them dying at the stake, on the block, in the dungeon, as they laid the foundations of the religious lib- erty which we now enjoy, who can count up the numbers who served God with a perfect heart ?" " The Believer's Victory over Satan's Devices," although from the pen of a Calvinist, contains much that is invalu- able on the higher life. Who can afford to omit the read- ing of a book which samples like this ? — " Take, again, the simple fact of God's loving and abiding presence, sweetly manifested as a reality to the soul's inner consciousness. The result is, that we know and feel that we live and move and have our being in him, as the body lives and moves and has its being in the atmosphere which surrounds it. The soul communes with him as with an intimate, present friend. Prayer is no longer an effort to address God in the distant heavens, but is as natural and easy and spon- taneous as the communion, face to face, of loving friends. It is not limited to particular hours and forms, but goes on very much as two kindred and loving minds dwelling 256 METHODISM AND LITERATURE. together will, by the laws of want and suggestion, and by the very tendency of love to communicate, be always ex- pressing themselves to each other. This presence of God may sometimes dazzle and almost blind the soul with its effulgence, as with Moses when God showed him some-, thing of his glory ; but, generally, the Lord will so mani- fest his presence that it will be to the soul what the air is to the body, the natural, healthy, life-giving, and most sat- isfying element in which it is possible to live. When by this manifestation the believer's heart becomes the Sheki- nah wherein Jehovah dwells, it must have a life rich with all heavenly elements." ' 'Holiness the Birthright of All God's Children," by Dr. J. T. Crane is a valuable and very readable pro- duction. A vigorous little volume is " The Satisfactory Portion," by A. C. George, D. D. A paragraph must suffice : " No possessions, honors, friendships, or pleasures can fill the 'aching void' in a poor sinner's soul. The 'dearest idol' of a blindly loving heart is not to be compared with Jesus enthroned in the affections. And if our heavenly Father shall lead us to taste the emptiness of the world, and prove of how little worth are its applause, its dignities, and its glories, it is that our longing desires may go out after the imperishable good which blossoms in the promises of the Gospel, and drops in precious fruit from the tree of life in the soul's paradise, at the right-hand of God." The works of Rev. L. R. Dunn seem to be written out of rich experience. From " Holiness to the Lord" I take the following : ' ' All systems of philosophy and ethics have labored to reform and purify the outward character and life ; to make the stream sweet, the fruit good ; to cleanse the outside of the cup or platter, or to whiten the sepulcher. But the Christian system looks first of all to the utter eradication of all roots of bitterness from the heart, to the purification of the fountain, to making the tree good, to THE HIGHER CHRISTIAN LIFE. 257 bursting the cerements of the spiritual grave, and giving a resurrection from the moral death which has reigned within. This system teaches us that there can be no out- ward holiness in the life, in the conduct, and in the habit, unless the inward principle be implanted within, aud domi- nating over all the powers of the soul." His work en- titled "Mission of the Spirit" is a grand work on that noble theme. How rich is that chapter on "The Com- forter as the Sanctifier !" This literature of the higher life has been honored by the pens of some of the bishops, among whom we mention Peck, Foster, and Merrill. In "Aspects of Christian Ex- perience," by the latter, the author thus writes: "Meth- odism teaches the doctrine of Christian perfection, and attaches importance to it as a distinctive feature to be insisted upon in public and private ; and because of this peculiarity she has encountered no little opposition, and has been compelled to vindicate her faith by earnest and continued discussions. Some progress has been made in the work of impressing her views upon the minds of other Christian people, so that but few of the old forms of dis- putation are required ; but the time has not yet come for silence, for many yet fail to appreciate the ground she oc- cupies or the spirit in which this faith is held." What ringing words are these, and how they should sound through the aisles of our temples and in our homes: "The promotion of holiness is the mission of the Church. This was the life-work of the Son of God and the design of his death. ' He gave himself for us, that he might redeem us from all iniquity, and purify unto himself a peculiar peo- ple zealous of good works.' Then,' as the work of the Church is to carry out to completion the mission of Christ, its chief calling is to establish holiness in the earth. This is particularly the providential allotment of Methodism. Mr. Wesley never felt that he was called of God to found a denomination ; but he continually proclaimed that God had 22 2.38 METHODISM AND LITERATURE. thrust him out to raise up a holy people. The Methodist Discipline announces that our calling is to spread ' Scrip- tural holiness over these lands.' Every minister ordained in the connection believes in the doctrine, expects to be made perfect in love in this life, groans after full redemption, and pledges fidelity to this calling. How, then, with any consistency, can this topic be made a specialty or an excep- tional thing in the Church '? It is the common duty and privilege of all the thousands of our Israel, the aim of all our services, the end of all our preaching, praying, singing, and evangelizing. It is too late to say that we are unscrip- tural. The Gospel is full of the thing we mean. It per- vades the law and the prophets, the types and promises, the songs and sermons, the narratives and epistles of the Old and New Testaments. It thunders from Sinai, and shines from the Mount of Beatitudes. It comes down to us through the ages, attested by the testimony of martyrs and saints, and we hail it as the heritage of the Church till time shall end. Technicalities are of little value. Free- dom from sin is the great thing." "The Central Idea of Christianity," by Bishop Peck, is a standard on this theme, one of our classics. "Written a quarter of a century ago, it has lived and worked along with its author. In a masterly manner the writer reveals the crystalline center of bur faith, the " Idea "about which the Gospel forms itself. The venerable bishop thus closes his volume : "But these are not our appeals. They rise directly out of the fact that holiness is the central idea of Christianity. This fact, sustained by various indubitable evidences founded upon the Word of God, is before us. With what views and feelings is it contemplated? What disposition is to be made of it ? Let the reader answer on his knees. Before the Searcher of hearts let him renounce the world and all carnal indulgence forever. Let him seek to secure permanent reformation by the purification of the heart through the blood of Christ, by the power of THE HIGHER CHRISTIAN LIFE. 259 the Holy Ghost; and having proved, by a living, triumph- ant faith, the blessedness of perfect love, let him obey till he dies the great command, ' Grow in grace, and in the knowledge of our Lord and Savior Jesus Christ,' and in a heaven of unsullied holiness he will prove the fullness of the Savior's beatitude, 'Blessed are the pure in heart, for they shall see God.'"- Another of our Christian classics is the very scholarly and thorough work of Dr. George Peck entitled, " Chris- tian Perfection," a volume which must always occupy a high place in our literature. The author handles his great theme with the streugth of a giant, yet with the tenderness of a loving Christian heart. This is certainly one of the best and most judicious books on this subject ever penned. Bishop Foster laid the Church under obligation in the writing of his " Christian Purity." It is a work abounding and fairly overflowing with choice paragraphs on the higher life. It is full of meat, a book hard to lay down, one stimulating to holy meditation and to pious feeling, and inspiring to the experience of heart purity. I can give but few of these gems: "The believer is under obli- gation to possess all, to the last degree, of that which he may possess in Christ. Present possibility of holiness de- termines present duty of holiness." " What the Gospel proposes as the privilege of man, what it promises to do for him, particularly as it respects moral and spiritual ele- vation, must become the question which, by force of irre- sistible attraction, will yet draw all minds and sway all hearts." " The physical man has had his day — a day of darkness and debasement, of sensualism and crime ; the intellectual man is enjoying his — a day of refulgence and splendor ; the spiritual man must have his, and of as su- perior brightness as the interests pertaining to the soul are superior to those pertaining to the perishable body." What a trumpet blast does the good bishop sound in this: u If there be one want of Christendom, at this time, greater 260 METHODISM AND LITERATURE. than all others, it is this : There is learning, there is piety, there is zeal ; in our belief there never was more, perhaps never so much ; but there is still something more wanted than extraordinary learning, piety, and zeal. It is that entire consecration, that higher development of the Chris- tian life throughout the entire Church which can never take place until she sees the fullness of her privilege and the terribleness of her obligations. With low, or even medium views on these points, she can never pass into that higher life, that 4 fullness of the blessing of the Gospel/ that ' unity of the faith,' that dwelling in God, which she must attain before the world becomes regenerate through her instrumentality." What an earnest appeal the author here makes! — such an appeal, surely, as ought to move any person in whose soul is the faintest spark of the new life of Christ: " Taking the twin lamps of truth, the Bible and conscience, with sincere prayers for the guidance of the Holy Ghost, make that diligent search which the im- portance of the case requires. Be candid with yourself. Make no extenuation, no apology ; use no tenderness. Ferret every recess thoroughly ; probe to the bottom ; pass through every chamber of your soul ; search it through and through with a determination to know your case, to look at yourself stripped of every disguise. What do you find ? Are there no idols in the sacred temple ? no ' images of gold?' no ' Babylonish garments ?' no concealed 'spies?' no pride, no envy, no jealousy, no anger, no malice, no undue love of the world, no undue desire for the praise of men, no improper ambition ? Does God possess your heart without a rival? Are you wholly the Lord's? O for faithfulness! Would you attain to holiness? Linger at this point. Have no mercy on yourself ; be resolved to know the worst. You may have such discoveries as will astonish and distress you. Still make diligent search. What is your example ? Is it all that a Christian's ought to be? Do you daily exhibit, in the family, in the social THE HIGHER CHRISTIAN LIFE. 261 circle, in your business, everywhere, those tempers which should adorn the Christian character ? What is your in- fluence? Is it, so far as it is under your control, always decidedly and undividedly for Christ? With these aud such questions closely investigate your condition, praying for light and guidance and conviction. What is the result? Do you find great want ? Are there sins remaining within that need to be cast out ? What now ? Do you feel your need ? If not, dwell upon it, in earnest prayer for the enlightening agency of the Spirit, until you do feel." One of the latest contributions to the literature of the higher Christian life is "Love Enthroned" — a royal title, and one fitting the product of the gifted and learned au- thor, Rev. Daniel Steele, D. D. It is a carefully, beauti- fully, and earnestly written work, made the more valuable and practical by the introduction of the writer's own experi- ence, and the design of which is, " in true Pauline style, to testify unto you the Gospel of the grace of God." The vol- ume is thoroughly Scriptural, and, of course, must there- fore be Methodistic. It seems like a work inspired by the love of the author's heart. It was certainly born of grat- itude for experiences possessed and desire to make known the high privileges of the Christian life to others. Every chapter is a jewel. It is a misfortune to any Christian earnestly desiring nearness to God to pass it by unread. How true are these words : " To how many Christian souls is God veiled ! They have need to pray, ' Hide not thy face from me.' Many of these do not know that God is pleased to make communications of grace which shall be like the removal of a veil from the face of one beloved and adored. Such manifestations of grace to others are believed to be exceptional, that only a few persons of a peculiar and delicate spiritual organization can receive of Christ's love ; whereas we are living in a dispensation in which more glorious unveilings of God to every believ- ing soul are possible than was ever enjoyed by Enoch, 262 METHODISM AND LITERATURE. Abraham, Isaiah, or Daniel. ' The light of the moon has become as the light of the sun, and the light of the sun shall be sevenfold.' How shall not the ministration of the Spirit be rather glorious ?" How well would it be if all who enjoy not this experience were to heed this counsel ! — "Faith is the only door through which God enters the soul. Cease philosophizing, and take up the work of be- lieving. No sinner would ever find Jesus if he should stubbornly seek him w T ith the lamp of reason, refusing the lamp of faith. No imperfect believer can grasp Jesus as the complete Savior so long as he relies upon speculative reason as a supplement of his defective faith. Pride of intellect, the subtilest form of pride, is keeping thousands of Christians from that higher knowledge of God which is obtained only by climbing up the ladder of faith. It is not necessary for any soul to discriminate intellectually between regeneration and entire sanctification, or between the stream of love shed abroad by the Spirit of adoption and the ocean of love which the abiding Comforter pours around the purified soul, in order to enter upon this great salvation. As it is enough for the penitent to know that he is guilty and Jesus can pardon, so it is enough for the longing Christian to know that he is hungry, and there must be perfect satisfaction somewhere in the universe cor- related to that intense and painful appetency." Such is a view of the literature of the higher Christian life as that literature is provided by the press of the Methodist Episcopal Church. J. ALABASTER. AN EVANGELISTIC AGENCY. 2G3 XXIV. OUR LITERATURE AS AN EVANGELISTIC AGENCY. Methodism is a synonym for evangelism. Its genius is revivalistic. A ''passion for souls" is inherent to its life. This spirit has pervaded its history, and permeated all its agencies ; it has gone into its polity, its ministry, its liter- ature. Methodism has a literature that is both evangelical and evangelistic — a literature that is not only sound in doctrine, Scriptural in spirit, and emphatic respecting the vital and saving truths of the Gospel, but which exalts the conversion of souls, teaches the personal qualifica- tions for it, and inspires a holy, intense enthusiasm in its prosecution. While our literature is wide in its range of Biblical and theological discussions, rich and erudite in its doctrinal and ecclesiastical treatises, ample in its historical and biographical material, deep and spiritual in its devotional productions; yet had it not a distinctively evangelistic tendency all its other excellencies would fail to impart the knowledge and inspiration indispensable to the aggressive work of Christianity. The evangelistic power is a thing sui generis. It is a gift of the Holy Ghost. It is more than personal salva- tion or earnest piety ; it is that help of the Holy Spirit in the experience of the child of God which makes his per- sonality and powers effective, and imparts to him a sus- tained, quenchless impulse in soul-saving. This evangelistic power has been the divine pillar of cloud by day and the pillar of fire by night, leading on the Church in its uninterrupted march of holy triumphs 264 METHODISM AND LITERATURE. for eighteen centuries. It is the secret of the rapid growth and grand achievements of early Methodism. Whatever, therefore, in the agencies of our Church, tends to cultivate its spiritual power should be known, appreciate J, aud util- ized by its ministry and membership. Our evangelistic literature is so full and varied in its character that everv man of God among us, whether in pulpit or pew, may become thoroughly furnished unto the work of saving- souls. The shelves of our Book Concerns are loaded with volumes, every chapter of which is like a live coal; books which, if even casually perused, kindle a warmth that is uncommon to the heart, To exhume all the wealth and exhibit all the power of our evangelistic literature would require the compass of a volume, rather than the dimen- sions of a chapter. Only a view of the general outlines, together with a few of the choicest features, can here be given. The wealth of our evangelistic literature is to be found in three mines — our books, our periodicals, and our tracts. 1. Our Books. Among these a large number are evan- gelistic in design, treating of the nature, attainment, and application of revival power. There are also others, not distinctively evangelistic in title or contents, which contain incidental passages, paragraphs, and chapters pregnant with spiritual thought. Many of our historical, biograph- ical, homiletic, periodical, and general works disseminate a revival influence ; for a little leaven of spiritual power can leaven the whole lump of an otherwise lifeless and fruitless religious book. The Biblical, theological, and doctrinal works of Methodism are grand repositories of evangelistic thought. Our Commentaries, such as Clarke's Benson's, Watson's, Wesley's, last's, and Whedon's, abound in expositions and homiletical suggestions so quickening as to transform the devout student of them from a passive, pietistic life into an aggressive, soul-saving force. There is inherent in our commentaries that soul- AN EVANGELISTIC AGENCY. 265 quickening power which belongs to Luther's expositions. It was while listening to the reading of Luther's " Preface to the Romans" that John Wesley * 1 felt his heart strangely warmed." The doctrinal books of Methodism are many, and, as a class, they are able, safe, and Scriptural, while some are so pronounced in the evangelistic power as never to be read without drawing the soul nearer to the source of power. Fletcher's works stand foremost in this class of books. No one can read his matchless defense and comprehensive statements of spiritual truth without seeing how doctrinal theology may become a living power in soul saving, and without coveting the gift of effectiveness, and without being instructed in the way to its attainment. Our theologies, Watson's, Raymond's, and Pope's, are not wanting in evangelistic vigor, though this is not their distinctive temper. The works on different phases of doctrine are numer- ous: "Atonement," by Miley ; " Justification," by Da vies; " Freedom of the Will," by Whedon ; " Love Enthroned," by Steele, a fresh and scholarly discussion of evangelical perfection ; " Mission of the Holy Spirit," by Dunn, a masterly presentation of the personality, work, and dispen- sation of the Holy Spirit; "The Doctrine of the Holy Spirit," by Walker, emphasizing some of the operations of the Holy Spirit in respect to human personality and pre- vailing prayer. "Aspects of Christian Experience," by Bishop Merrill, needs only to be read to discover its spirit- ual as well as its intellectual worth; "The Philosophy of the Plan of Salvation," by Walker, is a book belonging to the category of evidences rather than that of doctrine. It is written in a philosophical style, and is an adopted rather than original book in Methodism. The sermonic literature of Methodism is a stream of living waters. Its fountain-head is Wesley's Sermons. It is a misfortune to any of our ministers not to have sat- 23 266 METHODISM AND LITER A TURE. urated themselves with them. Our preachers read South, Taylor, Spurgeon, Bushnell, and Beecher; but Wesley transcends them all in that which nourishes "able minis- ters of the New Testament." " Watson's Sermons" are in the spirit and power of the Elijah that came before him. " Bishop Hamline's Sermons " are freighted with revivalistic power. They are as saintly as Fletcher's " Checks," and as finished as Punshon's "Lectures." "Sermons on Con- secration," by A. C. George, have heart-power in them. "Simpson's Yale Lectures on Preaching" burn with the holy flame that has clothed his long and effective ministry. Many other volumes of sermons, and some single sermons, deserve mention, but space forbids. The devotional books issued from our presses are numer- ous. The Christian classics, "Imitation of Christ," Mrs. Rowe's " Devout Exercises of the Heart," Baxter's " Saints' Everlasting Rest," Law's " Serious Call," Alleine's "Alarm," " Extracts from Rutherford," and " Meditations of Madame Guyon," are well known. "All for Christ," by T. Carter; "Consecration," by A. C. George; "Mile-stone Papers," byD. Steele; " Triumphing over Death," by Hall; "Death- bed Scenes," by Bishop Clark, are later books, but not in- ferior in evangelistic power. These devotional works, to- gether with "Perfect Love," by J. A. Wood, and "New Testament Piety," by W. McDonald, are adapted to nour- ish the Christian graces. There are also many other special books, which are de- voted to the promotion of evangelism. "The Winning Worker," " Revivals of Religion," and "Camp-meetings," by Porter, are a whole curriculum of themselves in the line of Christian endeavor. "The Gift of Power," by Piatt; "God's Method with Man," by Gorham ; "Faith and its Effects," by Phoebe Palmer; and the " Tongue of Fire," by Arthur, form a library which would make its student, like Barnabas, a man full of faith and of the Holy Ghost. 2. Our Periodical Literature. The great family of our AN EVANGELISTIC AGENCY. 267 "Advocates" contain currently such inspiring religious in- telligence, ample reports of revivals, thrilling narratives of dying triumphs, interesting descriptions of heroic labors for souls, refreshing discussions of methods, and earnest presentations of spiritual truth as to exert a wonderful in- fluence upon the soul. One of these, by the accurate and elaborate account it gave weekly of the great revival in Cincinnati, Ohio, under the labors of Rev. Thomas Harri- son, scattered its fire throughout its patronizing territory. He who reads regularly one of our Church papers will have a sustained interest in and sympathy for the revival- istic work of Methodism. There are also some special periodicals, not all of them issued from our own presses, that are recognized forces in Church work. These we can not name here. Our Berean Lesson publications are entitled to take rank among our evangelistic forces. They are not only safe, but saving in their influence. It has been noticeable of late how largely the fruit of revivals has been gathered from among those attendant upon our Sabbath-schools. The Berean sowing of nine years past is now yielding a precious harvest in souls. " The Sunday-school Journal" is no doubt raising up many of the wise who shall shine as the brightness of the firmament, and multiplying the number of those who shall turn many to righteousness and shine as the stars for ever. The 11 Lesson Leaves" are in like manner proving themselves efficacious for the spiritual redemption and health of our children and youth. 3. Our Tract Literature. A careful examination of the tract publications of the Methodist Episcopal Church will reveal the fact that in them we have a wide range of works, able in literary excellence, largely spiritual, and systematized .in convenient series. The number adapted to awakening sinners, encouraging penitents, instructing converts, perfecting believers, and increasing the ^work- ing power of the Church, is very large. Its " Pocket 268 METHODISM AND LITERATURE. Series" is concise and entertaining, and so available in form as to enable every Christian business, professional, traveling, or laboring man to be a daily evangelistic col- porteur, doing good as they have opportunity. The 4 'Leaflet Series" is serviceable for scattering far and wide the seeds of spiritual truth ; and these are re-enforced by the "New Series," the "Revised Series," the "Selected Series," and the "Tract Book Series." Testimonials are not wanting attesting the usefulness of tracts. One alone in our list, the " Dairyman's Daughter," has been instrumental in scores, if not hundreds, of con- versions. The consecrated w r orkers of Methodism will find our tracts a healthful arm of power in enhancing their evangelistic usefulness. Tracts are appreciated by those who are spiritual and aglow with love for souls. Such do not despise the day of small things. They have learned how pebbles, hurled in faith, slay giants. A scholarly and successful minister said, " Never until I received ' the baptism of fire' did I know the worth of tracts." Our resume of the evangelistic resources of the litera- ture of Methodism is not exhaustive, yet it shows how prolific it is in productions adapted to beget, increase, and apply evangelistic power. If the Church should decline in revival power, it will be no fault of her literature ; for it is abundant, and there lives in it the baptism of fire which crow r ned the head of its tireless and successful founder. S. A. KEEN". ORGANIZING CHURCH LIBRARIES. 269 XXV. A PLAN FOR ORGANIZING A CHURCH LIBRARY. If John Wesley can be called the father of cheap re- ligious literature he can also be called the father of the Church library idea. At London, Bristol, and Newcastle he established libraries for himself and his assistants, in each of which the nucleus consisted of fifty well-selected volumes. It is curious, as well as instructive, to note the distribution of the subjects and the proportionate number of books given to each by the conference in these libraries. They consisted of eleven books on divinity, four on physic, two on natural philosophy, one (Whiston) on astronomy, one (the Universal) on history, two (Spenser and Milton) on poetry, sixteen in Latin, twelve in Greek, and one (Buxtorf 's Bible) in Hebrew. What was done by Methodism in 1745, in a circum- scribed way, is now proposed to be done throughout the whole Church, for the benefit and culture of all the mem- bership. The multiplication of libraries of a somewhat doubtful character, the pestiferous streams of moral pol- luted literature which are flowing from the press, and the insatiable thirst of the present generation for reading mat- ter require that the Church, as a matter of self-defense, shall counteract the evil by furnishing mental food for her membership, and especially for the young, that shall not only stimulate, but edify, confirm, instruct, and elevate, morally and spiritually. This object is met in the establishment of the Church library. The literature adapted to this purpose is so 270 METHODISM AND LITERATURE. varied, rich, and inexpensive, that the humblest Church organization can afford to form the nucleus of a library, which will, in course of time, not only increase in volume, but will also contribute to the intellectual growth and in- fluence of the Church. If thought advisable, there might be a combination of the Sunday-school and Church library, and it is possible that some of the evils heretofore com- plained of in the Sunday-school library, by the greater diligence and scrutiny that would be imparted, would thus be avoided. The lax manner in which many of these ju- venile libraries were formerly selected would give place to greater care, and the increased interest in literature would tend to make the Church the intellectual and moral, as well as religious, center of the community. In the beginning the library should be founded. It is the glory of such men as Astor, Peabody, and Carnegie, that after the death of these men, their works do follow them. The library remains not only a monument to their memory, but a constantly augmenting power for good. Now, although our people may not be able to give what these wealthy men have done, they can do something toward the founding of a library. In every congregation, however obscure, may be found a few men who can fur- nish the youth of their community with more books than Horace Greeley had access to in his young manhood, and they may thus become the unconscious formers of habits and cultivators of intellects that otherwise might lie dor- mant. In the work of forming these libraries liberal- minded men, desirous of benefiting the young, and who themselves were deprived of such advantages in their youth, have already given large sums to this work. But if no men of means should be found ready to step into the breach, let not the humblest Church despair. Mem- bership at a dollar a year will enable such a Church to lay a good foundation for a library. Let the matter be pressed upon the attention of all; let it be shown that by com- ORGANIZING CHURCH LIBRARIES 271 billing the resources the general good will be effected ; let the books be valuable and well chosen, and the library must grow, and grow to such proportions that the sacrifices that may be necessary for its implantation will be amply compensated by its usefulness and success. The Church evidently contemplates that the subject of general education shall be made prominent. It has already made provision in its ecclesiastical councils for committees on the subject. A committee on education is annually elected in every Church, and it would be a great further- ance of the cause, if, at the time of their election, the pre- siding elder should explain that this work of founding libraries legitimately comes under their supervision. In the constitution governing library associations in the Meth- odist Episcopal Church, it will be seen that cognizance has been taken of this committee, and that it is a constitu- tional factor in all such associations. The work of organizing libraries has been in progress for a few years past, and the enterprise is meeting with a large measure of success. In those places where libraries have been established longest the interest continues una- bated. Let every Church make provision for the intel- lectual development of its own congregation. Let the beautiful membership certificates of shares, which have been so neatly and artistically prepared, be distributed throughout all the membership as insignia of progress and wisdom, and let the work of circulating our literature by this process engage the thought and co-operation of all the office-bearers and well-wishers of the Church. So shall we contribute to the moral and intellectual advancement of the race, and harvests shall go on blooming in the long years of the future. We append a copy of the " Constitution and By-laws governing Library Associations of the Methodist Episcopal Church," from which will be seen the practicability and feasibility of the movement. They are as follows : 272 METHODISM AND LITERATURE. CONSTITUTION. ARTICLE I. — NAME. This Association shall be called the Library Association of the Methodist Episcopal Church of . ARTICLE II. — OBJECT. The object of this Association shall be to provide its mem- bers with pure, instructive, and religious reading. ARTICLE III. — QUARTERLY CONFERENCE COMMITTEE. The Quarterly Conference Committee on Education, as pro- vided for in the Book of Discipline of the Methodist Episcopal Church, shall be ex-officio members of this Association, and also of the Board of Control, with right to speak and vote upon all questions. ARTICLE IV. — MEMBERSHIP. Membership in this Association shall be represented by shares of one dollar each, and shall be renewed annually by the additional payment of one dollar. And any shareholder shall be entitled to all the privileges of the Association. ARTICLE V. — LIFE MEMBERS. Any person donating at one time the sum of twenty-five dollars to this Library Association shall be constituted a life member of the Association, and shall be entitled to all its privileges. ARTICLE VI. — HONORARY MEMBERS. Any person donating at one time the sum of one hundred dollars to this Library Association shall be constituted an hon- orary member of this Association, and shall be entitled to all the privileges of regular membership for life; shall also have the privilege of meeting with the Board of Control, and speak- ing upon all questions pertaining to the management of this Association; and also of designating each year five persons, who shall thereupon be entitled to receive certificates of mem- bership for that calendar year. ORGANIZING CHURCH LIBRARIES. 273 ARTICLE VII. Any person purchasing one or more shares may transfer the same, or any number thereof, to any person or persons whom he may elect, and said persons shall become members of the Association and entitled to all its privileges. ARTICLE VIII. — OFFICERS. The officers of this Association shall be a President, Vice- president, Treasurer, and Librarian, who shall act as Secretary ; each performing the duties pertaining to the respective office. ARTICLE IX. — BOARD OF CONTROL. There shall be a Board of Control composed of the officers of the Association, the Quarterly Conference Committee on Ed- ucation, and five members of the Association, to be elected annually at the regular election of officers ; provided that two- thirds of said Board of Control shall be members of the Meth- odist Episcopal Church. ARTICLE X. — GENERAL MANAGEMENT. The Board of Control shall have general management of all the affairs of the Association, shall fill any vacancy which may occur in the board of officers, shall appoint a committee of three members of the Association, of which the pastor of the Church shall be chairman, whose duty it shall be to determine what books shall be placed in the library ; this committee being authorized to purchase such books at any time, provided there are sufficient funds in the treasury. ARTICLE XI. — ELECTION OF OFFICERS. Section 1. The pastor of the Church shall be ex-qfficio Pres- ident of this Association. Sec. 2. The other officers of this Association shall be elected annually, on the first Tuesday of January ; notice of such elec- tion being previously given in the public congregation. Sec. 3. All elections shall be by ballot, and a majority of the votes cast shall constitute an election. ARTICLE XII. — APPLICATION FOR MEMBERSHIP. Application for membership shall be received at any time, and certificates of shares issued by the President, provided such membership shall date with the beginning of the current year. 274 METHODISM AND LITERATURE. BY-LAWS. 1. The President shall sign all shares issued by the Asso- ciation. 2. None but members of the Association shall have access to the Library. 3. No member shall retain a book in his possession for a longer period than two weeks, nor have more than one book at the same time. 4. Any member retaining a book for a longer period than two weeks without renewal shall be fined ten cents for each w T eek, or fractional part of a week, he retains such book there- after, and shall not be allowed to draw another book from the library until such fine is paid. 5. Members shall be held responsible for the proper care of books in their possession. 6. No member drawing books will be allowed, under any condition, to exchange books with other members. 7. At the instance of three members of the Board of Control the President may call a special meeting of the Board of Con- trol, or of the Association, for the transaction of business. 8. Five members of the Board of Control shall constitute a quorum for the transaction of business. 9. Fifteen members of the Association shall constitute a quorum for the transaction of business in meetings of the Association. 10. No member of the Association shall have more than one vote upon any question, or in the election of officers. 11. The Constitution and By-laws of this Association can be altered or amended only by a two-thirds majority of all mem- bers of the Association. EDITOR. Select Books FOR THE HOME, THE CHURCH, AND THE SUNDAY-SCHOOL. PREFATORY NOTE. In the preparation of the subjoined catalogue, the editor acknowledges his indebtedness for assistance and for favors re- ceived to the following-named publishers : Houghton, Mifflin & Co.; D. Lothrop & Co.; Henry A. Sumner & Co.; Macmillan & Co.; Porter & Coates; E. Ciaxton & Co.; E. P. Dutton & Co.; G. P. Putman's Sons; Harper & Brothers; D. Appleton & Co. \ Anson D. F. Randolph & Co.; Presbyterian Board of Publica- tions; Lee & Shepard; A. C. Armstrong & Sons; National Temperance Society and Publication House; Dodd, Mead & Co.; J. R. Osgood & Co.; Jansen, McClurg & Co.; Robert Clarke & Co. The catalogue is copious and varied, but a careful examina- tion has been made of the works named, and they are believed to be well adapted to the purposes designed. It would have been easy to select five hundred of the choicest rather than one thousand, or to name one thousand rather than five thousand ; but as tastes and wants differ, a smaller number w r ould not have answered our purpose. We have aimed to include no books of a doubtful character, and to make choice of those only which are valuable for reading. Had we selected books for ref- erence or consultation alone, many hundreds more might well have found a place here ; but as these volumes are intended for circulation in homes, and to be read in the parlor and by the fireside, the selection was limited by the end and purpose intended to be attained. Nor have we included all adapted to meet this want ; but we have given those w r hich, in the judg- ment of good critics, will serve to instruct the mind, enlarge the heart, and sweeten and beautify the life. J Catalogue of Books. *** In the following Catalogue the volumes are to be understood as bound In cloth, except where otherwise designated. €or ea, where it is prefixed to the price, denotes each ; and n denotes net. Books for youths are marked *. ABODE OI OllOW LAllUld.ld,yY llrsOIl \ iYiKlic W j. o ADroaa -A.ga.in , or, -rresn xoriacKDurn ^vvm. ivi.j & vois. O Aft o UU A el m nni f nT*v (~,r»nn«ipl«! \c\ a TVTptV>r»rli«f Tiab-o-nrckll (John). 18° 40 *Adventures in Canada. Geike (John C.) Illust. 16° 1 00 Adventures in Patagonia. A Missionary Exploring Trip. Coan (Titus). 12° 1 25 * Adventures of a Young Naturalist. Blant (Lucien). Illust. 12° 1 75 * Ad ventures of Telemachus. Fenelon (Archbishop). Illust. 8° 2 00 ♦Adventures on the Great Hunting Grounds. Meu- nier (V.) Illust. 12° 1 25 Advice to One who Meets in Class. Newstead (Robert). 72° 15 *jEsop's Fables. Illust. 12° 1 25 ♦^Esop's Fables. With Life of the Author, and Croxall's Applications. Illust. 12° 1 50 278 CHURCH LIBRARIES. ^Eneids of Virgil, The. Morris (William). 8° $2 50 vEneids of Virgil, The. Rendered into English oc- tosyllabic verse. Conington (John). 8° nl 50 Afflicted, Companion for the. Walker (Thos. H.) 12° 90 Africa, Diamond Fields of South. 1 50 Africa. Through the Dark Continent. Stanley (H. M.) lllust. 2 vols. 8° eh 00 Africa. Livingstone's Last Journals. Waller (H.) 8° 2 50 Africa, Hunting Scenes in the Wilds of. Illust. 12° 1 75 ♦Africa, Livingstone in. Jewett (S. A. W.) Illust. 16° 1 00 *African Adventure and Adventurers. An epitome of the elaborate works of Bruce, Speke and Grant, Baker and Livingstone. Edited by G. T. Day. Illust. 16° 1 50 African Hunting from Natal to the Zambesi. Bald- win (W, C.) Illust. 12° 1 50 *Afternoons with Grandma. From the French of Madame Garraud. Kinmont (Mrs. Mary). Illust. 16° 1 00 *After the Truth. Henry (Mrs. Sarepta M. I.) Part I— Finding; Part II— Teaching; Part Ill- Using; Part IV — Husbandman — Plowing. 4 vols. 16° el 00 *Against the Stream. The story of an heroic age in England. By the author of " The Schonberg- Cotta Family." 12° 1 00 Age, Temptation of American Christians, and Christ's own Method of Gaining the Victory and the Kingdom. 12° 1 25 Ages Before Moses, The. A Series of Lectures on the Book of Genesis. Gibson (John M.) 12° 1 25 *Agnes and Her Neighbors. Pratt (Frances Lee). 16° 1 50 Agnes and the Little Key; or, Bereaved Parents Instructed and Comforted. Adams (Nehemiah). 12° 1 00 * Agnes Morton's Trial ; and the Young Governess. Janvier (E. N.) 16° 1 00 Agreement of Science and Revelation. Wythe (Joseph H.) 12° 1 75 Aids to Faith. A Series of Theological Essays by Several Writers. 12° 2 00 Alaska, Travels and Adventures in. Whymper (F.) Illust. 8° 2 50 97Q mm . , .... . u .r. n Ahiskn :inl oU Alchemy and the Alchemists. 1 9° i no 1 uu iiiconoi anu. ine oiaie. a uiscussion 01 uie irroo- lem of Law as Applied to the Liquor-traffic. jritman ^ivODert kj.j 1 9° 1 OU Alfred the Great. Hughes (Thomas). 1 OO 1 to Alhambra and the Kremlin. A Journey from Mad- rid to Moscow, including Spain, Switzerland, Russia, Finland, Norway, Sweden, Poland, and i Denmark. Prime (S. I.) Illust. QO o O fkA Z UU i\ 1 1 l.iii 1 1 )r.i. irvuig ^ vv cioiiiiigiuii^. ID 1 Of\ *Alice and Adolphusj or, Worlds not Realized. viatty ^ivirs. Aiirea;. 1 AO lo oo * Alice Benson's Trials. Her Fidelity brings her a Noble Victory at last. Illust. 1 QO to *Alice Sutherland. Bristol (Mrs. Mary C.) Illust. 1 AO lo 1 OK 1 Zo All About Jesus. Dickson (Alex.) i oo LZ o nn z uu *A11 Aboard for the Sunrise Lands. Rand (Ed- ward A.) Illust. 4: o ore z zo All Around the House ; or, How to Make Homes xiappy. ±>eecnei ^ivirs. xi. w.) i oo LZ 1 oU All Around the Year. Verses from the Sky Farm. Goodale (Elaine and Dora R.) Illust. 1 AO lo i ore 1 Zo All for Christ ; or, How a Christian may Obtain, by a Renewed Consecration of his Heart, the Fullness of Joy Referred to by the Savior Just Previous to his Crucifixion. With Illustrations from the Lives of those who have made this Consecration. Carter (Thomas). 1 A° lo AtC OO aii xrue. xtecorcis 01 .rem ano Adventure , es- capes and Deliverances | of Missionary Enter- prises, etc. lviticduiay \a.. l>.) 1 9° 1 OU All Quiet Along the Potomac, and Other Poems. r>eers (nr oo Anecdotes, Ladies' Book of. Smith (Daniel). 18° OD Anecdotes of the Christian Ministry. Smith (D.) 18° OO Angels, Nature and Ministry of. Rawson (James). 18° «n OXJ Angels of God, The. Dunn (Lewis R.) 16° 1 ZD Angelique Arnauld, Abbess of Port Royal. Martin (Francis). 12° 1 IK 1 ID ♦Animal Life, Curiosities of, as Developed by the Recent Discoveries of the Microscope. Illust. 16° 65 ♦Anna Lavater. A Picture of Swiss Pastoral Life in the last Century. Ziethe (W.) Translated from the German by Catherine E. Hurst. 16° 85 *Anna Maylie. A Story of Faithful, Resolute Work in the Sunday-school, and in the Field of the Western Religious Pioneer. Farman (Ella). 16° 1 50 ♦Anna Ross. Kennedy (Grace). 18° 50 ♦Annals of Christian Martyrdom. Relating to the Martyrs of Pagan Rome and of the Middle Ages. 24 16° 1 00 282 CHURCH LIBRARIES. Annals of the Christian Church. Designed to Fortify the Youthful Mind against Jesuitism. Parker (Mrs.) 18° $0 45 Annals of the Poor. Containing the Dairyman's Daughter, the Young Cottager, the Negro Serv- ant, Cottage Conversation, Visit to the Infirm- ary, and the African Widow. Richmond (Legh). 18° 45 Annals of a Quiet Neighborhood. MacDonald (George). Illust. 16° 1 75 *Annetta ; or the Story of a Life. Hughes (M. S.) Illust. 16° 1 00 Annihilation of the Wicked, Scripturally Consid- ered. McDonald (W.) 12° 45 Antislavery Struggle and Triumph in the Methodist Episcopal Church. Matlack (L. C.) With an Introduction by D. D. Whedon. 12° 1 50 Aonio Paleario and his Friends. Blackburn (Will- iam M.) 16° 1 25 Apocalypse, Key to the ; or Revelation of Jesus Christ to St. John in the Isle of Patmos. Brunson (Alfred). 16° 1 00 Apologetics. A Course of Lectures. Smith (Henry B.) Edited by William S. Karr. 12° 1 25 Apology for the Bible. A Powerful Antidote to Infidelity. Watson (Richard). 18° 40 Apostolic Era ; or, the Early Years of Christianity. De Pressense (E.) 12° 1 50 Apostolical Succession, An Essay on. Powell (Thos). 12° 90 Apostles of Mediaeval Europe. Maclear (G. F.) 12° 1 75 Appeal to Matter of Fact and Common Sense. Fletcher (J.) 18° 45 -Apple-blossoms. Poems of Two Children. Goodale (Elaine and Dora R.) 16° 1 25 *Apron Strings, and which Way They Pulled. Fell (Archie).' ^ 16° 1 00 Arctic Experiences : containing Captain George E. Tyson's Wonderful Drift on the Ice-floe, a His- tory of the Polaris Expedition, the Cruise of the Tigress, and Rescue of the Polaris Survivors. To which is added a General Arctic Chronol- ogy. Edited by E. Vale Blake. With Map and Illustrations. 8° 4 00 CATALOGUE OF BOOKS. 283 *Arctic Heroes. Facts and Incidents of Arctic Ex- plorations. From the Earliest Voyages to the Discoveries of Sir John Franklin, embracing Sketches of Commercial and Religious Results. Mudge (Z. A.) Illust. 16° $1 00 Arctic Researches and Life among the Esquimaux: being the Narrative of an Expedition in Search of Sir John Franklin, in the Years I860, 1861, and 1862. Hall (Charles Francis). Maps and Illustrations. 8° 5 00 Arena and Throne, The. Townsend (L. T.) 16° 75 Arizona and Sonora. The Geography, History, and Resources of the Silver Regions of North America. Mowry (S.) 12° 1 50 Arms and Armor in Antiquity and the Middle Ages. Also a Descriptive Notice of Modern Weapons. Lacombe (M. P.) Illust. 12° 1 50 ♦Arnold Family, The. Miller (Mary C.) Illust. 16° 1 25 Around the World. A Book of Travels. Prime (E. D. G.) 8° 3 00 ♦Arthur and Bessie in Egypt. 16° 65 Arthur in America. Addresses delivered in New York by Rev. William Arthur, of London. 12° 60 Art at Home. A Collection of Papers on House Decoration. Garrett (Rhoda and Agnes). Illust. 12° 1 50 Art, Literature, and Science, Reviews and Essays on. Phelps (Mrs. A. L.) 12° 1 50 Artist Biographies. Sweetser (M. F.) Illust. with 12 Heliotypes in each volume. 5 vols. 16° e 1 50 Vol. L Raphael, Leonardo, Angelo. Vol. 2. Titian, Gnido, Claude. Vol. 3. Reynolds, Turner, Landseer. Vol. 4. Durer, Rembrandt, Van Dyck. Vol. 5. Angelico, Murillo, Alston. The same are also published in smaller vol- umes, one biography in each. 15 vols. 18° ebO Artists of the Nineteenth Century, and their Works. Clements (Clara E.) 2 vols. 8° e2 50 Art of Speech. Townsend (L. T.) 18° c60 Vol. 1. Studies in Poetry and Prose. Vol. 2. Oratory and Logic. Arts of Intoxication. The Aim and the Results. Crane (J. T.) 16° 1 00 284 CHURCH LIBRARIES. Art Text-books. Edited by Poynter (E. J.) Illust. 8° tfS 00 L Architecture, Gothic and Renaissance. 2. German, Flemish, and Dutch Tainting. R. Italian Tainting. 4. Sculpture, Antique: Egyptian and Greek. A-saddle in the Wild West. A Glimpse of Travel among the Mountains, Lava-beds, etc., of South- ern Colorado, New Mexico, and Arizona. Ride- in" (W 11 1 18° BO \.nj (Edwin L.) 12° A / u Asbury and his Co-laborers. Larrabee ( W. C.) 2 vols. 12° 8 0(1 m OU Asbury, Life and Times of ; or, The Fioneer Bishop. Strickland (W. T.) 12° 1 KfS 1 DU Asbury "s Journals. 3 vols. 12* A ^ •Ashcliffe Hall. A Tale of the Last Century. Holt (Emily S.) 16° 1 0^ Asked of God. Shipton (Anna). 16° t O Aspects of Christian Experience. Merrill (S. M.) 16° 1 Art Aspect of German Culture. Hall (G. Stanley). 12° 1 *>Cl ± o\j Astoria. Irving (Washington). 16° 1 ox Astronomy without Mathematics. Denison (E. B.) 12° 1 00 Astronomy. Ball (R. S.) 12° 0 OR Astronomy of the Bible. Mitchcl*(0. M.) 12° 1 7% At Eventide. Discourses. Adams (Nchemiah). 12° 1 25 -i —i lij tl I 1 1 1 1 1 1 IcllJlVXlXl j tllltl Oil U^^lto \JL Lllvy Jill font Nntion Abbott C.Tobn S C ) Illust, 12° 1 25 16° 75 12° "Rpnton^ (T H } Thirtv Ypars' View or a His- tory of the Working of the American. Govern- ment for Thirty Years, from 1820 to 1850. 2 vols. 8° 6 00 ♦Bernie's White Chicken. Alden (Mrs. G. R. [Pansy]). 16° 75 *Bessie and Her Spanish Friends. 16° 75 ♦Bessie Harrington's Venture. Mathews (Julia A.) 1G° 1 25 ♦Bessie, the Cash Girl. Brine (Mrs. Mary D.) 18° 45 ♦Bessie Hartwell ; or, Charity. Illust. 10° 1 00 ♦Bessie's Trials at Boarding-school. Perry (Nora). Illust. 1G° 1 25 *Best Fellow in the World, The. [Temperance.] Wright (Mrs. J. McNair). 12° 1 25 Best Reading, The. Hints on the Selection of Books, a Classified List, etc. Perkins- (F. B.) 12° 1 75 ♦Between the Clifts- or, Hal Forrester's Anchor. Marshall (Emma). 16° 1 00 Beyond the Grave. Being three Lectures before Chautauqua Assembly in 1878, with Papers on Recognition in the Future State, and other Addenda. Foster (Randolph S.) 12° 1 25 Bible and Modern Thought. Birks (T. R.) 12° 1 50 Bible and Slavery. Elliott (Charles). 12° 1 25 Bible Dictionary. Covel's. For Sunday-schools and Families. With Maps and Engravings. 85 Bible Dictionary, The Westminster. Shepherd (Thomas J.) Illust. 8° 1 50 ♦Bible, English, A Short History of the. With Brief Notices of the Translators. Freeman (James M.) 12° n50 288 CHURCH LIBRARIES. Bible Geography, Hand-book of. (New and Re- vised Edition.) Containing the Name, Pronun- ciation, and Meaning of every Place, Nation, and Tribe mentioned in both the Canonical and Apocryphal Scriptures. Whitney (George H.) Illustrated by One Hundred Engravings and Forty Maps and Plans. 12° $2 25 Bible Hand-book. Theologically Arranged. Hol- iday (F. C.) 12° 1 25 Bible History, Outlines of. Hurst (John F.) Four Maps. 12° n 50 Bible History, the Chronology of, and How to Re- member it. Munger (C.) 12° n50 Bible, Home's Introduction to the. Abridged. 12° 1 25 *Bible Images. A Book for the Young. Wells (James). Illust. 12° 1 25 Bible, Index and Dictionary of the. A Complete Index and Concise Dictionary of the Holy Bible. Barr (John). 12° 85 Bible in the Public Schools, The. Records, Argu- ments, etc., in the Case of Minor vs. Board of Education of Cincinnati. 8° 2 00 Bible Lands. Their Modern Customs and Man- ners Illustrative of Scripture. Van Lennep (Henry J.) Illust., and Colored Maps. 8° 5 00 Bible Lore. Chapters on the Rare Manuscripts, Various Translations, and Notable Characteris- tics of the Bible. Gray (James Comper). 16° 90 Bible Manners and Customs, Hand-book of. Con- taining Descriptions of the Ancient Manners and Customs mentioned in the Bible, and ex- plaining over three thousand Scripture Texts. Freeman (James M.) Illust. by 168 Engrav- ings, and accompanied by an Analytical In- dex, a Textual Index, and a Topical Index. 12° 2 25 *Bible Steps for Little Pilgrims. Stories from the Old and New Testaments. Illust. 12° 1 50 Bible Teachings in Nature. Macmillan (Hugh). 12° 1 75 Bible Thoughts and Themes. Bonar (Horatius). 12° e2 00 Vol. 1. Genesis. Vol. 4. Acts. Vol. 2. Old Testament. Vol. 5. Lesser Epistles. Vol. 3. The Gospels. Vol. 6. Revelation. CATALOGUE OF BOOKS. Biblical Biography. Containing a full History of Bible Men and Women. Beharrell (T. G.) 8° Biblical Chronology, Introduction to. From Adam to the Resurrection of Christ. Alters. 8° Biblical Museum, The. Collection of Notes, Ex- planatory, Homiletical, and Illustrative, on the Holy Scriptures. Gray (J. Comper). 12° Vol. L Matthew and Mark. Vol. 2. Luke and John. Vol. 3. Acts and Romans. Vol. 4. Corinthians to Philemon. Vol. 5. Hebrews to the End of New Testament, Old Testament. Vol. 1. Genesis and Exodus. Vol. 2. Leviticus to Deuteronomy. Vol. 3. Joshua to Samuel. Vol. 4. Kings and Chronicles. Vol. 5. Ezra to Job. Vol. 6. Psalms. Vol. 7. Proverbs to Solomon's Song. Bible Work in Bible Lands ; or, Events in the His- tory of the Syria Mission. Bird (Isaac). Illust. 12° Biblical Literature, Illustrations of. Townley (Jas.) 2 vols. 8° Biblical Literature, Manual of. Strickland (W. P.) 12° *Big Brother Series, The. Illust. 4 vols. 12° The Big Brother. A Story of Indian War. Eggleston (Geo. Cary). Captain Sam ; or, The Scouts of 1814. Eggleston (Geo. Cary). The Signal Boys; or, Captain Sam"s Company. Eggleston (Geo. Cary). Boys of Other Countries. Taylor (Bayard). Biographical Series. Cabinet Edition of Choice Biography. By Distinguished Authors. Sold separately or in sets. 16° • Vol. 1. Robert Burns. Carlyle (Thomas). Vol. 2. William Pitt. Macaulay (T. B.) Vol. 3. Frederick the Great. Macaulay (T. B.) Vol. 4. Julius Caesar. Liddell (Henry G.) Vol. 5. Columbus. Lamartine. Vol. 6. Martin Luther. Bunsen (Chevalier). Vol. 7. Hannibal. Arnold (Thomas). Vol. 8. Joan of Arc. Michelet (Jules). Vol. 9. Mahomet. Gibbon (Edward). Vol.10. Oliver Cromwell. Lamartine. Vol. 11. Vittoria Colonna. Trollope (T. A.) Vol. 12. Mary Stuart. Lamartine. 25 290 CHURCH LIBRARIES. *Biographical Histories. Abbott (Jacob and John S. C.) Illust. Set in box, 32 vols. 16° $32 00 Cyrus the Great. Mary Queen of Scots. Darius the Great. Queen Elizabeth. Xerxes. Charles I. Alexander the Great. Charles II. Romulus. Hernando Cortez. Hannibal. Henry IV. Pyrrhus. Louis XIV. Julius Cajsar. Maria Antoinette. Cleopatra. Madame Roland. Nero. Josephine. Alfred the Great. Joseph Bonaparte. William the Conqueror. Hortense. Richard I. Louis Philippe. Richard II. Genghis Khan. Richard III. King Philip. Margaret of Anjou. Peter the Great. Sold separately. eal 00 Biographical and Historical Essays. De Quincey (Thomas). 8° 1 75 Biology. Cook (Joseph). 12° 1 50 'Bird Book, Boys' and Girls'. Colman (Julia). Illust Colored engravings. 12° 80 Birds of the United States. Bailey (L.) 12° 1 25 Birds and Poets. AVith Other Papers. Burroughs (John). 16° 1 50 ^Birthday, The. A Sequel to "The "Well-spent Hour." Follen (Mrs.) 16° 1 00 Bitter Sweet. A Poem. Holland (J. G.) 12° 1 50 Black Horse and Carryall ; or, Outdoor Sights and Indoor Thoughts. McCarty (J. H.) 16° 1 00 Blessed Hope ; or, The Glorious Coming of our Lord. Lord (Willis). 12° 1 25 *Bloomfield. A Story exhibiting Piety in its Unob- trusive Aspects, as " steady, calm, meditative, and trustful," and which does not overlook Home "Work in its devotion to that abroad. Warner (Elizabeth). Illust. 16° 1 50 *Blind Man's Holiday ; or, Short Tales for the Nur- sery. Illust. 16° 85 *Blount Family, The; or, A Widow's Toil, Trust, and Triumph. Brown (Theron). Illust. 16° 1 50 *Blue-eyed Jimmy ; or, The Good Boy. Illust. Homespun (Sophia). 16° 1 00 CATALOGUE OF BOOKS. 291 ♦Blue Flag and Cloth of Gold. Warner (Miss Anna), 16° $1 25 *Boardman Library, The. Boardman (Mrs. W. E.) Illust. 4 vols. 16° 5 00 Haps and Mishaps of the Brown Family. The Sister's Triumph. Nellie (.tates and the Little Missionary. The Mother-in-law. *Roat-hnilrlprs' Familv Thp A 5Unrv nf tht» Soa ±J\Jt nnd Nubia Primp fA\^m C*. ^ l~t\ji\ L iiiu xxx r cxxxvx 11 uuiw* jl i into 1 tt 111. Vv. / 19° 9 no z uo jjouuic tiiKi xvoaitj , or, xx fju.iniiicr in ine ixiie 01 J. WO vvillxUrt!Il. 1Z i no 1 UU .bodily btrengtn ana okiii. Depping ((jr.) Illust. 12° 1 25 x>ouiey ixDroau, ivir. ocucicier ^xiorace xj). must. Boards. AO 4 1 50 *ix>dleys Aloot, llie. r>cudder (Horace Hi.) must. Boards. 1 K(\ 1 OU *Bodleys on Wheels, The. Scudder (Horace E.) Illust. Boards. 1 KO 1 uu i>ouieys idling dories, inc. ocucuier ^xrorcice xli.) Illust. Boards. AO 4 1 50 Boehm's Reminiscences. Historical and Biograph- ical. Wakeley (J. ±>.) 1 oo Iz 1 50 Bold Frontier Preacher. A Portraiture of Rev. William Cravens. Wakeley (J. B.) 1 QO lo 4(J Bonneville. Irving (Washington). 1 OP 1 OK 1 JO v:-T>^^.*^t^ ,i / • _ Til,. _,x. *.L>onnie xiiirie. must. i no lo 1 50 * .book and its fetory, lhe. Kanyard {Li. IN.; 1 OO 1 50 Book of Ballads, The. Including Firmilian. Aytoun (VV. 1 A° 10 1 KO l 00 Book of the Farm. A Book of Husbandry. War- ing (George E.) Illust. IZ o no *book oi the Worthies, A. (jrathered trom Uld iiis- tories, and now Written Anew. Yonge (C. M.) 1 oo lo 1 25 * Book-stall Boy oi Batherton, lhe. rl odder (Hid- win.) Illust. lo TK *Books about Boys who Fought and Won. Illust. 4 vols. 18° 2 00 *Books about Wonderful and Curious Things. 4 vols. 16° 2 75 Borderland of Science, The. A Series of Familiar Dissertations on Stars. Planets, and Meteors, etc. Proctor (R. A.) 12° 4 00 292 CHURCH LIBRARIES. *Bourdaloue and Louis XIV. From the French of Bungener (L. L. F.) 12° $1 50 Bow in the Cloud, The ; and The First Bereave- ment. Macduff (J. R) 1S° 50 *Boyhood of Great Men. (Edgar (J. G.) 16° 1 00 * Boyhood of Martin Luther. Mayhew (H.) Illust. 16° 1 25 *Boys and Girls of Beech Hill, The. Greenough " (A. J.) 16° 1 00 *Boys at Eastwick. Griffith (M. E.) Illust. 16° 100 *Boy, The, with an Idea Series. Illust. 4 vols. 8° el 62 £ The Boy with an Idea. Young Mechanic ; containing Directions for using all kinds of Tools, etc. Amongst Machines ; a Description of Various Mechanical Appliances used in the Manufacture of Wood, etc. Boy Engineers. What they Did, and How they Did it. Boys and Girls in Biology ; or, Simple Studies of the Lower Forms of Life, based upon the latest Lectures of Prof. T. H. Huxley. Stevenson (Sarah H.) Illust. 12° 1 50 *Boya and Girls Playing; and Other Addresses to Children. Rylc (John C.) 16° 75 -Boys of Brimstone Court, The. With Other Stories by Favorite Authors. Phelps (Elizabeth Stu- art). 16° 75 *Boys of " 76," The. A History of the Battles of the Revolution. Coffin (C. C.) Illust. 8° 3 00 *Boy Travelers in the Far East, The. Knox (Thomas W.) Illust. 3 vols. 8° e3 00 Part L Adventures of Two Youths in a Journey to Japan and China. Part 2. Adventures of Two Youths in a Journey to Siam and Java. With Descriptions of Cochin-China, Cam- bodia, Sumatra, and the Malay Archipelago. Part. 3. Adventures of Two Youths in a Journey to Ceylon and India. With Descriptions of Borneo, the Philip- pine Islands, and Burmah. Bracebridge Hall. Irving (Washington). 16° 1 25 *Braid of Cords, A. A. L. 0. E. Illust. 18° 75 *Brainards, The, at the Rocky Mountains. Sheer (Adeline E. H.) Illustrated. 16° 85 Bramwell, William, Memoir of the Life and Minis- try of. Sigston (James). 18° 40 "^Branches of Palm. By the Author of " Evening Rest." Illust. 16° 1 50 CATALOGUE OF BOOKS. 293 Brand of Dominic. History of the Inquisition. Rule (W. H.) 0 12° $1 00 Brazil, Life in. Ewbanks (T.) 8° 3 00 ^Breakfast for Two. Mathews (Joanna.) ■ 16° 1 25 Breathings of the Better Life. Edited by Larcom (Lucy.) 18° 1 25 *Brewer's Fortune, The. [Temperance.] Chellis (Mary D.) 12° 1 50 Bricks without Straw. Tourgee (A. W.) 16° 1 50 Bride and Bridegroom ; or Letters to a Young Mar- ried Couple. Dorr (Julia C. R.) 16° 1 00 Bride of the Rhine, The. Two Hundred Miles in a Mosel Row-boat. Waring (Geo. E.) Illust. 16° 1 50 *Bright Days. Looking at Things from the Child's Point of View. Howitt (Mary). Illust. 12° 1 25 *Brighter than the Sun ; or, Christ the Light of the World. A Life of our Lord for the Young. Macduff (J. R.) Illust. 8° 2 00 British Poets. A New and Revised Edition, on the Basis of Dr. Aiken's Work. Beginning with Chaucer, and brought down to date. Johnson (Rossiter). Portraits on Steel of the Different Authors. 3 vols. 8° 15 00 British Poets. Red-line Edition. 12° e 1 25 Browning (Mrs). Ilemans (Mrs). Proctor. Chaucer. Jean Ingelow. Religious Poems. Cowper. Lucile. Tennyson. Coleridge. Macaulay. White (Kirke). Dante. Milton. Wordsworth. Dryden. Owen Meredith. Tupper. Goldsmith. British Poets, Selections from.. Wood worth (Eliza). Illust. 12° 1 25 British Reformers, Lives and Writings of. 12 vols. 12° e 1 25 Wickliffe to Bilney.— Tyndale, Frith, and Barnes.— Edward VI, Parr, Balnaves, etc.— Latimer.— Hooper.— Brad- ford.— Ridley and Philpot.— Cranmer, Rogers, Care- less, etc.— Knox.— Becon.— Jewell.— Fox, Bale, and Coverdale. Broadcast. A Collection of Choice Original Thoughts on Various Topics. Adams (Nche- miah). 12 3 1 00 *Broken Looking-glass, The. Sequel to the Old Look- ing-glass. Charlesworth (Maria L.) 16° 1 00 294 CHURCH LIBRARIES. •Broken Fetters. Illust. 16° $1 50 *Brookside Series, The. Baker (Mrs. Harriet W.) Illust. In box, 4 vols. 16° 4 00 Hole in the Pocket. Lost but Found. Stopping the Leak. Fashion and Folly. *'Brought Home. A Temperance Tale. Stretton (Hesba). 16° 75 *Brother and Sister ; or, the Way of Peace. 10° 85 *Bruey: Little Workers for Christ. Havergal (F. R) 12° 1 10 Bryant's Poetical Works. Household Edition. 12° 2 00 *Building Stones. Ballard (Mrs. Julia P.) Illust. 16° 1 25 Buried Cities of Campania. Adams (W. H. D.) 12° 1 50 Burnet on the Thirty-nine Articles. Edited by Page. 8° 2 50 Burnett, Peter H., the First Governor of the State of California. Recollections and Opinions of an old Pioneer. 12° 1 75 *Byrne Ransom's Building. Pardoe (Hiles C.) Illust. 16° 90 Pat vTMTC\r a a It Tc /^V\if}r*T~i/~*n c ■fn TTncfoi* ^T? >5 l \jALi YlJNJ.t5.iH ats J-b J.O, V^UJcCUUIlO UJ. X Uolcl yJX. tJ. J 1 00 Calvinistic Controversy. Embracing a Sermon on Predestination and Election. Fisk (Wilbur). 12° 85 Camp-fires of Napoleon. Watson (Henry C.) 12° 1 25 Camps in the Caribbees. Adventures and Discov- eries of a Naturalist in the Lesser Antilles. Ober (F. A.) Illust. 8° 2 50 Camp-meetings : Their Origin, History, and Utility, also their Perversion and How to Correct it. Swallow (S. C.) 12° 30 *Captain Christie's Granddaughter. Illust. 16° 1 00 Captain Waltham: A Tale of Southern India. Scudder (Mrs. Joseph). Illust. 16° 1 10 ^Captivity of Judah, The. Illust. 18° 60 Carlyle, Thomas. His Life— His Books— His Theo- ries. Guernsey (A. H.) 18° GO Carlyle, Sketch of Thomas. Conway (M. D.) 12° 1 00 •Carolina, the Hotel - keeper's Daughter. Berry (Mrs. M. E.) Illust. 16° 1 25 *Carrie Ellsworth ; or, Seed-sowing. Johnson (M. 0.) Illust. 16° 1 25 ♦Carrots: Just a Little Boy. Molesworth (Mrs.) 16° 1 50 Cartwright, Peter. Autobiography of. Edited by Strickland (W. P.) 12° 1 50 CATALOGUE OF BOOKS. 295 Carvosso, William. A Biographical Study. Wise (Daniel.) 16° $1 00 Carvosso, William, a Memoir of: Sixty Years a Class - leader in the Wesleyan Connection. ITT "ii 1 TT* if I i»j it r • Ci AY ritten by Himself, and edited by his Son. 18° 50 'Lasella. A otory oi the Wakienses. Jfinley (Mar- J.1 T? \ tha F.) 16° 90 ♦basii-ooy s irusi, ine. jrayne ^auiiib luixcneuj. 10 I uO Castilian Days. Hay (John). 0 AA 1 UO Catacombs of Rome, and their Testimony Relative to Primitive Christianity. Withrow (W. H.) must. 1Z Z ou ^Catacombs, lhe Martyr oi the. A lale oi Ancient T~> „ Til - a. Rome. Illust. 16 75 ^Catechism, Pictorial, of the Methodist Episcopal Church. 12° 80 ^Catharine. Adams (Nehemiah). 12° 1 00 Catherine II, Empress of Russia, Memoirs of the Court and Reign of. Smucker (Samuel M.) 1 oo 1Z 1 ZO * Cecily; A Tale of the English Reformation. Leslie (Emma). Illust. t no 12 1 2a Cedar Christians. Cuyler (T. L.) 16° 90 Celebrated Female Sovereigns. Jameson (Mrs.) QO O O ETA J 50 • Celesta Stories, The. Berry (Mrs. M. E.) Illust. 3 vols. el 00 Celesta. Crooked and Straight. The Crook Straightened. Century ot Dishonor, A. A feketch ol the Dealings of the United States Government with the inuian j.riDes. xi. 11, LZ Chan ana Wheat. Willing (Jennie Jbowler.) lb 1 00 ■ : Chalmers, Thomas, a Biographical Study. Dodds (J ames) . lb 1 OK 1 25 Chambers's Encyclopaedia. A Dictionary of Uni- versal Knowledge for the People. Household Edition. Illust. 10 vols. Cloth, $15.00. Sheep, oo 8 OA AA 20 00 Changed Cross, The. Hobart (Mrs. Charles). DU Charity, Sweet Charity. Porter (Rose). 16° 75 Character. Smiles (S.) 12° 1 50 *Charley Laurel. An Interesting Story of Sea Life. Kingston (W. H. G.) Illust. 16° 1 25 ♦Charley Hope's Testament. Illust, 18° 75 296 CHURCH LIBRARIES. *Chart of Life. Porter (James). 16° $0 80 *Chauncey Judd; or, The Stolen Boy. A Tale of the Revolution. Warren (Israel P.) 16° 1 25 ^Cheerful Words. From the Writings of George MacDonald. Edited by E. E. Brown. With a Biography. Introduction by James T. Fields. 16° 1 00 *Chautauqua Girls at Home, The. By Pansy (Mrs. G. R. Alden). Illust. 12° 1 50 Chautauqua Library of English History and Literature. Vol. 1. From the Earliest Times to the Later Norman Period. 8° n 80 Vol. 2. The Period of the Early Plantagenets. 12° n50 Vol. 3. The War of the Pvoses. 8° n 50 Chautauqua Text-books, The. No. 1. Biblical Exploration. A Condensed Manual on How to Study the Bible. Vin- cent (J. H.) nlO No. 2. Studies of the Stars. A Pocket Guide to the Science of Astronomy. Warren (H.W.) n 10 *No. 3. Bible Studies for Little People. Vin- cent (B. T.) nlO No. 4. English History. Vincent (J. H.) n 10 No. 5. Greek History. Vincent (J. H.) n 10 No. 6. Greek Literature. Vail (A. D.) n20 No. 7. Memorial Days of the Chautauqua Lit- erary and Scientific Circle. nlO No. 8. What Noted Men Think of the Bible. Townsend (L. T.) nlO No. 9. William Cullen Bryant. n 10 No. 10. What is Education ? Phelps (Wm. F.) n 10 No. 11. Socrates. Phelps (Wm. F.) nlO No. 12. Pestalozzi. Phelps (Wm. F.) n 10 No. 13. Anglo-Saxon. Cook (Albert S.) n 20 No. 14. Horace Mann. Phelps (Wm. F.) n 10 No. 15. Frcebel. Phelps (Wm. F.) nlO No. 16. Eoman History. Vincent (J. H.) nlO No. 17. Roger Ascham and John Sturm. Glimpses of Education in the Sixteenth Cen- tury. Phelps (Wm. F.) nlO No. 18. Christian Evidences. Vincent (J. H.) nlO No. 19. The Book of Books. Freeman (J. M.) n 10 CATALOGUE OF BOOKS. 297 Chautauqua Text-Books (Continued). jxo. xiiG ^nautauqua xiuii(i-dook. v lucent l T TX \ «i 0 JO No. 21. American History. Hurlbut (J. L.) n 10 ino. jdidiichi x>ioiogy. vv ytne \o. xi.) 71 10 No. 23. English Literature. Gilmore (J. H.) ~% OA n JO No. 24. Canadian History. Huglies (Jas. L.) 7110 ATr\ Col f-T^/l n f 1 r\n AiMon 1 Tnconn 1 X> U. —O. Qcll XM_lUl/clllo. ^0. ±ne ±aoernacic. xim ^jonn *> 1 ft 71 1U No. 27. Readings from Ancient Classics. 71 1U No. 28. Manners and Customs of Bible Times. i? reeman ^j. ivi.j n to xno. -y. ivian a Antiquity anu language, xerry /"AT S ^ O.) n iu xso. ou. ±ne woria 01 lviissions. v^arron (ri. is..) 71 10 "Nn ^1 "WVinf "Vn+arl TV/Ton Thinlr r\f PV-iviof i>o. oil \v nat i\ oteo. ivxen xiiinK 01 v^nrist. xownstiiiu. x.) 71 lU iio. os. a x>riei outline 01 tne xiistory 01 Art. T| 0 "EVvrocf 1 Tnl in "R ^ jve jorest ^juua sj.j ft 10 ino. oo. juiiiu jjurritt . tne juearneu. ijiacK- bmiiu. liori/iitjiiu. ^ i^uaries^ . u. ort. Ablatio xiiotory — v^imia, ^orea, japan. VjnillS ^ Will. Hi. ) ii 1ft n iu No 35 Ont.linps of GPiipral Hi«?forv \ T inf»pnt (J. H.) nlO No. 36. Assembly Bible Outlines. Vincent (J. H.) 71 10 No. 37. Assembly Normal Outlines. Vincent (J. H.) nlO Childhood of Religion. A Simple Account of the Birth and Growth of Myths and Legends. Clodd (E.) 12° 1 25 Childhood of the English Nation; or, The Begin- nings of English History. Armitage (Ella S.) 16° 1 25 *Child's History of England. Dickens (Charles). 12° 1 00 ^Child's History of Greece. Bonner. 2 vols. 18° e 1 25 *Child-life. A Collection of Poems for and about Children. Whittier (J. G.) 16° 2 25 *Child-life, in Prose. A Volume of Stories, Fancies, and Memories of Child-Life. Whittier (J. G.) 16° 2 25 *Child-life in Many Lands. Strong (J. D.) Illus- trated. 16° 1 00 298 CHURCH LIBRARIES. -Child Toilers of Boston Streets. Brown (Emma E.) With 12 Pictures drawn from Life by Kather- ine Pierson. Illuminated board covers. 4° $0 50 *Child World Stories. Loring (Laurie). 4° 1 25 -Child's Sabbath-day Book. 16° 40 ^-Children's Crusades in the Thirteenth Century. Gray (G. Z.) 12° 1 00 -Children and the Lion, and other Sunday Stories. Wilberforce (Bishop). Illust. 12° 1 00 ^Children, Government of. Gere (J.) 18° 30 *Children, Ministering. Charles worth (Maria L.) Illust. * 16° 1 25 ^Children of Lake Huron ; or, the Cousins at Cle- verly. Illust. 16° 1 00 *Children of the Great King, The. Illust. 1G° 1 00 ^Children's Book of Poetry. Coates (H. T.) Illust. 8° 3 00 *Childrens Treasury of Bible Stories. Gaskoin (Mrs. Herman). 3 parts. e30 Part 1. Old Testament. Part 2. New Testament. Part 3. The Apostles, St. James, St Paul, St. John. China and the Chinese. General Description of the Country, its Inhabitants, its Civilization and Form of Government, its Religious and Social Institutions. Nevins (J. L.) Illust. 15° 1 75 China and Japan. A Record of Observations made during a Residence of Several years in China, and a Tour of Official Visitation to the Mis- sions of both Countries, in 1877-1878. Wiley (L W.) Illust. 16° 1 25 Chinese Buddhism. Eskins (Joseph). 8° 4 50 Chinese Classics. Containing the Works of Con- fucius and Mencius. Legge (J.) 8° 3 50 Chinese, The : Their Education, Philosophy, and Letters. Martin (W. A. P.) 12° 1 75 *Chinks of Clannyford. Hamilton (Kate W.) Illust. 16° 1 40 *Chips from the White House ; or, Selections from the Speeches, Conversations, Diaries, and Let- ters of all the Presidents of the United States. Prepared by J. Chaplin. 12° 1 50 Choctaw Indians, Life Among the, and Sketches of the South-west. Benson (H. C.) 12° 1 50 CATALOGUE OF BOOKS. 299 Choice Readings for Public and Private Enter- tainment. Edited by Cumnock (Robert Mc- Lain). 12° $1 75 Christ a Friend. Adams (Nehemiah). 12° 1 00 Christ Bearing Witness to Himself. Chadwick (George A.) 12° 1 25 Christ and Christianity. A Vindication of the Di- vine Authority of the Christian Religion, grounded on the Historical verity of the Life of Christ. Alexander (William L.) 12° 85 Christ Crucified. [Divinity of Christ.] Clarke (George W.) 18° 50 Christ: His Nature and Work. A Series of Ser- mons Preached by Eminent Ministers. 12° 1 50 Christ His Own Witness. All that Jesus said Con- cerning Himself Topically Arranged and Stud- ied. Ballantine (E.) 12° 1 25 Christ in Modern Life. [Sermons.] Brooke (Stop- ford A.) 12° 2 00 Christ in Song. Selected from All Ages. Schaff (P.) 4° 2 50 Christ of History, The. Young (John). 12° 1 25 Christ, Life of. Farrar (F. W.) With Notes. 2 vols. 8° e2 00 Christ, Life of. Hanna (William). 3 vols. 12° e 1 50 Christ, Life of. Stalker (James). 16° 60 Christ of the Gospels. Tullock. 12° 1 00 Christ the Consolator. A Book of Comfort for the Sick. Hopkins (E.) 16° 1 25 Christ the Light of the World. Vaughan (C. J.) 16° 1 50 Christ, The Second Coming of, Considered in its Relation to the Millennium, the Resurrection, and the Judgment. Merrill (S. M.) 16° 1 00 Christian Altar, The ; or, Offices of Devotion for the Use of Persons receiving the Lord's Sup- per, together with a Treatise relating to that Sacrament, and Directions for the Communi- cants' Daily Walk with God. Wyatt (W. E.) 4° 50 Christian Believing and Living. Sermons. Hunt- ington (F. D.) 12° 1 00 Christian Daily Treasury. Temple. 12° 1 50 Christian Effort. Facts and Incidents. Baker (Sarah). 18° 45 Christian Ethics. Wuttke (Adolpu). Translated by J. P. Lacroix. 2 vols. 12° 3 00 300 CHURCH LIBRARIES. Christian Ethics, Outlines of. Lacroix (J. P.) 12°n$0 50 Christian Evidences, Outlines of. Alden (Joseph). 12° n40 Christian Exertion Explained and Enforced ; or, The Duty of Private Members of the Church of Christ to Labor for the Souls of Men. 18° 30 Christian Institutions. Essays on Ecclesiastical Subjects. Stanley (Arthur P.) 12° 50 Christian Laborer, the Christian Hero. Memoirs of a Useful Man. 18° 25 Christian Lawyer, The. Being a Portraiture of the Life and Character of William George Baker. 12° l 25 Christian Love; or, Charity an Essential Element of True Christian Character. Wise (Daniel). 24° 35 "Christian Maiden, Memorials of Eliza Hessel. Priestley (Joshua). 1 illust. 16° 1 00 Christian's Manual. A Treatise on Christian Per- fection. Merritt (Timothy). 24° 30 "Christian Panoply. Containing Ned Franks and Red Cross Knight. A. L. O. E. 18° 75 Christian Pastorate : Its Character, Responsibilities, and Duties. Kidder (Daniel P.) 12° 1 50 Christian Perfection. Fletcher (J.) 24° 25 Christian Perfection, An Account of. Wesley (John). 24° 30 Christian Perfection, Scripture Doctrine of. Peck (George). 12° 1 50 Christian Philosopher. The Connection of Science and Philosophy with Religion. Dick (Thos.) 18° 45 Christian Purity ; or, the Heritage of Faith. Foster (R. S.) 12° 1 50 Christian Singers of Germany. Winkworth (C.) 12° 1 75 "Christian Statesmen. A Portraiture of Sir Thomas Fowell Buxton. Mudge (Z. A.) 16° 1 00 Christian Student. Otheman (Edward). 18° 40 Christians and the Theater. Buckley (J. M.) 12° 70 Christian Theism. Testimony of Reason and Rev- elation to the Existence of a Supreme Being. Thompson (R. A.) 12° 1 50 Christian Theology. Clarke (A.) 12° 1 00 Christian Theology, Outlines of. Townsend (L. T.) 12° n40 Christianity, An Introduction to. Sutcliffe (J.) 18° 45 CATALOGUE OF BOOKS. 301 Christianity and Greek Philosophy ; or the Relation between Spontaneous and Reflective Thought in Greece and the Positive Teaching of Christ and His Apostles. Cocker (B. F.) 8° $2 75 Christianity, Aspects of. Foote (A. L. R.) 16° 50 Christianity, Central Idea of. Peck (J. T.) 12° 1 25 Christianity, Early Years of. De Pressense (E.) 12° el 50 The Apostolic Era. The Martyrs and Apologists. Heresy and. Christian Doctrine. Christian Life and Practice in the Early Church. Christianity Tested by Eminent Men : Being Brief oKetcnes 01 ^nrisiian jjiograpiiy. ^aioweu (Memttj. 1 AO lo pen onrisimas \_/niiQ, a. okcicii oi a x>oy-iiitj. ivxoies -rr/-»vfV» fTVTva ^ Tllnaf WUll/Il ^i'Xlo.^ XUU&L. x ou nhri«f'mfl«i Chimps Edited bv IVTrs E .T TCtiowIps XilUol. XXj ^'f^iTTMafiA'a Olrl Or crn n RjivpH at ftpn nnrl Little TTaitVi V^Ill latic o U1U Wlgclll, KjcL V C/IX cvL kJCaj clllM XjILLI^ X ctlLJX. Wilton (Mrs O F i Tn 1 vol TT clJLUJl ^lillOi V/. . / All X VUJ. XO 1 OA X UU *Dhn'stmfl«; Pip Bakpr fElln M 'i Tllimr 1 9". 1 ZD tf~!lTY»iatnG l.rniGnlntnr' • r\v tVio "Pnlrvit iti T^olo-fiz-i-r* 4- r\ vjihiblus vyuiJ&uJcuui , 01, mt x liiijiu 111 xvcJLUtlon X.O £Jr*r»iol T /it" t» TVTir^lonri I A 1 £}v ^ OUCicll XjJIg. XTXclX/ltSUlX ^ xlXtJA.. J 1 o° 1 70 v^iii i&luo . a lujfBici ^. v/uiii^ji ibing xii(3 x/ivine xitigcuy, xiic vruiu.t;n j_it;gciiu., unci xne INew "R'.ncrlcinrl r Trtia , f»rHp T ,r\n rrf nl 1 r\^ir / TT WT \ JJjllglclllU. Xld/gCUlOO, CLL.. XJUlJ.gl.t;l.iU W I XT. W . ) oo O 3 00 1 yt\t~\ i r*l oc r\i nil li 1 t\ IVTci n rw-Vi rvn Qm*/.An^ / /^i tti \ vyii 1 unicico irm ui v/iixi&t \,o me xear lo^o. iViosneim . XJ. V U1J AO 4 5 00 v^ijurcij x uiiiy. xij&say on. otevens 12° 85 v^iiurcii xxistory, v/uuines oi. xlurst (Jonn r.) 11- lu&iiditju. wnii ivxaps. 12 n50 .*Church History, Stories and Pictures from. For Young People. Illust. 16° 1 00 Church School and Its Officers. Vincent (J. H.) 16° 65 *Cicely Brown's Trials. How she got into them, How she got out of them, and What they did for her. Prosser (Mrs.) Illust. 16° 1 00 Cicero, The Life of. Trollope (Anthony). 2 vols. 12° 3 00 Circumstantial Evidence of Christianity. Carey (D.) 16° 1 00 302 CHURCH LIBRARIES. City and Ragged Schools, The. Guthrie ( Thomas). 12° $1 50 City of Sin, The, and its Capture by Immanuel's Army. An Allegory. Remington (E. F.) 12° 1 00 Clarke, Dr. Adam. Life of. Etheridge (J. W.) 12° 1 50 Class-leader, The. His Work, and How to Do it. With Illustrations of Principles, Needs, Meth- ods, and Results. Atkinson (John). 12° 1 25 Class-leaders, Address to* Janes (Bishop). 12° 20 Class-leader's Manual. Keys (Charles C.) 1S° 40 Class Meetings. Miley (John). 1S° GO Classic Preachers of the English Church. 12° 1 50 Classical Writers. Edited by Green (J. R.) 16° e60 Milton. Brooke (Stopford A.) VirgiL Nettleship (H.) Euripides. Mahafly i,J. P.) Sophocles. Campbell (Lewis). Livy. Capes (W. W.) *Clem and Joyce ; or, the Prairie School. Smith (Mrs. F. B.) Illust. 18° 75 Clerical Library. The. Especially Adapted to the Use of Clergymen. 3 vols. 8° e 1 50 Series 1. Three Hundred Outlines of Sermons on the New Testament. Series 2. Three Hundred Outlines of Sermons on the old Testament. Series 3. Outline Sermons to Children, with Numerous Anecdotes. Club Essays. Swing (David). 16° 1 00 *Clover Beach. For Boys and Girls. Yandegrift (Margaret ). Illust. 4° 1 25 *Cloverly. Higham (Mary R.) 12° 1 50 Coke, Rev. Dr. Life and Missionary Labors of. Drew (Samuel). 12° 80 Colenso, Fallacies of. Reviewed. Fowler (C. H.) 12° GO -Columbus ; or, the Discovery of America. Edited by Allen (Fred H.) Illust. 12° 1 00 ^Columbus and the Discovery of America. Abbott (John S. C.) Illust. 12° 1 25 "^Coming to the Light. Baker (S.) 16° 60 ^Coming to the Light. Xewbury (Mrs. F. E.) Illust. 16° 1 50 Commentaries. Bush (George), i vols. 12° 4 00 Exodus. Leviticus. Numbers. Joshua and Judges. Commentary, Bible. Benson (Joseph). 5 vols. Cf. 8° 20 00 Commentary, Bible. Clarke (Adam). 6 vols. Cf. 8° 24 00 CATALOGUE OF BOOKS. 303 Commentary, Bible. Intended for Popular Use. Edited by Whedon (D. D.) New Testament. 5 vols. 12° e$l 50 Old Testament. 6 vols. 12° e2 25 Commentary on the Book of Ecclesiastes. Young (Royal). 8° 2 50 Commentary, The People's : Including Brief Notes on the New Testament, with Copious Refer- ences to Parallel and Illustrative Scripture Passages, designed to assist Bible Students and Common Readers to Understand the Mean- ing of the Inspired Word. Binney (Amos) and Steele (Daniel). Revised with Topical Index. Commentary on the Lord's Prayer. Denton (W.) ♦Communion Sabbath, The. Adams (Nehemiah). Companions for the Devout Life. A Series of Lec- tures on Well-known Devotional Works. Comparative Geography of Palestine and the Sina- itic Peninsula, The. Adapted to the Use of Biblical Students. Ritten (Carl). 4 vols. Comparative History of Religions. Moffat (Jas. C.) 2 vols, in one. Part 1. Ancient Scriptures. Part 2. Later Scriptures. Comparative Zoology. Orton (James). Illust. Comprehensive Speaker, A: with Selections from Best Authors. Concordance to the Hymnal of the Methodist Epis- copal Church: To which are added Several Important Indexes. Codville (Wm.) Concordance of the Holy Scriptures. Coles (Geo.) 18° Concordance of the Bible, Young's Analytical. Conduct of Life, The. Emerson (Ralph Waldo). Confessions of an English Opium-eater, and Kin- dred Papers. De Quincey (Thomas). Confucius: His Life and Teaching. Legge (James). ♦Conquering and to Conquer. By the Author of " The Schonberg-Cotta Family." ♦Conrad: A Tale of Wiclif and Bohemia. Leslie (Emma). Illust. 12° 1 25 Conscience. Cook (Joseph). 12° 1 50 ♦Consecrated. [Temperance.] Gilmore (Ernest). 12° 1 50 1 o° Q O AA uo 12° 1 25 1 oo 1 ou 8 14 00 12° 2 50 8° 3 00 12° 1 50 12° 1 50 18° 1 25 4° w3 65 16° 1 50 8° 1 75 8° 4 00 12° 1 00 304 CHURCH LIBRARIES. "Consecrated Life, A ; or, Portraiture of Rev. Edwin Delmont Kelley, Missionary to Burmah. By His Wife. 12° $1 25 Consecration, Short Sermons on, and Kindred Themes. George (A. C.) 12° 1 00 "Consequences ; or, A Bowl of Punch, and What Came of It. Dunning (Mrs. A. K.) 16° 1 25 Consolatio ; or, Comfort for the Afflicted. Kenne- way (C. C.) 16° 1 25 Constitution of the United States. Story (J.) 12° 1 05 "Contentment Better than Wealth. 12° 1 00 Concessions of " Liberalists " to Orthodoxy. The Deity of Christ, the Atonement, Endless Pun- ishment. Dorchester (Daniel). 16° 1 25 "Contradictions ; or, High Life at Edgerton. Dun- ning (Mrs. A. K.) Illust. 16° 1 50 Conversations for the Young : Designed to Promote the Profitable Reading of the Holy Scriptures. Watson (Richard). 12° 1 00 Conversion of the World, Suggestions for the. Young (Robert). 18° 35 Converted Collier, The. Morgan (R. C.) 18° 45 Converted Infidel. Scarlett (John). 18° 50 Convert's Guide and Preacher's Assistant. Merritt (Timothy). 18° 45 Cookman's Speeches. Speeches Delivered on Va- rious Occasions. Cookman (George G.) 18° 30 Cooper, Mrs. Mary, Memoir of. Clarke (A.) 18° 40 "Cooper Stories. Being Narratives of Adventure Selected from the Works of J. Fenimore Cooper. Including Stories of the Prairie, Stories of the Woods, and Stories of the Sea. 3 vols. 16° e 1 00 "Cortes ; or, the Discovery and Conquest of Mexico. With a Brief Sketch of the More Recent His- tory of the Country. Edited by Allen (Fred H.) Illust. 12° 1 00 Counsels to Young Men. Nott (E.) 18° 75 "Counsels to Converts. George (A. C.) 12° 1 00 "Count Raymond and the Crusade against the Albi- genses. Elizabeth (Charlotte.) 16° 90 Court and Camp of Bonaparte, The. 18° 75 Cowper's Poems. Riverside Edition. 2 vols. 8° el 75 CATALOGUE OF BOOKS. 305 *Craythorns of Stony Hallow. Hildeburn (Mary J.) Illust. lo $1 10 Crayon Miscellany. Irving (Washington). 1 A° ID 1 OK 1 ZD Creation, The, and the Early Developments of bo- ciety. Chapin (James H.) 1 /5 Credo. Townsend (L. T.) 16° 75 * Cripple Dan. Whitgift (A.) 18° 75 *Cripple of Antioch, and Other Scenes from Chris- tian Life in Early Times. Charles (E.) 16° 1 00 Critical and Miscellaneous Essays. Carlyle (T.) 4 vols. QO o 7 DO Cromwell, Oliver. Oarlyle (1.1 & vols. 1 oo 6 OO 'Cromwell, Oliver, Life ot. Adams (Onarles). must. 1 uo lo 1 Aft 1 uo ^oross in tne LiDle. (lne Unabridged xLaition.j AO 4 J 70 *Crusade of the Children in the Thirteenth Century. Gray (George Z.) 12° 1 50 Crusades, The. Cox (G. W.) 16° 1 00 *Crystal River Turned into the Black Valley Hail- j /"i j mi a m a n road Country, The. A Temperance Allegory. XT 1 _ /C< nr \ Til L Hanks (b. W.) Illust. 16° 1 00 /^i i /"ii i mi_ n/r i , m_ fur \ tii i * Cuckoo Clock, The. Molesworth (Mrs.) Illust. 16° 1 50 Culture and Religion in Some of their Relations. Shairp (J. C.) 16° 1 25 *Cunning Workmen. A Story of Special Interest to CI J 1 1 "ITT _ i 1 11 /TIT /*T TTj Sunday-school Workers. Alden (Mrs. G. R. [Pansy J.) Illust. 16° 1 25 *Gurious J^acts for Little People about Animals. Illust. 16° 85 *Curious Schools. Very fully illustrated from Orig- inal Drawings. 12° 1 00 Cyclopaedia of Biblical, Theological, and Ecclesias- tical Literature, A. McClintock (John) and Strong (James). 10 vols. Cloth. 8° 50 00 Sheep. 8° 60 00 Cyclopaedia of British and American Poetry. Edited by Sargent (Epes.) 26 8° 4 50 306 CHURCH LIBRARIES. Cyclopaedia of Poetical Illustrations. Foster (Elon). First and Second Series. 8° e$5 00 Cyclopaedia of Prose Illustrations. Foster (Elon). First and Second Series. 8° eh 00 Cyclopaedia of United States History, Popular. From the Aboriginal Period to 1876. Contain- ing Brief Sketches of Important Events and Conspicuous Actors. Lossing (Benson J.) Il- lustrated by two Steel-plate Portraits and over 1,000 Engravings. 2 vols. 8° 12 00 Cyrus and Alexander. Abbott (Jacob). 16° 1 00 Daily Walk with Wise Men; or, Religious Exer- cises for Every Day in the Year. Head (JNelson). 12° 1 75 *Daisy Seymour. L. A. F. Illust. 16° 1 25 .Dance oi Modern bociety, lne. Wilkinson (W. C) 18° GO Dancing, Essay on, Crane (J. T.) 18° 30 Dan'el Quorm and His Religious Notions. Pearse (31ark (jruy). illust. 12° SO Dangerous Tendencies. Certain Dangerous Tend- " * 4 " T * f 1 Ail T\ encies in American Life, and Other Papers. 16° 1 25 Dan Young, Autobiography of. Strickland (W. P.) 12° 1 50 ^Daniel ±>oone, JLile oi. .Bogart (W. ±l,j must. 12° 1 25 Daniel the Beloved. Taylor (Wm. M.) 12° 1 50 Daring Deeds of American Heroes. Brayman (J. G.) 12° 1 25 David, King of Israel : His Life and its Lessons. Taylor (Wm. M.) 12° 2 00 David, the King of Israel : A Portrait Drawn from Bible History and the Book of Psaims. Kruni- macher (Frederick William). Translated by M. G. Easton. 12° 1 75 *Davy's Jacket. Inner and Outer Phases of Young Life. Ward (Hetta L. H.) Illust. 18° 75 Days of Bruce. A Story from Scottish History. Aguilar (Grace). Illust. 12° 1 00 Day with Christ, A. Cox (Samuel). 16° 1 00 *Deacon Gibbs's Enemy. Dunning (Mrs. A. K.) Illust. 16° 1 25 Death-bed Scenes. Dying with and without Relig- ion. Clark (D. W.) 12° 1 50 CATALOGUE OF BOOKS. 307 Declamations and Dialogues. Adapted to Sunday- school Occasions. Gilmore (J. H.) 16° $0 50 Deephaven. Jewett (Sarah 0.) 18° 1 25 Defense of Jesus. From the French of Menard St. Martin. Cobden (Paul). 12° 1 00 Defense of Our Fathers. Emory (Bishop). 8° 85 Demonstration of the Truth of the Christian Relig- ion. Keith (Alex.) Must 12° 1 50 De Quincey. Mason (David). 12° 75 De Stael, Madame. A Study of her Life and Times. The First Revolution and the First Empire. Stevens (Abel). 2 vols . 12° 3 00 *Devil's Chain, The. A Temperance Story. Jenk- ins (Edward). 16° 75 *Dewdrops and Sunshine. A Collection of Poems about Little Children. Edited by Mrs. J. P. Newman. 18° 1 25 Dialogues of Plato, The. Jowett (B.) 4 vols. 8° e2 00 Diamond Dust. Willing (Jennie Fowler). 16° 1 00 Diamonds. Unpolished and Polished. Richmond (J. F.) Must. 12° 1 00 Diana. Warner (Susan). 12° 1 75 Diary of a Country Pastor, Extracts from. Gard- ner (Mrs. H. C.) 12° 85 *Diary of Kitty Trevylyan. A Story of the Times of Whitefield and the Wesley s. By the Au- thor of " The Schonberg-Cotta Family." 12° 1 00 Dictionary of Dates. Haydn (Jos.) 8° 5 00 Dictionary of Roman and Greek Antiquities, A. With nearly 2,000 Engravings on Wood, from Ancient Originals, Illustrative of the Industrial Arts and Social Life of Greeks and Romans. Rich (Anthony). 8° 4 00 Dio the Athenian; or, From Olympus to Calvary. Burr (E. F.) Must. 12° 2 00 Discipline, Baker on the. A Guide in the Admin- istration of the Discipline of the Methodist Episcopal Church. Baker (Bishop). 12° 1 00 Discipline, History of the Revisions of. Sherman (David). 12° 2 25 *Discontent, and Other Stories. Gardner (Mrs. H. C.) 16° 1 00 Discovery of America, The. Abbott (J.) 3 vols. 10° c75 30S CHURCH LIBRARIES. Discover}" and Adventures in Polar Regions. 18° $0 75 Discoveries in North and Central Africa. Barth ^nenr\ j. must, o vois. ft° 1 9 1/ nn (JO ^Distinguished Females. "W ritten for Girls, with a \ iew to their Mental and floral Improvement. 1 9° Divina Commedia of Dante. Translated by Long- ienow [±i. w .) o Q O nn uu Divine Law as to Wines, The. Sampson (Geo. W.) 1 9° 1 nn Divine Mysteries. The Divine Treatment of Sin, and the Divine Mystery of Peace. Brown ( T Tlolflwin ^ ^ j . -DaiQwiiij. 1 9° 1 ^n r> Docia's Journal; or, God is Love. Alden (Mrs. VT. XX. |_J- cllito V J. ) lu "PlrkpfTiTTj 1 TVopfc PoticpH YV pci ott (T i X/UUII lllctl -LlctdS. IVC > loCU. TT C&lCjr \0 . J xo no *TiniT»p T-lrw^lpv T^dmilv in Tmrn anri rVinntrv XJKJi 1 I^O v->l LLlKj XJKJVl 1 G X X cLLXlllj III 1U m li aLlKX V/UUI11I J • Scudder (Horace E. ) Illust. Boards. 4° 1 50 Dolliver Romance, The, and. Other Pieces. Haw- thorne (N.) 16° 1 50 Domestic Piety and Family Government. Power (J. H.) 18° 40 *'Dnmp«»tIp Prohlpms TVork and ChiltiTrp in thp iy\_/lllv-oLiv^ J- J. l ./ 1 ^ i a i o • ii o. uiau ^ uiiun. xu vllv^ Household. Illust. 16° 00 *Donald Fraser. 1 A° 1 uu -L/ora jjLaiiiiiLOii , or, ounsiiine ana. £Miao.ow. must. 10 f o jjora s -Doy. xtoss ^i\irs. H/iieni. must. 10 1 1 rw i UU *Draytons and the Davenants, The. A Story of the L/ivii wars. x>y ine Autnor 01 ±nc ocnon- berg-Cotta Family." 1 1 nn UU r -Dr. Deane's Way, and Other Stories. Fa ye Hunt- mgton ana Aiaen (iurs. kj. xx. \_r ansyj.j must. 1 no lb 1 Jo Dr. Grant and the Mountain Nestorians. Laurie (Thomas). Maps and Illust. 16° 1 DO • Vr. 1 lassia s Patients. .bailey ( Una .Locke). Illust. 16° 1 25 :: Dreams and Deeds. 16° 50 ^Drifting Anchor. Religion in Daily Life Illustrated. >> inton (^Nelson must. 10 1 1 Jo ^Drifting and Anchored. Richmond (E. J.) Illust. 16° 1 00 Dryden. Saintsbury-(G.) 12° 75 *Duncan Matheson, the Scottish Evangelist, Life and Labors of. MacPherson (John). 16° 1 25 Dutch Republic, The Rise of. Motley (John L.) 3 vols. S° G 00 CATALOGUE OF BOOKS. 309 Duchess of Orleans, Memoir of. 12° $1 25 *Duties and Duties. Giberne (Agnes). 16° 1 25 Duty : With Illustrations of Courage, Patience, and Endurance, omiles (fe.j 1 oo 1 00 *Dying Savior and the Gipsy Girl. Sibec (Marie). lo Eagle Nest. Ruskin. 12° 1 50 Early Christian Literature Primers. Edited by Fisher (George Park). 2 vols. 18° e 60 Vol. L Containing the Apostolic Fathers, and The Apolo- gists of the Second Century, A. D. 95-180. Jackson (G. A.) Vol. 2. Containing the Fathers of the Third Century. *Early Choice, The. A Book for Daughters. Tweedie \ w . is.. ) must. 1 AO 1 1 *Early Crowned. A Memoir of Mary E. North. 1 AO lb 1 00 *Early Dawn, The 5 or, Sketches of Christian Life in England in the Early Time. By the Author of " The Schonberg-Cotta Family." 12° 1 00 Early Kings of Norway, The. Carlyle (T.) 12° 1 50 Earnest Christian's Library. 4 vols. 16° el 00 Plain Words on Christian Living. Sure Words of Promise. The Cross of Jesus. The Soul-gatherer. *Earnest Men, Life and Works of. Tweedie (W. K.) 1 o° 1Z 1 00 ^Jiayne ^xeterj. 9 vnl« £i VU1B. 1 9° 9 Afl w UO xLibsdv s in xnnosopny. ue v^uincey (inomasj. QO o 1 /O xiv.; 19° 9 AO Z OU Eucharist, Nature and Design of the. Clarke (Adam). 1 Q° oKJ xL/urope, ateliers iroiii. xiiomsuii 1 9° 1 9^ '"'Europe, Scenes in j or, Observations by an Amateur ixrtisi. x osi { JL/Oreiia j . j 1 9° 1 - 1 AA 1 OU ^Evening Rest. Under the Shadow of the Great Shepherd. Illust. 16° 1 OU ^Evenings with the Children ; or, Travels in South America. Ramsey (Mrs.) Illust. 16° 1 AA 1 UU Evenings with the Doctrines. Adams (Nehemiah). 12° 1 AA 1 OU *Every Man in His Place. A Story for Boys. Illust, 16° Evangelical Rationalism ; or, A Consideration of Truths Practically Related to Man's Probation. Knox (L. L.) 16° 1 00 Evangelist, The True. Porter (J.) 16° 50 *Every Inch a King. A Story Illustrating the Reigns of David and Solomon, Kings of Israel. Gard- ner (Calia E.) 12° 1 25 CATALOGUE OF BOOKS. 313 Evidence of the Christian Religion, Derived from the Literal Fulfillment of Prophecy. Keith (Alex.) 12° $1 50 Evidences of Christianity. Barnes (A.) 12° 1 75 Evidences of Christianity, The. Paley (Wm.) 18° 75 Evidences of Christianity. Whately (Archbishop). 18° 30 Evidences of Revealed Religion. Thomson (E.) 12° 1 25 Every-day Religion. Sermons. Talmage (T. De Witt.) 12° 2 00 Everlasting Righteousness, The. Bonar (Horatius). 16° 1 25 ^Evenings at Home. Aikin (John) and Barbauld (Mrs. A. L.) Illust. 16° 1 00 Evenings at the Microscope ; or, Researches among the Minuter Organs and Forms of Animal Life. Gosse (P. H.) 12° 1 50 Evenings with the Sacred Poets. Talks about Sing- ers and their Songs. Saunders (F.) 12° 1 75 Evolution, The Doctrine of: Its Data, Principles, Speculations, and its Theistic Bearings. Win- chell (Alex.) 12° 1 00 Excellent "Woman, The, as Described in the Book of Proverbs. With an Introduction by Wm. B. Sprague. Illust. 16° 1 50 Excursions in Field and Forest. Emerson (R. W.) 16° 1 50 Exeter Hall Lectures : Delivered before the Young Men's Christian Association, London. 20 vols. 12° 20 00 ^Exiles in Babylon; or, The Children of Light. A. L. O. E. Illust. 16° 1 00 Exposition of the Epistle of St. Paul to the Colos- sians. Daille (Jean). 8° 2 50 Exposition of the Epistle of St. Paul to the Philip- pians. Daille (Jean). 8° 2 00 Exposition of the Epistle to the Ephesians. In a Series of Discourses. Lathrop (Joseph). 8° 2 75 *Eyes and Ears; or, How I See and Hear. Illust. 16° 1 25 ♦Fabrics. Inculcates the Lesson of Loving and Living for others. Illust. 16° 150 Facts about Wives and Mothers. Donkersley (R.) 12° 1 00 Fairbairn on Prophecy. 8° 2 50 *Fairy-land of Science, The. Buckley (A. B.) Illust. 12° 1 50 Faith and Character. Vincent (M. R.) 12° 1 50 27 314 CHURCH LIBRARIES. Faith : A Poem. Leavitt (J. M.) 12° qpU 4U *Faith Gartney's Girlhood. Whitney (Mrs. A. D. T.) 12° 1 £A 1 ou J- al till 111, DUl IlOL X tllllOUo- J. 11 CI Ut3 11 IS 111 X liUlvC m thp TJflv** of thp Protpstants Tllnst 16° 1 OK *T^Mitlifn1 in T.ittlp Rtnrv c\i n (^iJTTMpr-flriVP X tllllliUl. Ill 1j 1 L I J C i Ulvl > Ul <\ V-alliV.1 VlU)U. 16° i on 1 UU Faithful to the End. The Story of Emile Cook s Life. Houghton (Louise S.) 16° 1 00 Famous American Indians. Historical Series for Young People. Eggleston (Edward) and Oth- ers. Ulust. 5 vols. 12° el 25 Tecumseh and the Shawnee Prophet. Red Eagle and the Wars with the Creek Indians. Pocahontas and Powhatan. Brandt and Red Jacket. Montezuma. Farm Ballads. Carleton (Will). Illust. 8° O AA Farm Legends. Carleton (Will). Illust. 8° 2 00 Fall of Man : and Other Sermons. Farrar (F. W.) 12° 1 DU Fall of the Stuarts, The : and Western Europe from 1678 to 1697. Hale (E. E.) 16° 1 aa 1 UU *False Shame. Illust 16° 1 ATI 1 UU *Family at Heatherdale ; or, the Influence of Chris- tian Principles. Mackay (Mrs.) Illust. 16° lO *Familiar Talks to Boys. Hall (John). 16° OU Familiar talks on English Literature. Richardson (Ahby Sage). 12° 9 AA Famous Americans of Recent Times. Biographical Sketches of Henry Clay, Daniel Webster, John C. Calhoun, John Randolph, Stephen Girard, and Many Others. 8° z UU Famous London Merchants. A Book for Boys. Bourne (H. R. Fox). Illust. 16° 1 AA 1 UU Famous Sculptors and Sculpture. Shedd (Mrs. Julia A.) 8° Q AA o UU *Fan's Brother ; or, An Old Head on Young Shoul- ders. Marshall (Beatrice). Illust. 16° £A OU Far East, The; or, Letters from Egypt, Palestine, etc. 12° 1 7^ J. 1 o Faraday as a Discoverer. Tyndall (John). 12° 1 00 *Farmer-boy, The ; and How he became Commander- in-chief. A Life of George Washington. Ju- vinell (Uncle). 16° 1 00 CATALOGUE OF BOOKS. 315 •Farmer Tompkins and His Bibles. Beecher (Wil- lis J.) Illust. 16° $1 25 Fate of Republics. Townsend (L. T.) 16° 75 Father Reeves. Methodist Class-leader. Corderoy (Edward.) 18° 30 •Father 's Coming Home. A Story of the Christie Family, and what they did to Welcome their Father Home. Illust. 16° 85 •Fault-finding, and Madeline HascalFs Letter. Gard- ner (Mrs. H. C.) 16° 1 00 Favorite Poems. A Choice Selection from English and American Authors. Red-line. Illust. 16° 1 25 Fellowship. Letters Addressed to My Sister Mourn- ers. Farrar (F. W.) 8° 1 00 Female Biography, Gems of. Smith (D.) 18° 65 •Fern Glen; or, Lilian's Prayer. Holt (M. H.) Illust. 16° 1 25 Fernside Library, The. Illust. 6 vols . 7 50 Aim Ash ; or, Kindness Rewarded. Anne Dalton ; or, How to be Useful. The Convict's Sons ; and, The Two Farmers. Don't Say So; or, You May be Mistaken. The Errand-boy ; or, Your Time is Your Employer's. The Two Firesides ; or, The Mechanic and the Tradesman. •Fiddling Freddie. Forest (Neil). 16° 1 00 Fifty Years a Presiding Elder. Cartwright (Peter). 12° 1 25 •Fifty Years with the Sabbath-school. Ballard (A. C.) 12° 1 25 •Fighting the Enemy. Miller (Emily Huntington). Illust. 16° 1 00 Finette, the Norman Maiden, and Her English Friends. Ropes (Mary E.) Illust. 16° 1 00 Finley, Rev. J. B. Autobiography of Rev. J. B. Finley. 12° 1 75 •Fireside Reading. Clark (D. W.) 5 vols. 16° 5 00 Traits and Anecdotes of Birds and Fishes. Traits and Anecdotes of 'Animals. Historical Sketches. Travels and Adventures. True Tales for the Spare Hour. Fireside Travels. Lowell (J. R.) Household Edi- tion. 12° 2 00 First Principles of Household Management and Cookery. Parloa (Maria). 16° 75 316 CHURCH LIBRARIES. *Fisher-boy, The ; or, Michael Penguyne. Glimpses of Fisher Life on the Cornish Coast. Kingston (W. H. G.) Illust. 16° in aa $1 UU Five Gateways of Knowledge, The. Wilson (Geo.) 16° 7K ♦Five Little Peppers, and How They Grew. Sidney { iviargare t ) . niubi. 1 *iA J. ou jive women 01 n/iigiciiiu. lviiutiititon ^ivieaQej. ID 1 AA ♦Flavia \ or, Loyal to the End. A Tale of the Church in the Second Century. Leslie (Emma). Illust. 12° 1 9^ *\rled.a and. the Voice. Witn Utner fetones. -Latn- hury (Mary A. [Aunt May].) Illust. no o 1 OK Fletcher, Beauties of. Being Extracts from his Checks to Antinomianism. Spicer (T.) 12° GA Fletcher, John, Life of. Benson (Joseph). 12° 1 AA I Uu Fletcher, Mrs. Mary, Life of. Moore (Henry). 12° 1 OK 1 ZD Fletcher, Eev. J., Works of. 4 vols. Sheep. 8° 10 Art ±U IAI Fletcher's Address to Seekers of Salvation. 18° 1 K Fletcher's Appeal and Address. 18° AK Fletcher's Checks to Antinomianism. 2 vols. 8° 0 UU Fletcher's Letters. 12° 1 AA I uu *Florence Egerton ; or, Sunshine and Shadow. Illust. 16° QK oo ♦Flower by the Prison. New Five Hundred Dollar Prize Stories. Illust. 16° 1 OK Flowers of the Garden and Parlor. Rand (Ed- ward S.) 8° 2 50 ♦Flower of the Family, The. A Book for Girls. Prentiss (Mrs. E.) 16° 1 f>A J. w Flowers for the Sky. Proctor (Richard A.) Illust. 12° 1 AA Follow the Lamb. Bonar (Horatius). 18° 4A ^u ♦Following the Master. Beckwith (E. L.) 16° 1 1A JL JLU Food and Nutrition, Philosophy of. Sidney (E.) 16° fiA UU Fool's Errand, A. Tourgee (A. W.) 16° 1 AA X uu Footprints of an Itinerant. Gaddis (M. P.) 12° 1 7^ ♦Footprints of Famous Men. Edgar (J. G.) 16° 1 AA 1 uu Footsteps of St. Paul. Macduff (John R.) Illust. 12° 1 ^A Footsteps of St. Peter. Macduff (John R.) Illust. 12° 2 00 ♦Forest Boy, The. A Sketch of the Life of Abra- ham Lincoln. Mudge (Z. A.) Illust. 16° 1 00 ♦For Mack's Sake. Burke (S. J.) Illust. 12° 1 25 Forms of Water, The. In Clouds and Rivers, Ice and Glaciers. Tyndall (John). Illust. 12° 1 50 Foundations ; or, Castles in the Air. Porter (Rose). 16° 1 00 CATALOGUE OF BOOKS. 317 Foundations of Christianity, The. Gibson (J. Monro). 16° $1 00 Fountain Kloof, The ; or Missionary Life in South Africa. Illust. 16° 1 50 *Four Feet, Wings and Fins. Anderson-Maskel (Mrs. A. E.) Illust. 4° 1 75 *Four Girls at Chautauqua. Girl Life and Charac- ter Portrayed with Rare Power. Alden (Mrs. G. R. [Pansy].) Illust. 12° 1 50 Four Happy Days, The. Havergal (Miss F. R.) 12° 40 Four Months in a Sneak-box. A Boat Voyage of Twenty-six Hundred Miles down the Ohio and Mississippi Rivers, and along the Gulf of Mexico. Bishop (Nathaniel H.) Illust. 8° 2 50 Four Years Among Spanish Americans. Hassau- rek (F.) 12° 1 75 Forty Years in the Turkish Empire. Memoirs of Rev. William Goodell, D. D. Prime (E. D. G.) 8° 2 50 Fragments, Religious and Theological. A Collec- tion of Papers Relating to Various Points of Christian Life and Doctrine. Curry (Daniel). 12° 1 50 Francis of Assisi. Oliphant (Mrs.) 12° 1 75 *Frank Harley, Little. Paper cover. 12° 30 ♦Fraulein Mina; or, Life in an American German Family. Norris (Miss Mary H.) Illust. 16° 1 00 Frederick the Great. Carlyle (Thos.) 6 vols. 12° 12 00 *Fred and Jeanie. How They Learned about God. Drinkwater (Jennie M.) 16° 1 25 ♦French Bessie. 18° 50 French Men of Letters. Mauris (M.) 18° 60 French Mission Life. Carter (Thomas). 16° 50 French Revolution, The. Carlyle (Thos.) 2 vols. 12° el 75 Fresh Leaves from The Book and Its Story. Ranyard (Ellen). Illust. 12° 2 00 Friends of Christ, The. Adams (Nehemiah). 12° 1 00 Friendships of the Bible. Illust. 12° 75 *Fritz's Victory, and Other Stories. A. L. O. E. Illust. 18° 75 *From Bethlehem to Calvary. Latimer (Faith). Illust. 16° 75 From Dan to Beersheba. The Land of Promise as it now Appears. Newman (J. P.) Illust. 12° 1 75 318 CHURCH LIBRARIES. *From Dawn to Dark in Italy. A Tale of the Ref- ormation in the Sixteenth Century. Illust. 16° $1 50 *From Different Stand-points. Alden (Mrs. G. R. [Pansy].) Illust. 12° 1 50 From Egypt to Japan. Fields (H. M.) 12° 2 00 From Egypt to Palestine. Through Syria, the Wil- derness, and the South Country. Bartlett (S. C.) Illust. 8° 3 50 From Exile to Overthrow. A History of the Jews, etc. Hears (John W.) Illust. " 16° 1 40 *From June to June. Cooke (Carrie A.) Illust. 16° 1 50 From the Lakes of Killarney to the Golden Horn. Field (H. M.) 12° 2 00 *From Night to Light. A Story of Bible Times. Brown (E. E.) Illust. 16° 1 25 *From Seventeen to Thirty. Binney (T.) 16° 75 * Fur-clad Adventurers ; or, Travels in Skin Canoes, on Dog-sledges, on Reindeer and on Snow- . shoes, through Alaska, Kamtchatka, and East- ern Siberia. Mudge (Z. A.) Illust. 16° 1 00 Future Religious Policy of America. Halstead (Wm. Riley). 12° 1 50 *Gaffney's Tavern ; and the Entertainment it Af- forded. Hildeburn (Mary J.) Illust. 16° 1 10 Garden of Sorrows; or, The Ministry of Tears. Atkinson (John). Revised Edition. 12° 1 25 Garden of Spices. Extracts from the Religious Letters of Rev. Samuel Rutherford. Dunn (L. R.) 12° 1 50 Garjand, The. A Collection of Choice Poetry. Compiled by E. P. Gurney. 12° 1 50 Garrettson, Rev. Freeborn, Life of. Bangs (N.) 12° 80 Gatch, Rev. P., Sketch of. McLean (Judge). 16° 50 Gates Ajar, The. Phelps (Elizabeth S.) 16° 1 50 Gaussen's Origin and Inspiration of the Bible. 12° 1 50 *Gayworthys, The. A Story of Threads and Thrums. Whitney (Mrs. A. D. S.) 12° 1 50 Gems from the Coral Islands. Incidents of Con- trast between Savage and Christian Life of the South Sea Islanders. Gill (William). Illust. 12° 1 25 CATALOGUE OF BOOKS. 319 Gems from the Coral Islands. Western Polynesia. CltU /" Will iain "> Tllncf Vjrin ^wiiiiamj. inusi. 1 9° 1Z Jfl>l 10 VTCI11S Ol VJClllUS. X dlllUUo XdllllUIn clUU. llll II XTlty i n . aa 17V tin nti 1 TT \\7 \ Tllncf tures. r rcncn ^n. w.) xuusi. A 0 1 OA Clama r\( Tnrlin • nr Slrnf pIiao r\( Tlicf lnorn Jchrvl TTin- VJ Ulllo \}L 1 IU 11*1 | j i^MH in Ul 1 / 1 > 1 1 1 1^ II 1 1 1 1 1 1 J 1 III #1r\r\ on/1 \! nil o 1111 n o ti » 1 n AVnmOM rl iltTiTilirfiir uou ciiici i*ioiidiiiiiit;ixc*ii »t uuiciii xxumpiii ay /Mn V. T \ Tllncf ( ->1 I !■>. I j. Ktuj* 19° 1. w 1 7"i X / <} vrcnme iNauons, xxisiory 01 inc. oiinin v^-**/ oiitJop. o * : dnn{Tm\T fl»o T.rjllorvT An TTicf nrii^nl Sfnrv TT.icf-. VX KsKJLLl C V , 11 lO 1-AJlldlLA. xX.ll JLlioLUl 11^.11 *OHJI V. JLJcloL wood (Frances). 10 on fior\lrwrin»i 1 ftlmf/^lioc Aiyocoi? fTnnic\ Tllncf VTtJUlU^JlCtll OlVULdlCQ. xlLjijdDOlA I^XjUlllb^. XlllloL. 1 V 1 oo Geological Sketches. Second Series. Agassiz (Louis). Tllncf in use XO 1 00 *Gcorge Clifford's Loss and Gain. Showing Religion fn l"io flir> flliiof Pnnoorn Tllncf LU UU LHU v/illcl vyUlllyCl 11. XllllbL. IO 1 oo ^'C^&mrcYt* WqcIi inrff nn • nr T.ifo in A mo»*ir»n <^no TTnn- VXL/UlgL/ » T tlBHIIlgLUll , \Jl , JL/11U 111 V1I1H III HTlio • r\v Thu Tlofflo wVii/-.n All Mnof vjiaiiL-Kuicr , xne , or, ins x>ai.tie wnicn ah iyiusi x i^ii i • ^uci« ii. ij. vy ■ xj. IS 0 XO I o vjiiuuri; xidridiiu. . or, vjoou. in xiar- well (Mrs.) 12° GO •Giles Oldham; or, Miracles of Heavenly Love. A. L. 0. E. 18° 75 •Gipsy Books. Pollard (Josephine). Illust. 6 vols. In a box. 16° 4 50 Gipsy's Early Days. Gipsy's Adventures. Gipsy in New York. Gipsy's Quest. Gipsy's Travels. The Other Gipsy. ♦Girl's Money, A. Farman (Ella). Illust. 16° 1 00 •Glance Gaylord Series. Gaylord (Glance). 3 vols. In box. 16° 3 25 Mr. Pendleton's Cup. Jimmy's Shoes. Miss Patience Hathaway. •Glaucia. A Story of Athens in the First Century. Leslie (Emma). Illust. 12° 1 25 320 CHURCH LIBRARIES. Glaucus; or, The Wonders of the Sea-shore. Kingsley (Charles). Illust. 12° $1 75 Gleanings in the Field of Art. Cheney (Mrs. E. D.) 12° 2 50 Glencoe Parsonage. Porter (Mrs. A. E.) Illust. 16° 1 00 *Glen Elder Books. Illust. 5 vols. In a box. 1G° 5 00 The Orphans of Glen Elder. The Lyceum Boys. Frances Leslie. The Harleys of Chelsea Place. Rosa Lindesay. *Glen Morris Stories. Wise (Daniel). 5 vols. In a box. Illust. 16° 5 00 Guy Carlton. Jessie Carlton. Dick Duncan. Walter Sherwood. Kate Carlton. *Glenwood. Bloomfield (Julia K.) 1G° 1 00 *Glimpses of our Lake Region in 1863, and Other Papers. Gardner (Mrs. H. C.) 16° 1 25 ^'Glimpses Through. With Noble Views of Sickness, Death, and the Future World. Biscoe (Ellen L.) Illust. 10° 1 50 Globe Edition of the Poets. Illust 16° e 1 25 CampbelL Dante. Herbert. Chaucer. Dryden. Milton. Cowper. Hemans. 2 vols. Glory of God in Man, The. Gifford (E. H.) 8° 1 00 *God in History and in Science. Cumming (J.) 1G° 05 God-Man. Search and Manifestation. Townsend (L. T.) 16° 75 God's Word Through Preaching. Being the Yale Lectures for 1875. Hall (John). 12° 125 *God's Way; or, Gaining the Better Life. Holt (M. A.) Illust. 16° 75 *Gold and Gilt. Capron (Mary J.) Illust. 12° 125 Gold and the Gospel. 12° G5 Golden Gleams of Thought. From the Words of Leading Orators, Divines, Philosophers, States- . men, and Poets. Linn (S. P.) 8° 2 50 Golden Legend, The. Longfellow (H. W.) 16° 1 00 *Golden Lines. Illust. 16° 1 50 Golden Maxims for Every Day in the Year. 24° 25 Golden Poems by British and American Authors. Edited by Francis F. Brown. 8° 2 50 Gold of Chickaree, The. Warner (Susan and Anna). 12° 1 75 CATALOGUE OF BOOKS. 321 ♦Gold Threads, The, and Wee Davie. Macleod (N.) Illust. 16° $0 75 Good English ; or, Popular Errors in Language. Gould (Edward S.) 12° 1 25 *Good-for Nothing Polly. A Story of Boy-life. Far- man (Ella). Illust. 10° 1 00 Good Girl and True Woman ; or, Elements of Suc- cess Drawn from the Life of Mary Lyon and Other Similar Characters. Thayer (Wm. M.) 16° 1 00 ♦Good Hope Series, The. Illust. 4 vols. In box. 16° 3 25 Belle Clement's Influence. Lulu Reed's Pup Sophie's Letter-book. Edith Withington. ♦Good Voices, The. A Child's Guide to the Bible. Illust. 8° 1 00 Effort. Chellis (Mary D.) Illust. 16° 1 50 Gospel in Ezekicl, The. Guthrie (Thomas). 12° 50 r-rr»Qnol in t1»p» TVppq "Wltli OniniATiQ nn flnm inr>n VAvOMV^l 111 Lllv Al LV, o. IT 1 I LI v/ pilllUllij U1I VvIjllIilUll T'liincrst n rwl TTVitfUMinl IVTpf Y\ r»d i«m fllnrlr ^ Aiex. ) 1 9° 1 1 uo vrospei j-iiie oi jesus, ±nc. i/avis \Li. 1 OK Gospel Miracles, The, in their Relation to Christ uiki \_/iix loiitviiiiy . X4IJ1U1 ^ ui. .lyx. j 19° 1 1 ou Gospel Records. Their Genuineness, Authenticity, Historic "Verity, and Inspiration, with some Preliminary Remarks on the Gospel History. Nast (William). 12° 1 50 Gospel Temperance. Van Buren (J. M.) 12° 60 Gospels, Compendium of the. Strong (James). 18° 40 Gospels, Manual of. Strong (James). 10° 75 ♦Grace Avery's Influence. Dunning (Mrs. A. K.) Illust. 1G° 1 50 * Grace Courtney ; or, Seeking the Shepherd. Ben- ning (H.) 10° 1 00 Granada. Irving (Washington). 16° 1 25 ♦Grandma Crosby's Household. Farman (Ella). Illust. 16° 1 00 ♦Grandmamma's Recollections. 12° 1 25 ♦Grandmother Dear. Molesworth (Mrs.) Illust. 16° 1 50 ♦Grandpa's Darlings. Alden (Mrs. G. R. [Pansy].) 16° 1 25 Great Conflict, The. Christ and Antichrist. The Church and the Apostasy. Loomis (H.) 12° 85 322 CHURCH LIBRARIES. Great Fur Land ; or, Sketches of Life in the Hud- son's Bay Territory. Robinson (H. M.) Illust. 12° $1 75 Great German Composers, The. Comprising Bio- graphical and Anecdotical Sketches of Bach, Handel, Gluck, Haydn, Mozart, Beethoven, Schubert, Schumann, Franz, Chopin, Weber, Mendelssohn, and Wagner. Ferris (G. T.) 18° 60 Great Ice Age, The ; and Its Relation to the An- tiquity of Man. Geikie (J.) Illust. 12° 2 50 Great Italian and French Composers, The. Ferris (George T.) 18° 60 Great Journey. 12° 50 *Great Lights in Sculpture and Painting. A Man- ual for Young Students. Doremus (S. D.) 12° 1 00 Great Musicians, The. Edited by Francis Hueffer. 12° el 00 Vol. 1. Wagner. Vol. 4. Schubert. Vol. 2. Weber. Vol. 5. Rossini. Vol. 3. Mendelssohn. Vol. 6. Marcello. Vol. 7. Purcell. Great Question. Prize Essay. White (Lorenzo). 16° do Great Reform, The. A Prize Essay on the Duty and the Best Method of Systematic Beneficence in the Church. Stevens (Abel). 16° oo Great Republic, The, From the Discovery of Amer- ica to the Centennial, July 4, 187G. Peck (Jesse T.) 34 Steel Engravings. 8° O OKJ Great Singers : Faustina Bordoni to Henrietta Sonn- tag. Ferris (George T.) 18° Art Greece and the Golden Horn. Olin. 12° i. o\j *Greek Hero Stories. Translated from the German of Prof. Niebuhr. Hoppin (Benjamin). Illust. 1(5° Grey cliff, and Vashti Lethby's Heritage. Hamilton (Kate W.) Illust. 16° 1 30 G ruber, Jacob, Life of. Strickland (W. P.) 12° 1 50 Guardian Angel, The. Holmes (0. W.) 12° 2 00 Gurley, William, Life of. 12° 1 00 *Gustaphus Adolphus, the Hero of the Reforma- tion. From the French of L. Abelous. Lacroix (Mrs. C. A.) Illust. 16° 85 Guthrie, Thomas. Autobiography and Life of. 2 vols, in one. 12° 2 00 *Guttenburg; or, The Art of Printing. Pearson (Emily C.) Illust. 12° 1 25 CATALOGUE OF BOOKS. 323 •Half-HOFB Studies of Life. Johnson (Edwin A.) 1G° $1 00 * Half-hours with Old Humphrey. Mogridge (Geo.) 16° 85 Half-hours with the Telescope. Proctor (K. A.) 16° 1 25 Half-hours with the Best Authors. Knight (Chas.) 3 vols. 12° 4 50 •Half-hour Series, The. Illust. 4 vols. 16° e90 Half-hours in the Deep. Half-hours in the Far North. Half-hours in the Far East. Half-hours in the Tiny World. Half-hours with the Stars. Proctor (R. A.) 4° 2 50 •Half-year at Bronckton. A Vigorous and Life-like Story of School-boy Days. Sidney (Margaret). Illust 16° 1 25 •Hall in the Grove. Alden (Mrs. G. R. [Pansy].) 1G° 1 25 Hamilton, R. W., D. D. His Sermons: with a Sketch of his Life. 12° 1 50 Hamline, Leonidas, D. D., Life and Letters of. Late one of the Bishops of the Methodist Episcopal Church. Palmer (Walter C.) With Introduc- torv Letters by Bishops Morris, Janes, and Thomson. 12° 2 00 Hamline, Rev. Leonidas L., D. D., Biography of. Late one of the Bishops of the Methodist Epis- copal Church. Hibbard (F. G.) 12° 1 50 Hamline's Works, Bishop. Edited by F. G. Hib- bard. 2 vols. 12° el 50 Vol. 1. Sermons. Vol. 2. Miscellaneous. *Hand-book for Sunday-school Teachers. Alden (Joseph). 16° $0 65 Hand-book for Travelers in Europe and the East. Being a Guide through Great Britain and Ire- land, France, Belgium, Holland, Germany, Austria, Italy, Egypt, Syria, Turkey, Greece, Switzerland, Tyrol, Denmark, Norway, Sweden, Russia, and Spain. Fetridge (W. Pembroke). With Maps and Plans of Cities. Twentieth Year (1881). 3 vols. Leather, pocket-book form. 12° eZ 00 Vol. 1. Great Britain, Ireland, France, Belgium, Holland. Vol. 2. Germany, Austria. Italy, Egypt, Syria, Turkey, Greece. Vol. 3. Switzerland, Tyrol, Denmark, Norway, Sweden, Russia, Spain. . 324 CHURCH LIBRARIES. Hand-book for Home Improvement. Comprising How to Write, Talk, Behave, etc. 12° $2 25 Hand-book of Legendary and Mythological Art, A. Clement (Clara E.) Illust. 12° 3 00 Hand-book, A, of Scripture Geography. Thomp- son (Andrew). With Maps. 16° 75 Handy Book of Quotations. A Dictionary of Com- mon Poetical Quotations in the English Lan- guage. Boards. 2 go ~- *Happy Home Stories for Small Boys. Illust. 6 vols. In box. 18 o 3 Q0 Diligent Dick. Cousin Willie. Lazy Robert. The New Buggy, little Fritz. Bertie and His Sisters. ♦Happy Home Stories for Small Girls. Illust. 6 vols. In box. 18° 3 00 Little Flyaway. The Singing Kilt The Spoiled Picture. Molly and the Wineglass. Fleda's Childhood. The Twins. ♦Haps and Mishaps of Childhood. Pleasing Stories of Child-life. Illust. 16° 1 00 ♦Happy Light. Illust. 16° 1 50 Harmony and Exposition of the Gospels. Strong (James). Maps and Engravings. Sheep. 8° 4 50 Harmony of the Divine Dispensations. Smith (G.) Sheep. 8° 2 50 ♦Harry Budd ; or, The History of an Orphan Boy. 16° 75 ♦Harry Lane, and Other Stories in Verse. 12° 80 Hartz Boys, The. The Scene is laid in Germany, and shows that " as we sow, so shall we reap." Hoffman (Franz ). Illust 16° 1 25 Haven, Gilbert. A Monograph. Wentworth (E.) With Portrait. Paper. 12 3 25 Health Primers. A Series of Hand-books on Per- sonal and Public Hygiene. Edited by Eminent Medical and Scientific Men of London. 8 vols. 16° e40 Exercise and Training. Alcohol: Its Use and Abuse. The House and its Surroundings. Premature Death : Its Promotion and Prevention. Personal Appearance in Health and Disease. Baths and Bathing. The Skin and its Troubles. The Heart and its Functions. CATALOGUE OF BOOKS. 325 Heart of Africa, The ; or, Three Years' Travels and Adventures in the Unexplored Regions of the Center of Africa from 1867 to 1871. Schwein- furth (George). Translated by Ellen E. Frewer. Tl 1 ii c;f »*o f i nnG on/i TVTmyic 9 Vfil*i J.llUbLrilLlUIlo tliiti IyXcII/o. ~ vuis. 8° o %sk on Heart and Church Division, Causes and Cure of. A olm ru fPitiTiorii ADUUI J \ XJlOH^J^f J' 18° 40 TTonrf nf flip Wliitp Mountains Trip DraltP fSam- XlCitl V OI L lit; if Hill, XvlvsLtlllAl'lllo, XUC* .ivicl.no ^ kJcllli iipI Arlams^ Tlltist 8° 3 00 *TTpnrt'a Clnntpnt A Storv of Child-lifp in a Hottip JLUlll I O WWII IVyll IM ii. 1 HV1 J \J L VyllllU 1111/ 111 C. living nampd " Hpart's Content " Batps CClara Dotv) 4° 1 50 Heat as a Mode of Motion. Tyndall (John). Illust. 12° 2 00 Hpavpn Thp Exnansp of Essavs on the Wonders Al\.lt > Lllj Xlllr 1_/A j'llllOVy Uli 1 JOUll J O vll U11V Tf V11\1V1 U oi ine x irnitiiiient. xron-or ^xv. XJJ 9 00 X \J\J ^TT/-\ \KJLo. xu 2 SO TToT\"ro\xr Ppnnlp TT?«tr»rv fif flip Smith ('rPnT'orf^ llcUICW X C/lJLJlt/, XXlotf 1 Jf Ul L11C rOlllllll ^vXTJUigC^. go- ^ 00 O \J\J TTpnMina Rishon T,ifp nnrl Timps of Clark (T) W ^ XXtJOOlllg, XHollUl/, XJlLKs clllvl -1 llllvjo \Jl. V_/ltli rv \XJ. TT • J 12° 2 25 xxeieii xxervtjy » v/iitiiigtj, or, \j ul oi -i/arKiieo© mio Xjigiii. Xingiiaii ^lvictria^. xinisi. ID / 0 ^TTolon T i*cf ot* * f n n* Vi i i • Vi i a QflHoH ' ' "NTqutiio'c TTvnpr- X1L1L11 litoltl , lO V\ lilt 11 IB ctULlLU -Ll dlllHC D J_iX|.>t/ 1 - impnt " Alrlpn ('Mrs d R rPnnavl ^ Tlln«f xO ID *Helena's Cloud with the Silver Lining. By the Author of "How Marjorie Watched," etc. 7o *Helena's Household. A Story of Rome in the First Century. 12° i cn 1 o(J Hell, The New Testament Idea of. Merrill (S. M.) 16° 1 00 X \J\J Helm, Cross, and Sword. Lorraine (A. M.) 12° 1 50 *Help for Sunday-school Concerts. A Choice Selec- tion of Poems. Folsom (A. P. and M. T.) 16° 1 00 *Helpful Thoughts for Young Men. Woolsey (T. D.) 12° 1 25 *Hendricks the Hunter. A Tale of Zululand. Kingston (W. H. G.) Illust. 12° 1 50 Henry VIII and His Six Wives, Memoirs of. Her- bert (Henry W.) 12° 1 25 326 CHURCH LIBRARIES. *Henry and Bessie; or, What they Did in the Country. Prentiss (Mrs. E.) 16° $1 00 Herbert Spencer, Philosophy of. Being an Exam- ination of the First Principles of his System. Bowne (B. P.) 12° 1 00 Heredity. Cook (Jos.) 12° 1 50 Heresy and Christian Doctrine. De Pressense (E.) 1 50 Hermits, The. Kingsley (Charles). 12° 1 75 Heroes of Bohemia: Huss, Jerome, and Zisca. Mears (John W.) 1G° 1 25 Heroes of Christian History. A Series of Popular Biographies. 12° e 75 William Wilberforce. Stoughton (John). Henry Martin. Bell (Charles D.) Philip Doddridge. Stanford (Charles). William Carey. Culross (James). Thomas Chalmers. Frascr (Donald). Robert Hall. Hood (E. Paxton). John Knox. Taylor (William M.) Jonathan Edwards. Paterson (H. Sinclair). Richard Baxter. Boyle (G. D.) John Wycliffe. Fleming (James). Heroes of the Cross, The. Biographies of Saints, Martyrs, and Christian Pioneers. Adams (W. H. D.) 12° 2 25 ♦Heroes, The; or, Greek Fairy Tales. Kingsley (Charles). 12° 175 ♦Heroes of History. Towle (Geo. M.) Illust. 4 vols. 16° el 25 Vasco da Gama. His Voyages and Adventures. Pizarro. His Adventures and Conquests. Magellan ; or. The First Voyage Round the World. Marco Polo. His Travels and Adventures. *Heroines of History. Owen (Mrs. O. F.) 12° 1 00 ^Heroine of the White Nile; or, What a Woman Did and Dared. A Sketch of the Remarkable Travels and Experience of Miss Alexina Tinne. Wells (William). Illust. 12° 8-5 ♦Heroism of Christian Women of Our Own Times. Darton (J. M.) 12° 1 50 ♦Hester Trueworthy's Royalty. 16° 1 25 ♦Hidden Treasure. The Treasure of a Generous, Loving Heart. Illust. 16° 1 25 ♦Hidden Treasure ; or, The Secret of Success in Life. Babcock (Sarah A.) 16° 85 CATALOGUE OF BOOKS. 327 ♦High Days and Holidays in Old England and New England. Illust. 4 vols. In a box. 16° $2 50 Vol. 1. Fourth of July in New England. Vol. 2. Red-letter Days in Old England and New England. Vol. 3. Joy Days on Both Sides of the Water. Vol. 4. Festal and Floral Days in New England. Higher Christian Life, The. Boardman (W. E.) 16° 1 50 ♦Hill Farm. Honesty and Faithfulness Rewarded. Temple (Crona). Illust. 16° 60 Hints for Home Reading. A Series of Chapters on Books and their Use. Abbott (Lyman), and Others. Cloth, $1. Boards. 8° 75 Hints to Self- Educated Ministers. Including Local Preachers, Exhorters, and Other Christians, whose Duty it is to Speak More or Less in Public. Porter (James). 12° 1 25 Historical Confirmation of Scripture. Blatch (W.) 18° 30 Historical Evidences of the Truth of the Bible. Rawlinson (G.) 12° 1 75 Historical Illustrations of the Old Testament. Raw- linson (G.) 16° 1 00 Historical Sketch of the Protestant Church of France. Lorimer (John G.) 12° 1 30 ♦Historical Sketches. Myrtle (Annie). Illust. 16° 1 25 ♦Historical Tales for Young American Protestants. 16° 75 Historical Views of the Revolution. Green (G. W.) 12° 1 50 History of the Jews, from the Earliest Period to Present Times. Milman (H. H.) Maps and Illust. 3 vols. 18° 2 25 History, Ancient, A Manual of. Thalheimer (M. E. ) 8° nl 60 History and Critical Essays. De Quincey. 2 vols. 12° 3 00 •History for Boys. Edgar (J. G.) 16° 1 00 History, Modern, A Manual of. Thalheimer (M. E.) 8° nl 60 History of American Bible Society, from its Organi- zation in 1816 to the Present Time. Strick- land (W. P.) 8° 2 00 History of Arabia. Crichton (Andrew). 2 vols. 18° 1 50 History of the Bible. Gleig (G. R.) 2 vols. 18° 1 50 History of Christianity. Abbott (John S. C.) Illust. 12° 2 00 History of Christianity from the Birth of Christ to the Abolition of Paganism in the Roman Em- pire. Milman (H. H.) 8° 2 00 328 CHURCH LIBRARIES. History of the Christian Church. Hase (K.) 8° $3 50 History of the Christian Church. Ruter (Martin). 8° 2 50 History of the Christian Church. From its Origin to the Present Time. Blackburn (W. M.) 8° 2 50 History of the Church. From the Earliest Ages to the Reformation. Waddington (M. A.) 8° 2 00 History of the Church in the Eighteenth and Nineteenth Centuries. Hagenbach (K.) 2 vols. 8° 6 00 History of Civilization. Guizot (F.-) 2 vols. 12° 4 00 History of Civilization in England. Buckle (H. T.) 2 vols. 8° 4 00 History of the Consulate and Empire of France under Napoleon. Thiers (M. Adolphe). Trans- lated by D. Forbes Campbell and H. W. Her- bert. Illust. 5 vols. 8° 12 50 History of the Crusades, The. Michaud (Joseph Francois). 3 vols. 8° 3 75 History of the Council of Trent. From the French of L. F. Bungener. Edited by Rev. John McClintock. 12° 1 50 History of the Decline and Fall of the Roman Em- pire. Gibbon (Edward). With Notes by the Rev. H. H. Milman. 6 vols. 12° 5 00 History of Doctrines. Hagenbach (K.) 2 vols. 8° 6 00 ♦History of Egypt. Clement (Clara E.) Illust. 12° 1 50 History of England, from the Fall of Wolsey to the Death of Elizabeth. Froude (J. A.) 12 vols. 12° 15 00 History of England. An Illustrated History of Society and Government from the Earliest Period to our Own Times. Knight (Charles). 8 vols. 18 00 History of England. From the Invasion of Julius Caesar to the Abdication of James II, 1688. Hume (David). 6 vols. 12° 5 00 History of England from the Accession of James IL Macaulay (T. B.) 5 vols. 12° 5 00 History of England in the Eighteenth Century. Lecky (W. E. H.) 2 vols. 8° 5 00 History of European Morals from Augustus to Charlemagne. Lecky (W. E. H.) 2 vols. 12° 3 00 History of France from the Earliest Times to 1848. White (James). 8° 3 00 CATALOGUE OF BOOKS. 329 History of Greece, A General, from the Earliest Period to the Death of Alexander the Great. With a Sketch of the Subsequent History to . the Present Time. Cox (G. W.) 12° $1 50 History of the Huguenots. Marsh (Mrs.) 16° 1 25 •History of India. Feudge (Fanny Roper). Illust. 12° 1 50 History of the Jewish Church. Stanley (Dean). 3 vols. 8° 7 50 Vol. L Abraham to Samuel. Vol. 2. Samuel to the Captivity. Vol. 3. From the Captivity to the Christian Era. ♦History of the Jewish Nation, A. From the Earli- est Times to the Present Day. Palmer (E. F.) Illust. 16° 1 25 History of Philosophy, Schwegler's. Translated from the Original German by J. H. Seelye. 12° 2 00 History of the Presbyterian Church in the United States of America. Gillett (E. H.) 2 vols. 12° 5 00 History Primers. Edited by J. R. Green. 6 vols. 18° en 45 Greece. Fyffe (C. A.) Rome. Creighton (M.) Geography. Grove (George). Europe. Freeman (E. A.) ' Old Greek Life. MahafFy (J. P.) Roman Antiquities. Wilkins (A. S.) History of the Reformation. D'Aubigne. 8° 2 50 History of the Great Reformation. Carter (T.) 12° 1 25 History of the Reformation. Fisher (George P.) 8° 3 00 History of the Romans. Merivale (Charles). 4 vols. 12° 7 00 ♦History of Spain. Harrison (James Albert). Illust. 12° 1 50 * History of Switzerland. Slidell-Mackenzie (Har- riet D.) Illust. 12° 1 50 History of the United Netherlands from the Death of William the Silent to the Twelve Years' Truce. Motley (J. L.) 4 vols. 8° 8 00 ♦History of the United States, Young Folks'. Hig- ginson (T. W.) Illust. 16° 1 50 History of the United States. Bancroft. 6 vols. 12° e2 50 History of the United States. Ridpath (John Clark). 8° 3 00 ♦History of the World. Barth (C.) 12° 85 History of the Waldenses, The. Baird. 8° 2 50 •Holiday Gift, My. Illust. 12° 1 00 28 330 CHURCH LIBRARIES. ^Holiday House. A Series of Stories. Sinclair (Cath- erine). Illust. 16° $1 25 nonness • tne -tsirtnngnt of all (aod s Children. i^rane [o. ±.) 16° 85 HolinPSS to thp T,nrrl Dunn (T T? \ 12° 85 Holland and its People. De Amicis (Edmondo.) Illust. 12° 2 00 Hollywood Series. Wise (Daniel). Illustrated. G vols. 16° 7 50 Stephen and His Tempter. Florence Baldwin's Picnic. Lionel's Courage ; or, Clementina's Great Peril. Florence Rewarded ; or, Priscilla the Beautiful. Nat and His Chum ; or, The Friendly Rivals. Elbert's Return ; or, " Foxy " at Home Again. Holy Gospels, Thoughts on the. How they came to be in Manner and Form as they are. TJpham (Francis W.) 12° 1 25 Holy Ground, On. Travels in Palestine. Hodder (Edwin). 12° 1 25 Holy Living, Rules for. Newstead (R.) 72° 15 Holy Living, The Rule and Exercises of. Taylor (Jeremy). 12° 1 25 Holy Living and Dying. Taylor (Jeremy). 12° 1 50 Holy Spirit, The Doctrine of the. Walker (J. B.) 12° 1 25 Holy War. Bunyan (John). 12° 1 25 Holy War. Bunyan (John). Illust. 8° 2 00 Home Altar, The. An Appeal in Behalf of Family Worship, with Pravers and Hymns. Deems (C. F.) 18° 1 25 Home as It Should Be. With Counsel for All. Barrows (L. D.) 18° 30 *Home Influence. Aguilar (Grace). Illust. 12° 1 00 Home Life ; or, How to Make Home Happy. Illust. 16° 75 Home Life, The, in the Light of its Divine Idea. . Brown (J.B.) 18° 75 Home Pictures of English Poets, for Fireside and School-room. Illust. 12° 85 *Home Scenes, and Heart Studies. Aguilar (Grace). 12° 1 00 *Home Story Series, No. 1. Larned (Augusta). 3 vols. 16° 3 50 Country Stories. Holiday Stories. Stories for Leisure Hours. CATALOGUE OF BOOKS. 331 ♦Home Story Series, No. 2. Lamed (Augusta). 3 vols. 1 a° 10 ACQ Krt ifro OU Vacation Stories. Stories for Little People. *Home Sunshine ; or, Bear and Forbear. Illust. 1 A° 10 IK to Homespun ; or, Five and Twenty Years Ago. Lackland (lhomas). 1 A 0 10 1 OU Home Truths. Kyle (J. 0.) 1 A° 10 Art OU Homes without Hands ; or, A Description of the Habitation of Animals, Classed According to their Principles of Construction. Wood (J. C.) Illust. 8° a *± OU Homer's Iliad. Derby (Edward, Earl). 2 vols in one. 12° 1 Pvrt 1 OU Homer s Iliad. VV. C Bryants Iranslation. l vols. in one. 1 oo O rtrt o UU Homer s Odyssey. W. U. Bryants Iranslation. Q rtrt o UU Homiletical Index. Hand-book of lexts, Ihemes, and Authors, for the Use of Preachers and Bible bcnolars. Jrittingili (J. xl.j oO o 3 00 Homiletical and Pastoral Lectures. By Archbishop Thompson, Bishops Goodwin, Thorold, Ryan, and Tilcomb; and Others.. oo 8 1 75 Homiletics, A Treatise on. Kidder (D. P.) 12° 1 50 Homilist, The. Sermons for Preachers and Lay- men. House (E.) 1 oo 1 50 *Honest and Earnest. Forest (Neil). 16° 1 00 * Honey Brook Library, The. Illust. 6 vols. 16° n AA 0 OU Julius Farley. Boy of Mt. Rhigi. Larry Loekwell. Romantic Belinda. True Manliness. Blind Nellie's Boy. *Honor, Six Steps to. Great Truths Illustrated. Andrews (H. P.) 16° OK 8o *Hope Raymond ; or, What is Truth ? Richmond (Mrs. E. J.) Illust. 16° 85 Hours of Christian Devotion. Tholuck (A.) 8° 3 00 Hours of Exercise in the Alps. Tyndall (John). Illust. 8° O rtrt Z 00 House and Home Papers. Stowe (H. B.) 16° 1 Krt 1 OU *House that Jack Built, The. Hamilton (Kate W.) Illust. 16° 1 25 ^Household Angel in Disguise, The. Leslie (Mrs. Madeline). 12° 1 00 332 CHURCH LIBRARIES. Household Book of Poetry. Dana (Charles A.) Illust. with Steel Engravings. ft 0 rPonovi i nine* ^lVLrs. \jr. Xv. LXilIloyj.^ JLllUSl. 19° i i nx» OO *TTr\n coli aIm fitATnoG TTvrim tVio f-roymoTi at ATorlnmp XtUUbtJllUIU. QLUllCo. XIU1U lllC vjTcl lllclil Ui -tVltlUtllllG Ot til ip Wilfl*»TmntV» TCinmnnf ( TlI pan at\ THiici V/LL111C tT 11LI v 1 1-Ll II L li . JVlllIllVJHL l XJlC/CVllVJI J . -LllLloL. 4 vols. 4 no T-Toticjp 0 . of T^nfji^tpr nnfl "York TVip "With tho PnnnnDci oi*\rl T acc r\f Fmnpo n l rr 1 "n o t* /'Inc. ^ vUIUjUcbL dllLl JL/Ubo Ul X XclIICt;. VJtill UI1L-I ^uao. J 16° *How a Farthing Made a Fortune ; or, Honesty is the Best Policy. Bo wen (C. E.) 18° 50 TTatv ta T^VIjiaqi o \ r Ain"s:pl f tvitVi at* wit ri An t a "\TnctPT 11U » t\J jLjl-lLl^tlLL/ 1 \J III odl W1L11 L/I >Y ll-llV LIL •& J.»XtloL'Cl» Eggleston (George Cary). Board. 16° 50 How to Get Strong and How to Stay so. Blaikie (William). Illust. 16° 1 00 xiuw lu ^.'iciKtJ U«£lI Uoi -1£>0 1 — ^0 TTaw +n Pnv OVm T*r»li T^olitc o n rl TTaif +r» TTppt^ 11U" HJ JL cl_y Ull HI X/CULDj dllU. XXUYT \AJ XVCCp \^nurcnes out oi Jjeot. otaii \p.) i 1 00 nundiu, juiiD, i>iemoirs oi. xrue ID i l uo xxuwtiru, i>irs. ousan, iviemoir oi. i^napin v> m.) 1 Q° oo ~How iMarjorie Watched. Illust. ID 70 /u ^How to Conduct Prayer - meetings. Thompson ^ijewis KJ.) 1Z 1 Jo How Two Girls Tried Farming. A Piquant Nar- rative of an Actual Experience. Shepherd (Dorothea Alice). lo 1 UU How the World was Peopled. Ethnological Lec- tures. Fontaine (Edward). 1Z o _ aa. 00 iiugucnoib, ine. omnes (o.j R° o L on uo Huguenots, The, after the Revocation. Smiles (S.) ft 0 9 Human Race, The '. And Other Sermons. Preached it i;n ol ton Vi i m Ovfrifi'l in/l ri rrl i t ATI T?a1^ott- cL L v 11 L J I L 11 1 1 tt 111 , UAlUIUj cUlvl -L)I 1 1 1 LU11 . 1VUUC1 t Soil { r . W . ; I- 1 Ou ^Hunting Adventures on Land and Sea ; The Young Nimrods in North America. A Book for Boys. Knox (Thomas W.) Illust. 8° 2 50 ^Huntingdon, Lady, Portrayed. Mudge (Z. A.) Illust. 16° 1 00 Hymns of the Ages. First, Second, and Third Series. Each in 1 vol. 12° el 50 CATALOGUE OF BOOKS. 333 Hymns of Frederick William Faber. With a Sketch OI XllS IvlH'. 11IUM. XU 91 Hypatia. Kingsley (Charles). 1 9° 1 71 X 10 TIiTnorinn T nnfy fill 1 f T T \v i XI y L>t;I U.'Il. J_AjllglcllU W ^XX. TV .y 12° X.£d 1 If) Idle Word, The. Short Religious Essays upon the Gift of Speech. Goulburn (E. M.) 12° to I Go A-Fishing. Prime (Wm. C.) 8° 9 1A Illustrations of Scripture : Suggested by a Trip through the Holy Land. Hackett (H. B.) Illust. 12° 1 Ifl Illustrated Gatherings. Bowes (G. S.) 1 71 x to Second Series. 1 71 1 to imitation ol Onrist. lvempis (1 nomas a). 1 CO lo 1 no Immortality of the Soul, and the Final Condition of the Wicked Carefully Considered. Landis ^xtoDert vv .) 1 9° x o\j Immortality, lne .Bible Uoctrine or. Mattison {ti.) Paper cover. 1 90 91 ZO Improvement of Society by the General Diffusion of Knowledge. Dick (Thomas). 1 QO AK In Prospect of Sunday. A Collection of Analyses, Arguments, Applications, Counsels, Cautions, etc., for Use of Preachers and Sunday-school leacners. r>owes o.) 1 9 LZ 1 10 1 OU Insect Lives ; or, Born in Prison. Ballard (Julia P.) Illust. 1 oo 12 1 fin Insects Abroad. Being a Popular Account of For- eign Insects, i their Structure, Habits, and Transformation. Wood (J. G.) 8° 4 UU Inquirer and New Convert. Young (Robert.) In 1 vol. 18° OK lo Inside the Gates. McCarty (J. Hendrickson). 16° 1 AA 1 W Interior Life. Upham (T. C.) 12° 1 1A 1 OU Intermediate World, The. Townsend (L. T.) 16° iO interpreter's House, The ; or, Sermons to Children. Newton (W. W.) Illust. 16° 1 25 Introduction to the Gospel Records. Nast (Wm.) 12° 1 10 Introduction to the Study of the Holy Scriptures. Harman (Henry M.) 8° 4 00 In the Arctic Seas. A Narrative of the Discovery of the Fate of Sir John Franklin and His Companions. McClintock (R. N.) Illust. 12° 1 25 334 CHURCH LIBRARIES. In the Fields. Poems which have for their Subjects the Objects and Thoughts of the Grassy Fields. Hathaway (Miss M. E. N.) 1G° $1 25 In the Mist. Porter (Rose). 16° 1 25 In the Days of Thy Youth. Farrar (F. W.) 12° 2 00 Indian and White Man, The ; or, The Indian in Self-defense. Right -Hand Thunder (Indian Chief.) Edited by D. W. Risher. 12° 1 50 Indian Biography. Thatcher. 2 vols. 18° 1 50 Infidelity, Best Method of Counteracting. Christ- lieb (Theo.) 12° 1 75 Infant Baptism Briefly Considered. Doane (N.) 16° 65 Infant Church Membership. Gregg (S.) 16° 80 *Infant Sunday-school. Knox (Mrs. and Rev. C. E.) 12° 65 -Influence. Illust. 16° 1 30 Influence of Jesus, The. Bohlen Lectures. 1879. Brooks (Phillips). 16° 1 25 *Inglises, The ; or, How the Way Opened. Rober- son (Margaret M.) 12° 1 50 *Inventor, Trials of an ; or, Life and Discoveries of Charles Goodyear. Peirce (B. K.) 16° 100 ♦Iron Boot, The : And Other Stories. IS 0 40 Irving's Belles-lettres Works. Including Alhambra, Bracebridge Hall, Crayon Miscellany, Gold- smith, Knickerbocker, Sketch-book, Tales of a Traveler, Wolfert's Roost. 8 vols. 16° 12 00 *Irving, Washington. Memoir of: With Selections from his Works and Criticisms. Adams (Chas.) 16° 1 00 Isaac, Jacob, and Joseph. [Expository Reading.] Dods (Marcus). 10° 1 25 Island Life ; or, The Phenomena of Insular Faunas and Floras, with their Causes. Including an entire Revision of the Problem of Geological Climates. AVallace (Alfred Russel). Illust. and Maps. 8° 4 00 Island of Fire, The ; or, A Thousand Years of the Old Northmen's Home, 874-1874. Headley (P. C.) Illust. 12° 1 50 Ismailia : A Narrative of the Expedition to Central Africa for the Suppression of the Slave-trade, Organized by Ismail, Khedive of Egypt. Baker (Samuel White). Maps and Illust. 8 a 5 00 ooo Israel in Egypt ; or r Egypt s Place among the An- cient Monarchies. Clark (Edward L.) 8° 9la on *Israel Putnam, Life of, Major-general in the Conti- nental Army. Tarbox (I. N.) Maps and lllust. 12° 1 OK 1 ZO Israelites, Ancient, Manners of the. Fleury (^lauuej. 1 OO lo KK OO Isoult Barry of Wynscote, Her Diurnal Book. A Tale of Tudor Times. Holt (Emily S.) 16° 1 K(\ 1 OU Italy, Florence, and Venice. Taine. 8° O Kf\ Z oU Itinerancy, Life in the. Davis (L. D.) 1 oo 1 OK 1 Zo Itinerant, Recollections of an. Smith (II.) 1 A° 10 QK OO *Itinerant Side \ or, Pictures of Life in the Itiner- ancy. Babcock (Sarah A.) Illustrated. lo QK OD T^"i t"i^i*o n i ^ cs Wife* * T X / » v ( *\ n n 1 i ^i no f iV^ti d Ckir* T^o4t\ti mnerani s >v lie . xier v^u \ Life Among the Indians. Imley (J. B.) 12° 1 75 X ' £ J T~* 1 x * £ X X"\ X*> • T Life and Education of Laura Dew r ey Bndgman. Lamson (Mary S.) 12° 1 00 Life and Epistles of St. 1 aul. Gonybeare and Mow- son. Popular Edition. Maps and Illust. 12° 1 50 *Life and Explorations of David Livingstone. Rob- erts (John S.) Illust. 12° 1 50 Life and Growth of Language, The. An Outline of Linguistic Science. Whitney (W. D.) 12° 1 50 Life and Letters of Rev. Stephen Olin, D. D. 2 vols. 12° 3 00 Life and Letters of Rev. F. W. Robertson. 12° 1 50 Life and Letters of Washington Irving. Irving. 4 vols. 16° el 25 Life and Literature in the Fatherland. Hurst (John F.) 12° 2 25 Life and Times of Lord Bacon. 2 vols. 8° 5 00 CATALOGUE OF BOOKS. 341 Life and Religious Opinions of Madame Guyon : Together with Some Accounts of the Personal History and Religious Opinions of Archbishop Fenelon. Upham (T. C.) 2 vols. 12° $3 00 Life and Speeches of the Right Honorable John Urignt, M. Jr. bmitli (Lxeorge uarnettj. A vols. in one. OO 8 2 50 Life and Times of John Wesley, Founder of the iMCinoQists. ±yerman ^IjUkoj. «j voio. qo 7 ^rt ljiie ana limes 01 jonn ivnox. irue jv.j 11) i on Life and Times of St. Bernard. Morison (J. C.) 1 no o no Life and Travels of Herodotus, in the Fifth Cent- ury ueiore vviinsu j.nivork.s 01 01. xaui. xarrar ^r. w ,j uoui" plete in 1 vol. oo 8 3 00 *'Life in Narrow Streets. Thompson (Julia Carrie). must. 16° 1 15 Life in the Laity. Davis (L. D.) 1G° G5 Life: Its True Genesis. Wright (R. W.) 12° 1 50 Life Mosaic, .The Ministry of Song, and Under the Surface. Havergal (Frances R.) 4° 4 00 Life of a Scotch Naturalist. Smiles (S.) 12° 1 50 Life of Alexander Duff, D. D. Smith (George). 8° I 00 Life of Rev. Alfred Cookman. Ridgaway (II. B.) 12° Z 00 Life of Amos Lawrence. Lawrence (W. R.) Illust. 16° 1 00 Life of Andrew Jackson. Jenkins (John S.) 12° 1 25 Life of Beethoven. Translated by John J. Lalor. 12° 1 25 Life of Benedict Arnold. His Patriotism and his Treason. Arnold (Isaac N.) 8° 2 50 Life of Benjamin Abbott. Ffirth (John). 18° 45 Life of Bishop Roberts. Elliott (Charles). 12° oo Life of Cicero, The. Trollope (Anthony). 2 vols. 12° 3 00 Life of Columbus. Irving (Washington). 3 vols. 1G° el 25 Life of Charles Dickens, A Short. Jones (C. H.) 18° 60 Life of Charles Sumner. Chaplin (J. and J. D.) Illust. 16° 1 50 Life of Daniel Webster. Banvard (J.) Illust. 16° 1 50 Life of Daniel Webster. Tefft (B. F.) 12° 1 25 342 CHURCH LIBRARIES. Life of David, as Reflected in the Psalms. Mac- laren (A.) 16° $1 25 Life of hdmund 5. Janes. Ridgaway (H. B.) Por- traits and Illust. 12° 1 50 lAie of inward Irving. I he. Ohphant (Mrs.) 8° 3 50 Life of Edward Livingston. Hunt (C. H.) With an Introduction by George Bancroft. Portrait. 8° 4 00 *Life of the Empress Josephine. Headley (P. C.) 12° 1 50 Eif e of the Empress J osephine, W lie of js apoleon me oreat. xiartie\ (u. 15. j -i no 12 a 1 25 j-jje oi xaiin. upnam [±. y^.) 12° 1 50 Life of George "Washington. Bancroft (Aaron). 12° 1 25 .Life oi (jeorge W niteneld. lyerman (L.) 2 vols. 8° 4 00 Life of Goldsmith. Irving ( Washington). 16° 1 25 Life of Henry Clay, Sargent (Epes) and Greeley (Horace). 12° 1 25 Life of Hester Ann Rogers. 18° 50 Eife of Jabez Bunting. With .Notices of Contem- porary Persons and Events. Bunting (T. P.) 12° 1 50 Eife of Joiin Jiaclie, V. D., 1 rofessor of Biblical Lit- erature and Exegesis, Cnited. Presbyterian Church. Brown (James). 12 2 00 Life of John James Audubon, the Naturalist. 12° 1 75 Life of John Huss. Gillett ih. ri.) 2 vols. 8° e2 50 Life of John Knox : Containing Illustrations of the History of the Reformation in Scotland. McLrie [x nomas). 8° 2 00 Life of John Q. Adams, reward ( William H.) 12° 1 25 .Lite oi ±-a.(i\ Jano ixiey. ±>aruett tJjaMu \\ IS 1 25 Life of Lafayette. Headley (P. C.) 12° 1 50 Life of Lord .Nelson, bouthey [EL) 18° 75 Life of Madame Catharine Adorna. Including Some Leading Facts and Traits in her Religious Ex- penence. Lpham (T. C.) 16° 75 Life of Mary, Queen of Scots. Headley (P. C.) 12° 1 50 *Life of Major Andre. Sargent. 8° 2 50 Life of Mozart. Iranslated by Calor (Jonn J.) 12° 1 25 Life of Napoleon Bonaparte. Headley (P. C.) 12° 1 50 Life of Napoleon Bonaparte, The. Lockhart (J. G.) 2 vols. IS 3 1 50 1 vol. Edition. Illust. 12° 1 00 *Life of Oliver Cromwell. Adams (Charles). 16° 1 00 CATALOGUE OF BOOKS. 343 Life of Oliver Cromwell. Garlyle (1.) 2 vols. 12° €$1 75 Life of Oliver Uromwell. Herbert (Henry Wm.) IZ 1 25 Lite oi Patrick Henry. Wirt (Wm.) 1 oo 1 5(J Life of Samuel Johnson, The : Including a Journal of a Tour to the Hebrides. Boswell (James). With Numerous Additions and Notes by John Croker. 2 vols. O A Oft 4 OO 4 vol. Edition. 10° o oo ljiic oi oamuci jonnson. aciuuis jliiuoi. 16° X \J\J Lift* nf Wilbur Fi«L- T) T) Hnblipb I Tnctiiiit/ 1 A° 10 1 Art 1 OO Life Worth Living, A. Memorials of Emily Blise Gould. Bacon (Leonard W.) 1 9° x 00 Xjiie s v^inei xiourb. v^uici, xiiiiis lor xoung unci v/iu. 4° 1 Oft 1 00 T io-lif nnrl Tlf^tri/'if \r Tvnrlall Tnliri 1 1 no 1 zo ljigiii/ ior nic Jjhlic Vynes. v/ompneu. uy iviarioa Van Martor. Illuminated Cover. oo 8 1 00 Light in Dark Places. Neander (Augustus). 1 AO 10 oO jjigui in tne v aney , or, xjiic oi lvirs. Jt>ocKing. Annesley (Miss). 18° 35 ♦Lights of the World. Stoughton (John). 16° 85 Light on the Dark River; or, Memorials of Mrs. H. A. Hamlin. Lawrence (Mrs. Margaret W.) Steel Plate. 12° 1 OO Light on the Pathway of Holiness. McCabe (L. D.) 16° 65 Light Science for Leisure Hours. A Series of Fa- miliar Essays on Scientific Subjects, Natural Phenomena, etc. Proctor (R. A.) 12° 1 75 •Lilian : A Story of the Days of Martyrdom in Eng- land Three Hundred Years Ago. Illust. 16° 75 ♦Lilian Grey. Lilian was what she prayed to be, a Blessing. Holt (G. H.) Illust. 10° 1 25 ♦Lilly's Travels through France to Switzerland. Illust. 10° 1 00 *Lindendale Stories, The. Wise (Daniel). 5 vols. In a box. 16° 5 00 344 CHURCH LIBRARIES. j-diicibHj ±-/ee anu ms x 1 nenus. j\. otory ior tne Times. ID Oft DO •Links in Rebecca's Life. Aldeii (Mrs. G. R. rPnr>c:v1 ~1 Tllntif clll&\ J. J JlIIUoL. 19° i l O'J Xjine upon j-/ine. 1 R° lo DU Lion-hmnting in Algeria. Gerard. 1 0° i l -A ou Literary and Historical Miscellanies. Bancroft (George). o Q o uu Literary Attractions of the Bible. Halsey (Lc Roy J.) 1 o° 1- 1 I uu LitPTJiTV (IVinTir'fprititipci nrwl A pVnpvpmpnt'j nf tVif* Bible. Trail (W.) 12° 1 •50 Literary Reminiscences. De Quincey. 2 vols. 12° 3 00 Literature and Life. "Whipple (Edwin P.) 16° 1 50 Literature Primers. Edited by J. R. Green. 18° e n 45 English Grammar. Morris (R.) English Literature. Brooke (S.) + Philology. Peilc (J.) Classical Geography. Tozer (H. F.) Shakespeare. Dowden (E.) Studies in Bryant. Aldcn (J.) Greek Literature. Jcbb (R. C.) English Grammar Exercises. Morris and Eowen. Comer. Gladstone. (William E.) English Composition. NichoL (John). •Little and Wise ; or, Sermons to Children. New- ton (W. W.) Illust. 16° 1 25 •Little Ben Hadden ; or, Do Right, "Whatever Comes of It. Kingston (W. EL G.) Illust. 16° 1 25 •Little Brothers and Sisters. Marshall (Emma). 10° 1 25 Little Classics. Edited by Rossiter Johnson. 18° e 1 00 Exile. Childhood. Life. Humanity. •Little Door-keeper. Illust. 16° 1 00 •Little Drops of Rain. 16° 1 00 •Little Foxes. By the Author of "How Marjorie Watched." Illust. 16° 75 •Little Erne's Home. 16° 1 25 •Little Housekeeper, The, and Other Stories. Illust. 18° 40 •Little Lights Along the Shore. Cobden (Paul). 16° 1 25 *Little Mother and Her Christmas, The, and Other Stories. McKeen (Phebe). Illust. 16° 1 00 •Little People Whom the Lord Loved. Illust. 16° 1 00 •Little Lucy's Wonderful Globe. Ycnge (C. M.) 16° 75 CATALOGUE OF BOOKS. 345 •Little r.caeh -blossom ; or, Rambles in the Central Park. Ulust. 16° $1 00 *Littlo Pillows* PoiniT Good-nirrlit Tli on frhtq for Lit.- tip Onos Havorwil (Y ~R ) 18° OK "Little Preacher, lne. Prentiss (Mrs. E.) 16° 1 00 * Little Princess, and Other fetories. Chiefly About lo **^T .| f fir* T?/~»qi o S*fnT*ioa TTnaivifii* I 1vT r i't*nr5iY*nt' l Tllncf LO c to Little Rosic's Christmas Times. Little Rosic's First Play-days. Little Rosie in the Country. Lime inree-year oia. jjavis ^lvirs. Hi. r\..) 10 to 'Little llireads; or, langle Ihread, bilver Ihread, ana Golden ihread. Prentiss (Mrs. E.) 16° 1 00 *Little Toss. A Story showing the Value of Chris- tian lrust. Oummings (M. J.; lllust. 16° 1 25 * Little irowel. Waddy (Edith), lllust. 16° 75 Little woman, a. xarman (itiiaj. lo i fin 1 00 Little Women. Alcott (Louisa M.) 2 vols. 10 Q no ^Live Boy, The ; or, Charlie's Letters. Johnson (iii, must. 10 oo Lives of the Leaders of our Church Universal, from the Days of the Succession of the Apostles to ine xrcseni, nmc jripur ^jccruinanuy anu. McCracken. Q° O Q fifi Lives of the Apostles and Early Martyrs of the Plmi./>V. T11.-i.-i4- L/iiurcn. must. lo /o Lives of the British Reformers. With Portraits. 1 0° 1 OU Lives of Celebrated Female Sovereigns. Jameson (Mrs. Anna). 2 vols. 1 c° lo 1 OU Ihe same, 1 vol. 1J 1 ZD *Lives Made Sublime by Faith and "Works. lllust. 16° 1 00 Lives of the Popes. 12° 1 Kd 1 OU Lives of the Queens of England from the Norman Conquest. Strickland (Agnes). lllust. 12° 1 9K Lives of the Three Mrs. Judsons — Ann, Sarah, and Emily. With Portraits. Wilson (Mrs. A. M.) 12° 1 9K Living Christianity ; or, Old Truths Restated. Hal- sey (Le Roy J.) 12° 1 25 *Living in Earnest. A Book for Young Men. John- son (Joseph). 16° 1 00 Living Waters for Daily Use. 24° 30 346 CHURCH LIBRARIES. Living Way. Atkinson (J.) 1G° $0 45 Living Wesley, lhe. Rigg (James H.) 12° 1 00 Living Words; or, Unwritten Sermons of the Late John Mcuhntock, D. JD., LL. JD. 12° 1 50 Locusts and Wild Honey, The Pastoral Bee, etc. Burroughs (John). 1 50 Looking Toward Sunset. Child (Lydia Maria). no O z oO Lord Herbert of Cherbury, and Thomas Ellwood. xioweiis (w. D.) ijittie Classic fetyie. lb 1 25 Lord's Prayer, The. Seven Homilies. Gladden (Washington). lb 1 AA 1 00 Lord's Supper, The. A Treatise on. Bickersteth /T7 XT \ H.) lo 50 Lord's Supper. Luckey (Samuel). lo oO Lord's Supper, Guide to the. Smith (D.) OA 0 z-y Lost Blessing, The. Shipton (Anna). lb 75 Lost Forever. Townsend (L. T.) lb 75 Juosl dim xounci. u riny ^ vv . o.^ lO OO *Lost Purse, The ; or, Bessie Bleak. Temptation Re- sisted. Illust. 1 A 0 10 1 0 "■"Louis XV and His Times. From the French of L. L. F. Bungener. 1Z 1 00 Love Enthroned j or, Essays on Evangelical Perfec- lion, toieeie ^i/anieij. 1 9° 1 zo Love in Marriage. An Historical Study. Lady Rachel Russell. Guizot. 16° 75 *'Loved into Shape, and Osgood's Rebellion. Illust. 16° 1 00 *Loving Heart and Helping Hand Library. Illust. 5 vols. 16° 4 75 Nettie and Her Friends. Philip Moore, the Sculptor. An Orphan's Story. Carrie Williams and her Scholars. The Story of a Moss Rose. Loyal Response ; or, Daily Melodies for the King's Minstrels. Havergal (F. R.) 18° 25 *Lucien Guglieri. Lee (Mary B.) 16° 50 Lucile, and Other Poems. Meredith (Owen). 16° 1 50 *Luck of Alden Farm. Mudge (Z. A.) Illust. 16° 1 50 *Lucy Forester's Triumphs. McKeever (Harriet B.) 16° 1 00 *Lucy, the Light-bearer. Sargent (G. F.) Illust. 16° 1 00 Luther, Martin, Life of. Cubitt (George). 12° 85 CATALOGUE OF BOOKS. 347 *Luthcr Martin, Historical Souvenirs of. Hubner (Utiarles vv.j lllust. 19° T tlMilllJ^l/Uiiy. £i VUIB. C X uO i>i.ook, ine , or, ine L/iie oi xvev. William Marsh. By His Daughter. lo 1 OK 1 LO *Man with the Book 5 or, the Bible Among the Peo- pie. Way Hand (John Matthias), lllust. 16 1 00 Manliness of Christ. Hughes (Thomas). lo 1 AA 1 00 Manly Character, Formation of a. A Series of Lec- mres to xoung lvien. reck ^oeorgej. 10 OO Manners, JBook of. A Guide to Social Intercourse. Smith (Daniel). 24° 35 ^Manuscript Man ; or, The Bible in Ireland. Walshe 1 6o (Miss E. H.) lllust. 16° 348 CHURCH LIBRARIES. -Marble Preacher. Clark (Mrs. Henry Steele). xllUSl. J o ^1 -in oo ^•■ATo. tpoI 1 n Af T-? atti a Tho T^oqtIogg (^IliTictiTn AfniflPYi -.TXcll Cdlcl Ul XcUIllU. X11U X Cell ItoQ v^lll lotlclll JlalUCll. Kief wnnrl i Kto t» or*o. \ XJclot VY UUU. \X IclllCCoJ. lv iviargarci -.TJ.ciIgu.ICt o v/lU XXU111C il Xctlc Ul Vyill lotlclll IA/VC. XllUSl. ' 1 1 or; ZO ATo rcr* - ! tat AY att n l ti ort ati A t Aline/ I-t1t1 &nAYi7a o ^TAcll gcll c t TT Ul L 1 1 1 i 1 ^ L 'J 1 1 . -ex 1 Uuilg \_X11 1 CXIU \Y O ct f-rOTinino ( ,K*»ic-f ion T^tittyaga r y , m T Aot 1 k of nn vjr cii unit; lntictii i ui |JUt)c. riuvuol ^xvctLim- rine). Illust. lb 1 1 r- a ^M^argarethe ; A. Tale of the Sixteenth Century. Illustrated. 1 OK * A/To rfrn ati ta • at I M A TTnffnciTinf 1 r 1 1 1 / 1 1 1 *n xrl ^\ >• -.vxcirguuriit; , or, xiitj xxugucxioi v^iiiiu. xayior l^YxlSS x.J ID 85 ^ATn t*i n n ' U Ul tllU Ct V Cll Lccll 111 flpntiirv Vy v_" i J till • 16° I ATa-rriafro Pnnlr i' TagptyVi ^ iTxdri idgc. v_/uuiv ^ousc|iiiy. 12° 1 X r;o •JU lviarriage, xrccitibe on v^nribiicui. jl/cIvio o 1 1 KCi 0\J iviary i^esiie s xriciis. »>icivcc\cr i iiciriict x>^. ID 1 1 no uo eATorofi'c TTpIa Aire Hnrn ( T T TllncT iviarsn & neip, *virs. x7ciiia \o. j.j xnust. ID 1 1 no uo ^Tiari\ rSj x 1 ox s x>ook 01. 19° 1 1 iviariyrs jnu ^xpoiogibLo. x rcBociist! ^n*. unj. 1 1 ou v Martyrs of the Catacombs. ID /D ->iari> r& io iiic xrdci v^ciust!. j\. v^oiiiriDuiion 10 iiie History of the Reformation. Hurst (J. F.) 1 9° DO Mary and I ; or, Forty Years with the Sioux. Riggs (otepnen tx.) 1 9° 1 OD Mason, Mrs. Mary W., Life of. With an Introduc- tion by Bishop Janes. 1 2° 1 25 Master and Pupil. The True Work of Education in Public Schools. Five Hundred Dollar Prize Stories. Illust. 10° 1 50 Master Missionaries. Studies in Horoic Pioneer Work. 12° 1 50 CATALOGUE OF BOOKS. 340 Masterpieces of Pulpit Eloquence. Fish (Henry C.) 8° $3 00 *Mat and Sofie. 18° 35 Maternal Duty. Abbott (J. S. C.) Illust. 16° 1 00 *Matthevv Frost, Carrier; or, Little Snow-drop's Mis- sion. Marshall (Emma). 16° 1 00 •Maude Grenville Library. Illust. 5 vols. In a box. 16° 5 00 Maude Grenville. Enoch Roden's Training. Heroism of Boyhood. Victor and Hilaria. The Children of the Great King. Maxwell, Lady, Life of. Lancaster (John). 12° 1 00 ♦May bee's Stepping-stones. Capron (Mary J.) 1 25 ♦May; or, Grandpa's Pet. Smith (Mrs. F. B.) Illust. 18° 75 ' ♦May Bell. The Devotion of a Young Girl to the Work appointed her by Filial Love and Chris- tian Faith. Illust. 16° 1 50 ♦May Dundas ; or, Passages in Young Life. Geld- art (Mrs. Thomas). 16°. 85 McClintock, John, D. D., LL. D., Life and Letters of. Crooks (George R.) 12° 1 50 Mediaeval and Modern Saints and Miracles. A Sharp, Searching Analysis of Roman Catholic Pretensions. 12° 1 50^ Meditations on the Actual State of Christianity. Guizot (M.) 12° 1 50 Meditations on the Essence of Christianity. Gui- zot (M.) 12° 1 50 ♦Mehetabel. A Story of the Revolution. Gardner (Mrs. H. C.) Illust. 16° 1 00 Memorable Scenes in French History. From the Era of Cardinal Richelieu to the Present Time. Smucker (Samuel M.) 12° 1 25 Memoir and Remains of the Rev. Robert Murray McCheyne. Bonar (Andrew A.) 12° 1 00 Memoir of Col. Charles S. Todd. Griffin (G. W.) 12° 1 50 Memoir of General William Francis Bartlett. Palfrey (F. W.) 16° 1 50 Memoirs of a Huguenot Family. Maury (Ann). 12° 175 Memories of Fifty Years. Containing Brief Bio- graphical Notices of Distinguished Americans, and Anecdotes of Remarkable Men, etc. Sparks (W. H.) 8° 2 50 350 CHURCH LIBRARIES. Memories of Patmos ; or, Some of the Great Words and Visions of the Apocalypse. Macduff (J. R.) 12° $1 25 Memorial Hour, The ; or, The Lord's Supper in its Relation to Doctrine and Life. Chaplin (Jer- emiah). 16° 1 50 Memorial Name, The. Reply to Bishop Colenso. MacWhorter (Alexander). 16° 1 00 Memorials of Frances Ridley Havergal. By her Sister. 12° 1 75 Memorials from Journals and Letters of Samuel Clarke. Edited by his Wife. 12° 2 00 •Men, Women, and Ghosts. Phelps (Elizabeth S.) 16° 1 50 Mendelssohn Family, The. (1729-1847.) From Letters and Journals. Hensel (Sebastian). Translated by Carl Klingemann and an Amer- ican Collaborator. Eight Portraits. 2 vols. 8° 5 00 Mental Discipline. Clark (D. W.) 18° 65 Mental Science, Elements of. Smith (M.) 12° 1 75 Mental Science. A Compendium of Psychology and History of Philosophy. Bain (Alex.) 12° 1 50 Meredith's, Owen, Poems. Household Edition. 12° 2 00 Mercy of God, Contemplations on the. Etheridge (J. W.) 18° 40 *Merry Times for Boys and Girls. Illust. 4° 1 25 Methodism, American, A Compendious History of. Abridged from the Author's History of the Methodist Episcopal Church. Stevens (Abel). Illust. 8° 3 00 Methodism, A Comprehensive History of. Em- bracing Origin, Progress, and Present Spiritual, Educational, Benevolent Status in all Lands. Porter (James). 12° 1 75 Methodism and its Methods. Crane (J. T.) 12° 1 25 Methodism and the Centennial of American Inde- pendence ; or, The Loyal and Liberal Services of the Methodist Episcopal Church during the First Century of the History of the United States. With a Brief History of the Various Branches of Methodism, and Full Statistical Tables. Wood (E. M.) 12° 1 50 CATALOGUE OF BOOKS. 351 Methodism, American. Statistical History of the r irsi v>eniury. vjoss ^-j to lvietiiouism anu me xt;iiipt;reweii.j 1 9° J.Z 1 1 uu TVTptlir>fU«5m TTprnps of "W^IcpIpv f.T R ^ ITXC HHJvllollJ , llclUCo V** " cl xv l_HJ ^ V*** J 12° 1 I ou Methodism, Heroines of. Coles (G.) 12° 1 00 ^Methodism, History of. For Our Young People. Bennett (W. W.) Illust. 16° 1 25 Methodism, History of. Stevens (A.) 3 vols. 12° 4 50 Methodism, Inside Views of. Reddy (W.) 18° 40 Methodism in the Field; or, Pastor and People. Potts (J. H.) With an Introduction by J. M. T> " rteia. lo 1 00 TVTotl inrliaTn in Wpet .Tprspv Rnvliolfl ( Cr A i iTXt^Lii\J\J.i.oiii in it col u vi oc y • ±\iL IO National Sermons. Haven (Gilbert). O 9 OO Nature and Life. Collycr (R.) 1 K(\ iNaiure 01 iji^mi, wmi a vjontjrai /vccouni oi x nys- Oi^finc T.iimmol ( "P 1 . ^ Tllncf it til VyLJUllyO. IjIIIIUIH 1 v / XllU&l. 19° 9 no iNaiurai vjoooness. iviercein (x. r. xv.j oo Natural History, Popular. AVood (J. Gr.) ft 0 o 1 7t; 1 /0 Nntnrnl TTisrnrv nf flip Rihlp TrisfrnTn (Tf "R ^ 19° X4 x o\j Antiit'ol Spipnpo OTirl "Rolifrinn rj-roir ( A cq ^ nidi o^iL/iict; tiiiLi it( i ij_, k )ii. vjritiy yjxtiai). 19° 1 (10 X UU Natural Theology. Paley (William). 2 vols. 1 ft 0 1 OU INJ o T*o 1 1 ci" Trio /"in 4*rifi Txi^Toi' A mi7nn T^o4*oc3 ixaiuiiUiM, xiitJ, (iii Lilt; xvivtJi xvniciAUii. x>ciic». o 9 ^0 OU *Ned and His Engine ; and Will and John. Two xiiitsrtjsiiiig ji/iigiisxi otontjs ior xxjys. xiiusi. 1 (\° i on 1 UU liuiguuor © xioubtJ, xiitJ. iwo ii cignooi ing ^ami- lies Contrasted. Shaw (Jennie R. ) Illust. ID 1 OU li eign uoi ly jl/Ov tj. mum. ID i no 1 UU '^Neither Rome nor Judah. Hoven (Ernest). Illust. IO 1 1 o 1 1U i>eison ( or, now a v^ouniry x>oy iviatiti xiis vvesmiin, or, ine x>aci ijriri. onowing xiiuian Character and Style of Life. Homespun (So- phia). Illust. ID i no 1 UU *New Commandment, The ; or, Ella's Ministry. Shaw (Jennie K.) Illust. 1 CO ID 1 oU New Divinity, System of, Examined. Hodgson (F.) 1 no 75 New England Bird-life. A Manual of New Eng- land Ornithology. Stearns (Winifred A.) AO 2 50 New England Divines, Sketches of. Sherman (D.) 12° 1 50 'JNew (jrralt on the ramily Iree, A. run oi trie Sweetness of Evangelical Religion. Alden (Mrs. (jr. K. [JransyJ.J Illust. 1 oo L2 1 50 New Life Dawning, and Other Discourses of the Late B. N. Nadal, D. D. 12° 1 50 ♦Newlyn House, the Home of the Davenports. Illust. 16° 1 25 New Plutarch Series, The. Lives of Men and Wo- men of Action. 13 vols. 12° el 00 Abraham Lincoln ; the Abolition of Slavery. With a Por- trait. Leland (Charles G.) Coligny : the Failure of the French Reformation. With a Portrait. Besant (Walter). Judas Maccaba;us and the Jewish War of Independence. Conder (Claude Reignier). 358 CHURCH LIBRARIES. New Plutarch Series. (Continued.) Victor Emmanuel ; the Attainment of Italian Unity. Dicey ^Edward). Joan of Arc ; the Expulsion of the English from France. Tuckey (Janet). Alexander the Great and His Age. Brodribb (W. J.) The Caliph Haroun al Raschid ; Saracen Civilization. Palmer (E. H.) Richelieu and His Court. Pollock (Walter Hemes). Hannibal and Carthaginian Civilization. Lee (Samuel). Harold Fair -hair and the Scandinavians. Magnusson (Erik). Charlemagne and His Time. Beesley (Prof.) Gustavus Adolphus. Garnett (Richard). Whittington, Lord Mayor of Loudon. Rice (James). New Puritan, The. New England Two Hundred Years Ago. .rike (J as. o. ) 1 oo 12 $1 DU New Testament Church Members. Adams (C.) 12° 75 New Testament Expounded and Illustrated. Moody (C.) CO o o DU New Testament History. [Abridged.] Maclear (Or. t.) 1 QO OA dU *JNext 1 rungs. A otory lor Little rolks. Alaen (Airs. \y. t\. i_ransjj.j lllllSt. 1 nn UU Nez Perce Joseph. An Aecount of His Ancestors, His Lands, His Confederates, His Enemies, His Murders, His War, His Pursuit and Cap- ture. Howard (0. U.) 8 50 *New York Bible Woman, The. Wright (Mrs. J. McNair). Illust. 1G° 1 10 *New York Needle- woman, The; or, Elsie's Stars. Illust. 16° 80 Night Lessons from Scripture. Sewell (E. M.) 16° 1 00 Night of Weeping. Bonar (Horatius). 18° 50 Nile Notes of a Howadji. A Volume of Eastern Travels. Curtis (George William). 12° 1 50 Nile Tributaries of Abyssinia. Baker (S. W.) 8° o 50 Nineteen Beautiful Years ; or, Sketches of a Girl's Life. Willard (Frances E.) 1G° 1 00 Nineteenth Century. The. A History. Mackenzie. (Roberta English Edition. 12° 1 50 Nineveh, Discoveries at. Layard (A. H.) Illust. 12° 1 75 •Nita's Music-lesson, and Other Stories. Illust. 18° 40 Nix's Offerings. Benning (H.) Illust. 10° 1 25 •No Such Word as Fail. Illust. 12° 1 00 CATALOGUE OF BOOKS. 359 Noble Deeds of American Women. Clement (F.) Illust. 1 oo 11 flfcl OK !j>1 lo ♦Noble Life, A; or, Hints for Living. Kingsbury (0. A.) 1 fio 1 OK 1 10 *Noble Printer, The, and His Adopted Daughter. A Story of the First Printed Bible. Translated, with additions, by Campbell Overend. Illust. 1 ft 0 1 00 *Noble Workers. Sketches of Men who have risen to Distinction. Edited by o. Jb . bmith. Illust. 11 1 DU ♦Nobody but Nan. i lo QK oo *'Nora Crena. How She Saved Her Own. Meade (L. F.) 11 1 OK 1 lo Normans in Europe, The. Johnson (A. H.) 16° 1 00 ^iNorse Lite, A lale oi. rsoyesen (ri. ti.) 11 1 ok 1 lo Norse Mythology. Anderson (R. B.) 1 oo 11 0 KC\ 1 Q\J *North Pole Voyages. Embracing Sketches of the Important Facts and Incidents in the Latest American Efforts to Reach the North Pole, from the Second Grinnell Expedition to the Polaris. Mudge (Z. A.) 16° 1 AA 1 00 ♦North-west, Early History of the. Hildreth (S. P.) 16° QK OO North American Antiquities, The. Short (John T.) Illust. 8° Q AA ♦Not Bread Alone; or, Miss Helen's Neighbors. Drinkwater (Jennie M.) 16° 1 25 ♦Note-book of the Bertram Family. A Sequel to Winifred Bertram. By the Author of the Schonberg-Cotta Family. 12° 1 00 ♦Nothing Venture, Nothing Have. Haven (Mrs. A.B.) 12° 1 AA 1 00 *Now and Forever. Leslie (Mrs. M.) 12° 1 00 Nubia and Abyssinia. Russell (M.) 18° 75 Obligations of the World to the Bible. Spring (Gardiner). 8° 2 00 Observations in the East. Durbin (J. P.) 2 vols. 12° O AA *Object of Life. Illustrating the Insufficiency of the World and the Sufficiency of Christ. Illust. 16° 1 00 ♦Odd One, The. Payne (A. M. Mitchell). 16° 1 25 Odes of Horace. Translated into English Verse. Martin (Theodore). 16° 1 00 Odyssey of Homer, The. W. C. Bryant's Trans- lation. 12° 3 00 360 CHURCH LIBRARIES. Office of the Holy Communion in the Book of Common Prayer. A Series of Lectures. Goul- burn ( rLi. M.) 12° $1 00 Official Guide-book to Philadelphia. Westcott ( 1 hfihir^CAn 1 Tllno4- ^ -UlUIlipfeUIl ). XllUSl. 16° 1 50 umuai -Aiemoeis oi tne Metnouist Lpiscopal t^nurcn, Helps to. ± orter (James). 16° 70 kjha ana i\ew rrienas. ine otory has Pathos and xvcii^iuus Aunt;, v/iivci ^ivianaj. must. i no J Z 1 50 \jh\ ^naieau, xiie. ivicj\.eever ^Harriet), lllust. 16° 1 50 Old England : Its Scenery, Art, and People. Hop- pin (James M.) 16° 1 75 Old Friends and New. Jewett (Miss Sarah 0.) 18° 1 25 * ,: 01d Humphrey, Half-hours with. Mogridge (Geo.) 16° 85 "Old Looking-glass, The. Charles worth (Maria L.) lllust. 16 1 00 T Ula 3larket- cart, ±ne. A Pleasant iNarrative of country l^iie. omitn (Mrs. r. ±>. j must. 1 oo lo 75 uici portmanteau. Hamilton (Jvate \\.) must. 1 GO lb 1 00 "Old Schoolfellows, and AVhat Became of Them. Tllnef must. 1 P.O lo 1 1 ZD uui otone riouse, ine. lviarcn (Annaj. must. lo 1 50 *01d Tales Retold from Grecian Mythology in Talks Around the Fire. Lamed (Augusta). lllust. 1 oo 12 1 70 Old Testament Characters Delineated and Illus- trated. Floy (James). J - 1 1 Eft oU yjid lestament riisiory. a unug^u. i>iacit3cir ^vj. t.) lo on oU Old Testament Shadows of New Testament Truths. Abbott ( Lyman), must. QO O o a AA Oldtown rolks. htowe (n. ±>.) 1 oo 12 1 r a 50 Ula w ells .uug uut. oermons oi ±. uevvitt lai- mage. 1 oo 1Z J 00 *01io, Boys' and Girls'. An Interesting Work for Children, lllust. 1 oo oU *01ive Loring's Mission. Lawrence (Annie M.) must. 1 0° 1 1 ZD -Oliver of the Mill. Charlesworth (Maria L.) 12° 1 50 *0n Board the Rocket. Adams (R. C.) lllust. 12° 1 50 *0n Both Sides of the Sea. A Story of the Com- monwealth and the Restoration. Being a Sequel to "The Draytons and Davenants." By the Author of "The Schbnberg-Cotta Family." 12° 1 00 CATALOGUE OF BOOKS. 361 Un tiic l urauies. vxuuine ( i nomas j. xnusi. 19° OO Un tlic 1 imiis and Among me r t)iunger \x. x.) 00 *Once Upon a Time. Brown (E. E.) 1U i i. 2fi 'une ^uiei lAiQ. toiler ^ivus. j. o.) must. 12° 1 25 *une x ear oi iviy J-iiie. must. i X *0nly Ned ; or, Grandma's Message. Drink water ( T "M" \ (J. M.) 1fi° io 1 I _ O *Only Way Out, The. A Temperance Story of the Highest Order. Willing (Jennie F.) 1 1 50 *Onward to the Heights of Lite. Illust. 1 *0pen Letters to Primary Teachers. With Hints to Intermediate Class Teachers. Crafts (Mrs. W. F.) 12° OA 80 Upen 1 olar beas. Hayes (1. 1.) oo o o O /0 Orators and Statesmen of Ancient and Modern Times, The Most Eminent. Harsha (David A.) With Portraits. OO o 50 Oratory and Orators. Matthews (Wm.) 1 oo 9 00 Oriental Missions, Our. India, China, and Bul- garia. Thomson (Edward). 2 vols. 1 oo o 00 Origin of Nations, The. Rawlinson (G.) 1 JUI lit llcl ) . xo 1 X 1 5 ^Parsnnono in Tnrlio Tlio Ar1i»r»fpf1 ■frr»Tr» +Vip r5pr<« X ivi bUiitiyc ill XllUld, 1 lit. I\ tliip LUtX ilUXXl tllC Utl man. iticxtttiucii ^i>irH. v/uriitjiidj. iO 1 X vu Pa ccinrr r FTir»nfrn+a r>n T?r»l iorinn RpwpII TF. "\T ^ xaoblxlg XilUllglltB wix xvt/iiynjxx. U^WCU \ J-J. XTA. y 1U 1 X 00 Taaf in flip Frp«?pnt Thp "^^hat is Givilizntion ? 1 tloL 111 11 lO X 1 LotlUj XllCi TT Xlal iO \yl \ XXX£i£ilXWXX i Mitphpll ( Arthur^ Tllnst lYXllA lldl ^ ill LltUl j. XllUftL. 8° 0 0 00 Pastor and People ) 01% Methodism in the Field. X OILS \o . XX. ) XD 1 X Pastor's Sketches ; or, Conversations with Anxious Inquirers Respecting the Way of Salvation. opencer ^x. o.j vois. JO 9 Art UU Pastoral Office in the Methodist Episcopal Church. Wythes (J. H.) 18° 25 Pastoral Theology. The Pastor in the Various Du- ties of His Office. Murphy (Thomas). 8° 3 00 *Path of Life ; or, Sketches of the Way to Glory and Immortality. Wise (D.) 12° 85 364 CHURCH LIBRARIES. xdxiGiii; oubitj , or, it flying iiig ivxorigagc. must. 1 A° 10 Oi Art $>1 uu X ilLlcllL TV dXlIIlg X> O XjOoO. 1 9° 1 OA 1 UO T-*d i"ri Q Tr* n Q 1 A o*o • sw HPl-io TTic+/~tt/t\t' nncl T?oli Smith iTM X.^ttctL. OiXXXlXX ^VJ.^ o 9 7ti *Paul Morris Millpr CMarv C 1 Tllimt 1fi° xu 1 9^ x _o Paul tViP ^VTi««inr»nrv T'sivlnr fWrn AT ^ Tllnef x niu Lxic A»xxo&iuxi£ti y . xctynjx ^ tt xxi. ivx. ^ xiiuou 1 9° X oo Pp vcnn Ppv F.rlwfird 1^) T) Mpmpntns r»f Tfln*a A<£yoV-/Xl, XVUVt XjUYVmIUj I-/* X_-/ . , llXUXUUXitvo Ult tJcIIiCo ("Edwin L ^ 12° 1 25 x dyouxij i tit; iTXULici x>uy. xo Poarla nf Thnnrrht TTrlitorl \\\r AfatiiTriTi 1VT Pallrrn redns oi xxiougxit. xMiiieu. oy iviciiurin ivx. jjaiiou. XO i fin 1 00 Ppn v Philricrir»ho'r T'Vio Fnn n rl orl nn tho x cfiotiiiL xjyjy x xixxijofjiyiid • xiil. x uuxiixcix kjh ihc H Q T*l \T T i to r\T TrnrnrncnTi trio ^hDTvnDyn T^/nr A c— xiidxiy x-iiit3 oi X? urguson, uio oixcpxicxu x>oy as 4"l*/^n rim or TVTo'irl-TOT.ir ^ T T \ uoxxuiiicx. iTXdy xic vv y±x.j XO 1 9^ *Ppnnlpci ri*rfcnn fno PTTrrilr ftorrii r\n g tn ilhilfl'ro'ri XCUUICiJ XXtJXXI LilC XJIUUJrV. kJCIIIUJIIS HJ V/X11XU.J CXI. Npwtnn iPiplm'rd^ 11 \_> TV LVJ11 I lllL llcll 1 ■ xu x — u Por*lr Pov rT-onrnro T) T~) T/ifo onrl Timoc rvf Writ. X LLh, XVCV. UCiJIgC, X/. X^.j XjLXC dlllX XXXXXCO OA. f? Illr +OTT rnr l-ii mcolf It Xl Uy XXllllotill. 1 9° i Kn 1 ou PofTnlin* Pomelo A • r~kT PoQiitv iri PaiTiqtipo Pair*!*! X tLUllill X t,U|JlC, xX j tJI • XVCtlllLy XXX XVUIXlclllLC. XJcllLIl \ w 1111am o. j 1 9° '■'T^ooTia o 4- miT SiiTiri q v-cr* n nri! c i^q \j \ c^r I Alfi*orl\ x ceps ctt uixx ouxxuety -ouxxutjiB. xttyxux ^xxixicix^. -l no X _ i on X OO xGGp x)Gxllxl(x lilC oCGIlGS, A. VV UIlOII ALTS. J lllUSl. 1 A 0 1 OK 1 ZD XTccIJ OX Xydy f UX, XI utllcb UL XLiclX llcbL XvcllglOllb Instructions. Illust. 1 ft° 00 ^Porpv T? o \tA nn A Strirx' r»f Splf.fnnmipct T oclio xciL,y xvftyiXL'xx. xv otuxy ux ocxx-^Tjxi^ucBt. x-icoixt; fF-mmR 1 ) Tllnst 16° 1 00 xo 1 9^ 1 — o Pfvrfppf T,nvP WnnH A ^ 12° X —'J X LI ILL t XYXdll^ X lit? ^ L*I j i VJULll^ T i f o Tr\r> pg /'TTqttvi 16° i no X KAJ X tJI&UU \JJl VyXXi lotj XXXC/* kJCXX^lJX yX XXXlXLJy* 12° X £0 X crbUIXHl XJlXUZ L X-iApictlXXtJLl clXXLX XjXXXUX CtUX. it X&t/ ^ X-/. J 94° 9^ PiaroATial T i f o /^vf T^qtti^ T ivir,nrctr\np "Rlci iL'TO XtJioUIldl XjIXc \JL ±JcL V ILX XjX\ IIlgoLUXlt;. XJXdXiVXt? l »T liiXctXXX VJ • J 8° 3 50 x Gicr tiiG ivpostiG. ±ayior [ » m. ivi.j 1 9° 1 OO ^Potor tno A TM^TOTitirTO A TTicfTi'rir*Ql 'icilo r\\ tno x tier tile i\. L>pxt;iiiH-.t*. xx xTxibiuixctii x. ) 1 A° ID i i c\c\ UU Platfnrm PsirkPrtt* A rirlrpecpu riiBpnaeinno ar\A TTo- X latlVJI ill 1 a[iCJ o . XxUUICooCo, XyiB^lXooIUIIo, dXXvX X_jo save, nn Sr»pifi1 TVTnml an^l T?pliorir»nc SnWopfo o<£j O yjll LJKJ\slcllf JIUIalj dXl\X XVCIl^IUlXo OlXUJcL-lo. Curry (Daniel). 19° 1 Of T^latn'fi T-lf»cf T^VinnnrVi+a f^r\n^i r-vi 1 cwl frnm T*»-/-\f T/->-nr X lalU O XJCOl/ XXIUUgXIlS. V^UIIl LJXlcU XI U III XlUI. JOW" ptt'a. TVimclfi ti r\Ti r»f flip Tlialnnrnocj nf TMa+rk CLL o X X cUlalcl L-IUII OX LXXC X-'ItXIUi£lXC& UX XlcilU. xjixCKicy ^i^. XX. xx. J go o z oU *Play-days. Stories for Children. Jewett (Sarah 0.) 16° 1 50 ♦Pleasant Pathways. Persuasives to Early Piety. Wise (Daniel). 1 oo 1 00 Pledge and the Cross, The. [Temperance. 3 Henry ^ivirs. o. ivi. i.j 1 UO xius dixu. iviiiiuo , or, xxie x>rictnuge xrooiem. xeu lArrhip') Tllnsr xo 1 X ^0 ou xiixTdrcii s xjives. x/dngnorne i^doiin anci » niiam.j o o Z ry/i UU ^TMxrTYirmT \~i artr\ tVio "PilrrrimG • nr Tr\/^irlci"nTc onrl A /-l X Xy IXXULXLIX cllXU tXXC XllglXIXXO, UX , XliL-XUCIllS dllU XiU- VcXXLlXlCB UX LIIC XII&L kJCLLlCXO. XJctXX V okpt Mpaonrp Thp Aldpn (Mrs G P TPflimvl 'i X UlvlVCL ^TXCClOlXI C, XXXC. XX11XCXX yXfXIO- V_I . XV. [_X dXXoVJ.^ 12° 1 X XUclIXo. XXCI UCX L ftlXU > aUg'lliUI. XVI \ CX &XVXC XL/U1L1UX1. o 1 X ( 0 xUcxxlb ill v^uxxiUctxxy wnxi v^nxiui cxi. x iaii ^i>xx&. C M "R Tllnct O. Al. Jj.) XllUSL. 1fi° ID 1 1 -0 XUcXxio. X^ill CUIXX ^XjIXO )• 1 fi° XO 1 X -O TV\oma TTci vprcrnl ^ FrQTiPPt! T?ir11p\r^ flflmnlpfp X UCXllO. XXQ 1 ^frkrlr« r»f TT T^incfpllnw T-Tnn«f>Vmhl A Ot_ IH ill VT yJL IxO Ul XXi TT ■ J~d\J LLglKZ l l\J W • XXUUQclUJlU. jMiiuon. 19° 9 Art Z UU xoeticai vv otks oi v^ii<*u.Ltjr. x^untju uy vriniuiri. 3 vols. «° o K OK 0 ZO xoeticai worKS oi wwen lvienjuixii. xiouseiioiu iMiiuon. 9 on Z UU xoeticai w orKS oi jonn \x. ottxe. 1 OU xoeticai w orKS oi Aiirea. xeiiiiyoon. rxou&ciioiu HiUition. 1 9° LZ 9 rtrt z uu Poetical Works of Bayard Taylor. Household Edition. 12° 9 AA z UU •Poetry for Children. Edited by Samuel Elliott. 16° 40 Poetry for Home and School. Edited by Anna C. Brackett and Ida M. Eliot. 16° 1 OX. 1 zo Poets, Quotations from the, Moral and Religious. Rice (Wm.) 8° 9 Xf\ Z OU Pointed Papers. For the Christian Life. Cuyler (T. L.) 12° 1 OU Politics for Young Americans. Nordhoff (Charles). 16° 70 Political Romanism. Hughey (G. W.) 12° 1 ZD •Pomponia; or, the Gospel in Caesar's Household. Webb (Mrs.) Illust. 16° 1 OU •Poor Boy, The, and the Merchant Prince ; or, Ele- ments of Success drawn from the Life of Amos Lawrence and Other Similar Characters. Thayer (Wm. M.) 16° 1 rtrt Pope, Temporal Power of the. McClintock (J.) 12° Krt OU Popery and its Aims. Moody (Granville). 12° yfrt 4U Popery, Dialogues on. Stanley (J.) 18° 1 X 40 *Poplar Row, A Year at. Ellenwood (March). 16° 1 Art 1 UU Popular Amusements. Crane (J. T.) 12° 85 Popular Antiquities. Brand (John). 3 vols. 12° 7 50 Popular Astronomy. Mitchel (0. M.) 12° 1 75 •Popular Library of History for Young People. Illust. 4 vols. In a box. 16° 3 75 Stories of Old England. Count Ulrich of Lindburg. History of the Crusades. The Hero of Brittany. 368 CHURCH LIBRARIES. Popular Science Library, The. A Series of Popu- lar Books on Science. 5 vols. 12° e$l 00 Health. Smith (Edward). The Natural History of Man. Quatrefages (A. de). Trans- lated from the French by Eliza A. Youmans. The Science of Music. Taylor (Sedley). Outline of the Evolution Philosophy. Gazelles (E.) Trans- lated from the French by O. B. Frothingham. English Men of Science, their Nature and Nurture. Galton (Francis). *Posie, the Minister's Daughter. Illust. 16° 1 00 Positive Theology. Lowrey (A.) 12° 1 25 Potiphar Papers. Curtis (G. W.) 12° 1 50 Power of Prayer, The. Illustrated in Wonderful Displays of Divine Grace at Fulton Street and Other Meetings in New York and Elsewhere. Prime (S. I.) 12° 1 50 Power, The Gift of. Piatt (S. H.) 12° 1 00 Practical Christianity. Designed Especially for Young Men. Abbott (John S. C.) 16° 1 00 Prayer and its Remarkable Answers. Patton (W. W.) 12° 2 00 Prayer and the Prayer Gauge. Hopkins (Mark). 16° 75 Prayer, Helps to. A Manual Designed to Aid Christian Believers in Acquiring the Gift, and in Maintaining the Practice of Prayer, in the Closet, the Family, the Social Gatherings, and the Public Congregations. Kidder (D. P.) 12° 1 50 Prayer-meeting and its Improvement, The. Thomp- son (Lewis O.) 16° 1 25 Prayer-meetings, Importance of. Young (R,) 18° 25 Prayers of the Ages. Compiled by Caroline S. Whitmarsh. 12° 1 50 Prayer of Faith. Judd (Carrie F.) 18° 50 Prayer, Secret and Social. TrcfTry (R.) 18° 40 Praying and Working. What Men Can do When in Earnest. Stevenson (Wm. F.) 1G° 1 00 Preachers' Manual. Including Clavis Biblica, and A Letter to a Methodist Preacher. Clarke (A.) and Coke. 12° 85 Preaching Required by the Times. Stevens (Abel). 12° 85 ♦Precept upon Precept. Peep-of-day Series. 1G° 50 CATALOGUE OF BOOKS. 3G9 ♦Precious Gems for the Savior's Diadem. Shipton (Anna). 16° $0 75 Pre-historic World, The. Berthet (Elie). 12° 1 50 Pre- historic Nations. Baldwin (J. D.) 12° 1 75 Pre-historic Times. As Illustrated by Ancient Remains and the Manners and Customs of Modern Savages. Lubbock (Sir John). Illust. 8° 5 00 Preparing to Teach. For Sunday-school Teachers, etc. Hall (John) and Others. Illust. 12° 1 75 Primary Truths of Religion. Clark (Thos. M.) 12° 1 00 Primitive Church, Constitution of. King (Lord). 12° 85 •Prince and the Page, The. A Story of the Last Crusade. Yonge (C. M.) Illust, 12° 1 25 Prince of Good Fellows, The. [Temperance.] Wil- mer (Margaret E.) 12° 1 25 Prince of the House of David. Ingraham (J. H.) 12° 2 00 Princes of Art, The. Engravers, Painters, Sculp- tors, and Architects. Urbino (Mrs. S. R.) Illust. 12° 2 00 •Prince of Pulpit Orators. A Portraiture of Rev. George Whitefield, M. A. Illustrated by An- ecdotes and Incidents. Wakeley (J. B.) 16° 1 00 Principles of Education, Drawn from Nature and Revelation and Applied to Female Education in the Upper Classes. Sewell (E. M.) 12° 2 00 Principles of Geology ; or, The Modern Changes of the Earth and its Inhabitants Considered as Illustrative of Geology. Lyell (C.) Illust. with Maps, Plates, etc. 2 vols. 8° 8 00 Prison Life. Memorials of. Finley (J. B.) 12° 1 25 *Pro and Con. A Story for Boys and Girls. Swift (Maggie). Illust. 16° 1 25 Probationers' Manual. Bass (E. C.) 18° 30 Problem of Evil. Translated from the French of M. Ernest Naville. Lacroix (John P.) 12° 1 25 Problem of Religious Progress, The. . Dorches- ter (D.) 12° 2 00 Prodigal Son. Four Discourses. Punshon (W. M.) 12° 25 ♦Progress of Science, The. A Short History of Natural Science for Schools and .Young People. Buckley (A. B.) 12° 2 00 Prohibitionists' Text-book, The. 12° 1 00 370 CHURCH LIBRARIES. xiumioe a- iure, opecidL x uiic nun, ciiiu. x roper xiiierpreia- Lion. x 1 tiirudiriL v 1 */ ft 0 9 t;r» ^ ou xiopnei oi x 1 ire, xne , ur, jlikj x^ne aim ximes oi Eli i ah Macduff (J R ) 12° 1 50 T^rriv T orV\a nf SnlrkmAn T1 ] n Qtrfi tp*1 \\\r H ic;tnrif»'i1 X I \J V "I Uo OvJ . xn ixcii tl'JiJll UHUCIU must. 12° 2 50 "Pmvprhinl "PH il nennh v atin Othpr Popms Tunnpr A 1UVCI Ulal 1 iHlU&UUUVj ctllvA V/LI1CI 1 VJCLUoi XLl^'^icI (M F ) 12° X _J Prnrprlis nnrl tlipir TJK,ll;ir- X LX I J 1 1 k> * J V C I XV 1X1^ CI XI VI X/t/tyttLCj XLU'.UIJIV ULO \J k» -J-JCXJ. row o ^ ij. aa j 1 9© 1 9^ "Pnlrnt Flnnnpnpp nf flip "\^iTiPtppri \\\ f^PTitnrv TMcTi X U.1JJ1L X-ilv*L£lXC.iX\_,C Ul tXXC 11 1XXC LCCXX til V-/ C XX L IX 1 V • X loiX /TTpnrv f! ^ ^xxciii y v^. ^ R° O ^ 00 "Pn»\ilc r\f ^if Tr^Tin fl*iP Hi^'ino "V^rvnrro AT ^ x Upilo yJL >~L. OU1111 ILlc X/lvlIIc. X Ullge ( v. .Al.) 8° 0 x to Pnrlfon T?OT' r / , il n f inn T^Vip f-» n T"r1 i n o Q ^ x LuiLiiii xvc\ uiuLiuii, xiie> vjctitxiiiei ^o. u. j 1 A 0 1 OA Pnrcnif nf rTrillTlPCG A Npnnpl fn ^' T^l^mirrVifG r\n A UIOUH Ul XlUllllCoS. A tJCl[UcI LU XIlUUgllLS Ull Pprsnnnl Pplicrinn " C-ir»nlV>nrn (~\? AT ^ X CI oUllcll XVCll^lUll- V'ULIIULIIII ^ ±iL, ) 190 1 — Pursuit of Knowledge Under Difficulties: Its Pleas- ures and Rewards. Illustrated by Memoirs of "P , TYiinpnt ATpn f^rculr ( C^c±r\rtm T ^ 9 -t-nlo XjLiiiiicii t *ucii. vyi tuiv ivjreuiize J-i. I *- \uio. 1 90 O PA O W ; PiicViinrr AVipqH • nr Tlicr TlrnfTiPr T^iax'o Pond lT?A- x Uoiiiiig rviicdu > ui , x-» J o uiuuici xycivc. xvdiiu. ^ hajl xtirt rrl A \ Tllliaf YVcvlU- Ai J XllUoL. xo 1 9^ ADKAiLf). a xdie ui nie >» uri(i m Liie v^iiurcu. I nc 1 1 D i T. ry"i iriQ ) Tllncf IjcbIIc [ Hjiiiiiici ) . iiilial. 1 9% Queens of England, Lives of, from the Xorman Conquest. Parker (Caroline G.) 190 1 9^ Queen of Xavarre, The Protestant. The Mother of the Bourbons. Townsend ("Virginia, i .) 4 11- 1USI. xu 1 9^ v^uccii x^uuisa ul x riiabici , ur, uuuuiicss in a r «iicicc Erom (T-prmnn Sources Efurst ^Catherine E ) Illust. 10° 85 r Queer Lesson, A, and Other Stories. Illust. 18° 40 Queer People. Illust. Bennett (Mrs. M. A.) 10° 1 00 Quinn, Rev. J., Life and Labors of. Wright (J. F.j 12° 75 CATALOGUE OF BOOKS. 371 ♦Rabaut and Bridaine. From the French of L. L. F. Bungener. A Continuation of the Fasci- nating Story of " Louis XV and His Times." Illust. 12° $1 50 Races of European Turkey, The. Their History, Condition, and Future Prospects. Clark (Ed- son L.) 8° 3 00 Races of the Old World, The. 8° 2 50 Rachel Weeping for Her Children. Vansant (N.) Introduction by C. N. Sims. 18° 65 ♦Rainbow Side. Edwards (Mrs. C. M.) Illust. 16° 1 00 ♦Raleigh, Sir Walter, Life and Times of, Pioneer of Anglo-American Colonization. True (C. K.) 16° 1 00 ♦Ralph and Dick. A Sea Story. Kingston ( W. H. G.) Illust. 16° 1 00 ♦Ralph's Possessions. A Revelation of the Deeper, Heartfelt Life. Hopkins (George). Illust. 1G° 1 50 Rambles Among Insects. Findley (Samuel). Illust. 16° 1 25 Rambles in Wonder-land ; or, Up the Yellowstone and Among the Geysers. Stanley (Edwin J.) Illust. 12° 1 25 Randolphs, The. The Characters so interesting in "Household Puzzles" appear again. Alden (Mrs. G. R. [Pansy].) 12° 1 50 Raphael and Michael Angelo. Duppa (R.) 12° 2 50 *Rare Piece of Work, A. Chamberlain (P. B.) 16° 1 00 Rationalism, Evangelical; or, A Consideration of Truths Practically Related to Man's Probation. Knox (L. L.) 16° 1 25 Rationalism, History of. Hurst (J. F.) 8° 3 00 ♦Rays from the Sun of Righteousness. Newton * (Richard). Illust. 16° 1 25 Real and Pretended Christianity. Townsend (L. T.) 16° 50 ♦Real Folks. Whitney (Mrs. A. D. T.) Illust. 12° 1 50 Reconciliation of Science and Religion. Winchell ; (Alex.) 12° 2 00 Recovery of Jerusalem, The. A Narrative of Ex- ploration, and Discovery of the City and the Holy Land. Wilson (Capt.) Illust. 8° 3 50 Recreations in Astronomy. With Directions for Practical Experiments and Telescopic Work. Warren (W. H.) Illust. 12° 1 75 372 CHURCH LIBRARIES. *Red Apple, The, and Other Stories. Must. 18° $0 40 Reformed Pastor. Baxter (Richard). 12° 65 Reindeer, Dogs, and Snow-shoes. A Journal of Si- berian Travel and Explorations, made in the Years 1865-7. Bush (R. J.) 8° 3 00 Relation of Civil Law to Ecclesiastical Polity, Prop- erty, and Discipline. Strong (Wm.) 12° 1 25 Relation of Science and Religion. Calderwood (EL) 12° 1 75 Religion of Childhood. Hibbard (Freeborn G.) 12° 1 50 Religion in China. Edkins (Joseph). 8° 2 50 Religions of China, The. Legge (Jas.) 12° 1 50 Religion and the Reign of Terror ; or, The Church during the French Revolution. Prepared from the French of M. Edmond De Pressense. La- croix (J. P.) 12^ 1 50 Religion of the Family. \\ lley (I. \V .) 16° 90 Religion, Philosophy of. Dick (T.) 18° 45 -Religion Recommended to louth. Thayer (Mrs.) 24° 25 Religion the u eal and Need of the Church. Stew- ard (G.) 12° 75 Religious Training of Children. Ohn (S.) 18° 20 Religions of the World, The, and Their Relations to Christianity. Maurice (F. D.) 12° 1 75 Remains of Lost Empires. Sketches of the Ruins of Palmyra, Nineveh, Babylon, ani Persepolis. With Some Notes on India and the Cashmer- ian Himalayas. Myers (P. V. N.) Illust. 8° 3 50 Remarkable Events in the World's Historv. Young (L. H.) 12° 1 25 Remarkable Examples of Moral Recovery. 18° 40 Remarkable Providences, Illustrating the Divine Government. 12° 1 75 Reminiscences by Thomas Carlyle. Edited by Jas. A. Froude. (Illust.) 16° 50 *Renata of Este. From the German of Rev. Carl Strack. Hurst (Catherine E.) 16° 1 00 Rent Vail, The. Bonar (Horatius). 16° 1 25 Resurgit. A Collection of Hymns and Songs of the Resurrection. Edited with Biographical and Historical Notes. Foxcroft (Frank). 12° 2 00 Resurrection of the Dead. Kingsley (C.) 18° 35 Revivals, Promotion of, Helps to the. Watson (J. V.) 12° 85 CATALOGUE OF BOOKS. 373 Revivals of Religion. Showing their Theory, Means, Obstructions, Importations, and Perversions, with the Duty of Christians in Regard to Them. Revised and Enlarged Edition. Por- ter (James). 12° $1 00 Revolt of the Netherlands, The. Trial and Execu- tion of Counts Egmont and Horn, and the Siege of Antwerp. Schiller (Frederick). 12° 1 00 *Rhoda's Corner. Payne (Mrs. A. M. Mitchell). 16° 1 25 Richards, Lucy, Memoir of. 18° 40 *Riches without Wings. Illustrated by Lessons from Life. Illust. 12° 1 50 Ride through Palestine. Dulles (John W.) Illust. 12° 2 00 Right Way. Lectures on the Decalogue. Crane (J. T.) 12° 80 Rivers and Lakes of Scripture. Tweedie (W. K.) Illust. 1G° 1 00 *Riverside Farm, A Year at. Miller (Emily Hunt- ington). Illust. 10° 85 *Rob and Mag ; or, A Little Light in a Dark Corner. Marston (L.) Illust. 1G° 75 Rob Roy, The, on the Jordan, Nile, Red Sea, and Gennesareth, etc. A Canoe Cruise in Palestine and Egypt and the Waters of Damascus. Mae- gregor (J.) Maps and Illust. 8° 2 50 *Robbie Meredith. Cotter (Mrs. J. J.) Illust. 16° 1 00 Robert Dick, Baker of Thurso, Geologist and Bota- nist. Smiles (S.) Illust. 12° 1 50 *Robin Tremayne : A Tale of the Marian Persecu- tion. Holt (Emily S.) 12° 1^0 Robinsons, The. Bissell (Mary L.) Illust. 1G° 1 25 Rocky Mountains. History of the Exj>editions under the command of Captains Lewis and Clarke, etc., during the Years 1804, 1805, 1806. 2 vols. 18° 1 50 Roddy's Ideal. Johnson (Helen K.) 10° 1 00 Roddy's Reality. Johnson (Helen K.) 1G° 1 00 Roddy's Romance. Johnson (Helen K.) 16° 1 00 Rogers, Hester Ann, Journal of. 16° 60 Rollins's Ancient History. 2 vols. 8° 4 50 Romance of American History. De Yere (M. S.) 12° 1 50 Romance of the Harem. Leono wens (Mrs. Anna H.) 12° 1 25 37-4 CHURCH LIBRARIES. Eomance of M. Renan and the Christ of the Gos- pels. Schaff (P.) and Roussel (M.) 12° $1 00 Romance of the Revolution. Being True Stories of Heroic Exploits of the Days of '76. Bunce (Oliver B.) 12° 1 25 •Romance without Fiction ; or, Sketches from the Portfolio of an Old Missionary. Bleby (Henry). 1 must 16° 1 50 Romanism, Delineation of. Elliott (C.) 2 vols. 8° 5 00 Rome and Italy at the Opening of the (Ecumenical Council. Depicted in Twelve Letters written from Rome to a Gentleman in America. Pres- sense (Edmond De). 12° 1 25 ♦Romneys of Ridgemont, The. Eastman (Julia A.) Illust. 16° 1 50 ♦Rosa Leighton; or, In His Strength. [Temper- ance.] Martin (Mrs. M. F.) 12° 75 ♦Rosamond Dayton. Gardner (Mrs. H. C.) 16° 1 25 ♦Rose and Millie. By the Author of ''Hester's Happy Summer." Illust. 16° 1 25 ♦Rosedale. A Story of Self-denial. Gardner (Mrs. H. C.) 12° 1 50 Rosedale Library, The. Illust. 6 vols. 16° C 00 Henry Arden ; or, It Is Only a Pin. Honest Gabriel ; or, The Reward of Perseverance. Joe Fulwood ; or. Honesty and Perseverance Triumphant. Kate Kemp and the Swan's Egg. Little Jane ; or, The Reward of Well-doing. The Little German Drummer-Boy. ♦Rose Marbury. Pritchard (S. J.) _16° 125 ♦Rosy Dawn Stories, The. For Small Children. Illust. 6 vols. In a box. 18° 3 60 The Picnic Party. The Twin Brothers. The Water-cress Girl. The Violet Girls. The Little Indian. The Two Birthdays. Round the World. A Series of Letters. Kingsley (Calvin). 2 vols. 12° 2 00 Royal Bounty ; or, Evening Thoughts for the King's ' Guests. Havergal (F. R.) 18° 25 Royal Commandments; or, Morning Thoughts for the King's Servants. Havergal ( F. R.) 18° 25 Royal Invitation ; or, Daily Thoughts on Coming to Christ. Havergal (F. R) 18° 25 CATALOGUE OF BOOKS. 375 ♦Royal Preacher. Lectures on Ecclesiastes. Hamil- ton (James). 16° $1 25 Eoyal Responses; or, Daily Melodies for the King's Minstrels. Havergal (F. R.) 18° 25 *Royal Road to Fortune. Miller (Emily H.) Illust. 16° 1 25 * Roy's Dory at the Sea-shore. A Sequel to " Push- ing Ahead." Rand (Edward A.) Illust. 16° 1 25 ♦Ruby Hamilton. Full of Stirring Incident and Earnest Christian Lessons. Oliver (Marie). Illust. 16° 1 50 ♦Rue's Helps. Drinkwater (Jennie M.) 12° 1 50 *Rufus the Unready. Farquharson (Martha). Illust. 16° 1 25 ♦Rule and Exercises of Holy Living. Taylor (Jer- emy). 18° 75 Rule and Exercises of Holy Dying. Taylor (Jer- emy). 18° 75 Rule of Faith. Appeal from Tradition. Peck (G.) 12° 1 00 Ruskin on Painting. With a Biographical Sketch. 18° GO ♦Ruth and Her Friends. A Story for Girls. Illust. 16° 1 00 *Ruth Erskine's Crosses. Showing the Power of the Word of God to Teach and Comfort. Alden (Mrs. G. R. [Pansy].) Illust. 12° 1 50 ♦Ruth Hawthorne ; or, Led to the Rock. Illust. 16° 1 25 Ruth the Moabitess, the Ancestress of Our Lord. Houghton (Ross C.) Illust. 12° 1 50 ♦Rutherford Frown, The. Illust. 16° 75 •Ruthie Shaw ; or, The Good Girl. A Collection of Well-drawn Portraits. Homespun (Sophia). Illust. 16° 1 00 Sabbath Chimes. Punshon (W. M.) 12° 1 70 Sabbath, Christian, Practical Considerations on the. McOwan (P.) 18° 50 •Sabbath-day Book, Child's. 16° 40 ♦Sabbath-school and Bible Teaching. Inglis (J.) 12° 85 Sabbaths, The Two. Fuller (E. Q.) 12° 60 ♦Sabrina Hackett. Illust. 16° 1 50 Sacraments of the New Testament, The, as Insti- tuted by our Lord Jesus Christ. Armstrong (George D.) 8° 2 50 Sacred Mountains. Characters and Scenes in the Holy Land. Headley (J. T.) 8° 2 00 37G CHURCH LIBRARIES. Sacred and Legendary Art. Jameson (Anna). 2 vols. 18° e$l 50 The first containing Legends of the Angels and Archangels, the Evangelists, the Apostles, the Doctors of the Church, and St. Mary Magdalene ; The second, the Legends of the Patron Saints, the Martyrs, the Early Bishops, the Hermits, and the Warrior Saints of Christendom, as represented in the Fine Arts. Sacred Annals. Smith (G.) 4 vols. Sheep. 8° 11 25 The Patriarchal Age. The Gentile Nations. The Hebrew People. Harmony of Divine Dispensations. Sacred Hour. Gaddis (M. P.) 12° 1 00 Sacred Memories ; or, Annals of Deceased Preach- ers of the New York and New York East Con- ferences. Smith (W. C.) 16° 1 00 Sacred Tabernacle of the Hebrews, The. Atwater (E. E.) Illust. 8° 2 50 St. Anselm. Church (R. W.) 12° 1 75 Saint's Inheritance, The. Guthrie (Thomas). 12° 1 50 Saint Louis and Calvin. Great Christians of France. Guizot (M.) 12° 1 75 Saintly Workers. Farrar (F. W.) 12° 1 25 Saintly and Successful Worker ; or, Sixty Years a Class-leader. A Biographical Study. Includ- ing Incidental Discussions of the Theory and Experience of Perfect Love of the Class and Class-meeting, and of the Art of Winning Souls, suggested by the Experience and La- bors of William Carvosso. Wise (Daniel). 12° 1 00 Saints' Everlasting Rest. Baxter (Richard). 12° 1 25 Salmagundi. Irving (Washington). 16° 1 25 Salvation, Philosophy of the Plan of. A Book for the Times. Walker (James B.) 12° 1 25 •Sanford and Merton. Day (Thomas). 16° 1 00 Satisfactory Portion. George (A. C.) 12° 50 Saving Faith : Its Rationale. Chamberlayne (I.) 12° 100 *Saxby. A Tale of Old and New England. Leslie (Emma). Illust. 12° 1 25 *Say and Do Series, The. Warner (Miss Anna). 6 vols. In a box. 16° el 25 Little Camp on Eagle Hill. A Fiag of Truce. Willow Brook. Bread and Oranges. Scepters and Crowns. Rapids of Niagara. CATALOGUE OF BOOKS. 377 oayiiigs 01 images, converse 19° 9^ *S\<«if f Arnrl Finnninrir (~Mra A TT ^ Tllnaf oi/auci cu. _i 'in n 1 1 nj^ ^ixun. xv. i hum. ID 1 1 on OCcllCS 111 l»iy XjlltJ, UlAyUIIlIlg UUllIlg IH(>1I ^iTltllK.^. 1 9° 1 X Spiion i"»f»ro"-{~lr»ttn TT'fi'milv iHiTrrmiplfci nf tVic* na TVili"l k}vll\-Hl U^l g \jyj L Let X .11 1 1 1 1 Jy , V^HHJllIl^lTjo Ul IIM , lir»ril-'m r iei"f»T*«! lVT^ r • r>v 'PHa fifrn'Ar r>f UvllvUlo till* I OClUJtJl-lIlcloLd ft, -^*-lj , ^1 j A-llC Dvvl V Ul My Education. Miller (Hugh.) 12° 1 50 *Sphool-flfl vJ i" 11 1 1 t~k \T O I'll T*Q 1 H lof AT*T7 A rtOCC17 f IT 1^ oyd niuc oLutiies m liciturai xxistory. .Agassiz ^-Ej. \j. and. A.) Q° o O UO vjKZOi IVillgS dillX XXclNcll llclUCB. XMAgclI \*i . \J.) 1 A 0 XO x \jyj Second Arctic Expedition. Ivane (E. K.) 2 vols. QO o D UU oecret 01 (success, xne, or, now to vret un in tne vv onu. Auanis \ vv . xx. uavenportj. 1 Kf\ 1 ou Secret of the Lord, The. Shipton (Anna). 1 ft 0 ID 7K to secret 01 victory. |_xeiiiperance.j vv msiow ^ivxiss AT V \ a.VI. Jli. ^ 1 9° i 0 oeetx-tnougiit. j\. xxcHici-dook 01 xjoctnne aiiu ua~ votion. Robinson (Geo. C.) 1 9° co "Seed-time and Harvest j or, Sow W^ell and Re?ip Well. -fx DUUK 1U1 lilt? X UUIlg. X \V tcUXtJ y vv . xv. j liiubi. OccKcrB xXlLt!! vJTUtl. XUtJ -Lil V via Ul Ocllt/Ucl, Xi/|Jlvy* tetus, and ivxdxcuo ^\.uit!iiur5. rciiidi v-*-* »v.j 12° x to RAlf_Vic>lr» "With Tllimfrntinns! of ChfrraptPT" flnti- uuct, anci x ersev ci Til i. *Sheer Off. A. L. O. h. Illust. 18° 75 *Shell Cove. A Story of the Sea-shore and of the CI HjT 1 / fTf A \ Til X Sea. Mudge (Z. A.) Illust. 16° 1 50 *Shepherd King. A. L. O. h. Illust. 16° 1 00 Shield of Faith ; or, Articles of Religion, General Rules, Baptismal and Church Covenants, and Methodist Episcopacy. With Scripture Proofs. XT ^ - _ / X> _._x — .1 ^-l- \ Hawley (Bostwick). 16° 25 ^Shining Hours. Moraine (Paul). Illust. i no lo 1 50 *Shoe-binders, I he, of New York; or, The Fields White to the Harvest. Wright (Mrs. J. MciNairj. inust. 10 80 *fc>hore and Ucean, A lale or the. ivingston ( w . H. (jr., Illust. 1 oo 1 50 ^Short-comings and Long-goings. Lessons of Duty and Religion. Eastman (Julia A.) Illust. i no lb 1 ore 1 LO Short History of Art. DeForest (Julia B.) Illust. 8° 2 00 Short History of English Colonies in America. Lodge (H. C.) 8° 3 00 Short History of English People. Green (J. R.) 8° 1 50 *81iort History of France for Young People, A. Kirk- land (Miss E. S.) 12° 1 50 380 CHURCH LIBRARIES. oixon ooimoii on ^onsecranon cinu. xviiiuxtju. xjiciiico. \jreorge \a- v 1 no RlViO-rio AtlfinoAn CV TV \ Tllncf oioena. xxtKinson ^j.. vv.j must. CO o o o DVJ oigiiis -nf PnT-fnnv T]\ r\ "P1i«1t7C /"TTlirrri'Kof Vi Q ^ oiienx xarmci, uie. xneips ^iMizaDein o.j XO X oo ftilvPT* (~!o. clrof • rw r V^•\e* Wnvlrl nnrl if« TAmIpcj C11VCI VytloivLyL , KJL , XiXU IT KJ1 1KL ixDy ^j. x.j 19° 1 X oo ^Simple Stories with Odd Pictures j or, Evening Amusements for the Little Ones. Ivonewka m nn l\ Til net ^xauij. xnusi. XO Olllllcl ilHU. (Otlllll. xi. OLOIV Ol LI1VJ >V UlJlall O \jl u. sade. Hopkins (A. A.) 19° 1 X #Riotor- TTloonr.v'a "Rrnrwl Phplna ^ATt-o S ?> 1 Tllncf oisier Xjiednor s x>roou. xiicips ^i>xrs. o. x>.j xuust. XO 1 X oistei lMargarei, i>iy. xjQwarcis ^i>irs. \j. ai.) inust. io 1 1 on ou Illust. 16° 75 " Six IVIonths at INlrs. Prior's. A Story of "V\ omanly ^XLilllliyj. JLllllSL. io 1 X —•j Siiv "\Tr»nflic in Tfnlir TTiIIot-^I I fioAriTn R ^ OJX l>XOIlLIlb 111 JLLcliy. XllllclILl ^VJfcOIgC XO 9 — 00 r -Six Years in India ; or, Sketches of India and its PoaaI A o. a NAAn l\"\r n T orlir ificci Anin' • lrn r ATi xtjopic, tie oucii uy d Xjcioy nj-ihoiuiicii y . vjrivtjn in o ^AriAG / \ f T off ora f / \ TTov AT/\fli rir* TTnm- „T_ ■^^•cr /"]\T>.c 17 T \ Q Tllnr-f pnrey (ivirs. Hj. j.) o must. 1 9° 1 X no Sketch-book; or, I\Iiscellaneous Anecdotes. Smith (W. C.) 12° 1 00 Sketch-book. Irving (Washington). People's Edi- tion. 1 25 CATALOGUE OF BOOKS. 381 Sketches and Collections. Carroll (A.) 12° <*61 9^ «JpA ZD Sketches and Incidents. Stevens (A.) 18° P.K bo Sketches and Studies in Southern Europe. Symonds^ / T A \ 9 ir/-,l«3 (J. A.) Z VOlS. jy 9 no 6 Z UU Sketches, Biographical and Incidental. Thom- son (E) 1 00 1 OK 1 ZO Sketches from the Study of an Itinerant. Stevens (A oel). 1 00 12 TK " Sketches, Literary and Religious. House (Erwin). 1 QO Kf\ oU Sketches of Art, Literature, and Character. Jame- son (Anna). 18 1 oU Sketches of Creation. Winchell (Alex.) 1 9° 1Z 9 nn Z UU Sketches of Illustrious Soldiers. Wilson (Jas. G.) lb 1 OU ♦Sketches of Pioneer History. Hildreth (S. P.) 1Z 1 nn 1 UU oketcnes ot Western Methodism, rinley (J. U.) 1 00 lz 1 7K 1 ID hmitn, Kev. John, Memoirs ot. lrenry (K.J 18° OU ♦Smith's Saloon ; or, the Grays and the Grants. \v ortn { lurs. jl. i^. ) lb 1 UU *'So as by Fire. Sidney (Margaret). Illust. lz 1 OK 1 ZD Socialism. Cook (Joseph). 12° 1 K(\ 1 OU Solar Light and Heat: The Source and Supply. Allen (Ziacn.) illust. 1 Krt 1 oU ♦Soldiers and Patriots of the Revolution. The Inci- dents are Interesting -and the History Valu- able, Banvard (Joseph). Illust. 1 no Jb 1 ok 1 ZD ♦Soldier Fritz and the Enemies he fought. Illust. 1 no lb 7K to 0. tt:ii ix^x i „n„ th l * feome know llill Girls. Mitchella. Illust. 16° 1 on 1 UU Song, A, and a Sigh. Porter (Rose). 16° 1 OK 1 zo Song of the jSew Creation, The. Bonar (H.) 10° 1 OK 1 ZD Song Pilgrimage Around the World. Phillips (Philip). 8 2 00 O £ ~\ IT d TT T //"V TXT \ Songs of Many Seasons. Holmes (0. W.) 16° 2 00 Songs of Sunshine and Shadow. Moore (Maude). 16° 1 25 Sound. Tyndall (John). Illust. 12° Z UU South Africa, Memorials of. Shaw (Barnabas). 1 9° 1Z bo ♦Southern Explorers and Colonists ; or, An Account of the Early Settlement of North Carolina and Virginia. Banvard (Joseph). Illust. 16° 1 OK J. zo Sovereigns of the Bible, The. Steele (Eliza R.) 16° 90 Spain and the Spaniards. Amicis (Edmondo De). Illust. 8° 2 00 Spain and the Spaniards. Thieblin (N. L.) 12° 1 50 382 CHURCH LIBRARIES. Spain in Profile. A Summer Among Olives and Aloes. Harrison (Jas. A.) "Little Classic" Style. 18° $1 50 Spanish Conquests in America. Helps (Arthur). 4 vols. 12° 6 00 Spanish Papers. Irving (Washington). 16° 1 25 Speaking to the Heart. Guthrie (Thomas). 12° 1 50 Specimens of German Romance. Carlyle (T.) 12° 1 25 Spectacle Series, The. 16° el 00 1. The House with Spectacles. Robinson (Leora B.) 2. Patsy. Robinson (Leora B.) 3. Six Sinners. Wheaton (Campbell). Speeches of Daniel Webster. Tefft (B. F.) 12° 1 25 Spiritualism : With the Testimony of God and Man Against It. McDonald (W.) 12° 1 00 Spiritualism and Necromancy. Morrison (A. B.) 12° 1 00 Spiritual Struggles of a Roman Catholic. An Au- tobiographical Sketch. Beaudry (Louis N.) 12° 1 00 Spirit of Life. Bickersteth (E. H.) 12° 1 25 Spiritual Letters to Men. Fenelon (Archbishop). 12° 1 25 Spiritual Letters to Women. Fenelon (Archbishop). 12° 1 25 Spiritual Progress ; or, Instructions in the Divine Life of the Soul. Fenelon (Archbishop). Including " Christian Counsel and Spiritual Letters," and Madame Guyon's "Short and Easy Method of Prayer." 12° 1 50 Sports that Kill. Sermons by T. DeWitt Talmage. 12° 1 25 Spur of Monmouth, The ; or, Washington in Arms. A Historical and Centennial Romance of the Revolution, etc. 12° 1 75 *Squire of Walton Hall, The ; or, Sketches and In- cidents from the Life of Charles Waterton, Esq., the Adventurous Traveler and Daring Naturalist. Wise (Daniel). Illust. 16° 1 00 Standard Series of Temperance Tales, The. Chellis (Mary Dwinell). Illust. 4 vols. In box. 16° 5 00 Bill Drock's Investment. Mark Dunning's Enemy. The Old Doctor's Son. Gray Heads on Green Shoulders. *Stanifords of Stamford's Folly, The. Full of Fine Feeling and Sound Teaching. Kendall (Mrs. E. D.) Illust. 16° 1 50 *St. Augustine's Ladder. Noble (Annette L.) Illust. 16° 1 50 CATALOGUE OF BOOKS. 383 Star of our Lord; or, Christ Jesus, King of all Worlds, both of Time or Space. With Thoughts on Inspiration and the Astronomic Doubt as to Christianity. Upham (Francis W.) 12° L OU c?tars ana me Ji/ann, ine, or, inougnis upon Space, Time, and Eternity. lb rtU *Stella and the Priest ; or, the Star of Rockburn. Loring (Laurie). 11 lust. lb 1 00 ^fetellaiont Abbey. Marshall (Himmaj. lb i no 1 uu Stepping Heavenward. Prentiss (Mrs. E.) 1 oo Jus 1 7Pi 1 10 *Stepping-Stones. A Story of Our Inner Life. Doud- ney (Sarah). 1 AO lb 1 AA 1 UU Stewards and the People. Porter (J.) Paper. Per dozen. 1 c° lo AO Sier, Rudolf, Life of. From German Sources. La- croix (John P.) 1 9° 1 ZD Still Hour ; or, Communion with God. Phelps (Austin). 1 A° Aft OU Stoner, David, Life of/ 1 «° lo tu *Stony Road. A Scottish Story from Real Life. lb / O *Storehouse of Stories, A. Yonge (C. M.) 2 vols. i a° lb o 1 oo e 1 UU *otory ot tne Apostles, lllust. 1 oo lb AO bU otory oi tne r>attie oi watenoo, a irue. vjrieig Id T> \ 1 9° i ^n 1 OU Story of Aunt Lizzie Aiken, The. Anderson (Mrs. Galusha). W^ith Portrait. 1 A° i no 1 UU *Story of the Christians and the Moors of Spain. Yonge (L/. M.j 1 DO lo 1 9t 1 zo otory oi tne xuartn ana lvian, ine. uawson [j. w. Tllnat must. 1 9° i Kn 1 OU *Story of English Literature for Young Readers, rpv,_ \¥7"L * j / T /T tl \ Til i. ine. Wbite (Lucy Gecilj. lllust. 1 oo 1 ZD *Story of the Faith in Hungary. lllust. 16° OK OO ♦Story of a Fellow-soldier. The Life of Bishop Pat- terson. Narrated for the Young. Awdry (F.) lllust. 16° 1 00 Story of the Great March. Diary of General Sher- man's Campaign through Georgia and the Car- olinas. Nichols (George W.) lllust. 12° 2 00 ♦Story of Four Lives, A. Four Young Ladies Just Leaving School. Dunning (Mrs. A. K.) lllust. 16° 1 50 ♦Story of Liberty, The. Coffin (C. C.) lllust. 8° 3 00 384 CHURCH LIBRARIES. *Story of Madagascar. Mears (Jolm W.) Illust. 1 A° ©1 $1 Id oiury 01 Jidiiusci ipib. v> nil x ac-biiiine inubiraiionb of \ arious New Testament Manuscripts. Mer- Till ( nporcrp^ A 111 ^VJCvI gvji 12° i X *C| nrv r\f q Pnnlraf T^iVilo Tllnct oiory oi d, Jl ocKei xjioie. iiiubt. 1 A° 1 1 Storv of thp Pruvprs of Christian Historv Tllnst 12° 1 X )0 oioneo aiiu xrvomanceb. ocuuuer ^xiorace xu.) lo 1 -0 '■"Kt atmpc. frnm Anpipnf TTistAT-v Strir-Vlcmrl ( Arrnoc^ uiuiics ii uiu ^riiiLiciit xxioiuij'. *~ u lLKidJiu ^-figiicby. Illust. 1 fi° xo 1 1 -0 ^■"RtATiPC fyAm "P^nrrlicn T-TictAr"\r Sstr-ir»Lrl o n /" A «-tta tic? \ oiui icb lionx xidigubii xxibiory. oincKidnu ^iignesj. Xll List. 1 A 0 10 1 1 -0 ^RtAriPQ. frnm TTictArv Strir-lrlan rl ( Irmoc^ Tllnct UIUI1C3 11 UIU XAIBLUI Y. »- Li lttvlallU I -f\.i£llt/0 J . XJilloL. XO 1 X — 'J *SstAr5pc frnm AlArlprn TTictAw SfrioVlcinrl ( A mi do ^ KJLU11CO 11U1X1 J.1JLUU.C1 11 XXIBlUlJ'. Oil ILhldllU ^XlgllCD^. xn ust. X o 1 X ^ftfnrifia irr\m 'Wat AttTf* .Qr-n/lrloT' ( TT nrnno T^ 1 ^ OIUI lCO II OIlX lily xiLLIL/. OLUOUcI ^XXUIclLc S2j. J 1 fi° xo 1 X 00 uu W T / \ v l o t rv IT VI 1 h (i T T 1 1' t A n i i D / , f Paiiiq I ? (A / i c 1 1 t T / Aire l oiorieb irom iiie nisiones oi rvoine. x>eesiy ^iurs.j 1 A 0 10 on *fetories from the Moorland. A Story of the Scotch 1 AVDTl O Tl f nt»0 T^Q f DQ 1 T< 1 170 V*£i4" V» \ Tllnct \jO V clldlllci b. X>d.ieb ^HiUZdOeillJ. XllUbl. 1 fi° xo 1 X 9", nioneb oi -onrisi ine JLoiuiioii. vuuh.t! ^ooim j-**) 19° 1 1 ^0 oiones oi iiie tod-inib. v^iienovvein ^alid. v^. vriA c • '"PrSoiT Alafnro 1^1 q cci ii r*Q f iriTi pun T f i w Q OlOIIllb. XIIclI i->ctLLIIt;j VylctSolXH/ClLlUXlj D. -Diasius ( Vriniamj. inuai. 19° X — 2 "i0 •JU oirtiw oer ry mil. v ance \\jid.rd,). xnubi. xu i X 'JU . T~ 1 1 t T \Ta m Qnlo 1 1- 1 f 1 1 TllQ/>l T Arn T' Kin AirifT / \\ . V \ \ i?iray iviomenis wnii x iidCKcrtij . xvidciiig \ >> . xx.j xo 00 uu >itT*0"TT >tn'llAQ T7./~iTYT tt rrl o n n Q v\ /i 1 f 1 1 1 \ t (-.rppn dray oLUtueb irom xi/iigiaii(x aiiu xiaiy. uiccii ^T T? ^ 8° 1 75 f T* A aI □ OTTrl T QTIOC /A f O f^TttT T^llO "RpinO til P T?PTTi- otreeib a T\ ('Tnlia A ^ Tllnct rMriKing ior toe xvigiii. xL/dbuiidii ^juiia xi.^ xnubi. 1U 1 otUQent s Classical uicuonary oi xjiograpii v , iuy thology, and. Oeography. Smith (William). Illust. 12° 1 25 Student's Historical Series. Uniform in Style. 12° Ancient History of the East. From the Earliest Times to the Conquest by Alexander the Great. Smith (Philip). 1 25 CATALOGUE OF BOOKS. 385 Student's Historical Series. (Continued.) General History of Greece, A. From the Ear- liest Period to the Death of Alexander the Great. With a Sketch of the Subsequent History to the Present Time. Cox (G. W.) $1 25 History of Greece from the Earliest Times to the Roman Conquest. Smith (Wm.) 1 50 History of France. From the Earliest Times to the Establishment of the Second Empire in 1852. Jervis (W. H.) 1 25 History of Germany. From the Earliest Times. Lewis (C. T.) Illust. 1 50 History of the Christian Church, The. During the First Ten Centuries from its Foundation to the Full Establishment of the Holy Ro- man Empire and the Papal Power. Smith (Philip). Illust. 1 50 General History of Rome, A. From the Foun- dation of the City to the Fall of Augustulus. B. C. 753— A. D. 476. Merivale (Charles). With Maps. 1 25 Constitutional History of England, The. From the Accession of Henry VII to the Death of George II. Hallam (Henry). 1 25 History of England. Hume (D.) Illust. 1 25 History of t\\e Decline and Fall of the Roman Empire. Gibbon (E.) Illust. 1 25 History of Rome. From the Earliest Times to the Establishment of the Empire. Liddell (H. G.) Illust. 1 25 Lives of the Queens of England. From the Norman Conquest. Strickland (Agnes). Illust. 1 25 Middle Ages, The. A View of the State of Europe During the Middle Ages. Hallam (Henry). 1 25 Old Testament History. From the Creation to the Return of the Jews from Captivity. Smith (Wm.) Maps and Illust. 1 25 New Testament History, The. With an Intro- duction, Connecting the History of the Old and New Testaments. Smith (Wm.) Maps and Illust. 1 25 33 386 CHURCH LIBRARIES. Student's Historical Series. {Continued.) Students' Ecclesiastical History. A History of the Christian Church from the Times of the of Apostles to the Full Establishment of the Papal Power. Smith (P.) Illust. 12° $1 50 Student's Elements of Geology. Lyell (Sir Charles). Illust. 12° 1 I Studies and Stories. Jameson (Anna). 18° 1 1 zn ou Studies in Literature. Griffin (G. TV.) 12° 1 1 i ■) Studies in the Creative "Week. Boardman (G. D.) 12° 1 1 -■) Studies in the Model Prayer. Boardman (G. D.) 12° 1 1 OK Studies of Character. Guthrie (Thomas). 12° 1 oU Studies in Poetry and Philosophy. Shairp (J. C.) 16° 1 1 ou Studio, Field, and Gallery. A Manual of Painting for the Student and Amateur, with Informa- tion for the General Reader. Rollin (H. J.) 12° 1 1 50 Sub-tropical Rambles. Pike (N.) 8° 3 50 Success and Its Conditions. Whipple (Edwin P.) 16° i OU Successful Merchant. Arthur (W.) 16° 80 Sunday Half-hours with the Great* Preachers. Si- mons (M. L.) With Portraits. 8° 3 75 'Summer Days at Kirkwood. Miller (Emily Hunt ington). Illust. 16° i An 'Summer Days on the Hudson. The Story of a Pleasure Tour from Sandy Hook to the Saranac Lakes : Including Incidents of Travel, Legends, Historical Anecdotes, Sketches of Scenery, etc. Wise (Daniel). Illust. with 109 Engravings. 12° -i 1 i u 'Summer Driftwood for Winter Fire. Porter (Rose). 16° 1 UU 'Summer in Leslie Goldthwaite's Life. Whitney (Mrs. A. D. T.) Illust. 12° l Summer in Norway, A. With Notes on the In- dustries, Habits, etc., of the People, the His- tory of the Country, the Climate and Produc- tions, and of the Red Deer, Reindeer, and Elk. Caton (J. D.) Illust. 8° 1 75 Summer in Scotland. Abbott (J.) Illust. 12° 1 75 Summer Rambles in Europe. A Series of Sketches of Life and Travels in Great Britain and upon the Continent. Clark (Alex.) 12° 1 00 •Sun, Moon, and Stars, The. A Book for Beginners. Giberne (Agnes). Illust 12° 1 50 CATALOGUE OF BOOKS. 387 ♦Sunday Afternoons. A Book for Little People. Burr (E. F.) 16° $0 65 Sunday-school Concerts, Ten Complete. With Thirty Additional Concert Pieces, Dialogues, and Addresses. Reade (T. C.) 16 65 Sunday - school Concerts, Monthly. Containing Twelve New Concert Exercises. Butterworth (Hezekiah). 16° 50 ♦Sunday-school Hand-book. House (Erwin). 12° 1 00 ♦Sunday-School Institutes and Normal Classes. Vin- cent (J. H.) With an Introduction by Alfred Taylor. 16° 65 ♦Sunday-school Teachers' Guide. 12° 1 00 ♦Sunday-school Teachers, Hand-book for. Alden (Joseph). 16° 65 ♦Sunlight Through the Mist. Lessons from the Lives of Great and Good Men. 16° 75 ♦Sunny Skies; or, Adventures in Italy. Channing (Barbara H.) Illust. 16° 1 25 Sunrise Kingdom; or, Lite and Scenes in Japan, and Woman's Work for Women There. Car- rothers (Julia D.) Illust. 12° 2 00 ♦Sunshine of Blackpool. Leslie (Emma). 16° 85 ♦Sunset Mountain. Christian Faith Permeating Character and Beautifying Life. Porter (Mrs. A. E.) Illust. 16° 1 50 Superannuate, Sketches of a. Lewis (D.) 16° 1 25 Supernatural Factor in Religious Revivals, The. Townsend (L. T.) 12° 75 Suplee's Trench on Words. 12° 1 25 ♦Sure ; or, It Pays. Ministers to What is Highest in Social Morals and Vital in Religion. Illust. 16° 1 50 Sure Mercies of David ; or, God's Dealings in the Sanctuary. Shipton (Anna). 16° 75 ♦Susie's Spectacles. For the Eyes of the Mind. 16° 1 25 ♦Suzanne De L'Orme. A Story of Huguenot Times. 16° 1 00 ♦Sweet Story of Old; or, Tell Me About Jesus. Illust. 16° 65 ♦Swiss Family Robinson. Edited and Revised by Cecil Hartley. 16° 1 00 Sword and Garment; or, Ministerial Culture. Townsend (L. T.) * 16° 75 388 CHURCH LIBRARIES. ♦Sybil's Way. Underlaid with a Christian Purpose. Illust. 16° $1 25 *Sylvan Glen Stories, The. Illust. 4 vols. In box. 16° 4 00 X>Icctn.lllg I lit; XvUlco. Jetllllc l>ODlc. Charley Wheeler's Reward. Great Success. Syrian Home Life. Jessup (H. H.) Illust. 16° 90 Systematic Beneficence. Comprising The Great Reform, The Great Question, and Property Consecrated. 16° 85 Systematic Theology. .Raymond (Miner). 3 vols. 12° 5 00 Tait. Memoir of Catharine and Craufurd Tait, Wife and Son of the Archbishop of Canter- bury. Edited by W. Benham. 1 9° i l OU idKB v^art; oi iiuiiiocr v^iic. xowtjr ^x. x>. ) xnufei. ID i i OA *±albury Girls, ine. Vance (Olara). Illust. 16° 1 50 Tales and lakmgs. Watson (J. v.; 12 1 50 *Tales from Alsace ; or, Scenes and Portraits from Life in the Days of the Reformation. lo 1 50 ♦Tales from Shakespeare. Lamb (Charles and Mary). Illust. 16 1 00 *Tales from the Norse Grandmother. Lamed (Au- gusta). 1 9° i ou j.aies oi a ijrranuiaiiicr. ocoix ^WtHtcrj. vjriooe JliQltlOn. *± VOla. 1 A 0 ID c 1 uu Jl diCS OI Xi-UOlCllli uicctc. VUA ?T .J 12° I tlU xaics oi liic rdiiiiiy , or, xxomt; j_iiit2 iiiusiraieQ. ID 1 1 OU xaies oi tiic x crisccuitjo. xiiuoi. ID 1 1 ou Talks on Temperance. Farrar (F. W.) 1 9° I- OU *Talks with Girls. Larned (Augusta). ID 1 1 Talmud Miscellany. Hershon (P. I.) QO o A 4 OU Tangle wood Tales. Hawthorne (N.) 1 ID 1 ZD ♦Tapestry Room, The. Moles worth (Mrs.) Illust. ID 1 OU Tatham, Mrs. Mary, Memoir of. Beaumont (J.) 1 9° 1Z OO Taylor, Rev. Edward T., Incidents and Anecdotes of. Over Forty Years Pastor of the Seamen's Bethel, Boston. Haven (Gilbert) and Russell (Thomas). 12° 1 50 Teachers' Helper, The. Alden (Mrs. G. R. [Pansy).] Illust. 16° 1 00 Teacher, The. Moral Influence Employed in the CATALOGUE OF BOOKS. 389 Instruction and Government of the Young. Abbott (Jacob). Illust. Teaching, Outlines on. Alden (Jos.) Tears for the Little Ones. A Collection of Poems and Passages inspired by the Loss of Children. Edited by Helen K. Johnson. ♦Tell Jesus. Recollections of Emily Gosse. Ship- ton (Anna). ♦Tell me a Story. Graham (Ennis). Illust. Telephone : An Account of the Phenomena of Electricity, Magnetism, and Sound, as Involved in Its Action. Dolbear (A. E.) Telephone, the Microphone, and the Phonograph, The. Moncel (Count Du). Illust. ♦Temptation and Triumph. Townsend (Virginia F.) •Tempter Behind, The. A Temperance Story. Saun- ders (John). Illust. Ten Lectures on Alcohol. Richardson (B. W.) Tennesseean in Persia and Koordistan, The. Scenes and Incidents in the Life of Samuel Audley Rhea. Marsh (Dwight W.) Illust. Tennyson's (Alfred) Poems. Household Edition. Illust. ♦Tent in the Notch, The. Rand (Edward A.) Tent-life in the Holy Land. Prime (W. C.) Illust. Ten Great Religions. An Essay in Comparative Theology. Clarke (J. F.) ♦Tessa Wadsworth's Discipline. Drinkwater (Jen- nie M.) Text- book of Temperance. Lees (F. R.) ♦That Boy Bob. Huntington (Faye) and Alden (Mrs. G. R. [Pansy].) Illust. ♦That Boy of Newkirk's. Bates (L.) Illust. ♦That Boy. Who Shall Have Him ? Daniels (W. H.) Illust. ♦Theban Legion, The. A Story of the Times of Dio- cletian. Blackburn (Wm. M.) Illust. ♦Their Children. Clarke (Mrs. S. H.) Illust. Theistic Argument, The, as Effected by Recent Theories. Diman (J. Lewis). Theistic Conception of the World. Cocker (B. F.) Theism, Studies in. Bowne (Borden P.) 12° $1 75 12° 40 12° 1 50 16° 75 16° 1 50 ao 4 75 1Z 1 ore 16° 1 25 12° 1 25 i ATI 00 12° 2 00 12° 2 00 16° 1 00 12° 2 00 ao 8 3 00 12° 1 50 12° 1 25 16° 75 16° 1 25 12° 1 50 16° 1 00 16° i 50 8° 2 00 8° 2 50 12° 1 50 390 CHURCH LIBRARIES. Theodicy ; or, Vindication of the Divine Glory as Manifested in the Constitution and Government of the Moral World. Bledsoe (A. T.) Half Morocco. 8° $2 50 Theological Compend Improved. Containing a Synopsis of the Evidences, Doctrines, Morals, and Institutions of Christianity. Designed for Bible Classes, Theological Students, and Young Preachers. Binney (Amos) and Steele (Daniel). 12° 75 Theology, Christian, A Compendium of. Being Analytical Outlines of a Course of Theological Study, Biblical, Dogmatic, Historical. Pope (William Burt). 3 vols. 8° 7 50 Theology of the English Poets. Brooke (S. A.) 12° 2 00 Theology, Christian, A Complete System of; or, a Concise, Comprehensive, and Systematic View of the Evidences, Doctrines, Morals, and In- stitutions of Christianity. Wakefield (Samuel). 2 50 Theology, General and Christian, Elements of. Townsend (L. T.) 12° 45 Theology of the New Testament. A Hand-book for Bible Students. Van Oosterzee (J. J.) Trans- lated by Maurice J. Evans. 12° 1 50 Thirty Years. Being Poems, New and Old. Mulock (Dinah M.) 16° 1 50 Thirty Years' War, The, History of. 1618-1648. Schiller (F.) Translated from the German by A. J. W. Morrison. 16° 1 00 *Thirty Years' War. True (Charles K.) 12° 1 00 *This One Thing I Do. Porter (Mrs. A. E.) Illust. 16° 1 50 *Thornton Hall; or, Old Questions in Young Lives. McKeen (Phebe F.) 12° 1 50 *Those Boys. Book for the Older Boys. Hunting- ton (Faye). Illust. 16° 1 50 *Those Dark Days ; or, the Diaries of Two Nether- land Girls. Chapman (Helen C). Illust. 16° 1 00 Thoughts for a Young Man. Mann (Horace). 16° 75 Thought-hives. Cuyler (T. L.) 12° 1 50 Thoughts, Letters, and Opuscules of Blaise Pascal, The. Translated from the French by O. AV. Wight. 8° 2 25 fj Thoughts on Religion. Pascal (Blaise). 12° 2 25 CATALOGUE OF BOOKS. 391 Thoughts on Personal Religion. Being a Treatise on the Christian Life in its Two Chief Ele- ments, Devotion and Practice. Goulburn (E. M.) 12° $1 00 Thoughts on the Religious Life. Alden (Joseph). With Introduction by W. C. Bryant. 16° 1 00 Thoughts Selected from the Writings of Horace Mann. 16° 1 25 Thoughts that Breathe. From the Writings of Dean Stanley. Edited by E. E. Brown. In- troduction by Phillips Brooks. 16° 1 00 ♦Three Christmas Eves. By the Author of "The Parsonage in the Hartz." Adapted from the German. McFadden (Mrs. Cornelia). 16° 1 25 Three Gardens, The. Eden, Gethsemane, and Par- adise ; or, Man's Ruin, Redemption, and Res- toration. Adams (Wm.) 12° 2 00 ♦Three Judges, The. Story of the Men Who Be- headed their King. Warren (L P.) Illust. 16° 1 25 ♦Three of Us. Story of Three Girls Won to a Re- ligious Life. Illust. 12° 1 00 ♦Three People. A Temperance Story. Alden (Mrs. G. R. [Pansy].) Illust. 12° 1 50 Threescore Years and Beyond; or, Experiences of the Aged. A Book for Old People, describing the Labors, Habits, Home-life, and Closing Ex- periences of a Large Number of Aged Repre- sentative Men and Women of the Earlier and Later Times. De Puy (W. H.) Illust. 8° 3 00 Three Visits to Madagascar during the Years 1853, 1854, 1856. Including a Journey to the Cap- ital, with Notices of the Natural History of the Country and the Present Civilization of the People. Ellis (Wm.) Maps, Illust., etc. 8° 3 50 Three Years in Arizona, the Marvelous Country. Cozzens (S. W.) Illust 8° 2 50 Thrift. Smiles (S.) 12° 1 00 Thrilling Adventures by Sea and Land : Being Re- markable Historical Facts, gathered from Au- thentic Sources. Edited by James 0. Brayman. Uhist 12° 1 25 Throne of David. Ingraham (J. H.) 12° 2 00 Through and Through the Tropics.- Vincent (F.) 12° 1 50 392 CHURCH LIBRARIES. xixruugu ixie uarK voniinent. ©lamey { ix. jjx.j XilU.Su ~ VOIS. ftp o Jplv UV Through Nature to Christ. o O uo Ajjxoug.ii x> urijxaiiciy . iu.«iCvjiioi(i l^-iv. o.y xiiusu 19° 1 Kft TrirmKTfn T*ATCii<\ Iw q t** i \7 * 1 ti A •rn/^wl/l / A rtlmr l XIII UUgU I ClBla Uj V, d.1 ci > clii. jM-1 1IOICI ^ xLI III III y . 12° 1 50 XJXlOUglJ. oiruggie lO > lCLOrjr . XteipiUX U-> *\.u VVXIO are Struggling for Knowledge. Meservy (A.) It) OA OU •Through the Eye to the Heart; or, Eye-teaching in the Sunday-school. Crafts (W. F.) 12° CA oU •Through the Dark to the Day. A Story. Willing (Mrs. Jennie F.) 16° 1 OA •Through the Wilderness. Willard (Mary E.) Hlust 16° 1 AO •Through Trials to Triumph. A Story of Boy's School Life. Putnam (Miss H. A.) Illust. 16° 1 AA 1 UU •Tip Lewis and His Lamp. Alden (Mrs. G. E. [Pansy].) Hlust 16° 1 KA To Cuba and Back. Dana (E. H.) 16° 1 9^ *Together ; or, Life on the Circuit. Boyd (Mrs. E. E.) Hlust. 16° lO •Tom Brown at Oxford. Hughes (Thomas). Hlust. 16° 1 ZD *Tom Brown's School-days at Eugby. Hughes (Thomas). Hlust 16° 1 00 Tonga and Feejee, Missions in. Lawry (W.) 12° 1 25 Tongue of Fire, The. Arthur (Wm.) 12° 1 25 ♦Topics for Teachers. A New and Valuable Work for Ministers, Sunday-school Teachers, and Others. On an Entirely New Plan. Gray (J. Comper.) Hlust.; also 6 Maps. 2 vols. 12° 2 50 *Torch-bearers, The. Examples of Love and Self- denial. Bates (Elizabeth). Hlust 16° 1 25 *Torn and Mended. " God's Love Shineth through all," is its Motto. Eound (Wm. M. F.) 16° 1 00 Tower of Constancy, The ; or, Bearing the Cross. From the French of L. L. F. Bungener. Hlust 12° 1 50 Tracts. From Nos. 1 to 455 inclusive. 9 vols. 12° e 1 25 Transcendentalism. Cook (Joseph). 12° 1 50 *Trapper's Niece, The. Story of Western Life. Illust. 16° 1 25 Travels Around the World. Seward (William H.) Edited by Olive Eislcy Seward. Illust. 8° 5 00 Travels in Central America. Stephens (J. L.) Hlust. 2 vols. 8° 6 00 CATALOGUE OF BOOKS. 393 Travels in Egypt. Stephens (J. L.) Illust. 2 vols. •i OO 12 $3 00 Travels in Greeee. Stephens (J. L.) Illust. 2 vols. 1 no Q 6 AA UU Travels in Yucatan. Stephens (J. L.) Illust. 2 vols. CO 8 6 00 Travels in Europe and the East. Prime (S. I.) Illust. 2 vols. 1 oo 12 o o An 00 Travels in the East Indian Archipelago. Beck- inore (A. S.) Illust. DO 8 3 50 xiiivciur a j. r«iytjr. vadrKC \-^-) Li <>a ~U xraveicrj jliic. Irving ^ vv asmngtonj. 1 A 0 ID l Travelers in Africa. Narratives and Adventures of Charles TVilliams. Illust. 12 i 1 otc Tregenoweth, John, His Mark. Pearse (Mark Guy). 12 00 *Trials of an Inventor. Life and Discoveries of Charles Goodyear. Peirce (B. K.) 1 A° lo 1 Aft •Tried in the rire. lreatmg of struggles with fekep- tics tinu oKepticai xenuencies. x>iancnarQ (Leone). Illust. 16 1 25 *Trifles. Showing the Influence Exerted upon Char- acter by what are often Deemed Little and Unimportant Things. Dunning (Mrs. A. K.) Til — —i. Illust. 1 GO lb 1 25 inp to England, ine. winter (wm.j r/iioto. Illust 16° 00 Trip up the Volga. Munro-Butler- Johnstone (H. A.) Illust. 12 j or: Triumph Over Death. A Narrative of the Closing ocenes oi tne x^iie oi vvniiam Vjtoruon, ivi. u. } l'. jl. o., oi ±vingsion-upon-xiuii. xiau ^x>ew man). i o° IJL J AA U(J *Triumph Over Midian, I he. A. L. O. E. Illust. 18° 75 *Tropics, The. Conversations Portraying Life in the Tropical Regions. Illust. 16° 1 25 *lrotty Book, lhe. Phelps (Elizabeth S.j Illust. AO 4 ] 25 lrue and ±>eautilui, lhe. Kuskin. 1 oo 12 c) Art 00 True Manliness. From the Writings of Thomas Hughes. Edited by E. E. Brown. Introduc- tion by James Russell Lowell. ID l Art UU True Order of Studies, The. Hill (Thomas). 16° I 25 *True Stories About Pets. Illust. Boards, 60c. Cloth. 16° 1 00 True Stories from History and Biography. Haw- thorne (N.) 16° 1 25 394 CHURCH LIBRARIES. *True Stories of Real Pets ; or. Friends in Fur and Feathers. 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Illust. 1 A° ID i i $iC- r |\«Ti-\ "VT ice Triors T ^ n it*c"/"in l' ' 1 ^Vi a / il inrf lv i / AT 1VT i iwo ivuss j ean uawsons, ine. ivooertson ^ivi. ivi.j 1 ft 0 ID i i ^O iwo xcims, inc. xvicnmonci ^ivirs. ji<. j.j must. 1 R° 10 00 iwo voyages, xiie, or, iviiunignt anci jL/ayiignt. must. ID i ou iwo i ears x>eiore tne lvidst. i>ew anu niacK- ourn (wm. ai.) 1 no 1 - 1 1 OU TTnhpotpn Trapks in .Lman An Apponnt of Trnvpls on Horseback in the Interior. Including Visits to the Aborigines of Yezo and the Shrines of Nikko and Ise. Bird (Isabella L.) Illust. 8° 3 00 Unbelief in the Eighteenth Century, as Contrasted with its Earlier and Later History. Cairns (John). 12° GO * Uncle Anthony. Cummings (M. J.) Illust. 16° 1 25 *Uncle Dick's Legacy. Miller (Emily Huntington.) Illust. 16° S5 *Uncle Gilbert. Miller (Mary C.) Illust. 1G° 1 00 CATALOGUE OF BOOKS. 395 *Uncle Toby, My. His Table-talks and Reflections. By an Attorney-at-law. 16° $1 00 Uncle Tom's Cabin. Stowe (Mrs. H. 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Prentiss (Mrs. E.) 12° 1 50 *Vagabond and Victor. The Story of David Shel- don. Hamilton (Kate W.) Illust. 16° 125 Vale of Cedars; or, The Martyrs. Aguilar (Grace). Illust. 12° 1 00 '^Vanquished Victors ; or, Sketches of Distinguished Men who Overcame the Obstacles in their Way to Fame, but Failed to Gain that Self- mastery which is the Greatest and Grandest of all Conquests. Wise (Daniel). Illust. 16° 1 00 Vaudois Church, History of the. From its Origin, and of the Vaudois of Piedmont to the Pres- ent Day. Monastier (A.) 12° 1 00 *Veil on the Heart, The. Phelps (Miss L. L.) Illust. 16° 1 25 Venetian Life. Including Commercial, Social, His- torical, and Artistic Notes of Venice. 12° 1 50 396 CHURCH LIBRARIES. *Vesper, and Other Stories. Translated from the French. Booth (Mary L.) 16° $0 85 Vicar of Wakefield, The. Riverside Classic. Illust. 16° 1 00 v iLLuna. . vviLii vjtner xoenis. xienry (o. l.j i no 85 viciuridii jroets. a i^ompiete vjruicie-DooK to tne -Tuciry oi me v lcionan iiira. 8 2 50 y itiui v ui Liitj v aimjuidiiou, xne. otorv oi tne xiibL v^eiitury. r>\ tne Autuoroi llie fccnon- ucr g-i^otta x am li \ . 1 00 Views Afoot; or, Europe Seen with Knapsack and Staff Tovlnr /"Po-i-owIN oiau. xajior ^r3a\araj. 1 oo 12 1 50 Village Blacksmith, The: A Memoir of Samuel Hicks. Everett (James). 18° 60 Village Improvements and Farm Villages. Waring (George E. ) Illust. 1 oo 18 75 Villages and A illage Life. W T ith Hints for their Improvement. Egleston (N. H.) 8° 1 75 *Violet and Daisy ; or, The Picture with Two Sides. lllust. 16° 1 00 *Violet Douglas ; or, The Problems of Life. Mar- shall (Emma). Illust. 1 £»0 lb 1 50 *Virginia. Story of Adventure in the Early History oi viir country, jvingsion [ >> . n. vj.j must. 1 A° ID 1 2o > IblUilo L»l -L±Cd.\Cll, 1U1 Lilt! .Lille Ull £jcU 111. -Ldllcl- son (Robert M.) lb 1 0\J *\ ivian and His Friends ; or, Two Hundred \ ears Ago. Illust. lb i i o 1 10 \ / \ 1 f\r\ / \ r 4~ V. r\ t t i \ T> 1 A TT v T * 1 Aire S V 1 1 \ voice oi tne nome, a. xienr\- \alts. ©« dm., x.) 1 9° 1 or: Voices from Babylon ; or, the Records of Daniel the Prophet. Seiss (Joseph A.) 1 oo 1 ou > tigo ui LiitJ xd.pcr v^ciiiutJ. a vjrcugid.piiiLui Journey of Twenty -five Hundred Miles from Quebec to the Gulf of Mexico. Bishop (Na- thaniel H.) Illust. 8° 2 50 *Voyage of the Steadfast. Kingston (W r . H. G.) Illust. 16° 1 00 Voyage, Thy ; or, A Song of the Sea, and Other Poems. Burr (E. F.) 8° 3 00 *Wadsworth Boys, The. Erickson (D. S.) Illust. 16° Waiting at the Cross. A Collection of Prose and Poetry, Original and Selected. Eddy (D. C.) 18° 1 50 1 50 CATALOGUE OF BOOKS. 397 Waiting Hours with the Hungry and Weary and Thirsty in the Wilderness. Shipton (Anna). 1 oo lb W to Wake Robin. Burroughs (John). Illust. i xvecoiiecnona 01. viciuuia /TIT T> \ (M. P.) 1 OO 1 /o Walks to Emmaus. Adams (Nehemiah). i An 1 UU Walking in the .Light. ±>uck [v. v.) 1 oo Krt OU wainngioras ivnstaKe, Mr. lvunning ^i\irs. a. r*..) in,, .f illust. 1 flO lb 1 Art 1 uu Wall's End Miner ; or, A Brief Memoir of the Life of William Crister. Everett (J.) 18° 40 ♦Walter: A Tale of the Times of Wesley. Leslie (Emma). Illust. 12° 1 OK. 1 ZD ♦Walter Macdonald ; or, Aunt Kitty's Legacy. Illust. 16° 1 OO ♦Walter Neal's Example. Story with Incidents from Real Life. Brown (Theron). Illust. 16° 1 OK 1 25 ♦Wanderings Over Bible Lands. By the Author of " The Schbnberg-Cotta Family." 1 00 Ware, Rev. Thomas, Life of. Written by Himself. With a Portrait. 12° AA UU Warfare of Science, The. White (Andrew D.) 12° 1 AA 1 UU ♦Warlock o' Glen warlock. MacDonald (Geo.) Illust. 12° 1 75 ♦Was I Right? Walton (Mrs. O. F.) 16° 1 00 Washington and His Generals. Headley (J. T.) 12° 2 50 , Washington, George, Life of. Irving (Washington). 5 vols. 16° _ i ax e 1 zo ♦Wat Adams, the Young Machinist. Boyd (Mary D. R.) Illust. 16° 1 00 Watch-tower, The, in the Wilderness. Shipton (Anna). 16° 75 ♦Watertdn's Wanderings in South America. Edited by J. G.Wood. Illust. 12° 2 00 Watson's Apology for the Bible. Watson (Bishop). 18° 40 Watson's Biblical and Theological Dictionary. With 5 Maps. 8° 4 50 Watson's Conversations on the Bible. 12° 1 Art 1 uu Watson, Rev. Richard, Life of. Jackson (T.) With a Portrait. 8° 2 25 Watson's Sermons and Sketches. 2 vols. 8° 5 00 Watson's Theological Institutes. 2 vols. 8° 5 00 398 CHURCH LIBRARIES. *Watson's Woods ; or, Margaret Huntington's Ex- periment. 16° $1 25 ♦Way Lost and Found, The. Tuttle (Joseph F.) fflost 16° 1 15 Way of Life, The. Guthrie (Thomas.) 12° 1 50 Wayside Service ; or, The Day of Small Things. Shipton (Anna). 16° 75 *We Got Agate of Singing. 18° 35 *We Three. Hamilton (Kate W.) Illust. 16° 1 10 * Weaver Boy, Trie, who Became a Missionary. Story of the Life and Labors of David Livingstone. Adams (H.G.) Illust. 16° 125 Week-day Religion. Miller (J. It.) 16° 1 00 *Well in the Desert, The. An Old Legend of the House of Arundel. Holt (Emily S.) 16° 1 25 * Well-spent Hour, The. Follen (Mrs. E. L.) Illust. 16° 1 00 *Wentworths, The. A Story of College Life. Pin- dar (Susan Cooper). Illust. 16° 1 25 Wesley and His Coadjutors. Larrabee (W. C.) 2 vols. 16° e 1 00 Wesley and Methodism. Taylor (I.) 12° 1 50 Wesleyana. A System of Wesleyan Theology. 12° 75 Wesleyan Preachers, Memoirs of. West (R. A.) 12° 75 Wesleyan Student. Life of A. H. Hurd. Holdich (Joseph). 18° 45 Wesleyan Demosthenes, The. Wakeley (J. B.) 16° 1 00 Wesley Family, Memoirs of the. Clarke (A.) 12° 1 50 Wesley Family, Memorials of. Including Bio- graphical and Historical Sketches of all the Members of the Family for Two Hundred and Fifty Years: Together with a Genealogical Table of the Wesleys, with Historical Notes, for more than Xine Hundred Years. 8° 3 50 Wesley His Own Historian. Illustrations of His Character, Labors, and Achievements. From His Own Diaries. Janes (Edwin L.) 12° 1 25 Wesley, Rev. Charles, Life of. Jackson (T.) With a Portrait. 8° 2 70 Wesley, Rev. John, Life of. Watson (R.) 12° 1 00 Wesley, Rev. John, Works of. 7 vols. 8° e 2 50 Full set, Plain, or Half Calf. 24 50 Wesleys, Anecdotes of the. Wakeley (J. B.) 12° 1 00 CATALOGUE OF BOOKS. 399 w esiey s jueiters. oeiect -L/etiers, v_/iiieny on i cr- sonal Religion. 1 0° ici> airj. must. 1 A° ID JL J u What Mr. Darwin Saw in His Voyage Around the vvoriu. must. DO o o o IaJ \y luii vjroci ±/oes is »ven j^one. rroin tne vjrerman of C. G. Salzmann. Disosway (Miss E. T.) lb 1 (VI uu ♦What is a Child ? or, the Properties and Laws of Child-nature Stated and Illustrated. Groscr { vv. a.) 1 s Wnat Must l Do to be oavea ( leek (J. x.) 1© * w nat onau 1 rteau r a. ^onnucntiai t^nat on Books. lb OO ^Wnat one baiu. Alaen (Mrs. xx. K. |_Jransyj.j Hie two stories, " What She Said : and What She Meant," and li People Who Have n't Time and oan i Aiiorci 11, in i > 01. must. 1 A 0 ID 1 -0 w 11611 jl was a j-iiiiie vjin. otories ior v^nnuren. must. 1 (1° lo J Art ♦Where there 's a Will, there 's a \Vay. 1 AA UU ♦Wliite Chrysanthemum, The. A Story. 1 A 0 ID 1 -0 Why Four Gospels ? or, The Gospel for all the World. A Manual Designed to Aid Christians in a Study of the Scriptures, and to a Better Understanding of the Gospels. Gregory (D. S.) 1 25 * Wicket-gate ; or, Sermons to Children. Newton (W. W.) lllust. 16° 1 25 Widow's Souvenir. A Gift -book for Widows. Kose (A. OA® OK OO "Villi A AT^.„4-'U 1 „ „ ^1 TJ,-,+l^« (~\XF 1? \ Wild North-land. Butler. ( w . Jj.) 12° 1 75 * w liaiorcis in mcua, ±ne. must. Id 1 ^O Wilpv Rpv A T-ifp and Timpc, of Hollidnv CF C, ) 12° ♦Wilfred. A Story with a Happy Ending. Winthrop (A. T.) 12° 1 25 William Farel, and The Story of the Swiss Reform. 12° 1 50 Will, The Freedom of the. Whedon (D. D.) 12° 1 50 400 CHURCH LIBRARIES. ' Will .runups, ixicnaras t±.) must. lb $1 50 iA/illionic Ripnovn Ivl oiyiaii* /~\ T VV lllldillo, XVH/llctl Clj lTJ-tJlllUlx VL. lO *Willianis, Roger, Footprints of. Mudge (Z. A.) illust. lb 1 00 * William the Silent, and the Netherland War. Bar- icLL liVidiy^. Willi liXdjJa uiiu. x^iigi u, v 1 iigo< xo winiam tne xaciturn. xraiibiateti vy o. x. i^acroix. riUIll lilO X? 1 CllCll Ul i-i. ilUClUUDi lilUBl. i no i \jA woman, ine irue. xecK [ Jesse ±.j 1 t>o 1 OU Women of the Bible. Headley (B. L/.j Illust. 1 oo 1 50 * Women of Christendom. .Being ©ketches ot the Lives of the Notable Christian Women of His- tory. ±>y the Author ot ine fechonberg- uotta Jbamily. 1 oo 1 AA 1 00 Women of Israel, The. Aguilar (Grace). Illust. 1 OO 1J 1 AA 1 UU women ol the Arabs. Jessup [U. xi.j must. i o° 1Z 1 OK 1 SO •Women of the Bible. Adams (C.) 10° or: oO Women oi Methodism, btevens (Abel). i oo 1 oc 1 Jo Women of the Orient. An Account of the Relig- ious, Intellectual, and Social Condition of Women in Japan, China, India, Egypt, Syria, and Turkey. Houghton (Ross C.) Illust. 12° 1 50 *Wonder-book for Boys and Girls. Hawthorne (N.) 16° 1 25 •Wonderful Lamp, The, and Other Talks to Chil- dren. Macleod (Alex.) Illust. 16° 1 00 ♦Wonderful Life, The. A Life of Christ for Young Readers. Stretton (Hesba). 16° 90 •Wonderful Life, The Story of a ; or, Pen Pictures of the Most Interesting Incidents in the Life of John Wesley. Wise (Daniel). Illust. 16° 1 00 34 402 CHURCH LIBRARIES. ^Wonderful and Curious Things, Our Library of Books About. Illust. 4 vols. In a box. 16° $3 00 Wonders in the Air. The Wonders of Fire and Water. The Birthday Present. Elder Park Garden. * Wonders Xear Home. Houghton (W.) Illust. 16° 1 00 Wonders of Science. Life of a Wonderful Boy. Written for Boys. Mayhew (H.) 16° 1 25 ♦Wonders of Insect Life. The Structure, Habits, and Instincts of Insects, as Illustrating the Wisdom, Power, and Goodness of God. Willet (I. E.) With Engravings and Colored Illust. 16° 1 75 *Wonders of the Deep. DeVere (M. Scheie). Illust. 12° 1 25 * Wonders of the Plant World. Illust. 12° 1 50 *Wonder - stories Told for Children. Andersen (Hans Christian). Illust. 8° 1 50 *Woodlawn Series, The. For Small Children. Les- lie (Mrs. Madeline). 6 vols. In a box. Illust. 18° 3 60 Bertie's Home. Bertie and the Masons. Bertie and the Plumbers. Bertie and the Painters. Bertie and the Carpenters. 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Comprising The History of the Jews, History of Christianity, and History of Latin Chris- tianity. Standard Edition. 8 vols. 8° $12 00 ITT i £ T ^ ~ 1, K ,1 A 1 . 17* _ I • il TTT1 1 Works of Joseph Addison : Embracing the Whole of the Spectator. Complete in 3 vols. 8° 6 00 Works of Oliver Goldsmith. Complete. With Notes by James Prior. 4 vols. 12° 5 00 Works of Thomas Dick, LL. D. Complete. 5 vols. 12° 10 00 Works of William Jay. Complete. 3 vols. 8 6 00 World of Wonders, A. Marvels in Animate and Inanimate Nature. 8° 2 00 World's Witness of Jesus Christ. The Power of Christianity in Developing Modern Civilization. Williams (Jno.) 8° 1 00 * Wrecked, Not Lost. A Book of Adventure for Boys. Dundas (Mrs.) lllust. 16° 1 00 Wrestling Jacob. Hannah (J.) 2o JlfcTTT 1 TT 1 ITT / C% J A \ *Wych Hazel. W arner (Susan and Anna). 12° 1 75 -tt x x "n V • T» 1_ /TT TT7 \ Yale Lectures on Preaching. Beecher (H. W.) 3 vols. 12° el 25 *TT I T J T-fc 1 * TT IT / T 1_ \ Yale Lectures on Preaching. Hall (John). 12° 1 50 s Yale Lectures on Preaching. Simpson (Matthew). 12° 1 25 *Year in the Country, A ; or, Keilei's Missionary TTT 1 T* / Tl f T> _ 1 1 _ T? \ Til ... Work. Burton (Mrs. Bella r .) lllust. 16° 1 25 *Year at Riverside Farm, A. Miller (Einily Hunt- ington). lllust. lb O X OO Years that are lold, lhe. Porter (Rose). lb 1 25 *Yensie Walton. A Story of Girl Life. Clark (Mrs. T~* C% /"I 1 \ Til A R. S. Graham). lllust. 16° 1 50 Yesterday, To-day, and Forever. Bickersteth (E. H.) 16° 1 00 Yesterdays with Authors. Fields (J. T.) 12° 2 00 York and a Lancaster Rose, A. A Book for Girls. Keary (A.) 1 o° i f>K * Young Americans Abroad ; or, Vacation in Europe. Choules (John Overton) and His Pupils. lllust. 16° 1 25 * Young Benjamin Franklin; or, The Right Road Through Life. Mayhew (H.) lllust. 16° 1 25 *Young Folks' Cyclopaedia of Common Things. Champlin (J. D.) lllust. 8° 3 00 404 CHURCH LIBRARIES. * Young Christian Series, The. Abbott (Jacob). Ulust. 12° e$l 75 L The Young Christian. 3. The Way to do good. 2. The Corner-stone. 4. Hoaryhead and JIcDonner. * Young Folks' Bible History. Yonge (Charlotte M.) Ulnst 12° 1 25 ' Young Folks' History of America. Edited by Hez- ekiah Butterworth, Author of " Notable Prayers of Christian History." Illust. 12° 1 50 * Young Folks' History of Boston. Butterworth (Hezekiah). Illust. 1 50 * Young Folks' History of England. Yonge (Char- lotte M.) Uniform with "Germany" and " Greece." 12° 1 30 *Young Folks' History of Germany. Yonge (Char- lotte M.) Illust. 12° 1 30 *Young Folks' History of France. Yonge (Char- lotte M.) Illust. 12° 1 30 *Young Folks' History of Greece. Yonge (Charlotte M.) Illust. 12° 1 30 * Young Folks' History of the Netherlands. A Con- cise History of Holland and Belgium, from Earliest Times Down to the Present. Young (Alexander). 12° 1 50 * Young Folks' History of Rome. Yonge (Charlotte M.) Illust. 12° 1 30 *Young Folks' History of Russia. Dole (Nathan Haskell). Illust. 12° 1 50 ♦Young Folks of Renfrew. [In the Interest of the Missionary Cause.] Taneyhill (Miss Ellen). Illust. 16° 85 *Young Lady's Counselor. Wise (D.) 16° 85 * Young Ladies' Friend. Ward (Mrs. H. O.) 12° 1 50 *Young Life ; or, The Boys and Girls of Pleasant Valley. Mather (Mrs. Sarah A.) Illust. 1G° 1 25 *Young Life, The, Equipping Itself for God's Serv- ice. Vaughan (Charles J.) 12° 1 00 * Young Man Advised; or, Illustrations and Con- firmations of Some of the Chief Historical Facts of the Bible. Haven (E. O.) 12° 1 00 *Young Man's Counselor. Wise (D.) 16° 85 CATALOGUE OF BOOKS. 405 ♦Young Man's Friend and Guide through Life to Immortality. James (J. A.) 16° $1 25 Young Minister, S. B. Bangs. Magruder (W. H. N.) 12° 1 00 *Young People's Half-hour Series. Paper covers. 12° e20 Keep Good Company. Smiles (Samuel). Daniel, the Uncompromising Young Man. Payne (C. H.) Ten Days In Switzerland. Ridgaway (H. B.) Two Weeks in the Yosemite Valley. Buckley (J. M.) *Young Pilgrim, The. Illustrative of Pilgrim's Progress. A. L. 0. E. 18° 75 * Young Rick. Eastman (Julia A.) Illust. 16° 1 50 *Young Shetlander and His Home. Being a Bio- graphical Sketch of young Thomas Edmonston, the Naturalist, and an Interesting Account of the Shetland Islands. Pierce (B. K.) Illust. 16° 1 00 *Young Whaler, The. Kingston ( W. H. G.) 16° 75 *Young Woman's Friend and Guide through Life to Immortality. James (J. A.) 16° 1 25 Young Workers in the Church ; or, The Training and Organization of Young People for Chris- tian Activity. Neely (T. B.) 12° 1 00 *Zina ; or, Morning Mists. Giberne (A.) Illust. 16° 150 Zulu-land; or, Life Among the Zulu Kafirs of Natal and Zulu-land, South Africa. Grout (Lewis). Illust. 12° 1 50 406 CHURCH LIBRARIES. ADDITIONAL BOOKS. After-glow, The, of European Travel. Harrington (Adelaide L.) Illust. 12° $1 50 Age of Fable ; or, The Beauties of Mythology. Bulfinch (Thomas). 8° 2 50 * Alice's Adventures in Wonderland. Carroll (Lewis). 12° 1 50 American Men of Letters. A Series of Biographies of Eminent American Authors. Edited by Charles Dudley "Warner. In uniform volumes. The following are now ready : 16° e 1 25 Washington Irving. Warner (Charles Dudley). Noah Webster. Scudder (Horace E.) Henry D. Thoreau. Sanborn (Frank B.) Nathaniel Hawthorne. Lowell (James Russell). J. Fenimore Cooper. Lounsbury (T. R.) N. P. Willis. Aldrich (Thomas Bailey). William Gilmore Simms. Cable (George W.) Benjamin Franklin. Higginson (T. W.) Around the Hub. A Boy's Book about Boston, Drake (Samuel A.) Illust. 8° 2 00 Around-the-world Tour of Christian Missions. A Universal Survey. Bainbridge (Wm. F.) 8° 2 00 Biographical Notes and Personal Sketches of James T. Fields. 8° 2 00 Civilization of the Period of the Renaissance in Italy. Burckhardt (Jacob). Translated by S. G. C. Middlemore. 2 vols. 8° e 2 50 Constitutional History of England, The, from 1760 to 1860. Yonge (Charles Duke). 12° 1 75 D' Israeli (I.) Complete Works. Edited by His Son, Lord Beaconsfield. 6 vols. 8° 7 50 Curiosities of Literature. 3 vols. Calamities and Quarrels of Authors, and Memories. 1 vol. Literary Character ; History of Men of Genius. 1 vol. Amenities of Literature ; Sketches and Characters. 1 vol. *Dr. Gilbert's Daughters. Mathews (Margaret Har- riet). Illust. 12° 1 50 Eastern Proverbs and Emblems Illustrating Old Truths. Long (J.) 8 5 1 00 CATALOGUE OF BOOKS. 407 English Men of Letters. Edited by Jno. Morley. 12° $0 75 Lamb. Ainger (Alfred). Dickens. Ward (A. W.) Bentley. Jebb (R. C.) Grey. Gosse (E. W.); Euthanasy; or, Happy Talks Toward the End of Life. Mountford (William). 12° 2 00 Fortunate Failure. Le Row (Caroline B.) 12° 1 25 •French History for English Children. Brook (Sarah). With Colored Maps. 8° 2 00 Gems of Illustrations. From Sermons and Other Writings of the Rev. Thomas Guthrie. 8° 1 50 *Golden Motto Series. Illust. 4 vols. 16° 3 00 Robert Rightheart. The Golden Motto. Earl Whiting. The Adventurer. Henry W. Longfellow. Biography, Anecdote, Let- ters, Criticism. With Portrait. Kennedy (W. iji.Utii.it; j. xnuuu 8° o 1 ^rt JL OO TTprnip TVfptnod i«?t,<5 of thp Oldpn Timp Wisp fDnnipl^ 1 25 TTiv • v.) 1 1 AO xroicbiaiii x oreign alissiuiis. .nieir xiesent otate. v^nrisiiieD ^ineooorej. lo 1 AA UU irruuence iranre>. ^a.iu.ricii ^xuoiiias isaijeyj* ID 1 1 ou Prophets of Israel. Smith ("W. Robertson). QO o 1 75 xvepuunc oi vjuu, xne. xiibiiiute 01 JLneoiogy. jYiuiiora (Hiiisnaj. oo 8 2 00 Saunterings in Europe. "V\ ood (Charles). DO o 1 50 oca diiu oiiort?. »> rigin una o>iCj->airj. iiiust. l -0 Social Equality. A Short Study in a Missing Sci- pnw ATftllnplr /William TT ^ CllUv. ±iXiLlXKJ\st±. y »f llllcLlll XX, J 19° i no Spare Hours. First and Second Series. Brown (jonnj. must. - aois. 1 oo n 1 e 1 £A oU *Sweet Clover Series. May (Carrie L.) Illust. 4 vols. 16° 4 00 i>clllt! ALlllUll is XAUUScisvtrcpillg. JJUMi 111c OcllllUlLl. Sylvia's Burden. Ruth Lovell. S'T'nTI-c- +/-v T?/~it»cj onrl r^-irla oVvniTt" .Tpcn a A T ifo nf Christ tor tne xoung. uraits (w. j.j 10 ^„ / D Ine Lnnstmas xree. --a »~tor\ oi ueruiau x'uuiestic Ldie. cKelton iaits. xiennettd). limst. 1 A 0 io i ox ZD ^Through the Looking-glass, and hat Alice Found There. Carroll (Lewis). Illust. 19° 1Z i OU jLnree in .\ orw2 \ . ij\ x>\u I cXliV 1C/ y f T • \A • J 8° 3 50 T ifo nf Tnhn Spnrlrlpr Wfltprhiirv LT T£ i XJl It! Ul ti Willi k;tUUUCli n alCI will J \*' * / 12° 1 75 Tnfp nf "William Oarpv "Rplohftr (JoseDh^ 16° 1 25 Life of William Ellis. Ellis (J. E.) Introduction UV XXCIlljr -fillUll. 8° 4 20 Memoir of Rev. William C. Burns, Missionary to China, English Presbyterian Church. Burns (Islay). 12° 2 50 Memoirs of William Goodell, D. D. ; or, Forty Years in the Turkish Empire. Prime (E. D. G.) 12° 2 50 4. INDIA. Tfnnr "Vpni'd' f^n m "nni cyn in Tnflin TVavlrn* fA^illinm^ 1 Uul 1 LtU o \JiXLLl LJ Ul -L 1 ULLoLullu lUiOOlUllO XXX XXXvXXcl'* V/X t I'HJcU "\7olno Shomnnr f\T A ^ V dilit/» Ollt/lllllg ^±»X. xX. ^ o 7 • 90 Tnrlia T-Ticfrn*v T^pcr*rintirm q n rl Tllndtrcif inn "FTon/lorA Xllvlld* lllril'JI \ ? l-^C^Ul lj^ll'Jlly clll'J. X J 1 lloll cl 11. xx. j QO o i l o\J Land of the Veda, The. Butler (William). 8° 3 50 Life by the Ganges. Mullens (Mrs.) 16° 80 Missionary Life among the Villages in India. Scott (T. J.) 12° 1 50 Six Years in India. Humphrey (Mrs. E. J.) 16° 1 00 5. CHINA. \JlllLlai cvllil O cl J Id 11. »r llcjr y±. »T •) 19° i i ZD r^hinij n n rl flip f"!hinPCP "Wpviiih ^.T T< ^ ViJllltl till' I lilt, V^lllllCoC liCVluD V / i x I o Chinese Buddhism. Edkins (Joseph). 8° 4 50 Chinpsp Thp tVipir F.fliipa'Hon ptf "Martin Vylllllv^oC, XUCs, Llll^ll J-J*~l Ll^«X LIVJ11, CtV^« XVXcll bill (W A P ) 12° l 50 Fnrpifrnpr in nVtina HTHp WVipplpr (Tl&v S "N" ^ j. W 1 1 1 1 o m _ O Will llc^ D 111 XiUILll V Illllcl, IVXUilgUlltl, tJLC VV Ullttlll- son (Alexander). 2 vols. 12° 6 00 Middle Kingdom, The. Williams (S. Wells). 2 vols. 12° 4 00 Our Life in China. Nevius (Mrs. Helen S. C.) 16° 1 50 Religions in China. Edkins (Joseph). 8° 2 50 Religions of China, The. Legge (James). 12° 1 50 412 CHURCH LIBRARIES. Kiver of Golden Sand, The. Travels through China, including Western China, and Eastern Thibet to Burmah. Gill (William). 2 vols. 8° $12 00 Social Life of the Chinese. Doolittle (Justus). 2 vols. 12° 5 on 6. JAPAN. China and Japan. Wiley (I. W.) 12° 1 25 Mikado's Empire, The. Griffis (W. E.) 8° 4 00 Unbeaten Tracks in Japan. Bird (Isabella L.) 2 vols. 8° 5 00 7. THE TURKISH EMPIRE. A mono trip Tnrk«< TTamlin fCvrnO 12° 1 50 Bible YA T ork in Bible Lands. Bird (Isaac). 12° \ UU "Portv ~Y"pfir«? in thp Turkish Emnirp Arpmniri of JL \JX 1 V JL ^ ell O 111 L11U -1- LI 1 lv loll 1 j 111 I J 1 1 V/. -^'1 V^lllWll o Ul William Goodell, D. D. Prime (E. D. G.) 12° 2 50 TJopoc of Enronpnn Tnrkpv Clark f"F! L 1 -LVCl^V^O V_/l -1^111 J ' V. Cl 1 1 J- 11 1 IV ^ > . VlulU 1 1 J. 8° 3 00 Romanpp of An^sions Wnrnan's "Work in Asiatic j-i^ii itiii v_,v yjx 1'iiooiviiOi " i v^iiitiii o if via. in ixoiuiiv Turkey. West (Maria A.) 12° 2 no uu Ton Vpi r« rm tViA T'nnVi'ratoB A Vpru TTc£»fnl T^r»nlr JLC1A 1 CtllO Ull U1C LI pill a Lt-S. -IX V CI J "JSCIUI -I_>Uxxx lolltlxl -tiLX > t;xx I Ixx C/O 111 ■OUlilil -T-lIx xl_,<** JLcv V xvx ^ m •) 12° 1 50 f^olnnpl frorrlnn in C^pritT^! Afripa 1S74 — 7Q VUlvllvl Ul VIUH XXX VV'XlLXcil -*JlX1 XV^cV. JLU ( X t *J • 8° 8 00 Four Years in Ashantee. Ramseyer and Kuhne (Missionaries). 12° 1 75 Livingstone in South Africa. From 1840-1856. Jew- ett (S. H.) 16° I oo uu Memoirs of Missionary Labors in Africa and the West Indies. Moister (William). 12° Missionary Travels and Researches in South Africa. Livingstone (David). 8° 4 50 To the Central African Lakes and Back. The Nar- rative of the Royal Geographical Society's Last Central African Expedition, 1878-80. Thomson (Joseph), in command. 2 vols. 12° 6 00 Twelve Months in Madagascar. Mullens (Joseph). 12° 1 75 Western Africa. Wilson (J. Leigh ton). 12° 1 25 Zulu Land. Grout (Lewis). 12° 1 50 CATALOGUE OF BOOKS. 413 9. SOUTH SEAS. Forty Years' Mission Work in Polynesia and New Guinea. Murray (H. W.) 12° $2 50 Gems from the Coral Islands. Gill (Wm.) 2 vols. 12° 2 50 Missionary Among Cannibals, A. A Life of Rev. John Hunt in Fiji. Rowe (G. S.) 12° 85 Polynesian Researches. Ellis (W.) 4 vols. 12° 5 00 lO. MEXICO. Our Next-door Neighbor. Haven (Gilbert). 12° 3 50 11. AMERICAN INDIANS. Life Among the Choctaws. Benson (Henry C.) 12° 1 50 Life Among the Indians. Finley (J. B.) 12° 1 50 Mission Life Among the Indians of Oregon. 16° 50 12. MISCELLANEOUS, TRAVELS, ETC. Around the World. Hendrix (E. R.) 12° 2 00 Chinese in America, The. Gibson (O.) 12° 1 50 Christian Missions before the Reformation. Wal- rond (F. F.) 16° 1 25 From Egypt to Japan. Field (H. M.) 12° 2 00 Missionary Concerts for the Sunday-school. A Col- lection of Declamations, Select Readings, and Dialogues. Smith (W. T.) 16° 75 Missionary in Many Lands, The. House (Erwin). 12° 1 00 Mister Horn and His Friends ; or, Givers and Giv- ing. Pearse (Mark Guy.) Paper, 50c. 16° 1 00 Non-Christian Religious Systems. 18° e 75 Hinduism. Williams (Monier). Islam. Stobart (J. W. H.) The Koran. Muir (Sir W.) Buddhism. Davids (Rys). Confucianism. Douglas (R. K.) Orient and its People, The. Hauser (Mrs.) 12° 1 50 Our Oriental Missions. Thomson (Edward). 2 vols. 12° 2 00 Round the World. Kingsley (Calvin). 2 vols. 12° 2 00 These for Those: Our Indebtedness to Missions. Warren (William). 16° 1 50 To the East by the Way of the West. Marvin (Bishop). 12° 2 00 White Fields of France, The. Bonar (Horatius). 12° 1 25 414 CHURCH LIBRARIES. Women of the Orient, The. Houghton (Ross C.) 12 Young Folks of Renfrew. Beverle (Mrs. Dr. J. H. [Miss M. E. Taneyhill].) 16 YOUTH'S LIBRARY. Ceylonese Converts, The. Brief Memoirs of Emi- nent Workers in the Ceylon Missions. Conversations on the Life of William Carey, D. D., Founder of the Baptist Missions in the East Indies. Designed for Youth. History of Early Missions in India, The. To which is added a Memoir of Mrs. Ann Hazeltine Judson. History of the Missions in Greenland and Labra- dor, A. From Carne's Lives of Eminent Mis- sionaries. Indian Missionary Reminiscences. Elliott (Chas.) Life of Christian F. Swartz, The, one of the First Protestant Missionaries in India. Norris (W. H.) Life of Rev. Henry Martyn, The, Missionary to India. Norris (W. H.) Life of Robert Morrison, The, the First Protestant Missionary to China. Alcott (Wm. A.) Missionary Anecdotes. 16 Missionary Book for the Young. A First Book on Missions. Missionary Narrative of the Triumphs of Grace, A, as Seen in the Conversion of Kafirs, Hotten- tots, Fingoes, and Other Natives in South Africa. Young (Samuel), twelve years a Missionary in that Country. Missionary Teacher, The. A Memoir arid Early History of the Oregon Mission. Mudge (Z. A.) Mission Life Among the Indians of Oregon. New Zealanders, The. Abridged from the Library of Entertaining Knowledge. Smith (Daniel). Notices of Foochow and Other Ports of China, with Reference to Missionary Operations. South Sea Missions. No. 1. Island of Rurutu. Tortola; or, The Native Missionary of the West India Islands. CATALOGUE OF BOOKS. 415 MISSIONARY TRACTS. How Much, and How. A Treatise on Systematic Giving. A Valuable Tract. Stevens (Abel). Pp. 16. Japanese Door, The. Fowler (C. H.) Message, The. Fowler (C. H.) Pp. 52. Spirit of the Gospel. Christ Necessary. Our Business and "Home Heathen." Cost. Our Field is Larger than Our Availability. Success. The Triumph in Our Day. Protestantism and Romanism. How to Raise the Money. Missionary Office Tract, No. 3. Pp. 51. Our Missionary Society. What is it ? "What is its Field ? Is it Expensive ? Do Missions Pay ? Will we Succeed ? Results. Pveid (J. M.) Pp. 20. Speedy Christianization of the World. A Sketch of the Missionary Enterprise and its Agencies. Butler (William). Pp. 20. Support of Missions, The. How the Missionary So- ciety is Administered. Instructions of the Dis- cipline on Missions : Elements of Power of the Plan. Harris (Bishop). Pp. 36. [All the above series of Tracts may be had at the rate of one cent for 30 pages.] Appeal on Behalf of Missions, An. Tract-book Series. Edwards (W. S.) $0 05 Appeal to Christian Workers of All Denominations, etc., An. Pocket Series, No. 83. Mahan (Asa), Lowrey (A.), Steele (Daniel), and Swan (Freder- ick G.) Single, $c. Ten copies. 21 Conversion of Padre Rojana, a Mexican Priest. Car- ter (Thomas). 3 Developing the Missionary Spirit in Sunday-schools. Murdock (J. W.) 2 Go or Die. Kelley (Dr.) 15 Go or Send. A Plea for Missions. Prize Essay. Published by Order of the Board of Missions of the Methodist Episcopal Church, South. Hay- good (A. G.) 20 Mexico: The Past and Present of the Country: Its Resources and Prospects. Ellinwood (F. F.) 10 Missionary Office Leaflets, Nos. 1-5. Gratuitous. 416 CATALOGUE OF BOOKS. Missionary Outline Series — China. Extent, History, Population, Industries, and Religions of China, and Christian Missions therein. Gracey (J. T.) Maps showing Location of Missions of all So- cieties. $0 25 Missions. An Essay. Anderson (Dr.), Missionary to Spain. 15 Mission Work. Thrall (H. S.) 15 Principles and Facts of Missions, The. Bond (B. W.) 15 Thoughts on Missions; or, the Principles, Facts, and Obligations of Christian Missions. Cun- nyngham (Dr.) 15 World of Missions, The. A General Review of the Results of Protestant Missions in 1879. Chau- tauqua Text-book, No. 30. Carroll (H. K.) 10 Fifty-four Four-paged Tracts, in one Package, suita- ble for distribution in Sunday-schools. 15 The following are the titles of the Tracts, viz. : 1. Missionary First-fruits. 17. Orphans in the East. 2. The Lord's-day in a 18. Where shall I Go Last of All? Heathen Land. 19. Hadara. ' 3. Mongolian Boy. 20. Missionary Ship. 4. Hindu and the Tracts. 21. Trust in God. 5. Self-torture. 22. Hindu School-girls. 6. New Zealand. 23. Treading the Fire. 7. Heathens Know not the 24. Juggernaut. Good God. 25. Wild Choop. 8. Karen Converts. 26. Happy Hottentot. 9. Cherokee Indian. 27. All Given Up for Christ 10. Greenlanders. 28. New Zealand Girl. 11. Siberian Leper. 29. Mystery Man. 12. Tupe of Raratonga. 30. Old Saul. 13. Wild Men of the Jungle. 31. Blind Bartimeus. 14. Little Cornelia. 32. Sandwich Islander. 15. Heathen Prayers. 33. Hook-swinging. 16. African Girl. 84. Andres Stoffles, etc. INDEX OF AUTHORS. Abbott, E. A 363 Abbott, Jacob 306, 307, 319, 377, 386 389, 404 Abbott, Jacob, and John S. C 290 Abbott, John S. C 287, 302, 319, 327 349, 355, 368 Abbott, Lyman 327, 335, 360 Abclous, L 400 Adams, Charles. ..305, 309, 334, 342, 343, £ 352, 358, 366, 401, 402 Adams, Emily : 380 Adams, H. G 398 Adams, John 277 Adams, Neh 278, 284, 293, 295, 299 303, 305, 311, 312, 317, 397 Adams, R. C 360 Adams, Sarah B 280 Adams, W. H. D 294, 326, 379 Adams, Wm 391 Addison, Joseph 403 vEsop 277 Agassiz, L. C, and A 378 Agassiz, L 319, 336 Aguilar, Grace 306, 330, 355, 395, 401 Aikin, John 313 Akers, Peter 289 Alcott, Louisa M 345, 402 Alden, Mrs. G. R. [Pansy] 287, 305, 308 312, 317, 318, 319, 321, 323, 325, 332 335, 336, 337, 344, 352, 354, 356, 357 358, 363, 366, 371, 375, 380, 388, 389 391, 392, 394, 399, 400, 407 Alden.Joseph, 300, 323, 344, 387, 389, 391 Alden, Mariam 286 Aldrich, Thomas Bailey 408 Alexander, W. L 299, 401 Allen, Fred. H 302, 304, 366 Allen, Zach 381 Amicis, Edmondo De 330, 355, 381 A ndersen, Hans C 402 Anderson, Mrs. Galusha 383 Anderson, Jas 337 Anderson-Maskcl, Mrs. JS T . E 317 Anderson, R. B 359 Andrews, H. P 331 Anncsley, Miss 343 Armitage, Ella 8 297 Armstrong, Geo. D 375 Arnold, Arthur . 392 Arnold, Frederick 394 Arnold, Isaac N 341 Arnold, Thps .... 289 Arthur, William 283, 362, 386, 392 Asbury, F 284, 325 Atkinson, J 302, 318, 346 Atkinson, I. W 280, 380 Atwater, E. E 376 Awdry, F 383 Aytoun, Wm. E 291, 339 PAGE. Babcock, Sarah A 326, 335 Bacon, Francis 402 Bacon, Leonard W 313 Bailey, L 290 Bailey, Una Locke 308 Baillie, John 343 Bain, Alex.. ..309, 310, 350, 352, 355, 378 Bainbridge, Wm. F 406 Baird, R 329 Baker, Ella M 301 Baker, Mrs. II. W 294 Baker, O. C 307, 339 Baker, S 302 Baker, Sarah 299 Baker, S. W 334, 358 Bake well, John 277 Bakewell, Mrs. J 355 Balch, Wm. S 364 Baldwin, J. I) 281, 369 Baldwin, W. C 278 Ball, R. S 284 Ballantinc, E 299 Ballard, A. C 315 Ballard, Julia P 294, 333 Ballou, Maturin M 364 Bancroft, Aaron 342 Bancroft, Geo 329, 344 Banvard, Jos 341, 365, 366, 381 Bangs, Nathan 318, 351 Barbauld, Mrs. A. L 313 Barnes, A 313 Barr, Jno 288 Barrett, Wm 400 Barrows, L. D 330, 370 Barth, C 329 Barth, Henry 308 Bartlett, S. C 318 Bartlett, David W 342 Barwell, Mrs 319 Bascom, J 377 Bass, E. C 369 Bates, Clara D 325 Bates, Elizabeth 384, 392 Bates, L 389 Bates, W. H 357 Baxter, Richard 372, 376 Beach, Rebecca G 279 Beaudry, Louis N 382 Beaumont, Jos 388 Beckmore, A. S 393 Beckwith, E. L 316 Beecher, H. W 394, 403 Beecher, Mrs. H. W 279 Beecher, W. J 315 Beers, E. L 279 Beesley, (Prof.) 358 Beeslv, Mrs 384 Behafrell, T. G 289 Belisle, D. W 280 417 418 INDEX OF AUTHORS. PAGE. Bell, CMS. D 326 Benham, W 388 Bennett, Mrs. M. A 370 Bennett, W. W 351 Benning, H 321, 358 Benson, H. C 298 Benson, Joseph 302, 310 Benton, T. H 287 Bfjrry, Mrs. M. E 294, 295 Berth el, Elie 369 Besant, Walter 357 Bickersteth, E. H 346, 382, 403 Bierbowcr, Austin 365 Binney, Amos 303, 390 Binney, T 318 Bireh, S 310 Bird, Isaac 289 Bird, Isabella L 394 Birks, T. R 287 Biscoe, Ellen L 320, 337 Bishop, Nathaniel II 317, 395 Bissell, Mary L 373 Bixby, J. T 380 Blackburn, Wm. M....277, 282, 319, 328 389, 394 Blackie, J. S 378 Blaikie, Wm. G 332, 364 Blake, E. Vale 282 Blanchard, Leone 393 Blant, Lucian 277 Blasius. Wm 384 Blatch, W 327 Blebv, Henrv 374 Bledsoe, A. T 390 Bloomfield. J. K 320 Boardman, G. D 386 Boardman, W. E 327 Boardman, Mrs. W. E 291 Bogart, W. H 306 Bonar, Andrew A 349 Bonar, Horatius...288, 313, 316, 355, 358 372, 381 Booth. Mary L 395 Boswell, James 343 Bourdillon, Francis 363 Bourne, II. R. F 314 Bo wen, C. E 332, 335 Bowes, G. S 333 Bowman, Anna 286, 337 Bowne, B. P 326, 389 Boyd, Mrs. E. E 392 Boyd, Mary 397 Boyesen, H. H 359 Boyle, G. D 326 Brackett, Anna C 367 Brand, John 367 Bray, Mrs. R. M 365 Bray man, J. G 306 Brayman, James 0 391 Bridgman, Thos 280 Brightwell, C. L 363 Brine, Mrs. Mary D 287 Bristol, Mrs. M. C 279 Brodribb, \V. J 358 Brook, Sarah 407 Brooke, S 344 Brooke, Stopford A 299, 302, 390 Brooks, Phillips 334, 339, 379 Brown, E. E 361, 407 PAGE. Brown, James 342 Brown, J. Baldwin 308, 330, 352 Brown, John 408 Brown, S. E 31 8 Brown, Theron 290, 397 Brugsch, Henry 394 Brunson, Alfred 282, 399 Bryant, Wm. Cullen 331, 340, 359 Buck, D. D 397 Buckle, H. T 328 Buckley, A. B 313, 369 Buckley, C. H. A 366 Buckley, J. M 300 Bulfinch, Thomas 406 Bulmer, Agnes 355 Bunce, Oliver B.. 374 Bungener, L. L. F...292, 328, 346, 371, 392 Bunsen, C. J - 289 Bunting, T. P 342 Bunyan, J * 330, 365 Burckhardt, Jacob 406 Burke, S. J 316 Burnet. G 294 Burnett, P. H 294 Burr, E. F 307, 387, 395 Burrougbs, John 290, 346, 397 Burt, N-. C 338 Burton, Mrs. Bella F... 403 Burton, Richard F 337 Butcher, S. H 407 Butler, Jos... 281 Butler, W. F 399 Butler, Wm 338 Butterworth, Hcztkiah 387, 404 Cairns, John 394 Calder, F 312 Calderwood, H 372 Caldwell, M 301 Campbell, Lewis 302 Campbell. S. M 277 Capes, W. W 302 Capron, Mary J 320, 349 Carey, Daniel 301 Carleton, W 314 Carlyle, Thomas ..289, 305, 309, 317, 343 372, 382 Carpenter, J. E 341 Carroll, A 381 Carroll, Lewis 406, 408 Carrothers, Julia D 387 Carter, Thomas.. 279, 317, 327 Cartwright, P 294, 315 Carvosso, Wm 295 Carv, Alice 365 Cary, Alice and Phoebe 285, 367 Can^, Phoebe 366 Caton, J. D 386 Cave, Harriet 384 Chadwick, G. A 299 Chaffin, J. W 286 Chalmers, T '. 378 Chamberlain, P.B 353, 371 Chamberlayne, 1 376 Chambers, W 352 Champlin, J. P 403 Champney, Lizzie W 311 Channing, Barbara H 387 Chapin, J. H 305 INDEX OF PAGE. Chapin, Wm 332 Chaplin, Jer 298, 350 Chaplin, J. and J. D 341 Chapman, Helen C 390 Charles, Mrs. A 377 Charlesworth. Maria L 293, 298, 311 352, 360 Chaucer, Geoffry 3(37 Chellis, Mary D 293, 321, 3G2, 382 Cheney, Mrs. E. D 320 Child, *G.C 287 Child, Lydia M 346 Choules, John 0 403 Christlieb, Theodore 334, 334, 408 Christopher, S. W 312 ChOfthill, E. K 362 Clark, Alex 321, 386 Clark, Davis W. ...306, 315, 325, 339, 347 350, 351, 378 Clark, Edson L 335, 371 Clark, Mrs. H. S 348 Clark, Mrs. R. S. Graham 403 Chirk, RufUfl N 402 Clark, Thomas M 369 Clarke, Adam..302, 304, 312, 368, 393, 398 Clarke, G. W 299 Clarke, James Freeman 339, 378, 389 Clarke, Samuel 350, 377 Clarke, Mrs. S. H 389 Clement, Clara E 283, 324, 328, 362 Clement, F 359 Clfldd, E 297 Coan, Titus 277 Coates, H.T 298 Cobden, Paul 307, 344 Cocker, B. F 301 Codville, Win 303 Coffin, C. C 292, 383 Coke, Thomas 368 Coles, Abraham 400 Coles, Geo 303, 351 Coley, Samuel 335 Collyer, Robert 357 Colman, Julia 290 Colter, Mrs. J. J 361, 373 Col ton, C. C 337 Conder, C. R 357 Conington, Jno 278 Conklin, Mrs. N 310 Converse, C. C 377 Conway, M. D 294 Comvell, R. H 286 Cook, John E 384 Cook, Jos...290, 326, 337, 348, 361, 381, 392 Cooke, Carrie Adelaide 318, 408 Cookman, G. C 304 Cooper, J. F 304 Cordery, B. M 337 Corderoy, Edward 315 Cousin, Victor 339 Covell, C 287 Cowper, William 304 Cox, G. W 305, 329, 385, 388 cox, Samuel 306 Cozzens, S. W 391 Crafts, W. F 392, 408 Crafts, Mrs. W. F 361 Craighead, J. G 377 Craik, Geo. L 370 AUTHORS. 419 PAGE. Crampton, G. E. E 380 Crane, J. L 394 Crane, J. Townley..283, 330, 350, 367, 373 Creighton, M 327 Cricnton, Andrew 327 Crooks, Geo. R 349 Cross, Joseph 407 Cruder), Alexander 305 Crum, G. C 286 Cubitt, G 346 Culross, Jas 326 Culver, Newell 351 Gumming, C. F. Gordon 284 Gumming, J 320 Cummings, M. J 345, 394 Cumnock, R. M 299 Curry, Daniel 317, 366 Curtis, Geo. W 358, 368 Cutler, Helen R 336 Cuyler, T. L 295, 367, 390 Daiixe, E 313 Dana, Chas. A 332 Dana, J.J 348 Dana, R. H 392, 394 Daniels, W. II 389 Dart, Mary 361 Darton, J. M 326 D'Aubigne, J. II...:. 329 Davenport, W. II 378 Davidson, J. M 310 Davie, H 348 Davics, R. N 336 Davis, Mrs. C. E. K 345, 353, 363 Davis, Geo. E 408 Davis, L. A 321 Davis, L. D 335, 341 Dawson, J. W 383 Day, G. T 278 Day, Thos 376 Deems, C. F 330 De Forest, Julia B 379 Dempster, John 339 Denison, E. B 284 Denton, W 303 Depping, G 291 De Puy, W. H 351, 391 De Quincey, T 281, 290, 303, 310, 312 327, 344, 357 Derby, Edw. (Lord) 331 De Vere, M. S 373, 402 Dicey, Edw 358 Dick, Thos 300, 333, 372, 403 Dickens, Chas 297, 365 Dickson, A 279 Diman, J. Lewis 389, 407 Disosway, Miss E. T 399 Disraeli, Isaac 406 Doane, N 334 Dods, Marcus 334 Dolbear, A. E 389 Dole, Nathan Haskell 404 Donkersley, R 311, 313 Doran, Dr 337 Dorchester, D 304, 369 Doremus, S. D 322 Dorr, Julia C. R 293 Doudney, Sarah 383 Dowden, E 344 420 INDEX OF AUTHORS. PAGE. Drake, Samuel A 325, 406 Drinkwater, Jennie M 317, 359, 301 375, 389 Drummond, Mrs 310 Du Chaillu, Paul B 338 Duffey, Mrs. E. B 337 Dulles, J. W 373 Dundas, Mrs 403 Dunn, Lewis R 281, 318, 330, 352 Dunning, Mrs. A. X. ..304, 306, 321, 340 377, 383, 393, 397 Duppa, R 371 Durbin, John P 359 Eastman, Julia A. ...337, 374, 377, 379 384, 405 Eastwood, Frances 319, 348 Eaton, H. M 335 Eddv, D. C 396 Edgar, J. G 292, 316, 327, 378 Edge worth, Maria 408 Edkins, Joseph 372 Edmondson, J 325, 378 Edson, N. 1 380 Edwards, Mrs. C. M 371, 380 Edwards, Jonathan 402 Eggleston, Edward 314 Eggleston, Geo. C 289, 332 Egleston, N. H 396 Ellenwood, March 367 Ellet, Mrs. Elizabeth F 366 Elliott, Chas 287, 341, 374 Elliott, Samuel 367 Ellis, Wm 391 Emerson, R. W 303, 313, 340 Emorv, John 307, 312 Ernorv, Robert 310 English, Maria 325 Erickson, D. S 395 Eskins, J 298 Etheridge, J. W 302, &50 Everett, James 396, 397 Ewbanks, T 293 Fairbairn, Patrick 370 Fancher, E. L 339 Farman, Ella 281, 319, 321, 345 Farrar, F. W...299, 311, 312, 314, 315, 334 341, 376, 378, 380, 388, 401 Farrell, Jos 339 Far, Miss Amy 356 Fell, Archie..." 282, 356, 366 Fenelon, Archbishop 277, 382 Ferris, Geo. T 322 Fetridgc, W. P 323 Feudge, Fanny R 329 Ffirth, John 341 Field, H. M 318 Field, Marie E 400 Fields, James T 395, 403. 406, 408 Findlav, Samuel 371 Finfey, J. B 315, 340, 369, 381 Finley, Martha Farquharson... 295, 310 Fish, Henrv C... 349, 370 Fisher, Geo*. P 309, 329 Fisk, Wilbur 294 Fiske, John 356 Fleming, Ja* 326 PAGE. Fletcher, John 282, 300, 316 Fleury, Claude 335 Floy, James 360, 378 Follen, Mrs. E. L 290, 398 Folsom, A. P. and M. T 325 Fontaine, Edw 332 Foote, A. L. R 301 Forrest, Neil 331, 335 Forrester, Francis [See Wise, Daniel] 330 Foster, Elon 306 Foster, R. S 287, 294, 300 Fowler, C. H 302 Fox, John 277 Foxcroft, Frank 372 Fraser, Donald 326 Freeman, E. A 329 Freeman, J. M 287, 288, 324 French. H. W 319 Froude, J. A 328 Fuller, E. Q 375 Fyffe, C. A 329 Gaddis, M. P 316, 376, 397 Gairdner, Jas 332 Galton, F 311 Gardiner, S. R 370 Gardner, Celia E 312 Gardner, Mrs. H. C 307, 315, 320, 337 338, 349, 374 Garnett, Richard 358 Garrett, R. and A 283 Gatty, Mrs. Alfred 279, 285, 363 Gaylord, Glance 319 Geike, J. C 277 Geikie, C 341 Geikie, J 322 Geldart, Mrs. Thomas 349 George, A. C 304, 376, 380 George, N. D 395 Gerard, J 344 Gere, J 298 Gibbon, Edward 289, 328, 385 Gibeme, Agnes 309, 386, 405, 408 Gibson, J. M 278, 317 Gifford. E. H 320 Gill, Wm 318, 319 Gillett, E. H 281, 311, 329, 342 Gilman, Arthur 337 Gilmorc, E 303 Gilmore, J. H 307 Gladden, Wash 346 Gladstone, W. E 336, 344, 3-52 Gleig, G. R 327, 383 Goldsmith. Oliver 403 Goodale. E. and D. R 279, 282 Goode, Wm. H 362 Goss, C. C 351 Gosse, P. L 313 Goulburn, E. M. ..333, 360, 370, 379, 391 Gould, Edw. S 321 Gould, Jeanie T 348 Graham, Ennis 389 Graham, Marv 319 Graham, Mrs. S. R 362 Grav, Asa 357 Gray, E. C 400 Gray, Geo. Z 298, 305 Gray, J. Comper 288, 289, 392 INDEX OF A UTHORS. 421 PAGE. Greeley, Horace 342 Green, G. W 327 Green, J. R 379, 384 Greenough, A. J 292 Gregg, S 334 Gregory, D. S 399 Griffin, G. W* 38G Griffis, W. E 852 Griffith. M. E 292, 339 Grimed J. Stanley 356 Groser, W. II 399 Grout, Lewis 405 Grove, Geo 329 Guernsey, A. H 294 Guernsey, Lucy E 361 Guild, Curtis 277 Guizot, F 328, 346, 349, 376 Gurney, E. P 318 Guthrie, Thos 302, 321, 322, 317, 361 362, 376, 382, 386, 398, 407 IlACKETT, H. B 333 Hagcnback, K 328 Hale, E. E 314 Hall, C. F 283 Hall, G. S 284 Hall, John 314, 320, 369, 393, 403 Hallam, Henry 385, 402 Halsey, L J 344, 345 Halstead, Wm. R 318 Hamill, S. S 310 Hamilton, James 375 Hamilton, Kate W 298, 322, 331, 360 395, 398 Hamilton, R. Winter 323, 378 Hamlin, Cvrus 280 Hamline, Mrs. M 378 Hanna, Wm 299 Hannah, John 403 Hanks, S. W 305 Hare, E 352 Harman, H. M 333 Harrington, Adelaide L 406 Harris, John 347 Harris, W. L 339 Harrison, C. C 401 Harrison, H. W 286 Harrison, James A 329, 382 Harsha, David A 361 Hartley, C. B 342 Hartley, Cecil 387 Hase, K 328 Hassaurek, F 317 Hathaway, Mrs. Mary E. N 334, 336 Haven, Mrs. A. B 339, 362, 366 Haven, E. 0 365, 404 Haven, Gilbert 357, 362, 379, 388 Haven, Marion 335 Havergal, Frances Ridley ..294, 317, 337 341, 345, 346, 350, 352, 355, 374, 375 Haweis, H. R 356 Hawley, B 351, 379 Hawthorne, N 280, 308, 311, 362, 388 393, 401 Hay, John 295 Haydn, Joseph 307 Hayes, Isaac 1 338, 361 Haygood, A. G 361 Hazelton, Mabel 285 PAGE. Head, Nelson 306 Headley, J. T 356, 375, 397 Headley, P. C 334 , 342, 343, 401 Helps, Arthur 382 Hendrick, A. C 302 Henkle, M. M 286 Henry, Mrs. S. M. 1 278, 366, 396 Henry, W. J 339 Hensel, Sebastian 350 Herbert, Henry W 325, 343 Herman, Mrs 298 Hibbard, F. G 285, 323, 363, 372 Higginson, T. W 280, 329 Hildebrandt, C 400 Hildeburn, Mary J 305, 318 Hildrcth, S. P 359, 381 Hill, G. C 280 Hill, Thomas 393 Hillard, Geo. S 380 Hingham, Marv R 361, 302 Hobart, Mrs. C 295 Hodder, Edwin 291, 330 Hodgson, Francis 351, 357 Hoffman, Franz 324 Holdich, Jos 343, 398 Holland, J. G 290, 337 Holliday, F. C 288, 399 Holmes, O. W 310, 322, 366, 381 Holt, Emily S 284, 335, 373, 398 Holt, G. H 343 Holt, M. A 315, 320 Hood, E. Paxton 326 Hopkins, A. A 336, 380 Hopkins, E 299 Hopkins, Geo 371 Hopkins, Mark 339, 368, 384 Hoppin, Benj 322 Hoppin, James M 360 Home, Rev. H 288 Hosmer, Margaret 340, 345, 395 Houghton, Louise S 314 Houghton, R. C 284, 375, 401 Houghton, W 402 House, E 331, 352, 377, 381, 387 Hoven, Ernest 357 Howard, O. 0 358 Howells, W. D 346, 395 Howitt, Mary 293 Hubner, Chas. W 347 Hueffer, Francis 322 Hughes, Margie S 282 Hughes, Thomas 347, 392, 393 Hughey, G. W 367 Hume, David 328, 385 Humphrev, Mrs. E. J 319, 380 Hunt, C. H 342 Huntington, Fave 356, 389, 390 Huntington, F. D 299 Hurst, Catherine E 281, 310, 370, 372 Hurst, John F 288, 301, 340, 348, 371 Huxley, T. H 377 Inglts, J 375 Ingraham, J. H 365, 309, 391 Irving, W 279, 284, 291, 292, 305, 321 334, 337, 340, 341, 342, 347, 876, 380 382, 393, 397, 401 Jackson, G. A 309 422 INDEX OF A UTHORS. PAGE. [ Jackson, Sheldon 279 Jackson, T 351, 397, 398 James, J. A 405 Jameson, Anna ...295, 339, 340, 345, 376 381, 386 Janes, Edwin L 284, 364, 398 j Janes. E. S 302 ! Janvier, E. N 278 | Jay, \Ym 403 Jebb. R. C 344 Jenkins, Edw 307 Jenkins, J. S 341 Jenness, Theodora R 394 Jervis, W. H 38-5 Jessnp, H. H 388, 401 Jeter. J. B 280 Jewett, Sarah 0 307, 360, 366 I Jewett, S. A. YV 278 | Jones. C. H 341, 343, 347 Johnson, A. H 359 Johnson, E. A 323, 345 Johnson, Franklin 408 Johnson, Helen K 373, 389 Johnson, Joseph 345 Johnson, M. O 294 Johnson, Rossiter 293 Johnson, Samuel 336 Johnston, H. A 393 Jones, Harrv 364 Jowett, B. .." 307 Judd, Carrie F 368 Kane. E. K 378 Keary, A 356, 403 Keith. Alex 307, 313, 338 Kelley, Mrs. E. I) 304 Kempis. Thomas a 333 Kendall, Mrs. E. D 336, 382 Kennedy, Grace 281 Kennedy, YV. S 407 Kenni'wav, C. C 304 Kevs, C. C. 302 Kidder, D. P 300,-331, 355, 368 KUlen, J. M 325 King, (Lord) 369 Kingsbury. O. A 359 Kingsley, Calvin 372, 374 Kingsley, Charles 320, 326, 333, 339 347, 408 Kingston, W. H. G 295, 316, 325, 344 364, 371, 379, 3%, 405 Kinmont, Eleanor 332 Kinmont, Mrs. Mary 278 Kirk, John 356 Kirkland, Miss E. S 379 Kitto, J 337, 338 Knight, Chas 323, 328 Knowles, D. C 340 Knox, C. E 334 Knox, L. L 312, 371 Knox, Thos. W 332 Krummacher, F. YV 306 Lackland. Thomas 331 Lacombe, M. P 283 Lar-roix, Mrs. C. A 322 Lacroix, J. P 300, 369, 383, 400 Lalor, J. J 341, 342 Lamartine, Alphonse de 289 PAGE, Lamb, Charles and Mary 388 Lamson, Mary S 340 Lancaster, John 349 Landis, R. YV 333 Lang, A 407 Langhorne, John and William 366 Larcom, Lucy 293, 366 Larned, Augusta 330, 331, 360, 388 Larrabee, YVm. C 284, 398 Larsen, Carl 340 Lathbury, Mary A 316 Lathrop, Jos 313 Latimer. Faith 317 Lawrence, Annie M 360 Lawrence, Mrs. M. YV 343 Lawrence, W. R 341 Lawrie, J. M 325 Lawry, YV 392 Layard, A. H 358 Leavitt, J. M 314 Lecky. W. E. H 328 Lee, Man- B 346 Lee, Samuel 358 Lees, F. R 389 Legge, Jas 298, 303, 372 Leland, Chas. G 357 Leonowens, Mrs. Anna H 311, 373 Le Row, Caroline B 407 Leslie, Emma 280, 285. 295, 303, 310, 316 319, 340, 348. 364. 370, 370, 387, 397 Leslie, Mrs. Madeline..331, 340, 359, 402 Levin, S. P 320 Lewis, C. T 385 Lewis, David 387 Lewis, W. G. YV 340 Liddell, H. G 289, 385 Liefde, I. de 380 Lockhart, J. G 342 Lodge, H. C 285, 311, 379 Long, J 406 Longfellow, Henry VY 301, 308, 320 333, 337, 367 Loomis, H 321 Lord. YVillis, 290 Lorimer, John G 327 Loring, Laurie 298, 383 Lorraine, A. M 325, 378 Lossing. Benson J 306 Lowell, J. R 280, 315, 367 Lowrey, Asbury 368 Lubbock. Sir John 369 Luckey, S : 346 Lummel, E 357 Lyell, Chas 369, 386 Macaulay, T. B 279, 289, 312, 328 MacDonald, Geo 282, 296, 311, 397 Macduff, J. R 292, 293, 316, 350, 370 MacGregor, J 373 Maekay, Mrs 314 Mackenzie, Robert 358 Maclaren, A 342 Maclear, G. F 282. 360 Macleod. Alex 301, 401 Macleod. Norman 321 Macmillan, Husrh 288 Macpb-rson, J 308 Macquoid, K. S 392 Macquoid, Thos. and Katharine... 408 INDEX OF AUTHORS. 423 PAGE. Magnusson, Erik 358 Magruder, W. H. N 405 Mahaffy, J. 302, 329 Mallock, W. H 408 Mann, Horace 390, 391 Manning, Anna 335 March, Anna 360 Marlay, J. F 355 Marsh, Dwight W 389 Marsh, Katharine M 356 Marsh, Mrs 329 Marshall, Beatrice 314 Marshall, Emma ..287, 309, 344, 349, 383 396 Marston, L 373 Martin, Francis 281 Martin, Mrs. M. F 280, 374 Martin, Theo 359 Martineau, Harriet 332 Martin, W. A. P 298 Martvn, W 365 Mason, D 307 Mason, J 378 Mather, Mrs. Sarah A 404 Matlack, L. C 282 Mathews, J. McD 340 Mathews, Joanna 293 Mathews, Julia A 287 Mathews, Margaret H 406 Matthews, Wm 361 Mattison, H 333 Maurice. F. D 372, 395 Mauris, M 317 Maury, Ann 349 Mav, Carrie L 408 Mayhew, H 292, 364, 402, 403 McCabe, L. D 343 McCarty, J. H 290, 333 McClintock, John. 281, 305, 346, 351, 367 McClintock, R. N 333 McConkey, Rebecca 280 McCrie, Thomas 342 McDonald, W 282, 382 McFadden, Cornelia 363, 391 McKeen, Phoebe F 344, 390 McKeever, Harriet B...310, 346, 348, 360 McLean, John 318 McOwan, P 375 McWhorter, Alexander, 350 Meade, L. T 355, 359 Mears, John W 286, 318, 326, 384 Mercein, T. F. R 357 Meredith, Owen 346, 350. 807 Merivale, C 329, 385 Merrill, George E 286, 384 Merrill, 8. M 284, 285, 299, 325 Merritt, T 300, 304 Meseroy, A 392 Meunier, V 277 Miehaud, Jos. F 328 Michelet, Jules 289 Middleton, Meade 316 Miley, J 284, 302 Miller, Emily H...286, 315, 373, 375, 386 394, 403 Miller, Hugh :!77 Miller, J. R 398 Miller, MaryC 283, 364, 394 Mills, Lucy A 335, 364 PAGE. Milman, Henry Hart 327, 339, 403 Milton, John 363 Mitchel, O. M 284, 367 Mitchell, Arthur 363 Moffat, J. C. 303 Mogridge, Geo 323, 360 Moister, W 352 Molesworth, Mrs..321, 294, 301, 305, 388 Monastier, A 395 Moncel, Count Du 389 Montgomery, Florence 353 Montgomery, H 343 Moody, C 358 Moody, Granville 367 Moore, Frank 280 Moore, Henry 316 Moore, Maude 381 Moraine, Paul 379 More, Hannah 402 Morgan, R. C 304 Morison, J. C 341 Morley, Henry 311 Morley, John 407 Morris, R 344 Morris, T. A 355, 379 Morris, Wm 278 Morrison, A. B 382 Mosheim, J. L 301 Motley, J. L 308, 329 Mountford, Wm 407 Mowry, S 283 Mudge, Z. A...283, 291, 300, 316, 318, 332 346, 359, 361, 366, 379, 400, 401 Mulford, Elisha 408 Mulock, Dinah M 390 Munger, C 288 Munsell, O. S 370 Murphy, Arthur 336 Murphy, Thos 363 Murry, A. T 356 Myers, P. V. N 372 Nadal, Bernard H 357 Nast, William 321, 333 Ncander, Aug 343 Neely, T. B 405 Nettleship, H 302 Nevin, Alfred 363 Nevins, J. L 298 Newbury, Mrs. F. E 302 Newman, J. P 285 Newman, Mrs. J. P 307, 355 Newstead, Robert 277, 330 Newton, R. H 401 Newton, Richard 337, 364, 371 Newton, Wm 379 Newton, W. W 333, 344, 362, 399 Nichol, John 344 Nichols, G. W 383 Noble, Annette L 380, 382 Nordhoff, Chas 367 Norris, Mary H 317 Nott, E 304 Ober, F. A 294 Olin, Stephen 322, 340, 372 Oliphant, Mrs 317, 342 Oliver, Maria 360, 375 Orton, J as 281, 303 424 INDEX OF AUTHORS. PAGE. Otheman, Edw 300 Owen, Mrs. O. F 326 Paddock, Z 302 Page, H. A 339 Palev, Wm 313, 355, 357 Palffev, F. W 349 Palmer, E. F 329 Palmer, E. H 358 Palmer, W. C 323 Pansy (See Alden. Mrs. R. G.) Pardee, H. C 294 Parker, Caroline G 370 Parker, Joseph 277, 309, 363 Parker, Mrs 282 Parloa, Maria 315 Parsons. W. 1 286 Pa-scal, Blaise 390 Paterson, H. Sinclair 326 Patterson, Robert M 310, 363, 395 Patton, W. W 368 Paull, II. H. B 279, 337 Payne, Mrs. A. M. M...295, 359, 362, 373 407 Pearse, Mark Guy 306, 352, 393 Pearson, Emilv C 322 Peek, Geo 300, 347, 351, 361, 364, 375 Peck, J. T 301, 322, 399, 401 Peile, J 344 Peirce, B. K 334, 393, 402, 405 Perkins, F. B 287 Pern-, Alice 355 Pern-, Nora 287 Phelps, Mrs. A. L 283 Phelps, Austin 383 Phelps, Elizabeth S....292. 318, 350, 377 380, 393 Phelps, Miss L, L 395 Phelps, Mrs. S. B 380 Phillips, G. 8 280 Phillips, Philip 381 Philpotts, J. 8 337 Piatt, Mrs. S. M. B 366 Pike, James 8 358 Pike, N 386 Pindar, Susan Cooper 398 Piper, Ferd 345 Pitman. Emma Raymond 407 Pitman, R. C 279 Pittingill, J. H 331 Piatt, 8. H 368 Pollard, Josephine 319 Pollock. Walter II 358 Poole, Mrs. L. E 336 Pope, Wm. Burt 390 Porter, Mrs. A. E 320, 356, 387, 390 Porter, Geo. P 284 Porter, Jas. ...296, 312, 327, 350, 351, 360 373, 383 Porter. Xoah 310 Porter, Rose ..295, 316, 334, 381, 386, 395 400, 403 Post, Loretta J 312 Potts, J. H 351, 363 Pouehet, F. A 395 Powell, F 285 Powell, T 282 Power, J. H 308 Power, P. B 388, 391 PAGE. Poynter, E. J 284 Pratt, F. L 278 Prentiss, Mrs. E....285, 316, 320. 345, 364 365, 383, 395 Pressense", Edmond de 282, 301, 326 335, 348, 372, 374 Priestley, J 300 Prime, E. I). G 283, 317 Prime, S. 1 279, 368, 393, 395 Prime, W. C 291, 333, 389 Pritchard, Miss S. J 285, 374, 379 Proctor, R. A..291, 316, 323, 325, 343, 355 361, 362 Prosser, Mrs 301 Proyost, Katharine 348 Punshon, W. M 339, 369, 375 Putnam, Miss H. A 392 Quick, R. H 312 Ramsey, Mrs 312 Rand, Edw. A. 279, 286, 316, 370, 375, 389 Ram ard, L. N 291 Rawlinson, Geo.. ..281, 327, 354, 361, 407 Raw. son, J 281 Raybold, G. A 351 Raymond, Miner 388 Reade, T. C 387 Reid, J. M 352 Remington, E. F 302 Rice, Jas 358 Rice, Wm 367 Rich, Anthony 307 Richards, C. H 400 Richardson, AbbyS 314 Richardson, B. W 389 Richardson, T. F 280 Richmond, Mrs. E. J 308, 331, 394 Richmond, J. F 307 Richmond, L 282 Rideing, W. H 284, 384 Ridgaway, H. B 341 Ridley, M. L 361 Ridpath, J. C 329 Rigg, J. II 346 Riggs, Stephen R 348 Risher, I). W 334 Ritten, Carl 303 Roberts, J. S 340 Robertson, F. W :332, 340, 378 Robertson, M. M 334, 335, 394 Robinson, Geo. C 378 Robinson, H. M 322 Robinson. Mrs. Mary S 280 Rogers, Hester Ann 373 Rogers, Mary E 362 Rollin, H. J 386 Ropes, Mary E 315 Rose, A. C 399 Ros-s, Mrs. Ellen 308 Round. Wm. M. F 392 Roussel, M. 374 Rousselet, L 379 Rule, W. H 293 Rusk-in. John 309, 375, 379, 393 Russell, Michael 359 Russell, Thomas 388 Rutcr. Martin 328 Byle, J. C 292, 331 - INDEX OF A UTIIORS. 425 Saintsbury 308 Sampson, S. W 308 Sandford, P. P 399 Sargent, Epos 305, 342 Sargent, G. E 301 Sargent, G. F 346 Saunders, F 313 Saunders, John 389 Saxe, John G 367 Searlett, J 304 Bchaff, P 299, 364, 374 Schiller, F 379, 390 Schweinfurth, Geo 325 Scott, T. J 352 Scott, Walter 388 Seudder, Horace E 291, 308, 379, 384 Scuddcr, Mrs. J 294 Seebohm, F 31-2 Seeley, J. R 309 Seelye, J. H 329 Seiss, Joseph A 352, 396 Sells, Mrs. S. E 281 Seward, Wm. H 392 Sevvell, E. M 342, 358, 363, 369 Shaffer, H. M 286 Shairp, J. C 305, 367, 386 Shaw, Barnabas 381 Shaw, Jennie R 357 Shedd, Mrs. Julia A 314 Sheldon, Amos 377 Shepherd, Dorothea A 332 Shepherd, I. J 287 Sherman, David 307, 357 Shipton, Anna 234, 346, 369, 370, 378 387, 389, 397, 398 Short, J. T 338, 359 Sibee, Marie 309 Sidney, E 316, 365 Sidney, Margaret 316, 323, 381 Sigston, Jas : 292 Simmons, C 377 Simmons, M. L 386 Simpson, Matthew 339, 351, 403 Sims, C. N 309 Sinclair, Cath 330 Skelton, Henrietta 408 Slaughter, W. B 354 Slicer, Adeline E. H 292 Slicer, H 286 Slidell-Mackenzie, Harriet D 329 Smiles, S 309, 332, 341, 373, 378, 391 Smith, D 281, 315, 339, 346, 347, 363 Smith, Mrs. F. B 302, 349, 360 Smith, Geo 324, 325, 341, 364, 376 Smith, Geo. B 341 Smith, Henry 335 Smith, H. B 282 Smith, 1 351 Smith, Moses 350 Smith, Newman 361 Smith, Philip 384, 385, 386 Smith, Mrs. R 355 Smith, R. B 354 Smith, S. F 337, 356, 359, 384 Smith, Sidney 401 Smith, W. C 365, 376, 380 Smith, W. Robertson 408 Smith, W. T 352 Smith, Wm 384, 385 PAGE. Smucker, S. M 295, 349 Sommers, Jane R 325 Southey, R 342 Sparks, W. H 349 Speke, J. H 336 Spencer, I. S 363 Spicer, T 316 Sprague, W. B 313 Spring, Gardiner 359 Stalker, Jas 299 Stall, S 332 Stanford, Chas 326 Stanley, A. P..300, 329, 335, 378, 379. 391 Stanley, Edwin J 371 Stanley, H. M 278, 392 Stanley, J 367 Stearns, Winifred A 357 Steele, Daniel 346, 352, 390 Steele, Eliza R 381 Stephens, J. L 392, 393 Stevens, Abel 285, 301, 307, 322, 347 350, 351, 368, 381, 401 Stevenson, Sarah H 292 Stevenson, Wm. F 368 Steward, G 372 Stokes, H. P 384 Story, J 304 Stoughton, John 326, 343 Stowe, Mrs. H. B 331, 360, 395 Stretton, Hesba 294, 286, 401 Strickland, Agnes 345, 384, 385 Strickland, W. P...284, 289, 322, 327, 365 Strong, James 305, 321, 324 Strong, J. D 297 Strong, Wm 372 Sutcliffe, J 300 Swallow, S. C 294 Sweetser, M. F 283 Swift, Maggie 369 Swing, David 302, 356 Symonds, J. A 381 Talmage, T. De Witt 313, 360, 382 Taneyhill, Miss Ellen 404 Taine, H. A 311, 335 Tarbox, I. N 335 Taylor, Alfred 364 Taylor, Bayard .*...289, 367, 396 Taylor, Isaac 398 Taylor, Jeremy 330, 375 Taylor, T 305, 336, 348 Taylor, Wm 353 Taylor, Wm. M....306, 310, 321, 326, 364 Temple, Crona 327 Tennyson, Alfred 367 Tefft, B.F 341, 382 Thalheimer, M. E 281, 327 Thatcher 334 Thaxter, Celia 280 Thayer, Mrs. C. M 372 Thayer, Wm. M 321, 357, 365, 367 Thieblin, N. L 381 Thiers, M. A 328 Tholuck, A 331 Thomas. W 292 Thompson, Andrew 324 Thompson, Mrs. E. W 286 Thompson, Julia C 341, 394 Thompson, Lewis 0 332, 368 36 426 INDEX OF A UTIIOHS. PAGE. Thompson, & A < 300 Thompson, Richard W 363 Thompson, Wm. M 338 Thomson, J 347 Thomson, Bdw .312, 313, 361, 381 Tide, C. P 407 Tonna, (Charlotte Elizabeth)... 304, 336 Tourgee, A. W 293, 316 Towle, Geo. M 286, 326 Townlev, James 289 Townsend, L. T. ..283, 300, 305, 315, 320 333, 346, 371, 3S7, 390 Townsend, V. F 310, 370, 389 Tozer, H. F 344 Trafton, Mark 377 Trail, W 344 Treffrv, R 287, 368, 381 Trench, R. C 370 Tristram, H. B 338, £57 Trollope, Anthony 301, 341 Trollope, T. A 289 True, C. K. ...332, 336, 337, 341, 371, 390 Trumbull, H. C £53 Tucker, Janet 358 Tullock, John 286, 299 Tupper, Iff. F 370 Tuttle, Joseph F 398 Tweedie, W. K 309, 373, 378 Tyerman, L 341, 342, 362 Tyler, Moses Coit 407 Tyndall, John 314, 316, 325, 331. 340 343, 381 Upham, Fraxcis W 330, 383, 400 Upham, T. C .333, 341, 342 U rhino, Mrs. S. R 369 Urmy, W. S 337 VAX BUKEN, J. M 321 Vance, Clara 281, 384, 388 Vandegrift, Margaret 302 Van Lennep, H. J 288 Van Oosterzee, J. J 390 Vansant, X 371 Vaughan, Chas. J 299, 404 Vincent, F .338, 391 Vincent, J. Ht 501, 387 Vincent, Iff. R 313 Waddington, M. A 328 Waddy, Edith 345 Wagstaff, F 339 Wakelev, J. B 291, Sal, 369, 398 Walden, Tread well 361 Walker, Miss A. D &55 "Walker, J as. B 330, 376 Walker, T. H 278 Wallace, Alfred R 334, 347 Wallace, Mrs. E. D 401 Wallace, Lew 287 Waller, H 278 WaLshe, Miss E. II 347 Walton, Mrs. O. F 301, 364, 397 Ward, Hetta L. II 306 Ware, Thomas 397 Waring, Geo. E 291, 293, 396 Warner, Anna 291, 311, 340, 376 Warner, Charles Dudley. ..285, 356, 400 407 PAGE. Warner, Elizabeth 290 Warner, Susan 320 Warner, Susan and Anna 403 Warren, H. W 380 Warren, Israel P 296, 391 Warren, W. H 371 Waterton, Chas 397 Watson, H. C 294 Watson, J. T 367 Watson, James V 372, 388 Watson, Richard 304, 397, 398 Watson, Richard (Bishop) 282, 397 Waylland, John H 347 Webb, Mrs 280, 367 Wells, Jas 288 WelLs, J. C. (Att'y at Law) 395 Wells, Wm 326 Went worth, E 324 Weslev, John 300, 308, 398, 399 West, R. A 398 Westcott, Thompson 360 Whatelv, Mary L 340 Whately, R 313 Whedon, D. D 303, 399 Wheeler, Henry 351 Wheeler, J. T 341 Wheeler, Mrs. Mary S 401 "Whipple, E. P 344, 386 White, Andrew D 397 White, James 310, 328 White, Lucy Cecil 383 White, Lorenzo 322 Whitgift, A 305 Whitmarsh, Caroline S 368 Whitney, Mrs. A D. T..314, 318, 371, 386 Whitney, G. H 288 Whitney, W. J) 340 Whittier, John G 297, .336, 366 Whvmper, F 278, 377 Wilberforce. Bishop S 298 Wildermuth, Ottilie 332 Wiley, Isaac W 298, 372 Wilkins, A. S 329 Wilkinson, W. C 306, 408 Willard, Frances E 358 Willard, Mary E 392 Willet, I. E 402 Williams, Charles 393 Williams. John 403 Wiliing, Jennie F 295, 307, 361, 392 Wilmer, Margaret E 369 Wilson, Andrew 277 Wilson, Mrs. A. M 345 Wilson, (Capt.) 371 "Wilson, Geo 316 Wilson, James G 381 Wilson, J. H 361 WinehelL. \lexander 313, 371, 381 Winkworth, C 300 Winslow, M. E 378 Winter, Wm 393 Winthrop, A. T 399 Winton, X. W 308 Wirt, Wm 343 Wise, Daniel..295, 300, 320, 343, 362, 363 364, 366, 376, 382, 386, 395, 400. 401 404, 407 Withrow, W. H 295 Wolfe, H. J 362 INDEX OF AUTHORS. 427 PAGE. Wood, Charles 408 Wood, E. M 350 Wood, E. P 362 Wood, J. A 364 Wood, J. G 331, 333, 347, 357 Woodbridge, Miss A. E 407 Woodworth, Eliza 293 Woolman.J 336 Woolsey, T. D 325 Worth, Mrs. L. L 381 Wright,;j. F 370 Wright, Mrs. J. McN...279, 287, 358, 379 399, 408 Wright, R. W 341 Wright, W. A 285 Wultke, A 299 Wyatt, W. E 299 PAGE. Wythe, J. H 278, 363, 377 Yonge, Chas. D 406 Yonge, Charlotte M....291, 344, 365, 369 370, 383, 404 Young, Alexander 404 Young, -Dan 306 Young, Edw 366 Young, Jacob 365 Young, John 299 Young, L. H 372 Young, M. C 338 Young, Robert 304, 333, 368 Young, Royal 303 Ziethe, W 281 \