Nov. 6. 1852.] 



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SOME ACCOUNT of DOMES- 

 TIC ARCHITECTURE in ENGLAND, 

 from the Conquest to the end of ti.e l hirteenth 

 Century, with numerous Illustrations of Ex- 

 isting Kemnins from Original Drawings. By 

 T. HUDSON TURNER. 



" What Horace Walpolc attempted, and what 

 Sir Charles Lock Eastlake has done for oil- 

 painting — elucidated its liistory and traced its 

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 of expenses and mandates of the successive 

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" The book of which the title is given above 

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"Mr. Turner exhibits much learning and 

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" The work is well illustrated throughout 

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" It is as a text-book on the social comforts 

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" Turner's handsomely-printed volume is 

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 Athenceum. 



JOHN HENRY PARKER, Oxford ; and 

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8vo., price 12s. 



A MANUAL OF ECCLESI- 

 ASTICAL HISTORY, from the First to 

 the Twelfth Century inclusive. By the Rev. 

 E. S. FOULKES, M.A., Fellow and Tutor of 

 Jesus College, Oxford. 



The main plan of the work has been bor- 

 rowed from Spanheim, a learned, though cer- 

 tainly not unbiassed, writer of the seventeenth 

 century : the matter compiled from Spondanus 

 and Spanheim, Mosheim and Fleury, Gieseler 

 and Diillinger, and others, who have been used 

 too often to be specified, unless when reference 

 to them appeared desirable for the benefit of 

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 The one object that I have had before me has 

 been to condense facts, without either garbling 

 or omitting any that should be noticed in a 

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" An epitomist of Church History has a task 

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 a love for the Catholic cause, a reverence for 

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 vail.' 



" And among other qualifications which may 

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 1852. 



JOHN HENRY PARKER, Oxford, and 

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THE CALENDAR OF THE 

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 Images are most frequently met with in Eng- 

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 the volume with its numerous illustrations. 

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On 1st of November, price 2s., No. LXXXHI. 



THE ECCLESIASTIC. 

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 GuBtavus Vasa, and the Swedish Reformation. 

 The Recent Investigation at Plymouth. 

 Laity in Convocation. 



The Acts of Convocation : Past and Future. 

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the Great Rebellion : Dr. Godfrey Goodman, 



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London : J. MASTERS, Aldersgate Street, 

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THE PRACTICAL WORKING 

 of THE CHURCH OF SP.\IN. By the 

 Rev. FREDERICK MEYRICK, M.A., Fel- 

 low of Trinity College, Oxford. 



" Pleasant meadows, happy peasants, all holy 

 monks, all holy priests, holy every body. Such 

 charity and such unity, when every man was 

 a Catholic. I once believed in this Utopia my- 

 self, but when tested by stern facts, it all melts 

 away like dream." — ^. Welby Pugin. 



" The revelations made by such writers as 

 Mr. Meyrick i;i Spain and Mr. Gladstone in 

 Italy, have at least vindicated for the Church 

 of England a providential and morally defined 

 position, mission, and purpose in the Catholic 

 Church." — Mornina Chronicle. 



" Two valuable works ... to the truthful- 

 ness of which we are glad to add our own testi- 

 mony : one, and the most important, is Mr. 

 Meyrick 's ' Practical Working of the Church 

 of Spain.' This is the experience — and it is 

 the experience of every Spanish traveller—of a 

 thoughtful person, as to the lamentable results 

 of unchecked Romanism. Here is the solid 

 substantial fact. Spain is divided between 

 ultra-infidelity and what is so closely akin to 

 actual idolatry, that it can only be controver- 

 sially, not practically, distinguished from it : 

 and over all hangs a lurid cloud of systematic 

 immorality, simply frightful to contemplate. 

 We can offer a direct, and even personal, testi- 

 mony to all that Mr. Meyrick has to say." — 

 Christian Rememhrancer. 



" I wish to recommend it strongly."— r. K. 

 Arnold's Theological Critic. 



" Many passing travellers have thrown more 

 or less light upon the state of Romanism 

 and Christianity in Spain, according to their 

 objects and opportunities ; but we suspect these 

 'workings' are the fullest, the most natural, 

 and the most trustworthy, of anything that 

 has appeared upon the subject since the time 

 of Blanco White's Confessions."— (^pec^afw. 



"This honest exposition of the practical 

 working of Romanism in Spain, of its every- 

 day effects, not its canons and theories,deserves 

 the careful study of all, who, unable to test the 

 question abroad, are dazzled by the distant 

 mirage with which the Vatican mocks many a 

 yearning soul that thirsts after water-brooks 

 pure and full."— Literary Gazette. 



JOHN HENRY PARKER, Oxford ; and 

 377, Strand, London. 



