12 Mr. Edward Arnold's Autumn Announcements. 



WALKING ESSAYS. 



By ARTHUR HUGH SIDGWICK. 



One Volume. Crown Svo. 5s. net. 



This book is a collection of eight essays, not previously published, 

 with a dedicatory ode, *' Comitibus," and an epilogue to the reader. 

 It is intended less as a practical guide to walking than as a study, 

 based on experience, of walking in the Home Counties, the Lake 

 District, and elsewhere, and of various questions arising therefrom. 

 Walking is viewed objectively in its relation to other pursuits, to 

 sport and athletics, to hygiene, to music and dancing, to eating and 

 drinking. It is viewed subjectively in its effect on the mind, 

 particularly as tending to form broad views and sound dogmatisms, 

 and to promote friendship. One essay is devoted to the praise oip 

 the " Walker Miles " footpath guides ; another to a brief sketch of 

 the history of walking as revealed in literature. A few illustrative 

 stories are included, some of which are true. Particular attention is 

 paid to the subjects of beer, boots, the weather, waltzing, walking- 

 out, Aristotle, Ibsen, Elizabeth Bennet, the Egoist, John Brown's 

 Body, the Seventh Symphony of Beethoven, walking in London, 

 rowing, hunting, and trespassing. The book is addressed primarily 

 to fellow-walkers : but it is hoped that a wider circle of readers may 

 find matter for interest, reflection, and disagreement therein. 



THE AUTOBIOGRAPHY AND LIFE 

 OF FATHER TYRRELL. 



By MAUD PETRE. 



In Tzc'o Volumes. With numerous Illustrations. Demy Svo, Cloth. 



21S. net. 



The first volume, which is autobiographical, will cover the period 

 from George Tyrrell's birth in 1861 to the year 1885, including an 

 account of his family, his childhood, schooldays, and youth in 

 Dublin ; his conversion from Agnosticism, through a phase of High 

 Church Protestantism to Catholicism ; his experiences in Cyprus 

 and Malta, where he lived as a probationer before entering the 

 Society of Jesus ; his early life as a Jesuit, with his novitiate and 

 first studies in scholastic philosophy and Thomism. This autobiog- 

 raphy, written in 1901, ends just before the death of his mother 



