<^ THE CAMBRIDGE BULLETIN ^»? 



No. XXXII May 19 14 



The Reign of Henry} the Fifth. Volume I (141 3-1 41 5). By James 

 Hamilton lV\ru'^ M.A., D.Lltt., late H.M. Divisional Inspector of 

 Schools. Ford's Lecturer in the University of Oxford, 1899. 



Royal 8vo. pp. viiiH-56o. Price 25J. net 



"The publication of the first volume of Dr Wylie's projected History 

 of the Reign of Henry V," says The Morning Post, " has been almost 

 immediately followed by the announcement of his death, at the age of 

 sixty-nine. Dr Wylie spent nearly forty years in the service of the Board 

 of Education, and, after his retirement in 1909, he was appointed an 

 Inspector of Historical MSS. The research which has made his name 

 familiar to historical students... was therefore the work and amusement of 

 the leisure hours of a busy man ; yet he succeeded in acquiring an amount 

 of historical learning which would have done credit to a student whose 

 whole life was devoted to his subject." 



This book is a continuation of the History of England under Henrv IV, 

 by the same author, which was published in 1898, and the present volume 

 carries the story to the point at which the first expedition sailed for 

 Harfleur. 



"The author is seen at his best in a chapter upon medieval hospitals, which 

 contains a vast amount of curious information ; and in his account of the preparations 

 for the French campaign, which should be studied by all military historians. We are 

 glad to see that this book is published with the imprimatur of the Cambridge University 

 Press. Dr Wylie is one of those unacademic students who are the glory of English 

 scholarship ; and academic historians are deeply in his debt." — The Manchester 

 Guardian 



The Divine Right of Kings. By John Neville Figgis, of the Community 

 of the Resurrection, Litt.D., Hon. D.D. Glasgow, Hon. Fellow of 

 S. Catharine's College, Caml>ridge. Second Edition, with three additional 

 essays. 



Crown 8vo. pp. xii4-4o6. Price 6j. net 



The first edition was published in 1896, and was at once recognised as 

 a work indispensable to the study of the history of the 17th century and of 

 Political Theory in general. • The author explains that while the historical 

 account stands mainly as before, his opinions on the theory of Sovereignty, 

 the relation of Small Groups to the State, and other political problems have 

 undergone much change. 



The additional essays are entitled : " Aaron s Rod Blossoming or Jus 

 Divinum in 1646," " Erastus and Erastianism," and " Bartolus and the 

 Development of European Political Ideas." 



I I 



