THE CAMBRIDGE UNIVERSITY PRESS. 7 



SELECT DISCOURSES, 



by John Smith, late Fellow of Queens' College, Cambridge. Edited by 

 H. G. Williams, B.D, late Professor of Arabic, Royal Odlavo. ^s. 6d. 



"The 'Select Discourses' of John Smith, "It is necessary to vindicate the distinc- 



collected and pubhshed from his papers after tion of these men, because history hitherto 



his death, are, in my opinion, much the most has hardly done justice to them. They have 



considerable work left to us by this Cambridge been forgotten amidst the more noisy parties 



School [the Cambridge Platonists]. They of their time, between whom they sought to 



have a right to a place in English literary mediate.. ..What they really did for the cause 



history." — Mr Matthew Arnold, in the of religious thought has never been ade- 



Cotttemporaiy Review. quateiy appreciated. They worked with too 



" Of all the products of the Cambridge little combination and consistency. But it is 



School, the 'Select Discourses' are perhaps impossible in any real study of the age not to 



the highest, as they are the most accessible recognise the significance of their labours, or 



and the most widely appreciated... and indeed to fail to see how much the higher movement 



no spiritually thoughtful mind can read them of the national mind was due to them, while 



unmoved. They carry us so directly into an others carried the religious and civil struggle 



atmosphere of divine philosophy, luminous forward to its sterner issues." — Principal 



with the richest lights of meditative genius... Tulloch, Rational Theology in England 



He was one of those rare thinkers in whom in tlie iqih Century. 



largeness of view, and depth, and wealth of "We may instance Mr Henry Griffin 



poetic and speculative insight, only served to Williams's revised edition of Mr John Smith's 



evoke more fully the religious spirit, and ' Select Discourses,' which have won Mr 



while he drew the mould of his thought from Matthew Arnold's admiration, as an example 



Plotinus, he vivified the substance of it from of worthy work for an University Press to 



St Paul." undertake." — Times. 



THE HOMILIES, 



with Various Readings, and the Quotations from the Fathers given 

 at length in the Original Languages. Edited by G. E. CORRIE, D.D. 

 Master of Jesus College. Demy Odlavo. 7J. 6d. 



DE OBLIGATIONE CONSCIENTI.^ PR^LEC- 



TIONES decern Oxonii in Schola Theologica habitas a Roberto 

 Sanderson, SS. Theologiae ibidem Professore Regio. With English 

 Notes, including an abridged Translation, by W. Whewell, D.D. 

 late Master of Trinity College. Demy Ocftavo. ']s. 6d. 



ARCHBISHOP USHER'S ANSWER TO A JESUIT, 



with other Trads on Popery. Edited by J. Scholefield, M.A. late 

 Regius Professor of Greek in the University. Demy Oflavo. js. 6d. 



WILSON'S ILLUSTRATION OF THE METHOD 



of explaining the New Testament, by the early opinions of Jews and 

 Christians concerning Christ. Edited by T. TuRTON, D.D. late Lord 

 Bishop of Ely. Demy Oftavo. ^s. 



LECTURES ON DIVINITY 



delivered in the University of Cambridge, by JOHN Hey, D.D. 

 Third Edition, revised by T. TuRTON, D.D. late Lord Bishop of Ely. 

 2 vols. Demy Odlavo. 15J. 



London: Cambridge Warehouse, 17 Paternoster Row. 



