MEMOIRS. 



who from a longer and more intimate friendship 

 are better entitled to do so, although I cannot 

 close without joining my testimony to what, among 

 all his friends, must be, in an unusual measure, a 

 consciousness of personal loss. 



" O strong soul, by what shore 

 Tarriest thou now ? For that force, 

 Surely, has not been left vain ! 

 Somewhere, surely, afar, 

 In the sounding labour-house vast 

 Of being, is practised that strength, 

 Zealous, beneficent, firm." 



III. 



THE REV. W. LOCK, SUB- WARDEN OF 

 KEBLE COLLEGE. 1 



STUDENTS of Theology have had a sad list of 

 deaths to mourn within the last twelve months : 

 Dr. Edersheim, Canon Evans, W. H. Simcox, Dr. 

 Hatch, Bishop Lightfoot, Dr. Littledale, and Dr. 

 von Dollinger have followed each other quickly to 

 " the Eternal School " ; and now, in the death of 

 the Rev. A. L. Moore, we have another loss coming 

 home to us in Oxford very closely, and one which, 

 if we combine performance with promise, is as sad 

 as any of the others. 



1 Reprinted from the Oxford Magazine, Jan. 22, 1890. 



