MEMOIRS. 



is also to realize that he had proved and uttered 

 the message which he had to give, and that future 

 work might have hardly done more than interpret 

 and expand it. The writings referred to are 

 " Science and the Faith " (containing reviews re- 

 published from the Guardian and Quarterly, with a 

 preface defining the general drift of their thought), 

 an " Oxford House Paper " on " Evolution and 

 Christianity," three sermons in " Keble College 

 Sermons, 1877-88," " Holy Week Addresses " (with 

 a preface on Calvinism, etc.), " Theology and Law : 

 an Assize Sermon," and an essay on " The Chris- 

 tian Doctrine of God" in "Lux Mundi." It is 

 much to be hoped that other pieces of his work 

 may still be issued, possibly his Oxford Reforma- 

 tion lectures which drew so large a class, some of 

 his sermons, and further essays on scientific sub- 

 jects, e.g. on Weismann's modification of the evolu- 

 tion doctrine. His is work of which the unity and 

 the balance made every addition of detail more 

 appreciably interesting and useful. 1 



Moore's life may be very briefly given. He was 

 the second son of the Rev. Daniel Moore, Pre- 



1 The wish here expressed has already been carried out in the 

 main. The Essays on Weismann are included in the present 

 volume, and the Reformation Lectures have been published this 

 year by Messrs. Kegan Paul, Trench, Triibner & Co., under the 

 title of " Lectures and Papers on the History of Reformation in 

 England and on the Continent." 



