lo Mr. Edward Arnold's Autumn Announcements. 



THE AUTOBIOGRAPHY AND LIFE 

 OF FATHER TYRRELL. 



By MAUD PETRE. 

 In Two Volumes. Demy 8vo., cloth. 21s. net. 



The first volume, which is autobiographical, covers 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 INIalta, 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, 

 and was not carried any farther. It is edited with notes and 

 supplements to each chapter by M. D. Petre. 



The second volume, which takes up the story where the first ends, 

 deals chiefly with the storm and stress period of his later years. 

 Large use is made of his own notes, and of his letters, of which a 

 great number have been lent by correspondents of all shades of 

 thought. Various documents of importance figure in this later 

 volume, in which the editor aims at making the history as complete 

 and objective as possible. Incidentally some account is given of the 

 general movement of thought, -which has been loosely described as 

 ' modernism,' but the chief aim of the writer will be to describe the 

 part which Father Tyrrell himself played in this movement, and the 

 successive stages of his mental development as he brought his 

 scholastic training to bear on the modern problems that confronted 

 him. The work ends with his death on July 15, 1909, and the 

 events immediately subsequent to his death. 



THE DIARY OF A MODERNIST. 



By WILLIAM SCOTT PALMER, 



AuTHOK OF 'An Agnostic's Pkogkess,' f.ic. 



Crown Svo., cloth. 5s. net. 



Mr. Scott Palmer's Diary is the attempt of a man of faith and 

 intellect to bring modern thought to bear on the ancient doctrines of 

 religion. His musings bear no resemblance to the essays at recon- 

 ciliation with which the latter part of the last century was only too 



