ME. MURE AY'S LIST OF WOEKS NOW EEADY. 



THE CHURCH AND THE AGE. 



ESSAYS ON THE PRINCIPLES AND PRESENT POSITION OF THE 

 ANGLICAN CHURCH. BY VARIOUS WRITERS. 



CONTENTS. 



Anglican Principles. — Dean of Chichester. 



Modern Rcligioiis Tlwught. —Bishop of Gloucester and Bristol. 



The State, Church, and Synods. — Rev. Dr. Irons. 



Religious Use of Taste. — Rev. R. St. John Tyrwhitt. 



Place of the Laity. — Professor Burrows. 



The Parish Priest. — Rev. Walsham How. 



Diviiies of 16th and 17th Centuries. — Rev. A. W. Haddan. 



Liturgies and Ritual. — Rev. M. P. Sadler. 



The Cliiorch and Education. — Rev. Dr. Barry. 



Progress of Christian Missions in India. — Sir Bartle Frere. 



The Church and tite People. — Rev. W. D. Maclagan. 



Conciliation and Cmnprehension. — Rev. A. V/eir. 



Second Edilion. 8vo. 14s. 



THE REVOLT of the PROTESTANTS in the CEVENNES, 



WITH SOME ACCOUNT OF 



THE HUGUENOTS IN THE SEVENTEENTH CENTURY. 



By MRS. BRAY, 



Author of "The Good St. Louis," &o. &c. 



Post 8vo. 10s. Qd. 



" Mrs. Bray has given in this little volume, a very full and interesting account of the civil 

 war in the Ccvennes, popularly known as the Camisard revolt. The book is agreeably written. 

 The revolt of the Cevennes, tliough unimportant in its efl'ects on the general course of histoi-j-, 

 has a dramatic unity which gives it an interest of its own. It is a singularly representative 

 twe, in a circumscribed space, of the revolt against political and religious oppression, with all 

 the characteristic features of such wiu'fare strongly viaiked.." — Literary Churchman. 



THE STUDENT'S ANCIENT HISTORY OF THE EAST. I 



FROM THE EARLIEST TIMES TO THE CONQUEST OF 

 ALEXANDER THE GREAT. 



INCLUDING EGYPT, ASSYRIA, BABYLONIA, MEDIA, PERSIA, ASIA MINOR, and PHCENICIA. 



By PHILIP SMITH, B.A., 



Author of the " History of the World." 



"With Woodcuts. Post 8vo. 7s. 6d. 



" The work is based on an independent study of the ancient writers, and a careful use of 

 the best modem authorities. The object has not been to draw up a mere skeleton or epitome, 

 but a narrative full and circumstantial enough to possess life and interest, and to leave that 

 impression on the memory which mere outlines can never pi'oduce. In fine, an earnest effort 

 has been made to produce a mannal, both for the student and the general reader, of the present 

 state of om' knowledge on a subject the interest of which is daily growing, its bounds enlarging, 

 and its details becoming more definite and certain by the progress of inquiry." — Preface. 



I 



