Mr. Murray's Recent Publications. 



The Foundations of the Creed. 



BEING A DISCUSSION OF THE GROUNDS UPON WHICH THE 



ARTICLES OF THE APOSTLES' CREED MAY BE HELD BY 



EARNEST AND THOUGHTFUL MINDS IN THE 



NINETEENTH CENTURY. 



By HARVEY GOODWIN, D.D., 



Lord Bishop of Carlisle. 

 %V0. \i,S. 



" Bishop Goodwin has endeavoured to make things plain to all, whether within or without 

 the Church, who may be seeking after knowledge, or whose belief may have been shaken by 

 one or other of the many attacks on Christianity made by modern professors of freethought 

 and science. He deals with the whole of his subject with conspicuous ability and scholarly 

 resource. He has brought to bear the whole powers of a keen intellect, a ripe judgment, a 

 cultured and well-stored mind, as well as a fund of theological erudition such as but few of 

 his contemporaries possess. He has well finished a task begun wiih a due and serious 

 apprehension of its vast importance, and as a result he has presented a vindication of the 

 Apostle's Creed whicli may well claim to rank as tlie legitimate corollary of Pearson's venerable 

 work." — Morning Post 



" Intelligent and cultured men who are in doubt as to the real contents of the Creed, and 

 who imagine that agnosticism, positivism, Robert Elsmereism, or any other of our modern 

 nostrums can supplant Evangelical Christianity, will find in this book much that should, 

 according to all the rules of logic, shut them up to the faith. The Bishop's ample knowledge, 

 cogent reasoning, and transparent style, impart to the volume great literary worth, while his 

 candour, his liberality, and his hopefulness render it a valuable eirenicon in the controversy 

 with unbelief." — Raptist Magazine. 



A Handbook to the Death Duties. 



By SYDNEY BUXTON, M,P., and 



GEORGE STAPYLTON BARNES, Barrister-at-Law. 



Post Svo. 2^- 6^. 



Comedy of a Country House. 



A NOVEL. 

 By JULIAN STURGIS, 



Author of "John a Dreams," " John Maidment," &c. 

 Popular Edition. Crown Svo. 6s. 



" Mr. Sturgis has a charming manner of writing social comedy. His touch is light and 

 graceful. " — Mortring Post. 



" Mr. Julian Sturgis is a very clever man, and there is so much cleverness in his ' Comedy 

 of a Country House,' that no reader who knows good work when he sees it, can fail to render 

 hearty and ungrudging admiration. The true tone of comedy is, on the whole, admirably 

 maintained." — Spectator. 



" Mr. Julian Sturgis, in his 'Comedy of a Country House,' gives us some minute and 

 clever studies of character, very much in the manner of Mr. Henry James, but with a stronger 

 human interest in them. There is, moreover, an excellent moral in the story, which, if it be 

 no more than the impropriety of interfering in other people's business, is not to be despised." — 

 Record. 



