50, Albemarle Street, 

 February, 1879. 



$Kr. JEurrati'a fiat nf 



A POPULAR COMMENTARY. 



The Student 's Edition of the Speaker s 

 Commentary on the Holy Bible. 



Abridged and Edited by JOHN M. FULLER, M.A. 



Vicar of Bexley, formerly Fellow of St. John's College, Cambridge. 



To be completed in 6 Volumes. Vol. I. Crown Svo. Js. 6J. 



The Speaker's Commentary on the Bible has secured for itself a recognized place as the 

 foremost work of its class available for English readers. Numerous testimonies to the merits 

 of this work, and to the fact that it meets a real want in religious literature, have been 

 received from various countries and different schools of thought. America and Germany, 

 Churchmen and Nonconformists, clergymen and laymen, have alike found in its pages wise 

 and liberal views upon points of confessedly disputed interpretation, and a storehouse of 

 scholarship and research upon questions philosophical, archaeological, and historical. 



The object of the present Abridgment is to give information sufficient to enable any reader 

 to understand the Holy Scriptures, "to acquaint him with the conclusions of learned investiga- 

 tions, and to supply him with satisfactory answers to current misinterpretations. 



The Bedouins of the Euphrates Valley. 



By Lady ANNE BLUNT. 

 Edited, with a Preface and some Account of the Arabs and their Horses, 



by W. S. B. 



With Map and Illustrations. 2 Vols. Crown Svo. 



• • Lady Anne Blunt is entitled by descent to be an authoress, since she is the grand-daughter 

 of Lord Byron. Having previously explored the Sahara south of the Atlas range, she spent 

 last winter with her husband among the wandering Arabs of the Syrian desert. Admitted by 

 their hosts to the privileges, not only of hospitality but of sworn brotherhood, the travellers 

 lived with them in their tents, moved with their encampments, and were even spectators of 

 some of their feuds and strifes. Although the chief tribes were in arms, and \\ ar was raging 

 in the desert at the time, the English visitors were honoured as friends and admitted to all the 

 privacies of tent life." — Athoncum. 



Gleanings of Past Years, 1843-78. 



By the Right Hon. W. E. GLADSTONE, M.P. 



6 I r ols. Small Svo. 2s. 6d. each. 



Vol. I.— The Throne and the Prince Consort, the Cabinet, ] 



and Constitution > Ready. 



Vol. II. — Personal and Literary J 



Vol. III.— Historical and Speculative I 



Vol. IV.— Foreign \ In the Press. 



Vols. V. and VI.— Ecclesiastical 



