to MR. MURRAY'S LIST OF NEW WORKS. 



ST. JAMES'S LECTURES. 



I. — 1875-76. — Companions for the Devoid 



Life. With Preface by Rev. J. E. Kempe, M.A., 

 Rector of St. James s. Post Svo. 6s. 



"A volume of more than ordinary interest. The books selected are well known, and 

 favourites with large numbers of readers. The lecturers have all treated their respective 

 subjects simply and practically, their aim having been to make these ' Companions to the 

 Devout Life' more companionable and useful than they have hitherto been." — Church Review. 



II. — 1877-78. — Classic Preachers of the 



English Church. 2 vols. Post Svo. js. 6d. each. 



"Masterly as these discourses are, it is not as sermons that we regard them. This 

 criticism apart— and it does not really touch the substantial merits of these volumes— there is 

 little but what we can unreservedly praise." — Spectator. 



My Boyhood ; a Trite Story of Cottntry 

 Life and A dvenhtres for the Old and Young. 



By H. C. BARKLEY. 



Author of " Bulgaria North .of the Balkans." 

 1 1 ll/i Illustrations by C O R B U LD. Post Svo. 6s. 



" This is about as good a book of its kind as we have ever seen."— Spectator. 



"The adventures are so plainly real, and are told with such total absence of egotism 

 although personal, that boys will thoroughly appreciate them. It is the genuine biography of 

 a typical boy." — Public Opinion. 



« 



England and Russia in the East. A 

 Series of Papers on the Political and Geo- 

 graphical Condition of Central Asia. 



By Major-Gen. Sir HENRY RAWLINSON, K.C.B., F.R.S. 



Member of the Council of India. 



Second Edition. Jl/a/. Si'c. 1 2 s. 



" A valuable contribution to the modern history of Central Asia. There is no single 

 chapter which does not merit careful study, and none from which the reader will rise without 

 a solution of some disputed point in geography, without a more distinct light thrown back on 

 Oriental tendencies and traditions, and without a more clear conception of the single- 

 mindedness, the persistence, and the adaptation of means to ends, displayed by Russian 

 autocrats of the field or Cabinet, in carrying out the policy of Peter the Great." — Saturday 

 Review. 



A Treatise on the Augustinian Doctrine 



of Predestination. 



By the late J. B. MOZLEY, D.D., Canon of Christ Church. 



New Edition. Crown Svo. gs. 



"Mr. Mozlcy has contributed a volume which we believe will live. His plummet has 

 sounded the depths of controversies which have engaged the most luminous minds for ages, 

 and he comes to the only conclusion concerning them which it is in the province of the human 

 mmd to form."— The Press. 



