MR. MURRAY'S LIST OF NEW PUBLICATIONS. 



Life of Jonathan Swift, 



DEAN OF ST. PATRICK'S, DUBLIN. 



By HENRY CRAIK, M.A., 

 Late Scholar and Snell Exhibitioner, Balliol College, Oxford. 



JFM Portrait. %vo. \%s. 



''Mr. Craik's materials have received many important additions, and altogether it is hardly 

 to l)e expected that time and research will do much more to give to this giant fio-ure in the 

 literary history of the last century more distinct outlines. Mr. Craiks tone is not one of 

 Idolatry, so common among biographers, yet in the able summary and view of Swift's genius 

 and career, ample justice is done to his brilliant powers, and above all, to that scorn for 

 Hypocrisy and meanness which underlies his Rabelaisian \Mmo\xx:'— Daily News 



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TRE.\TISE ON THE 



Augustinian Doctrine of Predestination. 



By J. B. MOZLEY, D.D., 



Late Canon of Christ Church, and Regius Professor of Divinity at Oxford. 



Third Edition. With Analysis of the Contents, a7id Index. Cro-wn 8vo. gs. 



" • The design of this treatise is to give an account of St. .Augustine's Doctrine of Predesti- 

 nation, together with such comments as may be necessary for a due examination of and 

 judgment upon it.' 



"Such are the words in which its author commences a work which will be admitted by 

 every conipetent reader to exhibit very remarkable powers. It is a work of no pretence or 

 assumption, yet there is abundant evidence on almost every page that it has formed the 

 careful labour of years." — Christian Remembrancer. 



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THE 



Rise and Growth of tlie Law of Nations. 



AS ESTABLISHED BY GENERAL USAGE AND BY TREATIES. 

 From the Earliest Time to the Treaty of Utrecht. 



By JOHN HOSACK, Barrister-at-Law, 



Of the Middle Temple. 



8vo. 1 2S. 



"An admirable volume ... it is literary in the most agreeable sense of being part history, 

 and in great part narrative. Though not a text book it is an indispensable adjunct to it, and 

 It certainly breaks new ground in the treatment of a perverse and difficult subject."— Z)«*/i« 

 Evening Mail. 



