NE W BOOKS. 



Cit oyenn ne Jacqueline : A Woman s 



Lot in the Great French Revolution. By Sarah Tytler. 

 With Frontispiece and Vignette. Crown 8vo, 6s. 



" ' Citoyenne Jacqueline ' is one of 

 those rare books of which every sen- 

 tence deserves to be read leisurely, 

 and will repay the attention with 

 pleasure. " — Guardian. 



"We pronounce 'Citoyenne Jac- 

 queline' superior to any, except three 

 or four, of the novels of the age." — 

 The Press. 



Wealth and Welfare. By Jeremiah 



GOTTHELF. 2 Vols, post SvO, 2IS. 



"For a long time we have not 

 read a book in which the style was 

 at once so fresh and individual with- 

 out being forced. The two volumes 

 are a perfect little mine of shrewd 

 observation. There is, too, a good 

 deal of humour of a peculiar kind 

 exhibited by the writer in the course 

 of the two volumes — a something 



which reminds us of George Eliot in 

 'Adam Bede,' without for an instant 



suggesting imitation Possibly 



' Wealth and Welfare ' may prove to 

 be too delicate a dish to touch the 

 general palate. We recommend it, 

 however, to those who still preserve 

 a taste for what is delicate in books 

 of light reading." — London Review. 



The Life and Light of Men. By 



John Young, LL.D. (Edin.), Author of "The Christ of 

 History." Post 8vo, 7s. 6d. 



" His idea is beautifully worked 

 out in this volume, which, like all Dr 

 Young's writings, is characterised by 



deep thought and the keenest appre- 

 ciation of spiritual things." — Spec- 

 tator. 



The Vicarious Sacrifice; Grounded 



on Principles of Universal Obligation. By Horace Bush- 

 nell, D.D., Author of "Nature and the Supernatural," 

 &c. Crown Svo, 7s. 6d. 



"An important contribution to 

 theological literature, whether we re- 

 gard the amount of thought which it 

 contains, the systematic nature of 

 the treatise, or the practical effect of 



its teaching No one can rise 



from the study of this book without 

 having his mind enlarged by its pro- 

 found speculation, his devotion stirred 



by its piety, and his faith established 

 on a broader basis of thought and 

 knowledge." — Guardian. 



" We have seldom seen a powerful 

 conception more powerfully worked 

 out than in these pages of Dr Bush- 

 nell's, and altogether the book is 

 worthy of a careful and discriminat- 

 ing reading. " — Literary Churchman. 



ALEXANDER STRAHAN, 56 LUDGATE HILL, LONDON. 



