Mr. Edward Arnold's Spring Announcements 7 



THE CLERGY AND SOCIAL 

 SERVICE. 



Cambrfftgc lectures on ©aatoral Zbeolog^, 

 By the Very Rev. W. MOORE EDE, D.D., 



Dean of Worcester. 



One Volume. Crown 8w., cloth. 2s. 6d. net. 

 These lectures differ from others delivered on Pastoral The- 

 ology at Cambridge in the extent to which they emphasise the 

 opportunities of social service which are open to the clergy, and 

 the importance of utilizing them — a subject in which their author 

 has had great experience through his intimate connection with 

 industrial life and working-class organizations. That this aspect 

 of clerical life is pre-eminently the one which needs to be brought 

 before candidates for Holy Orders at the present time is the 

 general opinion of those who would see the social re-organization 

 which is now taking place dominated by spiritual rather than by 

 materialistic ideals. There are six lectures, entitled : What is 

 the Church and what are its Duties ? — Equipment for the 

 Work — Reading, Preaching and Speaking — Agencies Outside 

 the Church which are Working for Social Redemption — The 

 Church and Charity — The Church as Teacher and Inspirer of 

 Education. 



THREE NEW NOVELS. 



FRANKLIN KANE. 



By ANNE DOUGLAS SEDGWICK, 



Author of ' Valerie Upton,' * Amabel Channice,' etc. 



Crown %vo. 6s. 

 This is the story of apartie carree, two men and two women (one 

 of each is American, the other English), the threads of whose 

 lives become interwoven, owing to a chance meeting in an hotel. 

 How will they pair off ? This is the problem : now one 

 solution seems inevitable, now another. As the plot develops 

 two of the dramatis persona stand revealed as irredeemably 

 ordinary, weak, egoistic ; two as self-reliant, noble, and capable of 

 clear-eyed self-sacrifice. Ultimately the determining factor is 

 character, which proves stronger than the chains of circumstance. 

 It is comedy, but serious comedy, and the situations towards the 

 close have a poignancy of which Miss Sedgwick alone possesses 

 the secret. 



