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PUBLISHED BY DAVID DOUGLAS. 17 Scotch Folk. Illu.strateiL Fourth Edition enlarged. Ex. fc-ap. bvo, Is. " They are .stories of the best type, quite equal in the main to the average of Dean Ramsay's well-known collection." — Aberdeen Free Press. Studies in Poetry and Philosophy. By the late J. C. Shairp, LL.D., Principal of the United College of St. Salvator and St. Leonard, St. Andrews. Fourth Edition, with Portraits of the Author and Thomas Erskine, by William Hole, A.R.S.A. Crown Svo, V.s. 6d. " In the ' Moral Dynamic,' Mr. Shairp seeks for something which shall per- suade us of the vital and close bearing on each other of moral thought and spiritual energy. It is this conviction which has animated Mr. Shairp in every page of the volume before us. It is because he appreciates so justly and forcibly the jiower.s of philosophic doctrine over all the field of human life, that he leans with such strenuous trust upon those ideas which Wordsworth unsystematically, and Cole- ridge more systematically, made popular and fertile among us." — Saturday Review. " The finest essay in the volume, partly because it is upon the greatest and most definite subject, is the first, on H'orcZstt-oriA. . . . We have said so much upon this essay that we can only say of the other three that they are fully worthy to stand beside it." — Spectator. Culture and Religion. By the late Principal Shairp. Seventh Edition. Fcap. Svo, 3s. fid. "A wise book, and, unlike a great many other wise books, has that carefully shaded thought and expression which fits Professor Shairp to speak for Culture no less than for Religion." — S^^ectator. "Those who remember a former work of Principal Shairp's, 'Studies in Poetry and Philosophy,' will feel secure that all which comes from his pen will bear the marks of thought, at once careful, liberal, and accurate. Nor will they be dis- appointed in the present work. . . . We can recommend this book to our readers." — Atheiiieum. "We cannot close without earnestly recommending the book to thoughtful young men. It combines the loftiest intellectual power with a simple and child- like fnith in Christ, and exerts an influence which must be stimulating and healthful." — Freeman. Sketches in History and Poetry. By the late Principal Shairp. Edited by John Veitch, Professor of Logic and Rhetoric in the University of Gla.sgow. Crown Svo. 7s. 6d. Kilmahoe, a Highland Pastoral, And other Poems. By Principal Shairp. Fcap. Svo, 6s. Shakespeare on Golf. "With special Reference to St. Andrews Links. 3d. The Divine Comedy of Dante Alighieri, The Inferno. A Translation in Terza Rima, with XdIl-s ai;d Introductory Essay. By James Romanes Sibbald. With an Engraving after Giotto's Portrait. Small demy Svo, 12s. " Mr. Sibbald is certainly to be congratulated on having produced a translation which would probably give an English reader a better conception of the nature of the original poem, having regard both to its matter and its form in combination, than any other English translation yet published." — Academy. The Use of what is called Evil. A Discourse by Si.mplicius. Extracted from his Commentary on the Enclaridion of Epictetus. Crown Svo, Is. The Near and the Far Vievr, And other Sermons. By Rev. A. L. Simpson, D.D., Derby. Ex. fcap. Svo, 5s. "Very fresh and thoughtful are these sermons." — Litera.ry World. "Dr. Simpson's sermons may fairly claim distinctive power. He looks at things with his own eyes, and often shows us what with ordinary vision we had failed to perceive. . . . The sermons are distinctively good." — British Quarterly Review.