A MEMOIR. With two Portraits. Crown "The subject of this memoir was a Unitarian minister, the representative of a class of which there are few left. He lived in every decade of the nineteenth century; that is to say, his life covers the whole period of Unitarian development in this country. . . This memoir will be of interest, not only to Dr. Morison's numerous friends, but as throwing many side-lights upon the whole period of our denominational history."-The Unitarian, Boston. Sold by all Booksellers. Sent, postpaid, by HOUGHTON, MIFFLIN & CO., BOSTON. Simpler Direct, Personal. Questions on the Whether we seek, or care, to The Series so far contains: Printed in very small attractive leaflet form for general distribution. Orders can be sent to THE UNITARIAN, 141 Franklin Street, Boston. Twelve copies for 10 cents, or 50 cents per 100. MAPLEBANK. HOME SCHOOL FOR BOYS In the family of Rev. Eugene De Normandie, Danvers, Mass. The best of care and instruction guaranteed. Most healthful location and all things conducive to the happiness and well-being of the boys Send for catalogue, containing full particulars Address CONTENTS: The Public Service of Religion, The Beseeching God, Christian Unity, Peace and War, The Lifelong Joy, The New Sinai, No Backward Step, Gravitations of the Spirit, The Possible Life, The House of Pain, Moral Athletics, A Liberal Faith, The Continuing City, The Old Testament and the Higher Criticism, The New Testament and the Higher Criticism, PROCTOR ACADEMY, ANDOVER, N.H. The Daring Hope. HENRY N. DE NORMANDIE, Danvers, Mass. sexes. Healthful location. Liberal management. Expenses low. Prepares for college, or for teaching, etc. For catalogue, addres JAMES F. MORTON, A.M., Principal. FREE READING! Unitarian tracts and other liberal religious literature sent free on application to Miss ELLEN A. CALL, 35 Summer Street, Law. rence, Mass. JAMES FREEMAN CLARKE. Nineteenth Century Questions. By JAMES FREEMAN CLARKE. 1 vol., crown 8vo, $1.50. CONTENTS: Literary Studies.-Lyric and Dramatic Elements in Literature and Art; Dualisms in National Life; Did Shakespeare write Bacon's Works? The Evolution of a Great Poem, Gray's Elegy. Religious and Philosophical.The Affinities of Buddhism and Christianity; Why I am not a Free Religionist; Have Animals Souls? Apropos of Tyndall; Law and Design in Nature. Historical and Biographical.-The Two Carlyles, or Carlyle Past and Present; Buckle and his Theory of Averages; Voltaire; Ralph Waldo Emerson; Harriet Martineau; The Rise and Fall of the Slave Power in America. Shortly before his death Dr. Clarke gathered these papers for the purpose of publication in a volume. Some of them have appeared in periodicals, others have never been printed. Their publication in permanent form has been urged by persons who had read or heard them; and those who are acquainted with Dr. Clarke's books need no assurance that these papers are of wide and lasting interest, that they are marked by freshness of thought, breadth of outlook, wealth of information, and rare sweetness of spirit. "A great body of valuable and not generally or easily accessible information."-The Nation (New York). Ten Great Religions. Part II. Crown 8vo. Cloth, $2.00; half calf, $3.25. "His rare learning, clear style, and the systematic conciseness with which he abridges a vast amount of material are apparent to every one."-. ."-Bibliotheca Sacra. "Every page is full of interest."-Christian Life (London). Events and Epochs in Religious With 20 Portraits, Plans, and Views. Crown CONTENTS.-The Catacombs; Buddhist Monks; Translated into their Modern Equivalents. A thorough study of the life, character, opinions, and influence of the apostle Paul. So many theological doctrines are based upon Paul's Epistles, or buttressed by them, that a careful examination of them by so competent and candid a scholar as Dr. Clarke is peculiarly welcome. Common Sense in Religion. Crown 8vo. $2.00. A book of twenty-two chapters, setting forth with absolute clearness and with singular candor what Dr. Clarke regarded as common-sense views regarding the great realities of religion and the religious life. Every-Day Religion. Crown 8vo. $1.50. Twenty-nine essays, discussing with the simplicity, wisdom, and practical good sense characteristic of Dr. Clarke, the religion of the daily life in the family, the neighborhood, in business, in society, in politics. It is a thoroughly wise and helpful book. Memorial and Biographical Sketches Self-Culture: Physical, Intellectual, Moral, and Spiritual. Twenty-two lectures, discussing with admirable breadth and insight the methods of educating the powers of observation, reflection, imagination, conscience, affection, reverence, temper; education by books, amusements, and love of beauty, and seeking for truth. Exotics. Poems translated from the French, German. and Italian. By J. F. C. and L. C. 18mo, $1.00. Sold by Booksellers. Sent, postpaid, by HOUGHTON, MIFFLIN & CO., |