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A New Variorum Edition of Shakespeare. Edited by HORACE HOWARD FURNESS, PH. D., LL. D. Vols. I-V. 8° Philadel

phia: J. B. Lippincott & Co. 1878-1880.

The Readers' Handbook of Allusions, References, Plots and Stories: With two Appendices. By the REV. E. COBHAM BREWER, LL. D. cr. 8° pp. 1184. Philadelphia: J. B. Lippincott & Co. 1880.

The Refutation of Darwinism; and the converse Theory of Development. By T. WARREN O'NEILL. 12° pp. 454. Philadelphia: J. B. Lippincott & Co. 1880.

The Pre-historic World. By ÉLIE BERTHET. from the French by MARY J. SAFFORD. 12° pp. 310. phia: Porter & Coates.

Translated
Philadel-

Health, and Health Resorts. By JOHN WILSON, M. D. 12o pp. 288. Philadelphia: Porter & Coates.

Our Indian Wards. By GEORGE W. MANY PENNY. 436. Cincinnati Robert Clarke & Co. 1880.

8° pp.

Reminiscences of Levi Coffin, the reputed President of the Underground Railroad. Second Edition: With Appendix. 12° pp. 732. Cincinnati Robert Clarke & Co. 1880.

The Mound Builders. By J. P. MACLEAN. Cincinnati: Robert Clarke & Co. 1879.

12° pp. 233.

The Spell-Bound Fiddler: A Norse Romance. By KRISTOFER JANSON. Translated from the Original by AUBER FORESTIER. With an Introduction by RASMUS B. ANDERSON. 12° pp. 161. Chicago S. C. Griggs and Company.

1880.

12° pp.

Hermeneutics of the New Testament. By DR. A. IMMER. Translated from the German by ALBERT H. NEWMAN. 395. Andover: Warren F. Draper. 1877.

The Logic of Christian Evidences. By G. FREDERick Wright.

12° pp. 312. Andover: Warren F. Draper.

1880.

Father Ryan's Poems. 8° pp. 263. Mobile: Jno. L. Rapier & Co. 1879.

Silver in its Relation to Industry and Trade: The Danger of Demonetizing it. 8° pp. 132. Montreal: Printed by the Lovell Printing and Publishing Company. 1880.

American Prose: Hawthorne: Irving: Longfellow: Whittier: Holmes: Lowell: Thoreau: Emerson. With Introduction and Notes. By the Editor of "American Poems." 16° pp. 424. Boston: Houghton, Osgood and Company. 1880.

A Complete Pronouncing Gazetteer or Geographical Dictionary of the World. Containing Notices of over One Hundred and

Twenty-five Thousand Places. With recent and authentic Information respecting the Countries, Islands, Rivers, Mountains, Cities, Towns, etc., in every Portion of the Globe. New Edition. Thoroughly revised, re-written, and greatly enlarged. By a Number of able Collaborators. imp. 80 pp. 2478. Philadelphia: J. B. Lippincott & Co. 1880.

Universal Pronouncing Dictionary of Biography and Mythology. By J. THOMAS, A. M., M. D. Complete in one volume. imp. 8° pp. 2345. Philadelphia: J. B. Lippincott & Co. 1880.

A Dictionary of the English Language. By JOSEPH E. WORCESTER, LL. D. Illustrated. 4° pp. 1854. Philadelphia: J. B. Lippincott & Co. 1880.

History of Political Economy in Europe. By JEROME ADOLPHE BLANQUI. Translated by EMILY G. HOWARD. With Introduction by DAVID A. WELLS. 8° pp. 590. New York: G. P. Putnam's

Sons. 1880.

Studies of Irving. By CHARLES DUDLEY WARNER, WILLIAM CULLEN BRYANT, and GEORGE PALMER PUTNAM. 8° pp. 159. New York: G. P. Putnam's Sons. 1880.

William Ellery Channing. By HENRY W. BELLOWS. 8° pp. 39. Paper. New York: G. P. Putnam's Sons.

1880.

The Theory of Thought. A Treatise on Deductive Logic. By NOAH K. DAVIS, University of Virginia. 8° New York: Harper & Brothers. 1880.

Certain Dangerous Tendencies in American Life, and other Papers. 16° Boston: Houghton, Osgood and Company. 1880.

Odd, or Even? By Mrs. A. D. T. WHITNEY. 12° pp. 505. Boston: Houghton, Osgood and Company. 1880.

A Graduated Russian Reader. With a Vocabulary of all the Russian Words contained in it. By HENRY RIOLA. 12° Boston: Houghton, Osgood and Company. 1880.

Introduction to the Study of Sign Language among the North American Indians as illustrating the Gesture Speech of Mankind. By GARRICK MALLERY. 4° pp. 72. Paper. Washington: Government Printing Office. 1880.

An Historical Sketch of Henry's Contribution to the ElectroMagnetic Telegraph. With an Account of the Origin and Development of Prof. Morse's Invention. By WILLIAM B. TAYLOR. [From the Smithsonian Report for 1878.] 12° pp. 103. Paper. Washington: Government Printing Office.

1879.

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xviii

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xix

The Bibliotheca Sacra.

VOLUME XXXVII. 1880.

The first Prospectus of the BIBLIOTHECA SACRA set forth its objects in the following language:

"It will embrace the subjects which are included under Theology in the wider acception of that term, namely, Biblical Literature, Doctrinal Theology, and the History of the Church, including that of the principal. doctrines of Christianity. Particular prominence will be given to Biblical Literature, in respect to which there is a large and constantly increasing amount of valuable materials. Certain collateral subjects will receive a share of attention, particularly classical philology and mental science. . . . It will endeavor to consult the needs of theological students and clergymen. With this view articles will be sought of permanent value, instead of those which are fitted to produce a popular and immediate effect.'

The plan of the Review here sketched was in some of its features entirely orginal. The BIBLIOTHECA SACRA first introduced the plan of publishing entire theological treatises in successive Articles, of condensing and transfusing instead of translating Essays and books from foreign languages, of describing original explorations in biblical geography, of presenting denominational differences in a series of Articles by representative writers, etc.

Under the administration of Professor Park, one of its founders, this plan of the work has been, in the main, steadily adhered to. The exceptions are such as were naturally developed in the progress of the active inquiries of the past thirty or forty years; such in particular as have grown out of the researches in the natural sciences, especially geology, in relation to the Bible; the illustration of certain passages of Scripture from travels and new discoveries in Oriental lands; and the state and progress of education in the higher seminaries of Europe and America. Investigations in natural theology, philology, archæology, textual criticisms, and the explanation of difficult passages of the Bible, homiletics, etc., have not been neglected; and in some of these departments the REVIEW has had many original papers by original explorers. These carefully-wrought papers have often been the result of long-continued study-months and even years of labor and investigation have produced them; and they have been, and still are, quoted as authorities.

Not only has great labor been expended in the preparation of these elaborate papers for the press, but also great care and pains to secure accuracy in printing, the use of type in various foreign and Oriental languages often involving the labor and expense in one page equal to that in two and sometimes five or six pages of ordinary matter; a sort of work which no other Review in this country often attempts.

Terms, $4.00 per annum.

W. F. DRAPER, Publisher,

ANDOVER, Mass.

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