FOOTNOTES:

[1] Preached at St. Giles's, Cripplegate. The argument in this sermon, stated shortly during dinner-hour in a City church, is developed at length in the lecture which comes last in this book.

[2] Browning. "Rabbi Ben Ezra."

[3] Trench.

[4] Preached in St. Margaret's Church, Westminster, in connection with the Annual Conference of the National Union of Women Workers.

[5] Preached in Westminster Abbey on Advent Sunday.

[6] Kipling.

[7] Preached in St. Martin's-in-the-Fields on Trafalgar Day, 1915.

[8] This was preached the day after the judicial murder of Nurse Cavell.

[9] This sermon was preached in 1915. There has been a great improvement in 1916.

[10] Shortly after this night clubs were abolished.

[11] Preached at St. Mary's, Bryanston Square, at a service for the Church-workers of the Deanery.

[12] Preached at the Parish Church, Camden Town.

[13] By Barry Pain. Published in the Westminster Gazette.

[14] Shakespeare.

[15] Southey's "Curse of Kehama."

[16] Preached in Westminster Abbey at the consecration of Canon MacInnes as Bishop in Jerusalem.

[17] The Bishop only lived a few weeks after his successor's consecration.

[18] Given first at Chiswick Parish Church to the Clergy of the Rural Deanery of Hammersmith; afterwards to the Chaplains of the Fleet, 1916.

[19] See a former volume, "The Eyes of Flame" (Wells Gardner, Darton and Co., Ltd.).

[20] See "The Church in Time of War," pp. 51-70: "The Treasure Committed to our Trust."

[21] In giving the substance of this address at a Quiet Day for the chaplains of the Grand Fleet this summer, I felt the touching appropriateness of this illustration, as no less than sixteen naval chaplains had lost their lives during the war.

[22] Robert Browning.

[23] An address to two thousand girls in Nottingham.

[24] Katharine Tynan.

[25] Preached in Marlborough College Chapel. The text is based upon the report taken by the Marlborough Times, kindly lent for this purpose.

[26] Mentioned on p. 189.