BIBLIOGRAPHY

George Fox: Journal. Edited by Norman Penney. Cambridge University Press, 1911.

George Fox: Journal. Bi-centenary edition in two volumes. Headley.

George Fox: Works. Eight volumes. Philadelphia, 1831.

Robert Barclay: An Apology for the True Christian Divinity. In English, 1678.

William Penn: No Cross, No Crown.

John Woolman: Journal.

Caroline E. Stephen: Quaker Strongholds. Headley, 1907.

John Wilhelm Rowntree: Essays and Addresses. Headley, 1905.

T. Edmund Harvey: The Rise of the Quakers. Headley, 1905.

Elizabeth B. Emmott: The Story of Quakerism. Headley, 1908.

Allen C. Thomas: The History of the Society of Friends in America.

Rufus M. Jones: The Quakers in the American Colonies. Macmillan, 1912.

Rufus M. Jones: Social Law in the Spiritual World. Headley, 1905.

Rufus M. Jones: Studies in Mystical Religion. Macmillan, 1909.

Rufus M. Jones: Children of the Light (Anthology of Quaker Mystics). Headley, 1909.

Evelyn Underhill: Mysticism. Macmillan, 1911.

William C. Braithwaite: The Beginnings of Quakerism. Macmillan, 1912.

William C. Braithwaite: Spiritual Guidance in Quaker Experience. Headley, 1909.

Edward Grubb: Authority and the Light Within. Clarke, 1908.

The Book of Discipline. Successive editions from 1783.

The Society of Friends. Encyclopædia Britannica. Eleventh edition.

NOTE

The bulk of Quaker literature falls into two main groups: (1) The voluminous writings of the early Quakers—journals, epistles, doctrinal works, and controversial matter—most of which were issued under the censorship of a body of Friends meeting in London, while a large mass of unprinted manuscripts and transcripts of manuscripts, admirably classified and indexed, is available at the headquarters of the Society, Devonshire House, Bishopsgate, whose library contains also the largest collection of books relating to the Society; (2) the modern output of history, commentary, expository, apology, and evangelistic writing.

Most of the printed works of George Fox have been collected in the eight volumes of the Philadelphia edition. A considerable quantity is still in manuscript. The Cambridge edition of his Journal is particularly interesting in having been printed unaltered from the original manuscript. It is incomplete, and is best supplemented by the bi-centenary edition (see [Bibliography]).