INDEX.
| PAGE. | ||||
| Ambition | civ | - | cv | [203] |
| Belief, Religious | lxxvii | - | lxxxiv | [136] |
| Bigotry | cxxxix | - | [286] | |
| Courage | i | - | xviii | [13] |
| Christianity | cxi | - | cxxv | [218] |
| Death | lxxiii | - | lxxvi | [117] |
| Discipline | cxxxii | - | cxxxiv | [264] |
| Doubt | cvi | - | cx | [206] |
| Education | cxxvi | - | cxxvii | [248] |
| Enjoyment | xlvi | - | lii | [72] |
| Faith | liii | - | lvi | [82] |
| Friendship | xlii | - | xlv | [68] |
| Government | xcviii | - | ciii | [190] |
| Heroism | cxxxvi | - | cxxxviii | [279] |
| Human Nature | lxi | - | lxxii | [104] |
| Humility | xxv | - | xxvi | [41] |
| Influence, Personal | lxxxv | - | lxxxix | [143] |
| Patience | lviii | - | lx | [93] |
| Providence | cxxxi | - | [256] | |
| Politician, The | cxlvi | - | cliv | [295] |
| Power | xxvii | - | xxxiv | [43] |
| Purity | lvii | - | [91] | |
| Reforms | xc | - | xcvii | [155] |
| Rest | cxxviii | - | cxxx | [250] |
| Rights, Woman’s | cxxxv | - | [276] | |
| Strength | xix | - | xxiv | [34] |
| Success | xxxv | - | xli | [60] |
| Toleration | cxl | - | cxlv | [291] |
FROM DIFFERENT STANDPOINTS.
By Pansy and Faye Huntington. 12mo. Price $1.50, Boston: D. Lothrop & Co.,
If there is any better writer of Sunday School books than “Pansy,” we should like to make her acquaintance, she has a rare tact in story telling, and knows quite as well what to omit as what to say. Even the sternest critics, of S. S. Literature surrender to Pansy, in spite of themselves, and confess that her books are worth reading.
“From Different Standpoints” is not quite so broad in its range as some of her previous works, but is more intense. The story is so full of life, though made up largely of letters and journals, the characters are so sharply drawn with so thorough an insight into the possibilities of human nature, and the religious element is of so high a type, and yet withal so natural, that the most careless reader is fascinated, and feels the inspiration of a noble Christian life. Such books, are a valuable addition to any S. S. libraries, and will supplement the best religious teachings of Bible-class or pulpit.
As to the double authorship of the book, Faye Huntington is so nearly the double of Pansy, that her separate work cannot be detected.
Sunday-School Helps.
A Full Line of QUESTION BOOKS, COMMENTARIES, MUSIC BOOKS, and other requisites for the Sunday-school.
JUST READY.
THE CHAUTAUQUA GIRLS AT HOME
By Pansy. 12mo. Illustrated. 1 50
“Pansy knows girls, and has the gift of story-telling, by which the hard facts of every-day life take on a charm as of fairy-land. No one can look into ‘The Chautauqua Girls’ without feeling the subtle fascination of its pictures of quiet life, and being drawn into warm sympathy with the four friends who long to form noble characters. They have been won to a love of Jesus by attending a camp-meeting at Chautauqua; but they find it so hard to be true to their new impulses, and to carry the spirit of the Bible into every-day life, that the story of their struggles, disheartening failures relieved by partial successes, is very human and full of genuine pathos. It is good summer reading, for beguiling away hours, and inspiring with generous purposes.”
“Pansy’s last book, ‘The Chautauqua Girls at Home,’ is as fresh and inspiring as a fine morning in June. The four friends, Marion, Ruth, Flossy and Eurie, are of genuine flesh and blood, with the petty weaknesses that flesh is heir to, and the noble aspirations that come at times to every high-minded girl. Their unlikeness to each other in character and social position, and their mutual helpfulness in all sorts of difficulties, make a delightful story; instructive as well as fascinating. One finds it hard to lay down the book after beginning the first chapter. It will find many readers who will welcome its stimulating power to high aims in life, and to patience and hope in fighting hard battles.”
Boston: D. LOTHROP & CO., Publishers.
Two new Books just ready. The most popular Children’s Books of the Season.
1st.