Fcap. 8vo. Fifth Impression 1s. 6d.
Mr. Lowes Dickinson's main object is to raise the question of the relation of Religion to Knowledge. Believing that all Knowledge must be attained by the method of science, he shows that a broad agnosticism is not of necessity inconsistent with the religious attitude, which may prove of definite help in the conduct of life.
The Magic Flute
A Fantasia in Prose and Verse based on Mozart's Opera
Cr. 800. Third Impression Quarter Canvas, 4s. 6d.
"His fantasia, half prose as it is, is beautiful ... all through there is the spirit of the Magic Flute and at times almost the music."—The Times
Letters from John Chinaman
Fcap. 8vo. Ninth Impression 1s. 6d.
In the form of letters the author explains China to the European. No less important, however, is the presentation of our own civilization as viewed by an outsider whose standards are not those which, from birth, we have been accustomed to take for granted.