THE UNIVERSITY MAGAZINE
AND
FREE REVIEW.
Among the high-class magazines, the University Magazine and Free Review takes the first place in English advanced literature. Independence of thought, freedom from conventional fetters, and boldness where necessary, impart a freshness and vigour to the articles of this publication, which we miss even in the best and most earnest literature of the day.
It is the Magazine for such readers as care for progressive thought in all or any of the main fields of discussion—the religious, the political, the sociological, the ethical, the economic, the literary, the scientific, and the æsthetic.
It always takes the part of the weak and oppressed, and this Magazine has done much to call attention to indisputable evils.
Contents of the APRIL No., 1897, Vol. VIII., No. I—
- The Case Of Dr. Romanes, by John M. Robertson.
- Cardinal Manning, the Sceptic, by R. de Villiers.
- The Inertia of English Universities, by F. R. Sarritor.
- The Bible and the Child, by Chilperic.
- Tourgenieff, by Ernest Newman.
- Roden Noel, by Karl Blind.
- The Whole Duty of Woman, by Geoffrey Mortimer.
- The Blasphemy Laws, by Fred. Verinder.
- Martin Turner, by H. J. Cressingham.
- The Intellectual Movement in France, by A. Hamon.
- Periodicals, by Walter Shaw Sparrow.
Contents of the MAY No., 1897, Vol. VIII., No. 2—
- Bentley and Anthony Collins, by M. W. Wiseman.
- Roden Noel, by Karl Blind.
- Tourgenieff, by Ernest Newman.
- The Downfall of Olive Schreiner, by X.
- Marie Corelli and her Public, by A. W. Stanbury.
- Moral Instruction without Theology, by F. J. Gould.
- The Social Purity Hallucination, by J. P. Gilmour.
- Current Pseudo-Philosophy, by John M. Robertson.
- Slumland by Night, by G. M.
- William Blake and Modern Problems, by Edward Willmore.
- The Social Evil and the Moral Law, by A. Macevir.
- Periodicals, by Walter Shaw Sparrow.
- New Books.
Contents of the JUNE No., 1897, Vol. VIII., No. 3—