Brighton: 129, North Street.
New York: E. & J.B. YOUNG & CO.
[Published under the direction of the General Literature Committee.]
CONTENTS
| [PREFACE.] | v |
| [PART I.] | 9 |
| [PART II.] | 50 |
| [PART III.] | 80 |
| [PART IV.] | 112 |
| [LIST OF WORKS] | 138 |
| [LETTERS] | 145 |
PREFACE.
In making a Selection from Mrs. Ewing's Letters to accompany her Memoir, I have chosen such passages as touch most closely on her Life and Books. I found it was not possible in all cases to give references in footnotes between the Memoir and Letters; but as both are arranged chronologically there will be no difficulty in turning from one to the other when desirable.
The first Letter, relating Julie's method of teaching a Liturgical Class, should be read with the remembrance that it was written thirty-two years ago, long before the development of our present Educational System; but it is valuable for the zeal and energy it records, combined with the common incident of the writer being too ill to appear at the critical moment of the Inspector's visit.