“The volume before us presents a coherent, comprehensive, and illuminating narrative. It is not a series of monographs, but gives the impression of the progressive development of national powers in relation to one another. A few typographical errors have been noted.” C. H. Levermore.
| + + − | Am. Hist. R. 12: 899. Jl. ’07. 1230w. (Review of v. 6.) | |
| A. L. A. Bkl. 3: 124. My. ’07. S. (Review of v. 6.) |
Reviewed by David Y. Thomas.
| + + − | Dial. 42: 179. Mr. 16, ’07. 890w. (Review of v. 6.) |
“This big book, which may well be called a life-work, is a mine of information. All the severest demands of the new school as to scholarship and industry are fully met, and there is in it a wholesome human sympathy.” John Spencer Bassett.
| + | Putnam’s. 2: 251. My. ’07. 180w. (Review of v. 6.) |
McNaugher, John, ed. Psalms in worship; a series of convention papers bearing upon the place of the Psalms in the worship of the church. *$1. Un. Presb.
7–18116.
These papers were presented at two Presbyterian conventions called to promote the claims of the Psalms in the field of worship and they are now published in the hope that they may influence the Christian church at large to “restore the Psalms to their true place in the hearts and on the lips of Christian believers.” The volume contains “a comprehensive statement of the reasons for the exclusive use in worship of the Bible Psalms. Definitely argumentative discussions of a doctrinal and critical kind are in the forefront. Others of broader type succeed.”
Macnaughtan, S. [Lame dog’s diary.] †$1.50 Dodd.