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PRAYER-BOOK AND HOMILY SOCIETY.

Just published by T. SEAWARD, for the Society, at 134 Salisbury Square.
1. A SERMON preached at Christ Church, Newgate Street, on
Wednesday, 2d May. By the Rev. JOHN BIRD SUMNER, M. A.,
Prebendary of Durham, &c. before the Members of this Society :-Also, the
Fifteenth Annual Report of the Committee. Price 2s. 6d. to non-subscribers.

2. The whole of the HOMILIES, as TRACTS; in the entire Vo-
lume, 12mo. with neat Wood Cuts; 5s. in boards; in 8vo. with Indexes,
10s. in boards; and in folio, 11. 11s. 6d.

3. The HOMILIES, as TRACTS; as also the BOOK of COMMON
PRAYER, in part or in the whole, in various Foreign languages.

Subscriptions and Donations will be thankfully received at the Society's
House, 134 Salisbury Square; at the following Banking-houses, viz:-
Messrs. Drummonds, Charing Cross; Messrs. Hammersley and Co., Pall
Mall; Messrs. Hoare, Fleet Street; Sir John Lubbock, Bart. and Co., Man-
sion-House Street; and Messrs. Williams, Deacon and Co., Birchin Lane.-
And by the following Correspondents:-Rev. Mr. Addison, Weymouth;
Captain Austin, R. N., Gosport; Rev. F. Blick, Tamworth; Rev. J. B.
Byers, Lamphey, Pembroke; Rev. J.H. Cotton, Bangor; Rev. Mr. Dusautoy,
Portsea; Rev. J. Fawcett, Carlisle; Rev. J. Fawcett, Leeds; Rev. J.-Hill,
Oxford; Rev. John Hatchard, Plymouth; Rev. Mr. Horsford, Weymouth;
Rev. P. W. Jolliffe Poole; Rev. J. Kempthorne, Gloucester; Rev. W
Marsh, Colchester; Rev. D. Pritchett, Cheadle; Rev. Professor Scholefield,
Cambridge; Rev. R. Simpson, Derby; J. Sculthorpe, Esq., Hinckly; S.G.
Sloman, Esq., Exeter; and Rev. Mr. Vicars, Exeter.

This day is published, price 5s. in boards.

TWENTY-ONE SERMONS, adapted to Parochial and Domestic
Use; preached in the Parish Church of Monkwearmouth, in the County of
Durham. By the Rev. B. KENNICOTT, A. B., Perpetual Curate.

Sunderland printed and sold by Reed and Son. Sold also by Baldwin,
Cradock and Joy; and Seeley and Son, London; and all other Booksellers.

This day is published, price 5s.

MEMOIRS of a WEST-INDIA PLANTER. Published from
an ORIGINAL MS. With a Preface and additional Details. By the Rev.
JOHN RILAND, M.A., Curate of Yoxall, Staffordshire.

London: Hamilton, Adams, & Co. and J. Nisbet.

This day is published, the third edition, in Two Vols. 8vo., price 28s. boards,
The WHOLE WORKS of the late Rev. R. CECIL. With a
MEMOIR of his LIFE. Arranged and revised, with a View of the
Author's Character. By the Rev, Jos. PRATT, B.D. F.A.S.

Printed for L. B. Seeley and Son; Baldwin, Cradock, and Joy; Hamilton,
Adams, and Co.; J. Nisbet; Simpkin and Marshall; and Wightman and
Cramp.

THE

CHRISTIAN REVIEW

AND

Clerical Magazine.

JULY 1827.

The Gentleman's Magazine for February 1827 - [Article, Christian Review and Clerical Magazine.]

SOME apology is due from us to our readers, for our having

omitted to notice, in our last Number, the above attempt at a reply, to the strictures previously made by us, on a former article in the Gentleman's Magazine. The fact is, that in the variety of subjects which demanded attention, this claim on our notice was neglected not, however, our readers may rest assured, from any indisposition on our parts to take such assailants in hand. No. We are avowedly men of strife. We have drawn the sword, and thrown away the scabbard. We are so far from shunning a contest with the literary periodicals of the day, high or low, rich or poor, that it is what of all things we seek. The spirit of the age; the principles of the age; the poor and puny, but corrupt and tainted, literature of the age; the bad taste of the age; the false refinement of the age; the real grossness of the age; the unbelief of the age; the bad theology of the age; the downright ungodliness, irreligion, and blasphemy of the age;these are the things which we are principally bent upon attacking and exposing. And if, in this warfare, we were to leave unassailed the magazines, the reviews, the registers, the periodicals, the newspapers of the age, we should feel that we were leaving our work but half performed. To speak the truth, however, we think scorn to confine ourselves to any single member of the tribe; and have larger designs of aggression and exposure, even against the whole order. The present, therefore, must be regarded as only a temporary measure on our part, till we have time to look about us, and consider how we can best attack and lay open, at once, the whole craft and mystery of the periodical press; under whose tyranny the nation groans, and

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