CorrcspDttlantrt. JOSEPH ALLEINE BY REV. E. 11. GILLETT, DAD Few human productions have ever had so extensive a circulation as Joseph Alleine's " Alarm to the Unconverted." He was one of the noble band of Non conformist ministers ejected from the English Church in 1662. The hard ships of his successive imprisonments, together with his arduous labors, under mined a naturally strong constitution, and in 1668, at the early age of thirty-five years, he fell a victim to religious in tolerance. His book was not published until four years after his death, but in three years from that time, its circulation had reached seventy thousand copies. It would be impossible to form even an approximate estimate of the number which havee since been issued in successive editions, or to calculate the results that have attended its perusal. It is a work that has long been classed, and justly, with such pro ductions as those of Richard Baxter's " Call to the Unconverted," and his " Saint's Rest." It is one of the classics of our religious literature. • Something of its popularity may be accounted for by a knowledge of the circumstances in which it was prepared. Alleine was not only a preacher, but a pastor. His zeal to do good led him to converse with all classes, and he thus came in contact with all varieties of minds and dispositions, and learned how to deal with them. In that touching tribute to his memory, penned by his wife, daughter of Rev. Richard Alleine, and like-minded with himself, we are told that "he found much difficulty in going fromYlouse to house, because it had not been practised a long time by any minister in Taunton, nor by any other of his brethren ; and he, being but a young man, to be looked upon as sin gular, was that which called for much self-denial which the Lord enabled him to exercise. Herein was his compassion showed to all sorts, both poor and rich, not disdaining to go into such houses amongst the poor as were very offensive for him to sit in, he being of an exact and curious temper. Yet •would he, with joy and freedom, deny himself for the good of their souls, and that he might fulfill his ministry among those the Lord had given him the oversight of." It was such diligence as this, not only among his own flock, but in prison, or wherever else his lot might be, that pre pared him to deal at once sq tenderly, yet so pungently, with the souls of men. His pastoral ietters, written from Ilches ter jail, where at different times he was confined for the space of about fifteen months, remind one of Paul's Epistles. He speaks of the " moving, melting let ters," which he received in return, but we feel that the pathos of his people's letters must have been largely indebted to that of his own. In some of the paragraphs of this cor respondence, we note the conjoined evidence of piety and genius, and are not surprised that such a book as his " Alarm" should have been the produc tion of his prison Patraos. His very soul seems to be coined into words, and we scarcely feel the need of a portrait to bring the saintly man before us as with tearful eyes he traces lines that would be read with tears. "My dear brethren," he says, "my business, as I have often told you, is not to gain your hearts, or turn your eyes toward me, but to Jesus Christ. His spokesman I am. Will you give your hearts to Him? Will you give hands, your names to Him? Will you subscribe to his laws, and consent to his offices, and be at thorough defiance with all his enemies? This do, and I leave my errand. Who will follow Christ's colors ? Who will come under his banner ? This shall be the man that shall be my friend ; this is he that will oblige me forever. . . . Hear a friend : Will you do nothing for a minister of Christ ? Nothing for a prisoner of Jesus Christ ? Methinks I hear you answer, yea, rather what will we not do. He shall never want while we have it. He shall need no office of love, but we will run and ride to do it.' Yea, but this not that I beg of you. Will you gratify me indeed? Then come in ; kiss the Son ; bow to the name of Jesus; not in compliment, with cap and knee ; but let your souls bow ; let all your powers bend-sail, and do him homage. Let that sacred name be graven into the substance of your hearts, and lie as a bundle of myrrh between your breasts. While holiness is made the butt of others' persecution, do you make it the white, the mark of your prosecution ; that you live it up as much as others cry it down. . . . Cleave fast to Christ ; never let go your hold ; cling faster because so many are labor ing to knock off your fingers and loosen your hold." Something of his own cheerful self-' denial is reflected in his counsels. " Let none of you dream of an earthly para dise, or flatter yourselves with dreams of sleeping in your ease and temporal prosperity, and carrying heaven too. Think not to keep your estates and liber ties and consciences too. Count not upon rest till you come to the land of promise. Not that I would have any of you run upon hazards uncalled. No, we shall meet them soon enough in the way of our duty, without we will balk it, and, shamefully turn aside. But I would have you cast overboard your worldly hopes, and count not upon an THE AMERICAN PRESBYTERIAN, THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 30, 1865 earthly felicity, but be content to wait till you come on the other side of the grave. Is it not enough to have a whole eternity of happiness yet behind? In such a strain as this, he inspires others with something of that Christian heroism which he evinced himself. Pew men have ever seemed to live so habitually in the land of Beulah, or breathe daily so much of the fragrance of heaven. All selfish aims or interests seemed eradi cated from his soul. His daily labori might have presented a living portrai ture from which Cotton Mather would only have needed to copy his " Essays to do good." We may say of his devo tion to his work, in the language of John Foster, when speaking of Howard, that it was characterized by "the calmness of an intensity, kept uniform by the nature of the human mind forbidding it to be more, and by the character of the individual forbidding it to be less." There is a sublimity in the uniform loyalty with which he adhered to his sacred purpose of usefulneSs and duty to God—a purpose which he foresaw would lead him on to scenes of persecu tion, reviling, imprisonment, and, for aught he could tell, extreme suffering and destitution. Yet, from first to last, he has no misgivings. He never roOks back to the flesh-pots of Egypt. He never thinks of compromising with con science. He has deliberately scanned the path of duty, from which he will not swerve, and he stands in his lot till the end of his days. NOTES ON HYMNS AND TUNES, WITH SPECIAL REGARD TO THE SO CIAL HYMN AND TUNE BOOK. ARP. I. DEAR BROTHER MEARS :-I have just procured and examined a copy of our new Social Hymn and Tune Book, and to say that I am delighted with it, is to say what those who have before been acquainted with it wont(' naturally ex pect. I profess myself a lover of good hymns, and this book satisfies.me better than any other of similar design that has come under my observation. Upon turning to the index of first lines, in order to conare it with my own lists of hymns for social singing, I found a large majority of the old favorites. For the present wants of the Church it is superior to the Temple Melodies, which has hitherto been better adapted for general use than any other. I confess to having had a feeling of uneasiness, as soon as the plan of preparing a new work was broached, lest it should be a failure, like so many similar attempts. If my voice could have had weight, I would have rather recommended a revision of the Temple Melodies, as safer than the ' compiling of a new work. The above named work, taking into view its design as well as the time at which it was pub lished, appears to me as perfect as can be. There is a great advantage in preserv ing those tunes that the Christian world will not willingly let die, and always associating them with favorite hymns. The Germans, who are far more success ful in promoting social and congrega tional singing, carry this to such an ex tent, that their tunes are named from the first lines of hymns. Why should we not follow the same practice, instead of ransacking our own language and many others for names ? There is no signifi cance to the majority of them, and even where there is it is lost to most people. A more meaningless system of nomen clature could not be invented. What better name for the Missionary Hymn than " From Greeland's icy mountains ?" This method is much more natural. People remember them much longer. •It takes no more space in printing, as a word re quires a line. The practice of thus associating a particular tune with each common hymn is of great value in fixing the tune in the memory. The twain become one. It is always best, too, to respect such marriage relations, especially where they 'are of long standing, even though a critic might fancy that he could' mate them more properly. It is this freedom of divorce that has made some hymn and tune books almost useless. The Sabbath school Hosanna, though comprising a good selection of both hymns and tunes, is an example of this fault. Also the Church Melodies, by Hastings, a book of the same class with our Social Hymn and Tune Book, might be instanced. It is beautiful in its workmanship, and evinces fine taste and a devout spirit in its selections, but still many are disap pointed in it, and often refuse to sing the tunes that are placed along with the hymns. In this respect our own book is worthy of high praise. Yet I would not say that in every particular my own idea has been met. For example, the second hymn, " Come 'thou Almighty King," has been sung for forty years or more to the tune " Italian Hymn." The two are almost always placed together in s the hymn and tune books, and where these words are printed in the collections of church music. In scores of churches, both in the city and country, it is the only one used. Unless it should appear that "New Haven" is the common tune in many other localities, it would seem almost sacrilege to place it here. I would also have preferred Windham for " Show Pity Lord," as being far more current, and better adapted to the spirit of the words. It would also have pleased me better to have had Stowe for " Yes the Redeemer rose." But these are small things, and I know that the editors had a great many ends to secure in the selection and position of every tune, all of which ends no one tune could fully meet, and which required a nice balancing of different claims to decide. There are a few hymns that I was surprised not to find, such as " 0 God, Our Help in Ages Past," " Come Tremb ling Sinner," " To-day the'Saviour calls," " When I Can Trust my all with God," "Through Every Age Eternal God." Yet I have not found the hymns that I could easily strike out to makemom for them. There are some other hymns that I did not expect to meet with in this collection, but that I should be glad to see kept in the remembranc, of the Church. They are such as the' follow ing : " Ah, Guilty Sinner! Rui ed by Transgression," " Stop, Poor inner, Stop and Think," "Oh That 'M Load of Sin Were Gone," " Oh, There i rll be Mourning," " Soft be the Gently reath \ ing Notes." If the editor of 4e RES BYTBRIAN would publish these 'it the tunes .given in the Christian Ly , in a form convenient for pasting in t , the back of • our Social Hymn and Tune Book, he will receive the hearty t nks of not a few of his readers. Th e i s power and pathos in them. It is a fact that ought to give serious concern,to all lovers of soulful, expressive music, that there is a tendency to negleet mi\or tunes. •We may - observe this in chobs, in social singing, and in the choice cif music for the piano. - Hammond's Praises of Jesus, excellent as it is, has nothiak, in the opinion of the writer, eci -l ist . of t above named pieces for promoting 27 .., feeling. In regard to the minor arrangements of the Social Hymn and Tune Book, it wants an alphabetical index of subjects, as a means of saving time- in selecting hymns. It has also the unusual defi ciency of the names of the authors, both of tunes and hymns.. It may be said that 'this is a matter of small importance. Doubtless many so regard it. But hope• that is not the judgment of the Committee. That is no true interest in a book or a poem, which does not also include an interest in the writer. We derive profit, as well as pleasure, in com paring the style of one author with an other. This book will come into the hands of many educated young Chris tians, who will love its hymns. But many of them will .A.learn the names of those who first give them to us, as they would if this information was fur nished. It is well to have them know that he who first sang those immortal songs of heaven, " Father I long, I faint to see," " Give me the wings of faith to rise," " There is a land of pure delight," who produced such versions of the Psalms as, " Sweet is the work, my God, my King," "God is the refuge of his saints," was Watts ; that Newton wrote " Safely through another week ;" that Cowper wrote " Oh, for a eloper walk with God." The name of The author should not only be given, but placed on the same page with the poem. Any one who cares to notice these names and who has turned hundreds of times to the index to find them, knows how great a convenience - 1111 - g - is. It makes the Plymouth Collection valuable and convenient for study. By the way, this last-named compilation, though marred by the introduction of various poems that can in no sense be termed hymns, and being glaringly deficient on some topics, is well worth the attention of the seekers after good hymns.' Likewise 'in regard to printing the names of the composers of the music ; to say nothing of what is due to them, it is a great means of instruction. Though there are but few that have much ac quaintance with the music of standard authors, yet it is worth something to know the names. If Christmas and Thatcher do not call up the composer of " The people shall hear and be afraid," " He was despised," " I know that my Redeemer liveth," " Total eclipse," it should at least bring to notice the name of Handel, as one of the world's great musicians. There are in this book but few tunes of classical composers ; not as many as the writer would wish had been taught to the Church. But it is interest ing to know what has been done for our church music by such men as Mason, Woodbury, Kingsley, Hastings, and others, who are well represented here. It is also instructive to know those tunes for which we are indebted to Germany, to the old English composers, and those unclaimed melodies that seem to have been inspired by the hymns themselves,, and to have sprung 'from the heart of the people, no one knows where nor when. This work being stereotyped, it is too late to remedy the deficiency in the body of the work, but there is space enough in the index on the same line with the hymn or tune in nearly every case. The introduction of so many new hymns will of course excite a desire for a new edition of the Church Psalmist. If a hymn ought to be sung; the same reason requires that it should be printed in the standard hymn book. In this respect the Methodists have set a good example, and their success in promoting social singing vindicates the plan. It is now twenty-five years since the work of preparing our present hymn book was given into the hands of the 'Committee. It is impossible to make a book meet all the wants of a Church for a great length of time. A hymn book of the last cen tury would be totally inadequate to our present wants. Would it not be well to fix by a rule the time of each revision, perhaps once in twenty-five years r A supplement does not meet the end, be cause a large number will not buy it. A new work should be prepared, and the printing of the old discontinued. Though the past quarter of a century has not produced any great master of sacred song, a large number of hymns have come to the notice of the Church, and many of them have been at once accepted. While we are thankful for a Watts or a Wesley, for volumes of Di vine lyrics, we should not overlook a Sarah F. Adams far giving us "Nearer my God to thee." As long as good hymns are written, they will be read and sung, and when a sufficient number of those that are considered indispensa ble have accumulated, they should be gathered up in our authorized compila tions. In a succeeding article we will speak of the subject of congregational singing, and the use of hymn and tune books. —, N. November, 1865 THE STUDY. The minister was' moving into the parsonage, and the great question before the house was, " Which room shall by the study ?" f " Oh, James must have the pleson.nt est retired room in the ho/e for his study." Such was the r9,YtY of my very dear friend, the m' tar's wife. Her decision was fine santest room in the vand the plea lause became the study. This goodly room , could ill be spared lethe purpose " A little . chamber on l 't•he wall," which they styled " the pro "Afet's bed-room," (happily turning an rgyance into cheer,) was all that was lEt for a guest chamber, and the bestow i4nt of a second corner called forth all "faculty" of 'the ever ready and pa tifilt wife. But these inconveniences wee nothing regarded in view of the sasfaction which " James" took in his st y. He delighted in it, was proud of , I t , wanted it always in perfect order, an desired that every visitor should at lea look into it. He wrought nobly, tool and with noble results at that study tabb. There is no doubt that it was besi for " James" to have " the plea san st retired room in the house" for his stu 1 because it suited him and his it inte ectual wants. But it might not have been best for another. What was intel •ctual life to him, might have been deat to his brother. I ave seen almost every possible di versi r of habit and taste indicated in the 60 oice of a study. Mr. A. wants a pleas nt room, but it does not signify to him : out its being retired. So he puts his riting-table and library into the " best i arlor," and it becomes the study. This the most convenient arrange ment i s ssible for his wife, who is thus spared) the perplexity about sleeping apartm:nts, which alrhost surely results from t,e appropriation of a pleasant room 0, the second floor for a study. This roam is front, and opens into the lower 1411. Every sound in the street, every ring at the' door, every step on the stair, eery shout of the little ones from the garden, is within hearing. (I+lorgett>a-inolui:l4:6 the-pageibility of - (to mestic clatter.) Amid all he writes on with imperturbable equanimity. If call ers cannot be received in the back-parlor, which serves of necessity in the winter for dining-room and nursery also, he expects them to be taken into the study. He often improves their reception in the discharge of pastoral duty, and al ways, when they are gone, resumes the unbroken thread of his discourse with unruffled composure. Happy pastor Happy people !, Thrice happy wife ! Mr. 0. is the antipode, of his serene brother. His nervous state is such, when, writing, that no sight, no pound of human or inhuman life must reach him. I lie regards the attic of attics as the only feasible room for a study, the only objection which it has to his mind being the .possibility that rats or mice may there disturb his meditations. So the attic becomes the minister's study; (as it ought, since it is his pleasure,) much, however, to the discomfiture (secret) of his " loving wife," who grieves to have him so far above " w.o man's sphere." This is no fancy sketch; I have known it true, even to the rats and mice. Again, as to the order and neatness of a study, there is every diversity of tastes among men. One delights in " heaven's first law ;" another enthrones and defends the king of chaos. The one loves to have the considerate wifely hand administer all needful discipline of broom and duster (happy wife, again ;) the other, like Mr. Oldbuck—of " The Antiquary"—resists as a personal insult all intrusions of " womankind," saying, "It is very ancient, peaceful dust, and will remain so for a hundred years if these gypsies will only leave it undisturbed." (" Buffeted" wife seeks " grace suffi cient" for this "thorn in the flesh.") This is no fancy sketch; either. I have seen just such studies ; (intruding where I wasn't wanted, and repenting of my sin in dust and ashes,) and, strange to relate, I have known fine sermons to emanate therefrom. I marveled at the fine sermons as much as St. Clare did at the superb dinners which Dinah " cre ated out of chaos and old night down in the kitchen ;" but as he fed on the din ners ignoring the honors of their getting up, so did I the sermons, and I judged their author as we do statesmen and generals, by his success. (And ever after forsook my repented sin of intrusion.) Verily, our beloved ministers have in tellectual habits, tastes, and necessities " differing." It is my heart-felt and happy conviction, that the only becoming, true, and Scriptural course for us (wives) is to let them have their own way.; and may God bless them in it. HERBERT NEWBITRY STRALHAN , S ENGLISH BOOKS. IRVING. Miscellanies from the Collected W tings of Edward Irving. A. S trahan, Ib don ; crown Svo. , p 487. For se Smith, English co., Philp Agents. Tina After a number of years of obltir;l' the name and works of this brillirt but erratic genius have emerged into 4 :least another experience of notoriety, filia l his biogra phers and editors 4, „ most industriou s ly laboring to make r einanent. Besides hi s life, by Mrs. OlPhant, and his collected fib volumes, they have writings, in ders who cannot find time to issued, for r , ` become w ivainted with those, the above volume:.l Miscellanies. There is in these wr i t i,s a mingling of rhetorical.splendor , w w tenderness of tone and quaintness of e .pression, which sometimes reminds us of Jeremy Taylor, " the Shakespeare of di vines." The truth is presented often with marvellous power and beauty, never with baldness or coldness. The stream of feel ing, of fancy, and of rich language, rolls on from page to page, scarcely ever showing signs of exhaustion. Striking, suggestive, and endlessly varied forms of thought meet one at every turn, and while it is well un derstood that Irving is no reliable teacher or guide, yet on many leading and essen tial points of doctrine he is not only soundly orthodox, but his mode . of arguing and putting the truth is singularly effective and worthy of study. From the lack of completeness to his theological character, a book of extracts is likely to give at least a fair conception of his merits, and will be regarded by most persons, doubtless, as containing all that is necessary to be known of his style, and supplying its whole benefit to the student and sermonizer. PURITAN DE GUERIN. Journal of Eugenie . de Guerin Edited by G. S. Trebutien. London Simpkins, Marshall & Co. 12m0., pp. 460 For sale by Smith, English & Co., Phila deiphia Agents. This journal, with that of her broiler Maurice, has created great interest among critics and a somewhat select circle or readers: It is the product of a most deli cately-strung mind in a diseased body, sym pathizing ardently with a brother, who himself passes away in a decline. It is overflowing with sisterly tenderness, with a mystic piety under the full sway of Itomish superstition, and with exquisite aesthetic conception of natural objects. Many deeply wise, yet as it would seem, chance remarks upon serious topics, are scattered along the pages, and a charm of language and of narrative holds the reader captive and hur ries him to the end. The translation is fresh, easy, and idiomatic. The sixteenth French edition of this Journal is just announced. ALFORD. Meditations in Advent, on Crea tion and Providence. By Henry Alford, D.D Dean of Canterbury. London : A. Strahan, 18mo., pp. 240. Philadelphia Agents, Smith, English & to. These Meditations, originally Sermons, are a sort of Theology for the People, in which the great truths of religion are han dled without formality or conventionality, and in which the,difficulties presented to the inquiring mind are met by analogies in the every-day phenomena of human existence. The gifts, the culture, and the piety of this eminent evangelical divine, abundantly qualify him for such an undertaking. The externals of these volumes are at once substantial and elegant, and the price is moderate TICKNOR A: FIELISS' BOOKS. HOLIZES. Humorous Poems, by Oliver Wen dell Homes. Square 18mo., paper cover, pp. 100. Boston : Ticknor & Fields. 1 Phi ladelphia: for sale by J. B. Lippincott & Co: This is one of the Series of Companion Poets for the People, and till doubtless prove highly popular. "The Wonderful One loss Shay," is worth the price of the book. ROBERTSON. Life and Letters of Rev. F. W. Robertson, M.A., Incumbent of Trinity Chapel, Brighton, (Eng., ) 1847-53. Edited by Stopford A. Brooke, M.A.; late Chap lain to the Embassy at Berlin. In two volumes, 12m0., pp. 352, 359. Boston : Ticknor & Fields. For sale by J. B. Lip pincott & Co. There is frequently an unaccountable degree of interest about the lives of men who have lived an inward life upon the border lines of faith and doubt. Sym pathising with doubters and with believers, bOth,tseeking ever those modes of viewing and presenting doctrines least liable to ob jection, sometimes removing or greatly softening objections to the truth; then, on the other hand, assailing established repre sentations of truth, which in their judg ment prejudice the inquirer, and frequently rendering good service to theological sci ence, we still scarcely know why their wri tings take such a hold and circulate so widely. But when high talents or some measure of genius are involved in these struggles and experiences, and when the workings of the mind are spread open to us, as in this life and correspondence of Robertson, with unwonted skill, we cannot but yield to the fascination. The picture o f a great mind passing through struggles, drawn by itself, this is the chief attraction of the work. The rare and splendid abili ties of the man as a preacher appear in his sermons. Of these, several volumes have been issued, some of which have gone through. as many as nine and twelve edi tions, besides appearing in the Tauchnitz edition of the English Classics. As a liter Xt(ifirt 7 o r)abtf. intellectaal phenomenon, the Life ary s etters are worthy of study. The and tr Arley of all he has written is far more iwards a Christianized and beautiful Stoi- cism than to Scriptural piety. AMERICAN TRACT SOCIETY, N. Y. The following volumes have just been issued in handsome bindings and large type, and with admirable illustrations, 18nio. THE GLEN CABIN, pp. 232. ILVERTON RECTORY; or, the Non-Con formist in the Seventeenth Century, pp 188. EVELYN PERCIVAL, pp. IS9. EFFIE MORRISON; Or, the Family of Red Braes, pp. 157. TUE HUGUENOTS OF FRANCE, pp. 198. This and the three preceding are by the author of Allen Cameron. SAVE THE ERRING, by the . Rev. J. H. Langille, pp. 164. - , PEMODICALS AND PAMPHLETS. THE ANNALS Or lO WA : A Quarterly Publication by the :Rate Historical Society. Edited by Theodore S. Parvin, Correspond ing Secretary.—Convits : Sketches of the Sac and Fox Indians, and the Early Settle ment ,of Wapello County; Dubuque in Early Times; The History of the First Congregational Church of Lyons, Iowa; Sketches from the History of Polk County. The Trial and Execution of Patrick O'Core ner, A the Dubuque Mines, 1834; Edi torial Notes. THE pVANGELICAL REPOSITORY AND UNITED PRESBYTERIAN REVlEW.—Con tents : Religious Education of Children; Religion and Politics; Remarks on Psalms CXVII. and CXVIII. ; On Success in Preaching; "Not Many Mighty are called," etc. THE ATLATIC MONTHLY FOR DEOEM BER.--Contents: Griffith Gaunt: or, Jeal ousy, I.; The Parting of Hector and Andromache ; Williain Blackwood; Thp Chimney Corner, XI; The Forge, 11., etc. Boston : Ticknor k Fields. Philadelphia, A. Winch, T. B. Peterson & Bro. LITTELL'S LIVING AGE.—No. 1121. November 25, 1865.—Contents : Posthu mous Writings of Alexis de Tocquevville ; Miss Marjoribanks, Part 9 ; Foreign Policy of America; Lord Palmerston; The Vacant Premiership, etc. LITERARY ITEMS. NEW MAGAZINE-" THE ARGOSY."- Messrs. Strahan & Co., London and New York, announce a new terary magazine by the above title, price twenty-five cents a month.—The library of Judge Jones, of this city, was sold at auction a fortnight ago. The prices were generally very low; some of the larger tomes must have gone by the pound, and will probably turn up in the sorting-room of a paper mill.—Mr. T. S. Arthur's last book, "Nothing but Money," has been republished in London. —A splendid volume, called "The Tri bute Book," is now going through the press in New York, designed to give a full account of the voluntary and popular chari ties of the war. No expense will be spared to make it worthy of its great object. It is to be sold by subscription only. T. B. Pugh, of this city, is agent.—" The Sun day Book of Poetry" is a collection, just issued, by C. F. Alexander, author of a fine production called the " Burial of Moses." Lindsay & Blakiston, Phila., announce a new book by Harriet McKeever, " The Woodcliff Children."—Urbino, of Bos ton, announces Gcethe's Herrmann and Do rothea, and Schiller's Mary Stuart, in the original, with English notes.—The Pres byterian Publication Committee announce : " Five Years •in China," by Rev. Charles P. Bush, and several other volumes.— Hurd & Houghton, N. Y.: " Six Months in the White House," by C. F. Carpenter; pro bably the interesting papers which have al ready appeared in the Independent. —lto berts Bros., Boston, announce " The Journal and Letters of Madame Recamier;" "The Book of Sonnets," an original work from the MSS. of Leigh 'Hunt; new works by Robert Buchanan and Jean Ingelow.— J. B. Lippincott & Co., of this city, have made extensive arrangements for the im portation and republication of the works of nearly a score of English houses. They promise : Mill on Comte and Positivism, with new editions of Kitto's Cyclope dia, Dickens' Works, etc.—Among gift books we notice "The Home of Washing ton," (new edition,) by Benson J. Lossing, small quarto, from $6 50 to $ll 50. Smith's " Concise Dictionary of the Bible," thick. Bvo., with illustrations, $6 to $8 : Little, Brown & Co., Boston. —Lee & Shepard, of Boston, promise " Fighting; Joe,' by Oliver Optic, (Dec. 10.)—Har per & Bro.'s have issued the fifth volume of Carlyle's " Frederick the Great." They have also in press, Rev.. Justus Doolittle's " Social Life of the Chinese," in two vol umes; also Livingston's " Zambesi." Rev. C. Merivale is now delivering "Boyle Lectures" on " The Conversion of the Northern Nations."—Dr. Rowland Wil liams, of the "Essays and Reviews," has in press the first instalment of a critical. work on the Hebrew prophets.—The English publishers are getting up splendid gift books for the Holidays, illustrated en tirely by photographs. They include copies from Raphael and other great painters, illustrations of the scenery of Scott's prin cipal poems, etc. The French Emperor has lately published a small work on " The Policy of France in Algeria."—A new volume on the Natural History of Pales tine, by*Tristram, the English naturalist, is promised. Lippincott & Co. promise a Secret Rebel Diary of the War, in two vol umes, soon.— The Nation of last week has a very unsparing, not to say savage, criti cism of Dr. Holland's last book—" Plain Talks on Familiar Subjects." BY constant reference of the Psalms to Christ, and to the Church as inseperably united to Christ, their words become in vested with brighter meaning. The words of David become the words of the Son of David—speaking either in his person or in the person of his people.—Plain Commen tary on the .Psalms.