26 DECEMBER 1868, Page 24

very seldom immoral. He has omitted the greater part of

the Dean's political writings, and, under the necessity of the case, may be thought right in doing so. His volume is as large and as closely printed as it could conveniently be, and, therefore, we must be content to miss much that we would gladly have seen retained. The editor and the pub- lishers deserve many thanks for their work. We should be grateful to them, if for nothing else, for making accessible the inimitable "Tale of a Tub," which the Bishop of Brechin and his friends the Ritualists. might read at the present moment with great advantage.