SOME BOOKS OF THE WEEK.
[ntim in this column does not twee:rarity preclude subsequent review.]
The Hibbert Journal for July touches on many subjects with its accustomed tolerance. Don Romolo Murri, the Italian Modernist, discusses in a most instructive article the changing relations between the Italian Government and the Vatican. Mr. Bernard Holland writes on " Rome and the Anglicans " from the standpoint of a Roman Catholic layman who is certain that Rome will never yield an inch to reconcile any other Church. Mr. Norman MacMunn upholds " The Wisdom of Educational Experiment," arguing from the success of his own school at Tiptree, in Essex. The new psychology is discussed from various standpoints by Dr. Lyttelton, Professor Laird and Mr. Hodgson. The Rev. T. J. Hardy's frank and unconventional protest against the attempt to reduce religion to an ethical code is worth reading ; the title, " The Supernatural under Domesti- cation," suggests the purport of the argument.