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t.'"--_Daily News_. "It is just the book for the innumerable Religious Book Clubs, one of which is to be found in every market town and every considerable village. Perhaps it would have sold more rapidly but for its 'exceeding honesty' and impartiality, which, however, in our opinion, are its great recommendations. Mr. Ritchie is either of no sect, or else he has attained to such a point of freedom, that though he may be especially attached to one, he can look with an impartial eye upon the virtues and failings of all. None but a practised hand could have succeeded in presenting such generally accurate portraits with so few strokes of the pencil."--_Illustrated Times_. "One of the cleverest productions of the present day."--_Morning Herald_. "Discriminating in observation, just in verdict, lofty in its ideal of pulpit excellence, and thoroughly interesting in style."--_Homilist_. "Mr. Ritchie is just the man to dash off a series of portraits, bold in outline, strikingly like the originals in feature and expression, and characterised by bright and effectual colouring."--_Civil Service Gazette_. "The style of Mr. Ritchie is always lively and fluent, and oftentimes eloquent. It comes the nearest to Hazlitt's of any modern writer we know. His views and opinions are always dear, manly, and unobjectionable as regards the manner in which they are set forth. Many, no doubt, will not agree with them, but none can be offended at them. As we have already remarked, Mr. Ritchie does not write as a sectarian, and it is impossible to collect from the treatise to what sect he belongs. The tendency of these sketches is to introduce into the pulpit a better style of preaching than what we have been accustomed to."--_Critic_. "Mr. Ritchie's pen-and-ink sketches of the popular preachers of London are as life-like as they are brilliant and delightful."--_The Sun_. "Without going so far as the late Sir Robert Peel, and saying that there are three ways of viewing this as well as every other subject, it will be allowed that the clerical body may be contemplated either from within one of their special folds, and under the influence of peculiar religious views, or in a purely lay, historical manner, and, so we suppose we ought to say, from the 'platform of humanity' at large. The latter is the idea developed in Mr. Ritchie's volume, and cleverly and amusingly it is done. One great merit is, that his characters are not unnece
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