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From John Wesley's Writings:

The New Birth (The New Birth')

Our Stewardship (The Good Steward')

The Kingdom of Heaven (The First Discourse upon the
Sermon on the Mount')

The Love that Hopeth and Endureth All Things (Second
Discourse upon the Sermon on the Mount')

A Catholic Spirit (Discourse Entitled 'Catholic Spirit')
The Last Judgment (Discourse on The Great Assize')
Thou Hidden Love of God, Whose Height (Translation
from Tersteegen)

From Charles Wesley's Hymns:

Father, I Stretch My Hands to Thee

Light of Life, Seraphic Fire

Love Divine, All Love Excelling

Eternal Beam of Light Divine

Gentle Jesus, Meek and Mild

Thou Very Present Aid

Hail! Holy, Holy, Holy Lord

A Charge to Keep I Have

And Have Measured Half My Days

Jesus, Lover of My Soul

Jesu, My Strength, My Hope

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"Wesley Preaching to the Indians" (Photogravure) 15806

15791

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IVAN VAZOFF

(1850-)

BY LUCY CATLIN BULL

HE remote principality of Bulgaria does not attract a large
Ishare of the world's attention. But small butterflies may

have great peacock's-eyes, with glintings and delicate gradations of color-inky blots too, and deep shadows! These are not only worth examining,- they may become in a collection a source of permanent enjoyment. And if life in Bulgaria, either from the moral or the material point of view, has ever so few phenomena that have a peculiar vividness not to be found elsewhere, then it is only a question of time before the world begins to feel the richer for them. That the rugged little country really abounds in poetic and picturesque elements, may be inferred from the fact that her strongest and most prolific writer has been able to confine himself, partly from choice, partly from instinct, to the treatment of life in Bulgaria, without forfeiting his claim to the serious consideration of readers in all parts of the world. In other words, nothing could be racier of the soil than the poems and romances of Ivan Vazoff, born in 1850 in the little town of Sopot, under the shadow of the Great Balkan. No book was ever more thoroughly and lovingly steeped in local color than his most widely read novel, 'Under the Yoke.' But his patriotism, poured out year after year in a cause that seemed utterly hopeless, takes a form so exalted as to raise him above the mere delineator of character and gatherer of specimens. Besides, an irresistible affinity felt in boyhood for writers like Béranger and Victor Hugo, could but have a happy effect on a nervous style, and a diction reminding the reader of the mountain torrents it dwells upon. Who shall say how far a scrupulous choice of words, and a keen ear for the harmonies of verse and prose, may not have tended to rescue the young revolutionist from becoming the ephemeral organ of a political insurrectiop?

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IVAN VAZOFF

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