mE OXFORD COUNTER-REFORMATION, 265 humanity, or for any sympathy with the passions which are the pulses of human life. With the Prayer-book for his guide, he has provided us with a manual of religious sentiment corresponding to the Christian theory as taught by the Church of England Prayer-book, beautifully expressed in language which every one can understand and remember. High Churchmanship had been hitherto dry and formal; Keble carried into it the emotions of Evangelicalism, while he avoided angry collision with Evangelical opinions. 'Thus all parties could find much to admire in him, and little to suspect. English religious poetry was generally weak-—was not, indeed, poetry at all. Here was something which in its kind was excellent; and every one who was really religious, or wished to be religious, or even outwardly and from habit professed him- self and believed himself to be a Christian, found Keble’s verses chime in his heart like church bells. The ‘ Christian Year, however, could be all this, and yet notwithstanding it could be poetry of a particular period, and not for all time. Human nature remains the same; but religion alters, Christianity has taken many forms. In the early Church it had the hues of a hundred heresies. It