ABSTRACT

SOME OPINIONS OF THE PRESS ON "THE SAVIOUR OF THE WORLD" VOL. II. HIS DOMINION
These reviews/comments followed the original release of His Dominion in 1908.

Miss Charlotte Mason has now given us the second instalment of her elaborate work in verse on "The Saviour of the World." . . . Miss Mason renders into graceful and original verse part of the story of Christ as found in the Gospels. She seeks to cover each incident in His career, and each notable saying to which He gave utterance, in a single poem, the series to form a complete story. Her obvious sincerity and the high aim which is everywhere apparent make her pleasing verses singularly attractive. She is reverent throughout and always dignified.
—Dundee Advertiser

Miss Mason has much of the subtle skill of Browning, and her effusions breathe everywhere a spirit of deep devotion to "The Saviour of Mankind."
—Catholic Times

Miss Mason's gracefully versified tractate in Christian theology—for that is what the poem is—should be read without weariness by the devout . . . On its literary side the book will readily evoke the admiration and sympathy of readers who like to have familiar lessons of Christianity refreshed by good workmanship in metrical art.
—Scotsman

The first volume met with a very cordial reception, and now the talented authoress gives her second volume to the world. . . . The authoress employs the choicest language, and shows great skill in versification. The whole work, in fact, aims at giving the whole of the Gospel story in verse—not a small task, by any means, but one for which Miss Mason seems to be specially endowed.
—Western Mail

Miss Mason here continues what she modestly describes as a "paraphrase in verse" of the Gospel story. As the writer aptly remarks, such a theme as this, in its sacred utterances and dramatic situations, finds a better medium of presentation in poetry than in prose. The first stage or act of the inspired narrative, The Holy Infancy, being completed, Miss Mason passes on to the Ministry of Our Lord at its commencement and first teaching (Sermon on the Mount and earlier parables), and first miracles . . . the sequence of the work is marked no less by the skill of the author than by the reverent spirit in which it is composed. Echoes of George Herbert and of Isaac Williams are to be caught here and there in the various pieces, as. E.g. where paraphrasing a passage in the Sermon on the Mount, Miss Mason writes: —
"Nay, keep thy soul at eve,
Nor e'er perceive
The heavy odour of an unchaste thought."
It would be difficult to express better the "atmosphere" of the new Paradise "regained" by Christ in place of that which was lost.
—Bookseller

The same careful, reverent handling of holy things characterises this new volume, which, like the former, is a paraphrase, in blank verse chiefly, of the Gospel narrative.
—Guardian

chapter |2 pages

The Saviour of the World

part I|52 pages

Authority

chapter III|2 pages

Christ teaches in Galilee

chapter IV|2 pages

Call of the four Fishers

chapter VIII|2 pages

Jesus prays in the Desert

chapter IX|2 pages

In Galilee

chapter X|4 pages

The fishers’ net

chapter XI|4 pages

The Leper healed

chapter XIII|6 pages

The call of Levi

chapter XIV|5 pages

The Jews are rejected

part II|44 pages

Authority

chapter XVI|5 pages

The Man healed at Bethesda

chapter XVI|5 pages

Christ’s Defence

chapter XVII|4 pages

Christ’s Defence

chapter XVIII|2 pages

Christ’s Defence

chapter XIX|4 pages

The World to Come (The Disciple)

chapter XX|5 pages

Christ’s Defence

chapter XXI|4 pages

Jesus walks in the cornfields.

chapter XXII|5 pages

Law (The Disciple)

chapter XXIII|3 pages

Christ restores the withered hand

chapter XXIV|3 pages

“He shall not strive nor cry”

chapter XXV|1 pages

Unrest (The Disciple)

chapter XXVI|1 pages

Rest (The Disciple)

part III|76 pages

The Church

chapter XXVII|5 pages

The Church of Christ

chapter XXVIII|5 pages

The Calling of the Twelve

chapter XXIX|2 pages

The Ordination Charge

chapter XXX|2 pages

Blessed are ye Poor

chapter XXXI|2 pages

Blessed are ye that hunger and thirst

chapter XXXII|2 pages

“Blessed are ye that mourn”

chapter XXXIII|2 pages

Of Persecutions

chapter XXXIV|2 pages

Order of the day

chapter XXXV|3 pages

Further orders

chapter XXXVI|3 pages

The nursery (the disciple)

chapter XXXVII|4 pages

Six parables

chapter XXXVIII|2 pages

The Sermon on the Mount

chapter XXXIX|3 pages

At School (The Disciple)

chapter XL|2 pages

The Old Rule and the New: of Love and Hate

chapter XLI|3 pages

Of Chastity

chapter XLII|2 pages

Of Guarded Speech

chapter XLIII|3 pages

“Be ye perfect”

chapter XLIV|2 pages

Of alms

chapter XLV|2 pages

Of Prayer

chapter XLVI|3 pages

“Our Father”

chapter XLVII|2 pages

Of Fasting

chapter XLVIII|2 pages

Of being anxious

chapter XLIX|2 pages

Of the single eye

chapter L|1 pages

Of serving God and Mammon

chapter LI|2 pages

“Consider the fowls of the air”

chapter LIII|1 pages

“Ask and ye shall receive”

chapter LIV|1 pages

“Seek and ye shall find”

chapter LVII|3 pages

Dedication of the Western Portal

chapter LVIII|2 pages

Authority of the Master