A Reprint of "A Guide To True Peace" Now Available

A New Reprint of “A Guide To True Peace”

 

There are several publishing ventures which have taken advantage of new technology and publish reprints of older books and make them available again to a new generation.  These older books are now in the public domain and thus can be copied freely.  The new technologies consist of computer scanning techniques and print-on-demand computer storage.  This means that the reprint houses do not have to incur the costs of a large inventory; rather they are able to print each copy as an order comes in.

 

One of these reprint houses, Nabu Public Domain Reprints, has just reprinted an early edition of “A Guide to True Peace”, a manual, or guide, to the practice of the prayer of inward silence.  The ‘Guide’ was first published in England in 1813.  The first American edition was 1816.  The ‘Guide’ circulated widely among Quakers and has had a pervasive influence on how Quakers view the practice of silent prayer. 

 

Nabu has reprinted the Third American Edition from 1846.  I have compared the 1846 edition with the First American Edition of 1816, and with the exception of a few changes in capitalization and punctuation, they are the same.  It is gratifying that the Quaker community will once again have access to this classic of inward and silent prayer.

 

Most Quakers who are familiar with the ‘Guide’ know of it through the Pendle Hill edition which was published in 1979.  The 1979 edition is a reprint of the 1946 edition published by Harper; both contain an ‘Introduction’ by Howard Brinton which I have found quoted in quite a few places.  Unfortunately, this edition is, in some ways, incomplete.  The most significant lack in the 1979 edition is the absence of scriptural references.  Quotation marks are placed around scriptural citations, but the actual location of the quote has been removed in this edition.  For the dedicated student of the ‘Guide’ this is a problematic lapse.  All earlier editions contain the scriptural references in a standard manner.  One of the great benefits of having Nabu reprint the 1846 edition is that Quakers now have access to an edition of the ‘Guide’ that has these references and can, therefore, follow up on them with ease. 

 

Sometimes reprint houses don’t do a very good job, but in this case I found the reproduction to be excellent; Nabu has actually enlarged the page making the print size very easy to read.  There is an additional plus: the 1846 edition of the ‘Guide’ added as an appendix a short piece by William Shewen, “Counsel to the Christian Traveller”.  I don’t know of any other edition of the ‘Guide’ that contains this (though I haven’t seen all of them).  This is a brief, inspirational essay and the pairing of the two works well.  It’s a nice added bonus.

 

You can purchase this reprint from Amazon:

 

A Guide To True Peace

9781178700794

Nabu Public Domain Reprints

$17.75, discounted by Amazon to $13.85

 

Best wishes,

 

Jim

 

Views: 196

Comment by Bruce R. Arnold on 10th mo. 9, 2011 at 12:09pm

I have had one of the Pendle Hill 1979 editions since shortly after it came out. This book is highly recommended to Friends and others who follow a contemplative discipline. I had not noticed the lack of scriptural citations noted above -- I guess if you know your scripture, you don't necessarily miss the "chapter and verse" stuff. LOL. I guess I grew up in an age when a certain degree of scriptural literacy was simply taken for granted.

In any case, let me second the recommendation of this fine work on the inner life, and many thanks to all those who had a hand in making it available once more.

Comment by Jim Wilson on 10th mo. 11, 2011 at 10:47am

Dear Dr. Arnold:

 

It's good to hear from someone else who has a strong connection to the 'Guide'.  I hadn't considered the cultural situation that you mentioned.  I grew up in a secular home; we didn't even have a Bible.  Not because my parents were anti-religious.  Rather religion just wasn't part of the world they inhabited.  So for me, when I first encountered the 'Guide' in the Pendle Hill edition the quotations were obscure.  When I found an earlier edition that contained the references along with the quotes it assisted me in my understanding of the 'Guide' and added additional dimensions of meaning as I looked up the quotations. 

 

Thanks again for the post.

 

Jim

 

Comment by Bruce R. Arnold on 10th mo. 11, 2011 at 11:33am
Good point, Jim. It's preferable to have the scriptural references than not to. Makes the book more valuable to many more readers.

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