Of all the groups of Christian believers that developed in the English-speaking world in the nineteenth century, the one which produced the greatest number of gifted writers was the Brethren …the one whose works have been most frequently printed is C. H. Mackintosh, generally known as C.H.M.
C. H. Mackintosh was born in October 1820, at Glenmalure Barricks, County Wicklow, Ireland, the son of the captain of a Highland regiment. Mackintosh was converted at the age of eighteen through the letters of a devout sister, and the prayerful reading of J. N. Darby's Operations of the Spirit. … (soon after the age of 24) he concluded he must give himself entirely to the ministry of the Word of God, in writing and in public speaking. Soon thereafter he felt led to establish a periodical, which he continued to edit for twenty-one years, “Things New and Old”.
He died on November 2, 1896, and was buried in Cheltenham Cemetery, awaiting the resurrection morn.
This book is the complete set, Volume 1 through 5.