Written by Henry Barclay Sweete and published in 1909, this text is available via Internet Archive.
THIS little book has for its aim to draw the attention of the younger clergy of the Church of England to the vast store of wisdom which has been bequeathed to them by the ancient Catholic Church.
The Fathers are often quoted, but in the hurry of the times they are perhaps seldom read. Yet quotation is safe only in the hands of the careful student. Knowledge gained at second hand is not merely of little worth, but may easily become mischievous both to its possessor and to the Church.
It is the hope of the writer that his attempt to map out the field of Patristic learning may serve to stimulate and guide personal study, and not be regarded as in any sense a substitute for it.H.B.S.
CAMBRIDGE, Christmas Eve, 1901
Chapter
I Introductory
II Fathers of the First Two Centuries
III Fathers of the Third Century
IV Post-Nicene Fathers (Greek and Eastern)
V Pos-Nicene Fathers (Latin)
VI Courses and Methods of Patristic Study
VII Helps to Patristic Study
This book is available here.
Other interesting titles written by the same auctor -maybe a little ‘oftopic’, but useful- are:
Selections from the Septuagint, according to the text of Swete (1905)
The Apocalypse of St. John: the Greek text with introduction, notes and indices
The Akhmîm fragment of the Apocryphal Gospel of St. Peter
An introduction to the Old Testament in Greek. Rev. by Richard Rusden Ottley. With an appendix containing the letter of Aristeas edited by H. St. J. Thackeray
The Old Testament in Greek according to the Septuagint
The Psalms of Solomon : with the Greek fragments of the Book of Enoch