University Press:
John Wilson and Son, Cambridge.
CONTENTS.
- [CHAPTER I.]
- Life at Earlham, a Hundred Years Ago
- [CHAPTER II.]
- Life's Earnest Purpose
- [CHAPTER III.]
- St. Mildred's Court
- [CHAPTER IV.]
- A Country Home
- [CHAPTER V.]
- Beginnings at Newgate
- [CHAPTER VI.]
- Newgate Horrors and Newgate Workers
- [CHAPTER VII.]
- Evidence Before the House of Commons
- [CHAPTER VIII.]
- The Gallows and English Laws
- [CHAPTER IX.]
- Convict Ships and Convict Settlements
- [CHAPTER X.]
- Visits to Continental Prisons
- [CHAPTER XI.]
- New Theories of Prison Discipline and Management
- [CHAPTER XII.]
- Mrs. Fry in Domestic and Religious Life
- [CHAPTER XIII.]
- Collateral Good Works
- [CHAPTER XIV.]
- Expansion of the Prison Enterprise—Honors
- [CHAPTER XV.]
- Closing Days of Life
- [CHAPTER XVI.]
- Finis
ELIZABETH FRY.
CHAPTER I.
LIFE AT EARLHAM, A HUNDRED YEARS AGO.
A hundred years ago, Norwich was a remarkable centre of religious, social and intellectual life. The presence of officers, quartered with their troops in the city, and the balls and festivities which attended the occasional sojourn of Prince William Frederick, Duke of Gloucester, combined to make the quaint old city very gay; while the pronounced element of Quakerism and the refining influences of literary society permeated the generation of that day, and its ordinary life, to an extent not easily conceived in these days of busy locomotion and new-world travel. Around the institutions of the established Church had grown up a people loyal to it, for, as an old cathedral city, the charm of antiquity attached itself to Norwich; while Mrs. Opie and others known to literature, exercised an attraction and stimulus in their circles, consequent upon the possession of high intellectual powers and good social position. It was in the midst of such surroundings, and with a mind formed by such influences, that Elizabeth Fry, the prison philanthropist and Quaker, grew up to young womanhood.