FOOTNOTES:
[81] Newman, Essays. ii. p. 428.
[82] See Sir Leslie Stephen's English Utilitarians, ii. p. 42.
[83] 'Nowhere that I know of,' the Duke of Argyll once wrote in friendly remonstrance with Mr. Gladstone, 'is the doctrine of a separate society being of divine foundation, so dogmatically expressed as in the Scotch Confession; the 39 articles are less definite on the subject.'
[84] On this, see Fairbairn's Catholicism, Roman and Anglican, pp. 114-5.
[85] A little sheaf of curious letters on this family episode survives.
[86] Afterwards Bishop of Salisbury.
[87] Marrying Walter Scott's granddaughter (1847) he was named Hope-Scott after 1853.
[88] The Apologia of its leader; Froude, Short Studies, vol. iv.; and Dean Church's Oxford Movement, 1833-45, a truly fascinating book—called by Mr. Gladstone a great and noble book. 'It has all the delicacy,' he says, 'the insight into the human mind, heart, and character, which were Newman's great endowment; but there is a pervading sense of soundness about it which Newman, great as he was, never inspired.'
[89] See Dr. Fairbairn's Catholicism, Roman and Anglican, p. 292. Pusey speaks of our 'paying twenty millions for a theory about slavery' (Liddon, Life of Pusey, iii. p. 172).