[293] The physical resemblance between R. H. F.’s child-portrait and il buon Pippo, becomes none the less noteworthy when one turns towards what Newman wrote from Rome to his sister about S. Philip Neri, on January 26, 1847. ‘This great Saint reminds me in so many ways of Keble, that I can fancy what Keble would have been … in another place and age; he was formed on the same type of extreme hatred of humbug, playfulness, nay, oddity, tender love of others, and severity.’ John Henry Newman, Letters and Correspondence to 1845, ii., 424.

HURRELL FROUDE

II

SOME REPRINTED COMMENTS
ON HIM AND ON HIS RELATION
TO THE OXFORD MOVEMENT

CONTENTS

PART II.—COMMENTS
PAGE
From ‘The Oxford Movement,’ 1833-1845, by R. W. Church[235]
From ‘Apologia pro Vita Sua,’ by John Henry Newman[259]
From ‘The Cherwell Water-Lily and other Poems,’ by Frederick William Faber[263]
From ‘Essays in Ecclesiastical Biography,’ by the Right Hon. Sir James Stephen[263]
From ‘A Memoir of the Rev. John Keble,’ by the Right Hon. Sir J. T. Coleridge[276]
From ‘Essays Historical and Theological,’ by J. B. Mozley[278]
From ‘Memoir of Joshua Watson,’ edited by Edward Churton[281]
From ‘William George Ward and the Oxford Movement,’ by Wilfrid Ward[282]
From ‘A Narrative of Events connected with the Publication of the Tracts for the Times,’ by William Palmer [of Worcester Coll.][287]
From ‘Oxford High Anglicanism and its chief Leaders,’ by J. H. Rigg[291]
From ‘Historical Notes on the Tractarian Movement,’ by Frederick Oakeley[299]
From ‘The British Critic’ for Jan., 1838. (A review of the Remains, Part I., by Frederic Rogers.)[306]
From ‘The Autobiography of Isaac Williams,’ edited by George Prevost[320]
From ‘Thoughts in Past Years,’ by Isaac Williams[326]
From ‘Cardinal Newman,’ by Richard H. Hutton[329]
From ‘The Anglican Revival,’ by J. H. Overton[334]
From ‘Essays on Various Subjects,’ by Nicholas Wiseman[338]
From ‘The Anglican Career of Cardinal Newman,’ by Edwin A. Abbott[344]
From ‘Oriel College,’ by David Watson Rannie[356]
From ‘Short Studies on Great Subjects,’ by James Anthony Froude[358]
Controversy from ‘The Contemporary Review’ and ‘The Nineteenth Century’ between E. A. Freeman and J. A. Froude[363]
From ‘The Remains of Richard Hurrell Froude’ [edited by John Keble and John Henry Newman], 1838[367]
Idem, 1839[374]
From ‘Reminiscences chiefly of Oriel College and the Oxford Movement,’ by T. Mozley[391]
From ‘The British Critic’ for April 1840. (A review of the Remains, Part II., by T. Mozley)[398]
From ‘Lyra Apostolica,’ edited by H. C. Beeching, with an Introduction by H. S. Holland[402]
From ‘Newman,’ by William Barry[405]
Excerpts from ‘Memoirs,’ by Mark Pattison; the ‘Life of Samuel Wilberforce,’ by his Son; the ‘Life and Correspondence of the late Robert Southey,’ by his Son; ‘A Key to the Popery of Oxford,’ by Peter Maurice; ‘John Henry Newman, Letters and Correspondences,’ edited by Anne Mozley; and ‘Catholicism, Roman and Anglican,’ by A. M. Fairbairn[406-408]