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Hurrell Froude: Memoranda and Comments

Chapter 15: B
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About This Book

The volume begins with edited memoranda and a selection of correspondence that reconstruct his life, ideals, and character, accompanied by editorial notes on missing letters, anonymized names, and facsimile pages; illustrations supplement the narrative. A second, independent section gathers contemporary essays and reviews assessing his intellectual affinities and relation to the Oxford religious movement, presenting varied critical perspectives. Together the parts offer a portrait shaped by personal documents and public appraisal, combining biographical reconstruction, candid editorial commentary about gaps in the record, and critical reflection on his place in Anglican religious debates.

B

  • Bagot, Hon. and Rt. Rev. Richard, Bishop of Oxford, R. H. F. ordained priest by, 368.
  • Balliol College, Oxford, beginning of its scholarly pre-eminence, 62.
  • Bancroft, see Saravia and Bancroft.
  • Barbados, (see also Codrington College, and Negroes), the Archdeaconry of, once offered to Keble, 131.
    • atmospheric and artistic defects of, 151-2.
    • climate of, 131, 144.
    • emancipation in and its consequences, anticipated, 134, and actual, 160, 169.
    • great hurricane at, in 1831., 131, 150, 151.
    • life of R. H. F. at, as told in his letters, 131 et seq., lack of gain to his health from his stay there, 143, 173, 176, no traces of his residence to be found there, 173.
    • vegetation of, its luxuriance, 135, and special interest of to R. H. F., 132.
  • Baring-Gould, Rev. S., see Gould, Rev. S. Baring-.
  • “Basil,” Newman’s sobriquet for R. H. F., 165, 256, letter suggesting, 163.
  • Bassenthwaite Lake, home of R. H. F.’s mother beside, 60.
  • Bastille, the fall of, Keble’s epoch-making sermon on the anniversary of, 113.
  • Battels, at Codrington College as at Oxford, 143.
  • Bavaria, Louis Charles, King of, generosity of, to German artists in Rome, (1833.), 96.
  • Becket, see Life of, and S. Thomas à Becket.
  • Beeching, Prof. H. C., in ‘Lyra Apostolica’ as edited by him, on R. H. F.’s poems in that collection, 404.
  • Benedictine monks of Buckfast Abbey, Buckfastleigh, their remembrance of R. H. F., 229.
  • Bennett, Rev. W. J. E., of Frome, writer of the Preface to the reprint of ‘State Interference’ from R. H. F.’s ‘Remains,’ 209.
  • Benthamism, Christianity’s greatest enemy, according to Stephen, 193.
  • Bible, the, whether the only authoritative teaching, according to R. H. F., in present times, 171.
  • Bishops, mode of their appointment, R. H. F. on need for change in, 148.
    • objected to as patrons, by R. H. F., 172.
  • Bisley, the first place where Anglican daily services were revived, (by Rev. T. Keble) 1834., 149 note, 322.
    • marriage of Rev. J. Keble at, 160 note.
  • Blachford, Lord, see Rogers, Frederic.
  • Blake, William, resemblance of R. H. F.’s style to, in a poem in ‘L. Apostolica,’ 404.
  • Blessed Virgin Mary, question of R. H. F.’s devotion towards, 305-6.
  • Bogue, Rev. J. R., husband of Mary Froude, R. H. F.’s sister, 189.
  • Boni, Felippo di, verse by, suggested as fit motto for R. H. F.’s ‘Remains,’ 208.
  • Bonnell’s ‘Life,’ a religious work, R. H. F.’s opinion on, 44.
  • Boone, James Shergold, editor of the ‘British Critic,’ 1835., and R. H. F., 186.
  • Bowden, J. W., Apostolicorum princeps, beloved of Newman, 167.
    • contributions of, to ‘L. Apostolica,’ 404.
    • first and last sight by, of R. H. F., 174.
    • letter to Newman, on the death of R. H. F., 198.
      • from Newman on the publication of R. H. F.’s ‘Private Thoughts,’ 206.
    • cited on the Oxford Movement and its bearings, 115.
  • Bowdler, Henrietta Maria, see Smith, Elizabeth.
  • Breviary, the Roman, R. H. F.’s first acquaintance with, 47, his own copy and its history, 187-8, its influence on Newman, and on the Oxford Movement, 352, 356.
  • “Bright and beautiful,” Miss Harriett Newman’s epithets for R. H. F., 199 note, 243, 405.
  • ‘British Critic, The, and Quarterly Theological Review,’
    • critique by R. H. F., on Blanco White, in, 187, 191.
    • letters of Thomas Becket, arranged by R. H. F. (in note S. Thomas à Becket) issued in, 192.
    • reviews in on R. H. F.’s ‘Remains.’
      • Mozley, Rev. T., on his character, irony, and influence, 398.
      • Rogers, F., on his connection with the Oxford Movement, 306.
  • ‘British Magazine, The,’ contributions to, of R. H. F., in 1832., 79, 124 & note, in 1832-3., 239, R. H. F.’s plans for using as a means of propagating the Oxford Movement, 324.
    • its editor, (see Rose, Rev. H. J.), ‘L. Apostolica,’ written for, 97.
    • issue in, of excerpts from Dartington Parish Books, 1834., 144.
    • Newman’s article in, on ‘Monasticism,’ R. H. F. on, 181-2.
    • citedon Christie’s ordination, 161.
  • Brockedon, William, of Totnes, R.A., friend and protégé of Archdeacon Froude, his career, and unfinished portrait of R. H. F., 5 & note, see also Preface.
  • Bucer, 164.
  • Buckfast Abbey, Buckfastleigh, see Benedictines.
  • Bull, Bishop, and the Nonjurors, R. H. F.’s attitude to, Archdeacon Froude on, 371 note.
  • Buller, Rev. Anthony, friendship of, for R. H. F., 128, the latter’s funeral service read by, 192.
  • Bulteel, Henry Bellenden, R. H. F.’s comparisons of the Reformers to, 72 & note, et alibi.
  • Bunsen, Baron Christian Carl Josias, Prussian Chargé d’Affaires in Rome, 1833., acquaintance with, of Newman and R. H. F., 100.
    • his adverse view of the Tractarians, 187.
  • Buonarotti, M. Angelo, see Michael Angelo.
  • Burgon, Dean, on the authorship of Tract 8., 125.
    • on R. H. F.’s use of “conspiracy” to describe the Oxford Movement, 154.
  • Burn, Rev. A., letter to, from Rev. C. Marriott, cited on the authorship of Tract 8., 125.
  • ‘Butler’s Analogy,’ reference to, by R. H. F., 113.
  • Buxton, Sir T. Fowell, anti-slavery leader, 139 & note.
  • Byron, Lord, Clough, and others, difference in the ideas suggested to, by a sight of Ithaca, 352.