WeRead Powered by ReaderPub
Hurrell Froude: Memoranda and Comments cover

Hurrell Froude: Memoranda and Comments

Chapter 22: I
Open in WeRead

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.

I

  • Ideas, not facts, R. H. F.’s chief topics of conversation, 122.
  • Incumbent, the English, of 1830., J. A. Froude on the status of, 359-60.
  • India, as a missionary field for R. H. F. and himself, Newman’s dreams of, 156.
  • Infallibility of the Church.
    • Hammond’s view cited by R. H. F., 122.
    • of the Church of Rome, alleged effect of the doctrine of, on the Reunion of Christendom, 101.
  • Irish bishoprics, abolition of, 1833., 113.
    • tour of R. H. F., 1829., 59.
  • “Irony,” the, of R. H. F.’s introspection, J. Mozley on, 349-50, as shewn in the ‘Remains,’ 398.
  • ‘Isles of the Sirens,’ poem by Newman, allusion in, to Ithaca, 331-2.
  • Italian Renaissance architecture, Oxonian preference for, 395 note.
  • Italy, visit of R. H. F. and Newman to, 78 et seq.
  • Ithaca, as seen by R. H. F., 87, Newman’s poetic allusion to, 331-2.