Chapter 26 of 37 · 165 words · ~1 min read

Part II

. his place in it, 116-7, aims in forwarding, 119, bearing of his health thereon, 122, methods of “rousing,” 125, way of supporting, 161, 195, 198, 339; his “Basil-” like-ness, 165-6; the “perfect flower” of, 211; the “traveller” and the “wing and talon,” 222; the “poker,” of Newman, 354, and of Keble, 123; a “philosopher” of the Movement, 193; the “stimulator,” 353, 356, 402; one of the “leading triumvirate” in, 362; effect of his death thereon, 355. his personal appearance, 5, 199 _note_, 243, 299, 405. his poems, _see_ Poems by R. H. F. some of his views on, Abolition of Slavery, 274, and on the Negroes of Barbados, 170, 274. Absolution, 106. the Altar, 149. the Articles, 174. Celibacy, 66, 310. the Church, 250. the Churches of England and Rome, _see those heads_. clergy, status of, 118, 137, 150. disestablishment, 114, 161, 261, 287, 291. Eastward position, 244. the Eucharist, 163-5, 220, 250, 251, 342. Faith, 314-5. Fasting, 12 _et seq._ _and see_ ‘Remains’