Part II
.), 285.
Salisbury, _see_ John of Salisbury.
Salvation, sureness of, Newman’s usual doctrine on, 351.
Saravia and Bancroft, King James’ translators of the A. V., “revivers of orthodoxy in England,” R. H. F., on, 124.
Sargent, Rev. John of Lavington, his daughters and their noted husbands, 145 _note_, 160 _note_.
Savonarola, 185.
“Sawney,” as used by R. H. F., 6 _note_, 77, 319 & _note_, 346.
Scotch Orders, preference for, of R. H. F., 161.
Scott, Dean, _cited_ on the effect of the ‘Remains’ on W. G. Ward, 283.
Scott, James Robert Hope, effect on, of the ‘Remains’, 225; letter of Newman to, on the Church and its scope for devotional and penitential feelings, 310 _note_.
Scott, Sir G. G., designer of the Oxford Martyrs’ Memorial, 337.
Scott, Sir Walter, guest of the Bunsens in Rome, 100, visit of, to S. Kevin’s bed, 59 _note_.
Sedgwick, Adam, Woodwardian Professor of Geology at Cambridge, 1833., 103 & _note_.
Self-government, R. H. F.’s struggles for, 12 _et seq._, 241, 253, 267, 311, 341, 346-9, shewn in ‘L. Apostolica,’ 403.
Self-knowledge, Newman’s doctrine concerning, 348, 349.
Sermons by R. H. F., written in 1833., 121, 126, that on Knowledge preached at Oxford 1830., 61, the style of his preaching, 62.
Severn, Joseph, artist and friend of Keats, R. H. F.’s acquaintance with, in Rome, 96-8.
Ships, resistance and propulsion of, W. Froude’s experiments concerning, R. H. F.’s interest in, 112.
Sicily, Newman’s illness in, 117.
‘Sight against Faith,’ sonnet by R. H. F., in ‘L. Apostolica,’ 110-11, 405.
Simcox, Mr., _cited_ on Newman’s indecision after R. H. F.’s death, 227.
Smith, Rev. Bernard, Canon, _cited_ on the Oxford attitude to Catholic practices, 224.
Smith, Elizabeth, of Burnhall, Oriental scholar and poetess, R. H. F.’s admiration of her writings, 33, not extended to her translations of Klopstock, 34.
‘Smug’ as used by R. H. F., 161 & _note_.
Social status of the Clergy, views on, of R. H. F., 118, 137, 150.
Society, its effect on himself feared by R. H. F., 129.
Society of the Holy Cross, called a “conspiracy” by Archbishop Tait, 154.
Solitude and dejection, Newman on, 200.
Southampton, as seen from the sea, R. H. F. on, 28.
Southey, Robert, poet-laureate, attitude of, to the ‘Remains,’ 214, _cited_ on their publication, 406. _cited_ on his own virtuous memory and its survival, 213.
Southrop and other parishes, forming Keble’s first curacy, 21 & _note_.
Spedding family, the, its origin, migrations and homes, 2, 3.
Spedding Anthony, uncle of R. H. F., 2.
Spedding Edward, only child of Phillis Spedding (_née_ Froude), his early death, 177.
Spedding James, the Baconian, friend of Tennyson and the Froudes, cousin of R. H. F., 2, his home and parentage, 3, his connection with Carlyle, _ib._
Spedding John, of Armathwaite Hall, his wife and family, 2.
Spedding John, the younger, 2, becomes heir to Thomas Story of Mirehouse, 3, his wife and sons, _ib._, his notable guests, 60, R. H. F.’s visit to, 1829., 58-60.
Spedding Margaret, wife of John, the elder, and mother of Margaret, afterwards wife of Archdeacon R. H. Froude, 2.
Spedding Margaret, the younger, wife of Archdeacon R. H. Froude, and mother of R. H. F., her birth and parentage, 2, her marriage, 3.
Spedding Mary, aunt of R. H. F., 2, 4, 8, 9, almshouse erected by, with tablet in memory of her sister Mrs. Froude, 10.
Spedding Phillis Jane, _née_ Froude, 3, 9, 20, wife of Thomas Story Spedding, her marriage, ill-health, son, and death, 3, 67, 162, 165, 175-6.
Spedding Thomas Story, eldest brother of James, (the Baconian), and his wife Phillis, R. H. F.’s sister, 3, remarriage of, 178.
Spedding William, uncle of R. H. F., 2.
Speech and its dangers, R. H. F.’s realisation of, 217.
Stained glass and glass mosaic, R. H. F.’s letter on, to W. Froude, 1833., 99.
‘State Interference in Matters Spiritual,’ by R. H. F.; its value, 146, the only reprint from the ‘Remains,’ 269.
Stephen, Sir James, annoyance of, at R. H. F.’s attitude to the West Indian slaves, 169. Newman’s conversation with, and _note_ on, 193. _cited_ on the “ecclesiastical fopperies” of R. H. F. and the Tractarians, 221 & _note_. _cited_ in ‘Evangelical Succession,’ on R. H. F. and the Oxford Movement, 263.
Stevenson, Robert Louis, ‘Letters’ of, _cited_, 14 _note_.
Story, Thomas, and his heirs, 3, 178.
Straits of Bonifacio, birthplace of, ‘Lead, Kindly Light,’ 78.
‘Summons, The,’ unfinished verses by R. H. F., 46.
Sutton, Sir C. Manners, raised to the peerage as Viscount Canterbury, 1835., 174 _note_.
T
TAIT, Archbishop, his use of the word “conspiracy,” 154.
Taormina, charms of, for Newman, 66.
Taylor, Jeremy, his failings as a “discourser,” Chillingworth _cited_ on, 182.
Tennyson, friendship of, for James Spedding, 3.
Theology, R. H. F.’s lack of any “turn” for, 246.
Thierry, A., his history of the Norman Conquest criticised by R. H. F., 77 & _note_.
Thirlwall, Rev. Connop, D.D., Bishop of St. David’s, the historian, 103 & _note_.
‘Thoughts in Past Years,’ poems by Isaac Williams, _cited_ on R. H. F.’s connection with the Oxford Movement, 326.
Thureau-Dangin, Paul, _cited_ on R. H. F.’s interview with Wiseman, 179 & _note_, and on his possible eventual change of creed, 225.
Tintern, associations of, for R. H. F., 43.
Tithes, R. H. F. on, 172.
Torbay, 180, calms of, 152; described by Newman, 63.
Torquay, its first beginnings, 26.
Toryism of the first Latitudinarians, R. H. F. on, 133, his own Toryism, 260, 361, 392.
Totnes, 322, Rev. R. H. Froude, Archdeacon of, 4.
Tractarian Movement, (_see also_ Oxford Movement), history of its beginning, 239, 285, 289, 290-1, 342, 352. leaders of, long omission of R. H. F.’s name from the biographies of, 231; his definition of their position in 1835., 172; their outward aspect, 115, 116.
Tracts issued by, the first, by Newman, appearance of, 123. abuse of, as “Popish,” reason for this, and results of their issue, 145. Protestantism of some, according to R. H. F., his cavils at, 172. some on the “safest course” urged by R. H. F., 137. suggested revision of, by R. H. F., 194. Tract 15., and its authors, R. H. F.’s criticism of, 194 & _note_, 291 _note_. Tracts by R. H. F., notably No. 8., after assigned to Newman, 124-5, No. 9., No. 59., and No. 63., aim of this last, 126, 177 _note_, his request for “lots” of, 143. Tracts by Newman, No. 85., influence of, on W. G. Ward, 282. ‘Via Media,’ in relation to alterations in the Articles, 136 _note_. in volume form, issue of, 1834., 158.
Tractarian times, distinctive features of, _see_ Zeitgeist, the, of 1832-3.
Tradition, in the Roman Catholic Church, its weight and the attitude of R. H. F. to, 132, 171, 293, 320, the question of the view of the Fathers on, considered by Newman, 182, R. H. F. on, 183.
‘Trembling Hope,’ poem by R. H. F., in ‘L. Apostolica,’ 106.
Trench, Rev. Richard Chevenix, curate at Hadleigh, in 1833., 118.
Trent, Council of, _see_ Councils.
“Tridentines,” R. H. F.’s term used against Roman Catholics, 302, 396, his view of the Tridentine decrees, 333.
Tucker, Rev. J., Dean of Corpus Christi College, Oxford, Newman on his prospects of work in India, 156.
Turner, J. M. W., the great Painter, 394.
Tutors of Oxford Colleges, and their duties, views vainly held concerning by R. H. F. and his Oriel colleagues, 36-7.
‘Twelve Good Men,’ by Dean Burgon, _cited_ on R. H. F. and the Tracts, 125, and on his use of the word “conspiracy,” 154.
Tyler, Rev. John Endell, “Bob” Froude’s trick on, 50. his London parish and the street named after him, 50.
‘Tyre,’ poem by R. H. F., in ‘L. Apostolica,’ 110, image of the fisherman in, 405.
Tyrrell, Rev. George, S.J., _cited_ on the Eucharistic doctrine, 220 _note_.
U
UNDERSTANDING and Genius, methods of, contrasted by R. H. F., 120.
Universities, the attitude of, to Church and State, 1832., 114.
V
VALENTINIAN II., the Emperor, (a Catechumen), R. H. F. compared to, by Wiseman, 343.
Valetta, Newman’s poem dated from, R. H. F.’s influence on, 76.
Vatican Library, the, and its treasures, 98, R. H. F.’s plan for historical research in, 179.
“Vocabularium Apostolicum,” the, of R. H. F., 127, 251, 387.
W
WARD, William George, of Balliol College, Oxford, “Ideal” Ward, leader of the Oxford “extremists,” the chief exponent of the Church principles of the Tractarian Leaders, 325, not on the scene at the time of R. H. F.’s death, 335, the effect on him, of the ‘Remains,’ 225, his own statement on this point made to Pusey, 282, 283.
Wilfrid, in ‘William George Ward and the Oxford Movement,’ on R. H. F.’s connection with the latter, 282.
‘Watchman, The,’ poem by Newman, in ‘L. Apostolica,’ indicative of the impulsion given by R. H. F., 402-3.
Watson, Joshua, letter of Rev. H. J. Rose to, _cited_ on Rogers’ criticism of the ‘Remains,’ 309 _note_.
‘Weakness of Nature,’ poem by R. H. F., 111-2, additional stanza to, 404.
Weekes, H., sculptor of the statues of the Oxford Martyrs’ Memorial, 337.
Wellington, Duke of, Testimonial to, when Chancellor of Oxford University, condemnation of, by R. H. F., 190.
Wesley, Rev. John, 119.
Wesleyan system, the, R. H. F. on, 172.
West Indies, (see Barbados _and other islands under their names_) religious prospects of, R. H. F. on, 1835., 169, and on the kind of clergy needed in, 150.
Westmacott, Sir R., the Painter, 394.
‘What is home, you silly, silly wight?’ poem by R. H. F., 318.
Whately, Richard, Archbishop of Dublin, and Blanco White, 195 & _note_. his definition of the Church, 250. his anti-donnish ways, at Oriel, 40 & _note_. and other Oriel Fellows not First Class men, 35.
Whatelian school at Oxford, as opposed to the Keble school, 322.
Whewell, Rev. W., Master of Trinity College, Cambridge, 103 & _note_.
Whiggery and Puritanism, R. H. F. on, 133.
White, Rev. Joseph Blanco, at Oriel, his influence on R. H. F. and his special friends, 46-7. his change of faith, 195 _note_, and R. H. F.’s review on, in the ‘British Critic,’ 186, 187, 195.
Wilberforce, Henry, Vicar of East Farleigh, 35 _note_, 198. his engagement, Newman on, 145, his misgivings thereanent, 146, his marriage, 160, 190 _note_. letter to, from R. H. F., 1835., 167. his wife a sister of the wife of S. Wilberforce, 145 _note_, 160 _note_, 190 _note_.
Wilberforce, Robert Isaac, (elder brother of H. W. and S. W.), friend of R. H. F., brief summary of his career, 35 _note_; pupil of Keble, at Southrop, 22, 235, 320, elected to an Oriel Fellowship, 35 _note_, end of his Tutorship at, 62, his profundity of mind, 70 _note_. letters to, from R. H. F., 46, 51. Newman’s invitation to, to join him at Littlemore, 63. results of his admiration for Cologne Cathedral, etc., 394-5. temperament of, 40 & _note_.
Wilberforce, Rev. Samuel, afterwards Bishop of Oxford, his attitude to the Oxford Martyrs’ Memorial, 337. his engagement and R. H. F.’s congratulations, 31, his wife and her sisters, 145 _note_, 160 _note_, 190 _note_. his review of ‘L. Apostolica’ and special praise of R. H. F.’s contributions, 204. visit to, at Brighstone in the Isle of Wight, of R. H F., 85 _note_. _cited_ on R. H. F.’s melancholy, 252, and on the ‘Remains,’ 408.
Wilberforce, William, the Emancipator, and his successor, 139 _note_; his remarkable sons, 35 _note_.
William I., King of Holland, his political difficulties alluded to, by R. H. F., 69.
William III., the Jurors of his reign, R. H. F.’s attitude towards, 258.
William IV., new difficulties in the relation between Church and State introduced in the reign of, 113.
‘William George Ward and the Oxford Movement’ by Wilfrid Ward, cited on R. H. F. and his connection with the latter, 282.
Williams, Jane, sister of Isaac, wife of Ven. Sir George Prevost, 43 _note_, 322.
Williams, Mrs. Isaac, _née_ Caroline Champernowne, 322.
Williams, Rev. Isaac, a friend of the Froudes, 9, 102, 116, 185. bad health of, 127, 158, 162 _note_. a bad sailor, 28. companion of R. H. F. in Cumberland in 1826., 43, 312. contributions of, to ‘L. Apostolica,’ 404. curacy of, and poetical works by, 43 & _note_, second curacy at Windrush, 322 & _note_. instigator of daily service at S. Mary’s, Oxford, 149 _note_. influence of, on Keble, 22. joint pupil of Keble, with R. H. F., 235, 320. his love affair, 160 & _note_, his wife, 322. love of Newman for, 167. Oxford Tutorship of, 322. and the ‘Remains,’ publication of extracts from R. H. F.’s letters suggested by, 205. reasons given to, by Newman on the publication of the book, 325. translation by, of the motto to the book, 207. on Archdeacon Froude, 322. visit of, to Devonshire, with R. H. F., 321. views of, as described by Newman, 305 _note_. _cited_ (in ‘Thoughts on Past Years’), on R. H. F.’s connection with the Oxford Movement, 326. _cited_ on R. H. F.’s resemblance to Hamlet, 252, 324. on R. H. F.’s uniqueness, 222. on his first impressions of Newman, 322-3. on his Oxford and Southrop friendship with R. H. F. and his colleagues, 320.
Willis and Reding, (in ‘Loss and Gain’), _see_ 181 _note_.
Wilson, Rev. R. F., curate to Keble, as characterised by R. H. F. misquoting Keble, 188, Keble’s disclaimer, 192. letter to Newman, on R. H. F.’s failing health, 1835., 188, one from Newman, on the people as the fulcrum of Church power, 102 _note_. _cited_ on the difficulties in the editing of the ‘Remains,’ 211.
Wiseman, Dr., afterwards Cardinal, head of the English College in Rome, 101. interview with, of R. H. F. and Newman on the relation between Protestantism and the Church of Rome, 101, 103, 179, 288, 304, 343 _note_. letter from, to A. P. de Lisle on the Oxford Movement, 343-4 _note_. remark to, of Canon B. Smith, on the Oxford attitude towards Catholic practices, 224. _cited_ (in ‘Essays on Various Subjects’), on R. H. F.’s connection with the Oxford Movement, 338. on R. H. F.’s visit to him in Rome, with Newman, 343 _note_.
Wordsworth, William, the poet, birthplace of, 60. his face an exception to Coleridge’s generalisation as to the expression of men of genius, 116. his offer to revise the ‘Christian Year,’ 30.
Wren, Sir Christopher, and his adoption of the classic form for S. Paul’s Cathedral, 96.
Wye, river, Keble’s expedition up, with R. H. F., referred to, 43.
Y
YONGE, James, M.D., a famous Exeter physician, his verdict on R. H. F.’s health, 1832. _et seq._, 74, 183, 187.
York Minster, beauty of the unseen details in, R. H. F.’s joy in, 395.
Z
“Z.,” a, meaning of the term among the Tractarians, 142.
Z.’s, the Barbados clergy described as, by R. H. F., 169.
Zante, its cliffs, wine, etc., 86-7, 88, longing of R. H. F. to live at “among the people,” 105.
Zeitgeist, the, of 1832-3 in England, some of the Oxford Leaders _cited_ on, 115.
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