Cardinal NewmanL. MacVeagh, The Dial Press, 1930 - 295 pages |
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Page 24
... language would allow , the visions , the emotions by which he himself was inspired . In so doing he pro- duced works which , for grace and charm , for power and simplicity - the noble simplicity of genius - stand almost alone in our ...
... language would allow , the visions , the emotions by which he himself was inspired . In so doing he pro- duced works which , for grace and charm , for power and simplicity - the noble simplicity of genius - stand almost alone in our ...
Page 50
... language he employed . No histrionic artifice here , no straining after effect , no deliberate attempt to excite the emotions of his audience . Only grave and beautiful thoughts , expressed in language of natural and inherent grace ...
... language he employed . No histrionic artifice here , no straining after effect , no deliberate attempt to excite the emotions of his audience . Only grave and beautiful thoughts , expressed in language of natural and inherent grace ...
Page 110
... language he could only speak with difficulty . He had , it is easy to gather , the true scholar's dislike of floundering or muddling through in an idiom which he had not mastered , and it is not easy to acquire ease and fluency of ...
... language he could only speak with difficulty . He had , it is easy to gather , the true scholar's dislike of floundering or muddling through in an idiom which he had not mastered , and it is not easy to acquire ease and fluency of ...
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Common terms and phrases
addressed Ambrose St Anglican Apologia beautiful Birmingham Bishop Bishop of Birmingham Bishop of Clifton blessing called Cardinal Cardinal's Catholic CHAPTER charm Christianity Church of England College Cullen dear divine doctrine Dream of Gerontius ecclesiastical English Essay face faith feel followed genius grace hand heart Holy Father honour human idea intellectual John Henry Newman Keble kindly Light Kingsley language letter Littlemore living looked man's matter Matthew Arnold memory ment mind nature never Old Oscott once Oratorian Oratorian Fathers Oratory Oriel Oscott Oxford passage perfect perhaps poem poet poetry Pope preached Prose Protestant Pusey R. W. CHURCH reason religion religious rhetoric Rome says Newman seemed sense Sermons sorrow sort soul sound speak spirit surely things thought tion Trinity truth turned Ullathorne University verse voice whole Wiseman words writing wrote