The
Pleasures
of Hope.
Cambridge History of English Literature - 1908 - v12
Ideals of Indian Art, 2nd edn, 1920.
Handbook of
Indian Art, 1920.
Haverfield, F. J. (1860–1919). British Academy Papers, Roman Britain in 1910–14. The
Romanization of Roman Britain, 3rd edn, 1915. Roman Britain in Cambridge
Medieval History, vol. I, 1911. Appendix to revised edn of Mommsen's Roman
Provinces, E. T. 1910. Illustrated Catalogues of Inscriptions, etc. (a) in Durham
Cathedral Library (Durham, 1899), (b) in Chester Museum (Chester Society, vol. VII,
1900). Contributions to Victoria County Histories, etc. Bibliography by G. Mac-
donald in Journal of Roman Studies, VIII, 184–198.
Hope, Sir William Henry St John (1854–1919), knighted in 1914. English Altars
from illuminated MSS (Alcuin Club), 1899; The stall plates of the Knights of the
Garter (1348–1485), Westminster, 1901; Fountains Abbey (in Yorkshire Arch.
Journal), Leeds, 1900; The Abbey of St Mary-in-Furness, Kendal, 1912; Heraldry
for Craftsmen and Designers, 1913; A Grammar of English Heraldry, Cambridge,
1913; Windsor Castle. An architectural history, 1913. Joint Author of The
Chronicles of. . . All Saints, Derby, 1881 ; Architectural Description of Kirkstall
Abbey (Thoresby Society publications), Leeds, 1907; Corporation Plate, etc. of
England and Wales, 1895; Pageant of the birth, life, and death of Richard
Beauchamp, Earl of Warwick (+1439), 1914; English Liturgical Colours, 1918.
Superintendent of explorations at Castleacre Priory, Furness Abbey, Dale Abbey,
Repton Priory, Ludlow Castle, St Augustine's Abbey (Canterbury), Old Sarum,
Silchester, etc. , recorded in Archaeologia. Notice by Ralph Griffin in Cambridge
Antiquarian Society's Comm. , vol. XXII, 127-9.
Humphreys, A. L. A Handbook to County Bibliography. 1916.
Macdonald, George (b. 1862). The Roman Wall in Scotland. Glasgow, 1911.
Marshall, Sir John Hubert (b. 1876), Director-General of Archaeology in India since
1902. Guides to Sanchi and Taxila, Calcutta, 1918. Annual Reports.
Minns, Ellis Hovell. Scythians and Greeks. Cambridge, 1913.
Pennant, Thomas (1726–1798). A Tour in Scotland in 1769, Chester, 1771, etc. A
Tour in Scotland (“the Second Tour') and Voyage to the Hebrides ("the Third
Tour'), 2 vols. , Chester and London, 1774–6; Pennant's Three Tours in Scotland,'
1790. A Tour in Wales in 1773, London, 1778; continued 1781-3. Tours in
Wales, 3 vols. , 181 ed. T. Rhys, Carnarv 1883. The Journey from Chester
to London, 1782, etc. Antiquarian and Historical Account of London, 1790, etc.
The History of the Parishes of Whiteford and Holywell, 1796. Also works on
Zoology. Autobiography, 1793. See vol. xiv, p. 246.
Stein, Sir Aurel (b. 1862), Superintendent Indian Archaeological Survey. (Trans-
lation of) Chronicle of Kings of Kashmir, 3 vols. (1) Bombay, 1892; (11-IT)
Westminster, 1902, Sand-buried Ruins of Khotan, London, 1903. Ancient
Khotan, 2 vols. , Oxford, 1907. Ruins of Desert Cathay, 2 vols. , London, 1912.
Under V(o). Literary Antiquaries :
Daniel, Charles Henry Olive (1836-1919), Provost of Worcester College, Oxford, author
of History of Worcester College, 1900, and founder of the Daniel Press. See The
Times for 8 Sept. 1919, and F. Madan in the Literary Supplement for 20 Feb. 1903;
also Memorials by Sir Herbert Warren and others, and Bibliography by F. Madan,
Oxford, 1921.
O'Grady, Standish Hayes (1846–1915). Silva Gadelica (ed. ), 1892.
1
1
## p. iv (#16) ##############################################
## p. v (#17) ###############################################
PREFACE
THE
THE last three volumes of this History will deal with the
literature of the nineteenth century as a whole, it being
understood that living authors do not fall within the scope of
our work. Though the present volume is published in advance
of volumes XIII and xiv, it is not to be regarded as in any other
respect separated from them. In the case of chapters treating
of subjects more or less outside the range of what is usually
included in a history of literature, we have endeavoured, in
gathering up several threads, to complete the subject in so far as
it could be completed in a single chapter, without observing what
might be deemed to be the chronological limits of the particular
volume-for example, in the present volume, the Oxford move-
ment, the growth of liberal theology and the sections devoted to
scholarship of various kinds. On the other hand, we have not
scrupled to assign distinct portions of the same general subject
-ancient and modern history, for instance—to different volumes.
We hope to publish volumes XIII and xiv together, with as little
delay as possible ; but, under existing circumstances, we cannot
bind ourselves to a definite date. In more ways than
one,
has delayed the appearance of the present volume. The University
Press has been working under great difficulties, caused by
the part taken by a very large proportion of its members in the
service of the country. We have been deprived of the co-
operation of Mr H. V. Routh; two chapters which he had kindly
undertaken to write for the last volumes have had to be placed in
other hands, in consequence of his absence at the front.
the war
JAN 4 50
a 3
1533911
## p. vi (#18) ##############################################
vi
Preface
With the exception of a few bibliographies in the present
volume, we have been obliged to forgo the careful services of
Mr A. T. Bartholomew, considerations of health compelling him
to limit his labours. The History and several contributors to
it have been much indebted to his assistance in the past.
Mr G. A. Brown's help has been as valuable as usual, and we
hope he may be able to continue it to the end of the work. We
owe many thanks to Professor J. G. Robertson, of the University
of London, for kindly looking over some bibliographies in the
present volume more particularly concerned with the pro-
ductions of continental literatures ; to Canon S. L. Ollard, for
the bibliography of the chapter on the Oxford movement;
and to Mr Stephen Wheeler for generous help in the Landor
bibliography.
Our last two volumes will contain chapters on education,
scientific writers, daily, weekly and university journalism and
changes in the language, besides an account of Irish, and short
summaries of Anglo-Indian, Canadian, Australian and South
African, literature, in addition to sections on later nineteenth
century writers.
A. W. W.
A. R. W.
2 August 1915
## p. vii (#19) #############################################
CONTENTS
CHAPTER I
SIR WALTER SCOTT
By T. F. HENDERSON, LL. D. , St Andrews
PAGE
The Scottish literary revival of the eighteenth century. Scott's
relations with the past. His early years. His German studies.
Ballad poetry. Minstrelsy of the Scottish Border. The Lay of
the Last Minstrel. Marmion. The Lady of the Lake. Rokeby.
Scott's lyrics. Scott and Byron. Border Antiquities. The
Waverley Novels. Scenic arrangement. The sweep and compass
of his narrative. The characters in his novels. His treatment of
love. His humour. His historical inaccuracies. His style. The
influence of his work
1
CHAPTER II
BYRON
(
By F. W. MOORMAN, B. A. (Lond. ), Ph. D. (Strassburg), Assist-
ant Professor of English Language and Literature in
the University of Leeds
Early years. Departure from England. Life at Venice and Ravenna.
The Liberal. Life at Pisa and Genoa. Death at Mesolonghi.
Hours of Idleness. English Bards and Scotch Reviewers.
Childe Harold. The Verse-tales. Dramatic works. Lyrics.
Beppo. The Vision of Judgment. Don Juan
31
CHAPTER III
SHELLEY
By C. H. HERFORD, Litt. D. , Trinity College, Professor of
English Literature in the University of Manchester
Queen Mab. Alastor. Laon and Cythna. Prometheus Unbound.
The Cenci. Peter Bell the Third. Odes. Epipsychidion.
Adonais. The Defence of Poetry. The Triumph of Life.
Summary
57
## p. viii (#20) ############################################
viii
Contents
CHAPTER IV
KEATS
By C. H. HERFORD
PAGE
1
Early years. Endymion. Isabella. Letters. Hyperion. The Eve
of St Agnes. La Belle Dame Sans Merci. Lamia. Odes.
Sonnets. Summary
79
CHAPTER V
LESSER POETS, 1790-1837
ROGERS, CAMPBELL, MOORE AND OTHERS
By GEORGE SAINTSBURY, M. A. , Merton College, Oxford,
LL. D. , D. Litt. , F. B. A. , sometime Professor of Rhetoric
and English Literature in the University of Edinburgh
Rogers. Campbell.
The Pleasures of Hope. Moore. Irish Melodies.
Lalla Rookh. Hartley Coleridge. Thomas Hood. The Plea of
the Midsummer Fairies. Winthrop Mackworth Praed. Sir
Henry Taylor. Philip van Artevelde. George Darley. Thomas
Lovell Beddoes. Death's Jest Book. Charles Jeremiah Wells.
Joseph and his Brethren. Richard H. Horne. Charles Whitehead.
Thomas Wade. James and Horace Smith. Rejected Addresses.
Richard Harris Barham. The Ingoldsby Legends. Poetesses.
Joanna Baillie. Mrs Hemans. L. E. L. Sara Coleridge. Henry
James Pye. William Sotheby. John Abraham Heraud. Robert
Pollok. Robert Montgomery. Bryan Waller Procter (Barry
Cornwall). Thomas Haynes Bayly. Robert Bloomfield. John
Clare. John Bampfylde. John Leyden. Robert Stephen Hawker.
William Barnes. Bernard Barton. James Montgomery. Ebenezer
Elliott. Henry Kirke White. Henry Francis Cary. Charles
Wolfe. Reginald Heber
1
95
CHAPTER VI .
2
REVIEWS AND MAGAZINES IN THE EARLY YEARS
OF THE NINETEENTH CENTURY
By the Hon. ARTHUR R. D. ELLIOT, M. A. , Trinity College,
Hon. D. C. L. (Durham), sometime editor of The Edin-
burgh Review
The Edinburgh Review. Jeffrey. Brougham. The Quarterly Re-
view. Gifford. Scott. Lockhart. Croker. Blackwood's Magazine.
Lockhart. Wilson. Hogg. Maginn. Noctes Ambrosianae. The
London Magazine. De Quincey's Opium Eater. Lamb's Roast
Pig. The New Monthly Magazine
140
## p. ix (#21) ##############################################
Contents
ix
CHAPTER VII
HAZLITT
By W. D. HOWE, Professor of English in the University
of Indiana, U. S. A.
PAGE
Hazlitt's early years. His later life. His work as a critic. His
dramatic criticism. His writings on art. His quotations. His
influence
164
CHAPTER VIII
LAMB
By A. HAMILTON THOMPSON, M. A. , F. S. A. , St John's College
Lamb's early days and friendships. Mary Lamb. Charles Lloyd. Tales
from Shakespear. Specimens of English Dramatic Poets. Con-
tributions to periodicals. The Essays of Elia. Letters. His
later life. Summary
180
CHAPTER IX
THE LANDORS, LEIGH HUNT, DE QUINCEY
By GEORGE SAINTSBURY
Walter Savage Landor's prose and verse. His classicism. Gebir.
Count Julian. Hellenics. Imaginary Conversations. Landor
as a critic. Leigh Hunt's influence. His merits and defects.
De Quincey's mastery in ornate prose. Robert Eyres Landor
204
CHAPTER X
JANE AUSTEN
By HAROLD CHILD, sometime Scholar of Brasenose
College, Oxford
Early tales. Pride and Prejudice. Sense and Sensibility. North-
anger Abbey. Mansfield Park. Emma. Persuasion.
231
## p. x (#22) ###############################################
X
Contents
CHAPTER XI
LESSER NOVELISTS
By HAROLD CHILD
PAGE
Susan Edmondstone Ferrier. Catherine Grace Gore. Thomas Henry
Lister. Mary Wollstonecraft Shelley. Frankenstein. Catherine
Crowe. The Night Side of Nature. George Croly. G. P. R. James.
W. H. Ainsworth. Marryat. Theodore Hook. John Galt. Moir's
Mansie Wauch
245
CHAPTER XII
THE OXFORD MOVEMENT
By the Ven. W. H. HUTTON, B. D. , Archdeacon of North-
ampton, Canon of Peterborough and Fellow of St John's
College, Oxford
Keble. R. H. Froude. Tracts for the Times. Newman at St Mary's.
Tract 90. Ward's The Ideal of a Christian Church. Newman
joins the Roman Catholic church. Pusey. Keble's Christian Year.
Isaac Williams. Newman's Apologia pro vita sua. The Dream of
Gerontius. His later works. Dean Church. Trench. Liddon.
Neale. The Mozleys. Hook. The Wilberforces. Wiseman,
Manning. Pollen. Faber. Dalgairns. W. G. Ward. de Lisle.
Dolben. F. E. Paget
253
CHAPTER XIII
THE GROWTH OF LIBERAL THEOLOGY
By the Rev. F. E. HUTCHINSON, M. A. , Trinity College, Oxford,
formerly Chaplain of King's College
The Evangelicals. The Clapham sect. The influence of Coleridge.
Erskine of Linlathen. The noetics. Whately. Hampden. Thomas
Arnold. Frederick Denison Maurice. Robertson of Brighton.
The Broad Churchmen. Jowett. Stanley. Essays and Reviews.
Robertson Smith. Ecce Homo. Westcott and Hort. Lightfoot.
T.
Indian Art, 1920.
Haverfield, F. J. (1860–1919). British Academy Papers, Roman Britain in 1910–14. The
Romanization of Roman Britain, 3rd edn, 1915. Roman Britain in Cambridge
Medieval History, vol. I, 1911. Appendix to revised edn of Mommsen's Roman
Provinces, E. T. 1910. Illustrated Catalogues of Inscriptions, etc. (a) in Durham
Cathedral Library (Durham, 1899), (b) in Chester Museum (Chester Society, vol. VII,
1900). Contributions to Victoria County Histories, etc. Bibliography by G. Mac-
donald in Journal of Roman Studies, VIII, 184–198.
Hope, Sir William Henry St John (1854–1919), knighted in 1914. English Altars
from illuminated MSS (Alcuin Club), 1899; The stall plates of the Knights of the
Garter (1348–1485), Westminster, 1901; Fountains Abbey (in Yorkshire Arch.
Journal), Leeds, 1900; The Abbey of St Mary-in-Furness, Kendal, 1912; Heraldry
for Craftsmen and Designers, 1913; A Grammar of English Heraldry, Cambridge,
1913; Windsor Castle. An architectural history, 1913. Joint Author of The
Chronicles of. . . All Saints, Derby, 1881 ; Architectural Description of Kirkstall
Abbey (Thoresby Society publications), Leeds, 1907; Corporation Plate, etc. of
England and Wales, 1895; Pageant of the birth, life, and death of Richard
Beauchamp, Earl of Warwick (+1439), 1914; English Liturgical Colours, 1918.
Superintendent of explorations at Castleacre Priory, Furness Abbey, Dale Abbey,
Repton Priory, Ludlow Castle, St Augustine's Abbey (Canterbury), Old Sarum,
Silchester, etc. , recorded in Archaeologia. Notice by Ralph Griffin in Cambridge
Antiquarian Society's Comm. , vol. XXII, 127-9.
Humphreys, A. L. A Handbook to County Bibliography. 1916.
Macdonald, George (b. 1862). The Roman Wall in Scotland. Glasgow, 1911.
Marshall, Sir John Hubert (b. 1876), Director-General of Archaeology in India since
1902. Guides to Sanchi and Taxila, Calcutta, 1918. Annual Reports.
Minns, Ellis Hovell. Scythians and Greeks. Cambridge, 1913.
Pennant, Thomas (1726–1798). A Tour in Scotland in 1769, Chester, 1771, etc. A
Tour in Scotland (“the Second Tour') and Voyage to the Hebrides ("the Third
Tour'), 2 vols. , Chester and London, 1774–6; Pennant's Three Tours in Scotland,'
1790. A Tour in Wales in 1773, London, 1778; continued 1781-3. Tours in
Wales, 3 vols. , 181 ed. T. Rhys, Carnarv 1883. The Journey from Chester
to London, 1782, etc. Antiquarian and Historical Account of London, 1790, etc.
The History of the Parishes of Whiteford and Holywell, 1796. Also works on
Zoology. Autobiography, 1793. See vol. xiv, p. 246.
Stein, Sir Aurel (b. 1862), Superintendent Indian Archaeological Survey. (Trans-
lation of) Chronicle of Kings of Kashmir, 3 vols. (1) Bombay, 1892; (11-IT)
Westminster, 1902, Sand-buried Ruins of Khotan, London, 1903. Ancient
Khotan, 2 vols. , Oxford, 1907. Ruins of Desert Cathay, 2 vols. , London, 1912.
Under V(o). Literary Antiquaries :
Daniel, Charles Henry Olive (1836-1919), Provost of Worcester College, Oxford, author
of History of Worcester College, 1900, and founder of the Daniel Press. See The
Times for 8 Sept. 1919, and F. Madan in the Literary Supplement for 20 Feb. 1903;
also Memorials by Sir Herbert Warren and others, and Bibliography by F. Madan,
Oxford, 1921.
O'Grady, Standish Hayes (1846–1915). Silva Gadelica (ed. ), 1892.
1
1
## p. iv (#16) ##############################################
## p. v (#17) ###############################################
PREFACE
THE
THE last three volumes of this History will deal with the
literature of the nineteenth century as a whole, it being
understood that living authors do not fall within the scope of
our work. Though the present volume is published in advance
of volumes XIII and xiv, it is not to be regarded as in any other
respect separated from them. In the case of chapters treating
of subjects more or less outside the range of what is usually
included in a history of literature, we have endeavoured, in
gathering up several threads, to complete the subject in so far as
it could be completed in a single chapter, without observing what
might be deemed to be the chronological limits of the particular
volume-for example, in the present volume, the Oxford move-
ment, the growth of liberal theology and the sections devoted to
scholarship of various kinds. On the other hand, we have not
scrupled to assign distinct portions of the same general subject
-ancient and modern history, for instance—to different volumes.
We hope to publish volumes XIII and xiv together, with as little
delay as possible ; but, under existing circumstances, we cannot
bind ourselves to a definite date. In more ways than
one,
has delayed the appearance of the present volume. The University
Press has been working under great difficulties, caused by
the part taken by a very large proportion of its members in the
service of the country. We have been deprived of the co-
operation of Mr H. V. Routh; two chapters which he had kindly
undertaken to write for the last volumes have had to be placed in
other hands, in consequence of his absence at the front.
the war
JAN 4 50
a 3
1533911
## p. vi (#18) ##############################################
vi
Preface
With the exception of a few bibliographies in the present
volume, we have been obliged to forgo the careful services of
Mr A. T. Bartholomew, considerations of health compelling him
to limit his labours. The History and several contributors to
it have been much indebted to his assistance in the past.
Mr G. A. Brown's help has been as valuable as usual, and we
hope he may be able to continue it to the end of the work. We
owe many thanks to Professor J. G. Robertson, of the University
of London, for kindly looking over some bibliographies in the
present volume more particularly concerned with the pro-
ductions of continental literatures ; to Canon S. L. Ollard, for
the bibliography of the chapter on the Oxford movement;
and to Mr Stephen Wheeler for generous help in the Landor
bibliography.
Our last two volumes will contain chapters on education,
scientific writers, daily, weekly and university journalism and
changes in the language, besides an account of Irish, and short
summaries of Anglo-Indian, Canadian, Australian and South
African, literature, in addition to sections on later nineteenth
century writers.
A. W. W.
A. R. W.
2 August 1915
## p. vii (#19) #############################################
CONTENTS
CHAPTER I
SIR WALTER SCOTT
By T. F. HENDERSON, LL. D. , St Andrews
PAGE
The Scottish literary revival of the eighteenth century. Scott's
relations with the past. His early years. His German studies.
Ballad poetry. Minstrelsy of the Scottish Border. The Lay of
the Last Minstrel. Marmion. The Lady of the Lake. Rokeby.
Scott's lyrics. Scott and Byron. Border Antiquities. The
Waverley Novels. Scenic arrangement. The sweep and compass
of his narrative. The characters in his novels. His treatment of
love. His humour. His historical inaccuracies. His style. The
influence of his work
1
CHAPTER II
BYRON
(
By F. W. MOORMAN, B. A. (Lond. ), Ph. D. (Strassburg), Assist-
ant Professor of English Language and Literature in
the University of Leeds
Early years. Departure from England. Life at Venice and Ravenna.
The Liberal. Life at Pisa and Genoa. Death at Mesolonghi.
Hours of Idleness. English Bards and Scotch Reviewers.
Childe Harold. The Verse-tales. Dramatic works. Lyrics.
Beppo. The Vision of Judgment. Don Juan
31
CHAPTER III
SHELLEY
By C. H. HERFORD, Litt. D. , Trinity College, Professor of
English Literature in the University of Manchester
Queen Mab. Alastor. Laon and Cythna. Prometheus Unbound.
The Cenci. Peter Bell the Third. Odes. Epipsychidion.
Adonais. The Defence of Poetry. The Triumph of Life.
Summary
57
## p. viii (#20) ############################################
viii
Contents
CHAPTER IV
KEATS
By C. H. HERFORD
PAGE
1
Early years. Endymion. Isabella. Letters. Hyperion. The Eve
of St Agnes. La Belle Dame Sans Merci. Lamia. Odes.
Sonnets. Summary
79
CHAPTER V
LESSER POETS, 1790-1837
ROGERS, CAMPBELL, MOORE AND OTHERS
By GEORGE SAINTSBURY, M. A. , Merton College, Oxford,
LL. D. , D. Litt. , F. B. A. , sometime Professor of Rhetoric
and English Literature in the University of Edinburgh
Rogers. Campbell.
The Pleasures of Hope. Moore. Irish Melodies.
Lalla Rookh. Hartley Coleridge. Thomas Hood. The Plea of
the Midsummer Fairies. Winthrop Mackworth Praed. Sir
Henry Taylor. Philip van Artevelde. George Darley. Thomas
Lovell Beddoes. Death's Jest Book. Charles Jeremiah Wells.
Joseph and his Brethren. Richard H. Horne. Charles Whitehead.
Thomas Wade. James and Horace Smith. Rejected Addresses.
Richard Harris Barham. The Ingoldsby Legends. Poetesses.
Joanna Baillie. Mrs Hemans. L. E. L. Sara Coleridge. Henry
James Pye. William Sotheby. John Abraham Heraud. Robert
Pollok. Robert Montgomery. Bryan Waller Procter (Barry
Cornwall). Thomas Haynes Bayly. Robert Bloomfield. John
Clare. John Bampfylde. John Leyden. Robert Stephen Hawker.
William Barnes. Bernard Barton. James Montgomery. Ebenezer
Elliott. Henry Kirke White. Henry Francis Cary. Charles
Wolfe. Reginald Heber
1
95
CHAPTER VI .
2
REVIEWS AND MAGAZINES IN THE EARLY YEARS
OF THE NINETEENTH CENTURY
By the Hon. ARTHUR R. D. ELLIOT, M. A. , Trinity College,
Hon. D. C. L. (Durham), sometime editor of The Edin-
burgh Review
The Edinburgh Review. Jeffrey. Brougham. The Quarterly Re-
view. Gifford. Scott. Lockhart. Croker. Blackwood's Magazine.
Lockhart. Wilson. Hogg. Maginn. Noctes Ambrosianae. The
London Magazine. De Quincey's Opium Eater. Lamb's Roast
Pig. The New Monthly Magazine
140
## p. ix (#21) ##############################################
Contents
ix
CHAPTER VII
HAZLITT
By W. D. HOWE, Professor of English in the University
of Indiana, U. S. A.
PAGE
Hazlitt's early years. His later life. His work as a critic. His
dramatic criticism. His writings on art. His quotations. His
influence
164
CHAPTER VIII
LAMB
By A. HAMILTON THOMPSON, M. A. , F. S. A. , St John's College
Lamb's early days and friendships. Mary Lamb. Charles Lloyd. Tales
from Shakespear. Specimens of English Dramatic Poets. Con-
tributions to periodicals. The Essays of Elia. Letters. His
later life. Summary
180
CHAPTER IX
THE LANDORS, LEIGH HUNT, DE QUINCEY
By GEORGE SAINTSBURY
Walter Savage Landor's prose and verse. His classicism. Gebir.
Count Julian. Hellenics. Imaginary Conversations. Landor
as a critic. Leigh Hunt's influence. His merits and defects.
De Quincey's mastery in ornate prose. Robert Eyres Landor
204
CHAPTER X
JANE AUSTEN
By HAROLD CHILD, sometime Scholar of Brasenose
College, Oxford
Early tales. Pride and Prejudice. Sense and Sensibility. North-
anger Abbey. Mansfield Park. Emma. Persuasion.
231
## p. x (#22) ###############################################
X
Contents
CHAPTER XI
LESSER NOVELISTS
By HAROLD CHILD
PAGE
Susan Edmondstone Ferrier. Catherine Grace Gore. Thomas Henry
Lister. Mary Wollstonecraft Shelley. Frankenstein. Catherine
Crowe. The Night Side of Nature. George Croly. G. P. R. James.
W. H. Ainsworth. Marryat. Theodore Hook. John Galt. Moir's
Mansie Wauch
245
CHAPTER XII
THE OXFORD MOVEMENT
By the Ven. W. H. HUTTON, B. D. , Archdeacon of North-
ampton, Canon of Peterborough and Fellow of St John's
College, Oxford
Keble. R. H. Froude. Tracts for the Times. Newman at St Mary's.
Tract 90. Ward's The Ideal of a Christian Church. Newman
joins the Roman Catholic church. Pusey. Keble's Christian Year.
Isaac Williams. Newman's Apologia pro vita sua. The Dream of
Gerontius. His later works. Dean Church. Trench. Liddon.
Neale. The Mozleys. Hook. The Wilberforces. Wiseman,
Manning. Pollen. Faber. Dalgairns. W. G. Ward. de Lisle.
Dolben. F. E. Paget
253
CHAPTER XIII
THE GROWTH OF LIBERAL THEOLOGY
By the Rev. F. E. HUTCHINSON, M. A. , Trinity College, Oxford,
formerly Chaplain of King's College
The Evangelicals. The Clapham sect. The influence of Coleridge.
Erskine of Linlathen. The noetics. Whately. Hampden. Thomas
Arnold. Frederick Denison Maurice. Robertson of Brighton.
The Broad Churchmen. Jowett. Stanley. Essays and Reviews.
Robertson Smith. Ecce Homo. Westcott and Hort. Lightfoot.
T.