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Footnotes 1 ‘The Newman Problem’, The Clergy Review 62 (1977),137–42,410–13; ‘Newman's “Failure in the Schools”’, ibid. 63 (1978), 65–68; ‘Newman: the Tutorship Quarrel’, ibid. 64 (1979), 205–9. 2 Of the twenty‐seven English bishops, five ‘charged’ in 1841, seven in 1842, four in 1843–4 (one by implication). During the same period a total of nine Irish or colonial bishops repudiated the Tract. 3 e.g. Apologia , 15: ‘My habitual feeling then and since has been, that it was not I who sought friends, but friends who sought me.’ His habitual feeling; but was it the fact? It is clear from the ‘tutorship quarrel’ and from subsequent diaries that he sought the friendship of his pupils, and of Oriel undergraduates, assiduously. I should read the self‐praise on some early pages of Apologia as the desperate semaphoring of a marooned man in Birmingham to the London ecclesiastics. At Oxford from first to last his close foollowing, among either the young men or his own contemporaries, was small. Many came to the sermons, very few sought him out ‐ there was no reason why they should, it was not the Anglican or the Oxford way; but it was a fact, and it
The Heythrop Journal – Wiley
Published: Jan 1, 1982
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