Observations on the State of Religion and Literature in Spain

audiobook

Observations on the State of Religion and Literature in Spain

by John Bowring

EN·~1 hours·1 chapter

Chapters

1 total

Transcribed from the 1819 George Smallfield edition by David Price, email ccx074@pglaf.org

1:00:27

Description

A British traveler’s notebook from 1819 offers a vivid snapshot of Spain’s religious world at a time of uneasy transition. He sketches a landscape crowded with two hundred thousand clerics, distinguishing the well‑educated regular clergy—often benevolent and supportive of learning—from the more numerous mendicant orders, which he portrays as increasingly detached from the people they serve. The essay balances admiration for the humane priests with a sharp critique of those whose wealth and isolation seem to hinder social progress.

The writer also turns his eye to the ripple effects of the recent Revolution, noting how new laws have curbed monastic recruitment and forced many religious houses to open their doors to the wounded and the poor. This sudden mingling strips away the aura of mystique that once surrounded the clergy, revealing ordinary frailties and prompting a reassessment of their role in both faith and culture. Through these observations, the work captures a Spain poised between tradition and the stirrings of modernity.

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Details

Language

en

Duration

~1 hours (58K characters)

Publisher of text edition

Project Gutenberg

Release date

2020-04-25

Rights

Public domain in the USA.

About the author

John Bowring

John Bowring

1792–1872

A restless Victorian polymath, he moved easily between politics, diplomacy, languages, and literature. Best known as a translator, reformer, and later governor of Hong Kong, he also left behind hymns and travel writing that kept his name in print long after his public career ended.

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