
THE HARVEST OF RUSKIN
PREFACE
The Harvest of Ruskin - CHAPTER I THE SIGNS OF A PROPHET
CHAPTER II THE PILGRIM’S WAY
CHAPTER III TO WHAT FOLD?
CHAPTER IV RUSKIN AND MILL A RECONCILIATION
CHAPTER V RUSKIN’S RECONSTRUCTION
CHAPTER VI RUSKIN’S ECONOMICS TO-DAY
CHAPTER VII USURY
CHAPTER VIII WAR
This study offers a clear‑sighted look at John Ruskin’s ideas about faith, society and economics, concentrating on the moral and practical teachings that shaped his vision of a just world. Drawing on a series of university lectures, the author weaves Ruskin’s own words into a narrative that asks whether his 19th‑century insights have become timeless seed or merely forgotten chaff. The tone is respectful yet probing, inviting listeners to consider how a thinker who saw beauty as a revelation of the divine might still speak to today’s social and economic dilemmas.
The book follows Ruskin’s development from a child enchanted by the sanctity of nature to a public advocate for humane labor practices, educational reform and the protection of common lands. It examines his critique of industrial excess, his call for work that respects both creator and creation, and his belief that true prosperity rests on moral purpose. By grounding the discussion in carefully chosen excerpts, the work makes Ruskin’s once‑victorian concerns feel surprisingly relevant for modern listeners.
Language
en
Duration
~5 hours (299K characters)
Publisher of text edition
Project Gutenberg
Credits
Produced by Chuck Greif and the Online Distributed Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net (This file was produced from images available at The Internet Archive)
Release date
2016-04-20
Rights
Public domain in the USA.
Subjects

1859–1932
A Quaker thinker, educator, and writer, he brought moral seriousness and intellectual curiosity to subjects ranging from faith to war. His work reflects a life spent linking scholarship, conscience, and public debate.
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