
A vivid portrait emerges of a young cleric whose restless intellect helped shape the religious stirrings of early‑Victorian England. Through a careful selection of his own letters, family notes, and contemporary observations, the book sketches the mind and manners of the man who would become a key, if sometimes controversial, voice in the Oxford Movement. The opening pages already hint at his sharp humor, private doubts, and the fierce idealism that marked his youth.
The volume weaves together these memoranda with scholarly commentary and a handful of period illustrations, offering listeners a textured sense of his personality without the weight of a full‑scale biography. The editor’s approach is to let the fragments speak, arranging them so the listener can hear the echo of Froude’s character amid the debates of his time. It’s an engaging guide for anyone curious about the inner life of a 19th‑century thinker and the cultural currents that surrounded him.
Language
en
Duration
~19 hours (1107K characters)
Publisher of text edition
Project Gutenberg
Credits
Produced by Emmy, MFR, Carol Brown and the Online Distributed Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net (This file was produced from images generously made available by The Internet Archive). Dedicated, with much affection, to our friend Emmy, who "fell off the planet" far too soon.
Release date
2018-10-02
Rights
Public domain in the USA.

1861–1920
A poet, essayist, and editor with a gift for graceful language, this American writer moved easily between lyric verse, criticism, and literary history. Her work blends devotion, wit, and a deep love of old books and older traditions.
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