| 1919 - 936 pages
...secession to Rome and who even in its early days, to quote Newman, had been "able to give a name, a power and a personality to what was without him a sort of mob." The Gorham judgment (1850), in which the judicial committee of the privy council — which, being a... | |
| Birmingham central literary assoc - 1879 - 456 pages
...his adhesion gave it great prestige, a position, and a name. Newman says, " He was a host in himself, able to give a name, a form, and a personality to what was without him a sort of mob." Meantime the cry went up on all sides that the tracts and the writings of the Fathers would cause the... | |
| Owen Chadwick - 1992 - 340 pages
...unquestioning faith. In the Apologia Newman ascribed to Pusey the power to be the centre of the party - 'He was able to give a name, a form and a personality to what was without him a sort of mob.' But this, as is evident from Pusey's career, is what Pusey could not, and what Newman himself could,... | |
| C. Brad Faught - 2010 - 204 pages
...the vety welcome ourcome of giving to the Movement, in Newman's words, "a front to the world . . . he was able to give a name, a form, and a personality, to what was without him a sort of mob."4* Pusey, the aristoctaric professor and cathedral canon, supplied a scholarly deprh and a social... | |
| John Henry Newman - 2008 - 532 pages
...either side only asked with surprise how they got there, and attached no significancy to the fact; but Dr. Pusey was, to use the common expression, a host...of the Movement took our place by right among them. Such was the benefit which he conferred on the Movement externally; nor were the internal advantages... | |
| William Lonsdale Watkinson, William Theophilus Davison - 1865 - 572 pages
...either side only asked with surprise how they got there, and attached no significancy to the fact ; but Dr. Pusey was, to use the common expression, a host...of the Movement took our place by right among them. ' Such was the benefit which he conferred on the Movement esternail y ; nor was the internal advantage... | |
| Adolphus William Ward - 1907 - 388 pages
...and the churcL Newman said of his accession to the movement that 'he was able to give a name, a fame, and a personality to what was without him a sort of mob.' Tract no. 18, Thoughts on the Benefits of the System of Fasting enjoined by our Church was issued with... | |
| Walter H. Conser - 1984 - 374 pages
...and as professor of Hebrew and canon of Christ Church, Pusey was able to provide the movement with "a name, a form, and a personality, to what was without him sort of a mob." Nevertheless, that Pusey should be tapped for leadership by Newman or that the Oxford... | |
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