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I August 15,1890 The Publishers' Circula...
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Mr. Wiljliam PonTJsoua. William We are P...
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Charles Roach Smith. It is our painful X...
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Titus Hibbert Ware.. We much regret to a...
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I^ctu ewg , &q. From Mr. George _ ^^ _ A...
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Note: This text has been automatically extracted via Optical Character Recognition (OCR) software. The text has not been manually corrected and should not be relied on to be an accurate representation of the item.
Additionally, when viewing full transcripts, extracted text may not be in the same order as the original document.
In Fl3emoi£Iam
the iunction English with Church Keble three and years Dr later . Pusey . In , con Dr - .
famous t fewman Tractarian took a movement leading . He part contributed in the
to the series of ' Tracts for the Times the memorabl — — e Tract XC , which fell on the religious
world x *^^^ like a bombshell and caused a profound 111 sensation . The leading men of Oxford and
the Bishops condemned the tract , and Newman was asked to withdraw itbut declined ; A
if **»¦** , short . time subsequentl 1 lit y he severed his connecti IX wv »** on ^ - ' * . «¦ with -- — — the — Eng f-m lish Church -.- and -- joined _ .- _
the Church of Rome . He was ordained priest , and founded and became the head of the
Ml ** " *™ Oratory of Saint Philip Neri at Birmingham . During a period of four years ( 1854-8 ) he
held the rectorship of the newly-founded Roman Catholic University of Dublin ,
afterwards becoming principal of a school for the sons of Roman Catholic gentry which he had
In established December at 1877 Edgbaston Dr . Newman , near Birming was elected ham .
an hon _ orary fellow J * •¦ of Trinit ¦* TW ^ ¦ y College J - — SI ** " 1 , Oxford ^ ~ V rf » ^ , and the warmth and enthusiasm with which he
was received on the occasion of his revisiting his old university was eloquent proof that the
- — — - if x j , intense personal affection with which he had been ¦ % ^ ^» ^ r ^^™ « r ^ e ^^ garded j ^^ f — ^^ in the day _* y s when he occup ¦ ied
the pulpit of St . Mary's had not been suffered to die out during the long tale of years that
had elapsed since his departure . In May 1879 Dr . Newman was created and proclaimed a Cardinal Deacon by Pope Leo XIII .
receiv-, ing his title from the Church of San Giorgio , in Velabro , and being ^ f the first Eng v- lish Cardinal
thus identified with the representative Church of English Roman Catholics in Rome . Cardinal Newman oluminous laiii writer miuvi His jljl best
kno mdUU wn ttll works was ¥ » CbO at a are v v wx his . jlij 4 A . vs polog mo ia pro . Vita j . u uvuu sua , - ' his 'Parochial and Plain Sermons / his *
University Sermons , ' his ' Sermons to Mixed Congregations' ( delivered after he joined the Church of Rome ) , his * Essay on the Development of
Christian Doctrine , ' his 'Lectures on the Idea of a University , ' ' The Grammar of Assent , ' ' The Via Media of the Anglican Church' 'The
, ( Pr m 1851 ~— esent - ) m M , ¦ Verse Position T ^^^ J ^ ^^ ^^^ |~ s i r o ^^ r ^ n » ^» of Various » ^^ 1 Catholics * mm h . ^ - ^^ ^^ V ^^^ O ^ ta ^ c ^ " casi ~^^ ^^^ in " ^ ^^ o ^^»^ ^ n ™ ^ Eng ^ s » ""^ , V ' ' land ^ Loss ^^^^^ - ^ v » - ^^ - »^» '
and Gain , ' and his ' Dream of Gerontius . ' A master of irony and an overwhelming
controversialist , Cardinal Newman had a nature of rare tenderness , and his power Xover those who came
personally in contact with him was almost unequalled . Mr . Froude and Mr . Gladstone have both testified — — to his consideration his
, gentleness , and the singular and indescribable
cnarm of his manner .
I August 15,1890 The Publishers' Circula...
I August 15 , 1890 The Publishers' Circular 97 $ ¦ m —— ——^ . ¦—— 1—I—T—¦
Mr. Wiljliam Pontjsoua. William We Are P...
Mr . Wiljliam PonTJsoua . William We are Porteous sorry of to the announce firm of that Porteous Mr . brothers wholesale , booksellers and news
age at n h ts is , 43 , residence Renfi , eld Ea Street st Pollokshields , Glasgow , , died on
J" tice burgh Ml UlV . r y gn shi , < p 1 and and with Mr TVTt a aftfir fter Messrs . PorteouB TV a a short « f hnrt . . ftrvn Oliphant n time t . iinf served nATV * in in ^ & fl Tjrmdnn - Sons London his Vnn , appren n / nrvr Ed . ana and fiti in - -
^ th ^ Messrs , . Oliver & BoydEdinburgh , he pur chased the business of Messrs , . R . Griffin ,
** vo ., Glasgowwhich he carried on for ,
Mr. Wiljliam Pontjsoua. William We Are P...
near Porteous ly thirty , continues years . His as hitherto brother , Mr in . Renfield Thomas
street .
Charles Roach Smith. It Is Our Painful X...
Charles Roach Smith . It is our painful X . duty arto record the death
a on gen the tleman 2 nd inst long . of and Mr well . Charles known Roach as an Smith accom , - plished antiquary . Early in . life Mr . Smith
from devoted its founda himself tion to anti quarian rominen studies t me , m and ber p
of 185 the 6 his British collection Archaeolog of Londo ical n Association antiquities . was In pa laced in the British Museum with his own
of catalogue the Society . Mr of . Smith Antiquar was ies a leading and a fre member quent contributor to the Athenaeum , the Gentleman * s
Magazine , and other high-class journals .
Titus Hibbert Ware.. We Much Regret To A...
Titus Hibbert Ware .. We much regret to announce the death of
Mr . T . Hibbert Ware , which took place at his residence , Bowdon , on the 1 st inst ., in the 80 th year of his age . Mr . Ware was a man of varied
all accomp matters lishments pertaining , who to took literature a keen . interest He wrote in
several law books that have attained considerable repute , and it is an open secret that he had no small share in the authorship of the
novels bearing his wife ' s name .
I^Ctu Ewg , &Q. From Mr. George _ ^^ _ A...
I ^ ctu ewg , & q . From Mr . George _ _ AllenOrp _ _ ington ^ j — . . — ' Ariadne _
Florentina ; six ^^ lectures _ y , on j- Wood _ and Metal Engraving , ' by John Ruskin , LL . D . These lectures on engravinggiven before the
Univer-, sity of Oxford in Michaelmas Term 1872 , are , like all else from the pen of Mr . Ruskin , distinctive in thought and style and thorough in
execution . They are not the emanations of a mere college lecturer soulless and sapless or put together for entirely utilitarian endsbut the
work of one who brings intense conviction , , zeal , industry , insight , imagination , and a gift of expression unequalled among living writers to
all he does . Mr . Ruskin always has a moral to point and asan interpreter of the symbolic meaning of art it is safe to say that he is quite
unrivailed . These lectures are in his best manner ; they exhibit his unique and striking individuality , his perfect A . independence fc of jud m > gment \ J ,
and his loyalty to truth . Particularly stimulating and useful are his sketches of such men as Holbein --- w the spirit in which they worked
and their services , x . to art . It is a book •/ to be , studied closely in the present era of artistic production .
From Mr . J . W . Arrowsmith , Bristol . — * Between the Whiffs , ' by Henry Herman . Mr . Herman ' s little volume is made up of a collection
of short stones , anecdotes , odd savings , principally about celebrities , literary , theatrical < fcc ., and is entertaining casual reading for the
seaside or the railway train . From the same . — ' The Rajah and the Rosebud . '
The rosebud , Rhoda Courtenay , governess to Sir Francis Charing , makes the acquaintance of the Rajah MahommedAli , a reigning Indian Prince ,
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Citation
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Publishers’ Circular (1880-1890), Aug. 15, 1890, page 975, in the Nineteenth-Century Serials Edition (2008; 2018) ncse.ac.uk/periodicals/pc/issues/tec_15081890/page/19/
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