J. Henry Shorthouse, the Author of John Inglesant

J. Henry Shorthouse, the Author of John Inglesant

Author: Charles W. Spurgeon

Publisher: Universal-Publishers

Published: 2003

Total Pages: 332

ISBN-13: 1581121830

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When J. Henry Shorthouse (1834-1903) published John Inglesant in 1881, he contributed a unique synthesis of Anglo-Catholic sensibilities to the enduring legacy of the Oxford Movement. Although his "philosophical romance" has been acclaimed "the greatest Anglo-Catholic novel in English literature" and "the one English novel that speaks immediately to human intuition without regard to the reader's own faith or philosophy", his most enduring contributions are the "religion of John Inglesant", an Anglo-Catholic synthesis of obedience and freedom, faith and reason, and the sacramental vision of "the myth of Little Gidding". Afflicted with a lifelong stammer, "the author of John Inglesant" proved himself a master of cadenced rhythms and "enspiritualised" prose in quest of "the great musical novel". Delineating parallels between sixteenth-century and Victorian England, Shorthouse integrated Quietism with Platonism into a religious aesthetic, a sacramental vision of "the Divine Principle of the Platonic Christ". Studied chronologically, Shorthouse's transition from Quaker to "Broad Church Sacramentalist" provides informing comparison with T. S. Eliot's conversion from Unitarian to Anglo-Catholic, as his myth of Little Gidding informs the historical imagination of Eliot's Christian poetry and dramas. The religious and developmental nature of the work of both artists affords analogies with C. G. Jung's psychology of Individuation.


The Life and Letters of Leslie Stephen

The Life and Letters of Leslie Stephen

Author: Frederic William Maitland

Publisher: Cambridge University Press

Published: 2012-04-26

Total Pages: 535

ISBN-13: 110804817X

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The biography, published in 1906, of the leading Victorian literary figure and founding Editor of the Dictionary of National Biography.