Froude's Essays in Literature 
and History, by 
 
James Froude This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost 
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Title: Froude's Essays in Literature and History With Introduction by 
Hilaire Belloc 
Author: James Froude 
Commentator: Hilaire Belloc 
Release Date: April 28, 2006 [EBook #18276] 
Language: English 
Character set encoding: ASCII 
*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK FROUDE'S 
ESSAYS *** 
 
Produced by Michael Madden 
 
Essays on History and Literature 
By James Anthony Froude
London: J. M. Dent & Co., 1906 ____ 
Contents 
Arnold's Poems (Westminster Review, 1854) 
Words about Oxford (Fraser's Magazine, 1850) 
England's Forgotten Worthies (Westminster Review, 1852) 
The Book of Job (Westminster Review, 1853) 
The Lives of the Saints (Eclectic Review, 1852) 
The Dissolution of the Monasteries (Fraser's Magazine, 1857) 
The Philosophy of Christianity (The Leader, 1851) 
A Plea for the Free Discussion of Theological Difficulties (Fraser's 
Magazine, 1863) 
Spinoza (Westminster Review, 1855) 
Reynard the Fox (Fraser's Magazine, 1852) 
The Commonplace Book of Richard Hilles (Fraser's Magazine, 1858) 
____ 
INTRODUCTION 
Froude had this merit--a merit he shared with Huxley alone of His 
contemporaries--that he imposed his convictions. He fought against 
resistance. He excited (and still excites) a violent animosity. He 
exasperated the surface of his time and was yet too strong for that 
surface to reject him. This combative and aggressive quality in him, 
which was successful in that it was permanent and never suffered a 
final defeat should arrest any one who may make a general survey of 
the last generation in letters.
It was a period with a vice of its own which yet remains to be detected 
and chastised. In one epoch lubricity, in another fanaticism, in a third 
dulness and a dead-alive copying of the past, are the faults which 
criticism finds to attack. None of these affected the Victorian era. It 
was pure--though tainted with a profound hypocrisy; it was singularly 
free from violence in its judgments; it was certainly alive and new: but 
it had this grievous defect (a defect under which we still labour heavily) 
that thought was restrained upon every side. Never in the history of 
European letters was it so difficult for a man to say what he would and 
to be heard. A sort of cohesive public spirit (which was but one aspect 
of the admirable homogeneity of the nation) glued and immobilised all 
individual expression. One could float imprisoned as in a stream of 
thick substance: one could not swim against it. 
It is to be carefully discerned how many apparent exceptions to this 
truth are, if they be closely examined, no exceptions at all. A whole 
series of national defects were exposed and ridiculed in the literature as 
in the oratory of that day; but they were defects which the mass of men 
secretly delighted to hear denounced and of which each believed 
himself to be free. 
They loved to be told that they were of a gross taste in art, for they 
connected such a taste vaguely with high morals and with successful 
commerce. There was no surer way to a large sale than to start a 
revolution in appreciation every five years, and from Ruskin to Oscar 
Wilde a whole series of Prophets attained eminence and fortune by 
telling men how something new and as yet unknown was Beauty and 
something just past was to be rejected, and how they alone saw truth 
while the herd around them were blind. But no one showed us how to 
model, nor did any one remark that we alone of all Europe had 
preserved a school of water-colour. 
So in politics our blunders were a constant theme; but no one marked 
with citation, document, and proof the glaring progress of corruption, 
or that, for all our enthusiasm, we never once in that generation 
defended the oppressed against the oppressor. There was a vast if 
unrecognised conspiracy, by which whatever might have prevented
those extreme evils from which we now suffer was destroyed as it 
appeared. Efforts at a thorough purge were dull, were libellous, were 
not of the "form" which the Universities and the public schools taught 
to be sacred. They were rejected as unreadable, or if printed, were 
unread. The results are with us to-day. 
In such a time Froude maintained an opposing force, which was not 
reforming nor constructive in any way, but which will obtain the 
attention of the future historian, simply because it was an opposition. 
It was an opposition of manner rather than of matter. The matter of it 
was common enough even in Froude's chief decade of power. The 
cause to which he gave allegiance was already    
    
		
	
	
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