Oriel College - Archives - Some Famous Oriel Names Socialists. John Keble (17921866) Fellow 1811-1835 One of the key figuresin the Anglican Oxford Movement. Professor of Poetry 1831-1841. http://www.oriel.ox.ac.uk/library/orielnames.htm
Extractions: There is a College tradition that Sir Thomas More was a student at Oriel, but this cannot be substantiated. A tradition in his family placed him at Canterbury College (where the Canterbury Quad of Christ Church now stands). Another tradition suggests that he may have lodged in St Mary Hall , but there are no records to prove or disprove this. However, it is certain that all the following were at Oriel: Matthew Arnold (1822-1888)
Parish Of The Holy Spirit, Southsea -RELIGIOUS TEXTS- Julian of Norwich (c. 1342c. 1413). Revelations of Divine Love. K. Keble,John (1792-1866). Christian Year. Kierkegaard, Soren (1813-1855). http://www.hlyspirit.org.uk/books.php
Extractions: parish of the holy spirit , southsea the parish home about history what's happening ... benediction the resources religious texts clipart religious art rosary resources ... exsultet the faith introducing christianity priesthood prayer requests sign of the cross the features liturgical calendar outlook duplicates remover extract outlook to database free e-cards dedicated to the glory of God and the splendour of anglicanism anglican religious writings and other useful devotional works The Dream of Gerontius
Christian Classics Ethereal Library Dark Night of the Soul. Spiritual Canticle of the Soul and the Bridegroom Christ.K. Keble, John (17921866). Christian Year. Kierkegaard, Soren (1813-1855). http://kuyper.calvin.edu/index/classics.html
Extractions: CCEL Governance Classics by Author A Alphonsus de Ligouri, Saint (1696-1787) Anonymous Daily Light on the Daily Path Anselm, Saint, Archbishop of Canterbury (1033-1109) ... On Christian Doctrine B Baker, Augustine Holy Wisdom: or, Directions for the prayer of contemplation: extracted out of more than forty treatises by the Ven. F. Augustin Baker Baxter, Richard (1615-1691) Reformed Pastor ... Grace Abounding to the Chief of Sinners C Calvin, John (1509-1564) Calvin: Commentaries. Newly translated and edited by Joseph Haroutunian Commentaries Of Prayer ... My Utmost for His Highest D Dante, Alighieri (1265-1321) Divine Comedy Inferno Paradiso ... Stones Rolled Away E Eckhart, Johannes (c. 1260-1327)
Henderson Library - Acquisitions Report 7/1/00- 7/7/00 New York, Oxford Univ. Press, 1948. PR4839.K15 P6 1869 Miscellaneouspoems, Keble, John, 17921866. cn Oxford, J. Parker, 1869. http://www2.gasou.edu/library/acq/7-7-00.html
Extractions: AI21 .W334 BINDER JULY-DEC AI21 .W334 BINDER JAN-JUNE BOUND WITH PR3176.U3 R6 1869 BOUND WITH PR3176.U3 R6 1869 BOUND WITH PS1613 .R4 1976 Eureka; a prose poem. Poe, Edgar Allan, 1809-1849. Hartford, Transcendental Books [1973] Reference sources in history : an introductory guide / Fritze, Ronald H., 1951-
Hursley - Winchester And Its Villages - Hampshire Local Pages John Keble (17921866), poet and divine, was Vicar of Hursley forthe last thirty years of his life. Author of The Christian Year http://www.hants.gov.uk/localpages/central/winchester/hursley/
Extractions: Home Search Contacts A-Z Index ... Hampshire Local Pages Although the first reference to Hursley is in the late twelfth century, it was in all probability in the ownership of the bishops of Winchester since Domesday, if not before, and there it remained until 1552, when it was surrendered to the king. Bishop Henry de Blois built a castle at Merdon, within the parish, in 1138, which had become ruinous by the sixteenth century, when Edward Vl granted the manor and park at Hursley to Sir Philip Hoby. The manor was briefly restored to the church by Queen Mary, but given back to the Hoby family by Queen Elizabeth. In 1600 the manor and castle was sold to Thomas Clerke, who proved a difficult lord of the manor. The lodge and park at Hursley were leased separately at this time, but the two estates were brought together again in 1630. The manor passed into the Cromwell family when Oliver Cromwell's eldest son Richard married the daughter of the owner, Richard Major. Richard Cromwell lived in Hursley from 1649 to 1658, when he became Protector of England at his father's death. Richard's son Oliver took over the estate, and the tenants claimed their ancient rights and customs (including pastureage and felling trees) in a lengthy legal battle. The manor was bought from the Cromwells by Sir William Heathcote in 1718, and the new owner built the manor house known as Hursley House. Another large house was built at the hamlet of Cranbury. The eighteenth century house was owned by the Dummer family and later by the Chamberlayne family.
A Companion To Evelyn Waugh's 'Brideshead Revisited' 1,5 105 Keble ie the college at Oxford created by supporters of the greatHigh Church theologian John Keble (17921866). It had perhaps http://www.abbotshill.freeserve.co.uk/AmBook 1 Chapter 5.html
Extractions: a student organisation formed to support the principles and actions of the newly formed League of Nations, which had its headquarters at Geneva in Switzerland. The League of Nations suffered at that time from the not inconsiderable disadvantage that the United States, the Soviet Union and Germany did not belong.
A Companion To Evelyn Waugh's 'Brideshead Revisited' 1,5 101 Keble ie the college at Oxford created by supporters of the greatHigh Church theologian John Keble (17921866). It had perhaps http://www.abbotshill.freeserve.co.uk/Book 1 Chapter 5.html
Extractions: a student organisation formed to support the principles and actions of the newly formed League of Nations, which had its headquarters at Geneva in Switzerland. The League of Nations suffered at that time from the not inconsiderable disadvantage that the United States, the Soviet Union and Germany did not belong.
John Mason Neale John Keble (17921866) was born April 25, 1792, Fairford, Gloucestershire,England, the son of the vicar of Colne. After a brilliant http://www.hymnsandcarolsofchristmas.com/Hymns_and_Carols/Biographies/john_mason
Extractions: John Mason Neale, an eminent English clergyman and author, the son of Rev. Cornelius Neale, was born in London on Conduit Street January 24, 1818. His father died when he was five years old. As a boy of fourteen, he began a translation (published in 1833-34) of the poetical writings of Coelius Sedulius, who flourished about 450 AD, and was counted among the founders of Christian hymnody. Here are two significant lines from one of his compositions Great things are they I ask, Thou giv'st great things; And more he angers Thee, who trifles craves. As a student books were his passion; he read at meals, read walking, read driving, read everything that came to hand, and what he read he never forgot. Simeon was still alive when Neale entered Cambridge, and he used to attend his sermons, feeling profound reverence for the great evangelical divine, though the bent of his own mind was already set towards another school. When Simeon was on his deathbed, Neale wrote in his journal, "I do think at this moment Mr. Simeon must be the happiest man in the world." And then when the end had come, "What a meeting he and Henry Martyn must have had." Martyn was one of a generation of ministers greatly influenced by Simeon, and died bringing the Gospel to Persia. He was educated at Shelbourne Grammar school and by private tutors before he entered Trinity College in Cambridge in 1836.
John Keble John Keble. 17921866. Born on April 25 1792 in Fairford, John Keblewas a noted Anglican theologian and poet. He was educated at http://www.southrop.gloucs.sch.uk/johnkebl.htm
Extractions: John Keble Born on April 25 1792 in Fairford, John Keble was a noted Anglican theologian and poet. He was educated at home by his father and in 1806 Keble earned a scholarship to Corpus Christi College, Oxford. In 1811 after earning double first-class honours in Classics and Mathematics he was elected to a fellowship at Oriel College, Oxford. Keble was ordained by the Bishop of Oxford as a Deacon in 1815 and as a priest in 1816. John Keble served as curate at Southrop from 1823 to 1825. During his curacy he lived in the Vicarage, Southrop . In 1827 he published The Christian Year , a collection of hymns and poetry written between 1819 and 1827. He moved on to the curacy of Hursley (where he is buried) and during his life held a series of positions in Oxford including examiner and college tutor at Oriel, civil service examiner, and professor of poetry. His other published works include Lyra Apostolica Psalter in English Verse Lyra Innocentium , and his Oxford lectures on poetry were published in Latin as Di Poeticae Vi Medic . Keble's sermon of 1833, "National Apostasy", is considered the beginning of the Oxford Movement. Keble College, Oxford opened in 1869, and serves as a lasting monument to John Keble.
[Chinews] TIH November 25 is no disappointment; I shall never have to regret that I loved Thee too well 1820English poet and Oxford Movement leader John Keble (17921866) penned the http://lists.lcms.org/pipermail/chinews/2002-November/000371.html
Ave Maria! Blessed Maid! lofty brows with love and joy like thine. Words John Keble (17921866).Music St. Alban (St. Alban's Tune Book, 1866). Meter 886 D. http://www.oremus.org/hymnal/a/a102.html
THE HERON'S LEARNING LIBRARY Eve of St. Agnes, Ode on a Grecian Urn, and To Autumn (all 1819).Keatsian adj. Keble, John. 17921866. British cleric and http://theheronlibraries.homestead.com/poetryk.html
Extractions: kenning n. 1.A compound word or phrase similar to an epithet, but which involves a multi-noun replacement for a single noun, such as wave traveller for boat or whale-path for ocean, used especially in Old English, Old Norse and early Teutonic poetry. A type of periphrasis, some kennings are instances of metonymy or synecdoche. 2. A figurative, usually compound expression used in place of a name or noun, especially in Old English and Old Norse poetry; for example, storm of swords is a kenning for battle
Index Translate this page Terence, 1880-1946 Gutenberg Kant, Immanuel, 1724-1804 Gutenberg Kay, Ross GutenbergKeats, John, 1795-1821 Gutenberg Keble, John, 1792-1866 Gutenberg Keene http://www.elbooks.sk/angautK.html
Anglicanism Topical Index Page Anglicanism. John Keble (17921866) leader, with EB Pusey, of the OxfordMovement after John Henry Newman's conversion. Newman wrote http://ic.net/~erasmus/RAZ138.HTM
Extractions: Anglicanism John Keble (1792-1866): leader, with E.B. Pusey, of the Oxford Movement after John Henry Newman's conversion. Newman wrote to him on 14 November 1845, some five weeks after that event: "To you I owe it, humanly speaking, that I am what and where I am . . . Let it be your comfort, when you are troubled, to think that there is one who feels that he owes all to you, and who, though, alas, now cut off from you, is a faithful assiduous friend unseen." They spent some 17 years apart, but renewed their friendship in August 1863. [Courtesy of Warden and Fellows of Keble College] Click the banner to learn more about and purchase this book and additional popular apologetics and theology titles by Dave Armstrong
Extractions: Tune: 'Laudate Dominum' by Sir Charles Hubert Hastings Parry (1848-1918) In the days when diocesan choral festivals were great gatherings of (all male) robed choirs it was quite usual for a new anthem to be commissioned. For the 1894 meeting of the Salisbury Diocesan Choral Association, C H H Parry, by then one of the leading composers of his day and one of the leaders of the revival of English music that has continued to the present, wrote the anthem Hear my words, O ye people. It ends with a movement in which the cathedral choir and the main body of singers alternate to sing this hymn as the climax of the piece. The anthem itself, although revived from time to time, is not one of Parry's best pieces, except for this tune taken from it, including the elaborate accompaniment for the final verse, so suitable in the anthem, and so effective too in ordinary use. 'Laudate Dominum' ('Praise the Lord') is the heading of Psalm 150 in the Book of Common Prayer, and the words are a metrical version of that psalm by H W Baker. Abide with me
Anglican, Theology, Links Selected Hymns. Includes Just as I Am. John Keble (17921866). William Hodge Mill(1792-1853). Henry Francis Lyte (1793-1847). Marianne Williams (1793-1879). http://www.trinity.utoronto.ca/Library/Theology/links.html
Extractions: Gift of Mrs. Frances Foster; received: 1961. George Frisbie Hoar (1826-1904) was a Republican Senator from Massachusetts (1877-1904). Arranged alphabetically by author. A collection of letters, manuscripts, and documents chiefly of eighteenth and nineteenth century American and English literary and political figures. Approximately 175 persons are represented in the collection. Most of the papers were collected by Sen. George Frisbie Hoar. Includes some early documents, 1653-1769, of the Hoar family. (2) Adams, Charles Baker, 1814-1853. A.L.s.to [Parker Cleaveland]; Amherst, 19 Oct 1847. 1s.(3p.)
KEBLE, JOHN achieved in his verses on the crowning creation of Scotts humaner and manlier geniusMeg Merrilies http://89.1911encyclopedia.org/K/KE/KEBLE_JOHN.htm
Extractions: immortal. (A. C. S.) Subjoined are the chief particulars of Keatss life. He was the eldest son of Thomas Keats and his wife Frances Jennings, and was baptized at St Botolphs, Bishopsgate, on the 18th of December 1795. The entry of his baptism is supplemented by a margnai note stating that he was born on the 31st (Oxford, 1905). (M. BR.) Between 1827 and 1872 one hundred and fifty-eight editions had issued from the press, and it has been largely reprinted since. The author, so far from taking pride in his widespread reputation, seemed all his life long to wish to disconnect his name with the book, and as if he would rather it had been the work of some one else than himself. This feeling arose from no false modesty. It was because he knew that in these poems he had painted his own heart, the best part of it; and he doubted whether it was right thus to exhibit himself, and by the revelation of only his better self, to win the good opinion of the world. Towards the close of 1831 Keble was elected to fill the chair o~f the poetry professorship in Oxford, as successor to his friend and admirer, Dean Milman. This chair he occupied for ten~ eventful years. He delivered a series of lectures, clothed in excellent idiomatic Latin (as was the rule), in which lie expounded a theory of poetry which was original and suggestive. He looked on poetry as a vent for overcharged feeling, or a full imagination, or some imaginative regret, which had not found their natural outlet in life and action. This suggested to him a distinction between what he called primary and secondary poets the first employing poetry to relieve their own hearts, the second, poetic artists, composing poetry from some other and less impulsive motive. Of the former kind were Homer, Lucretius, Burns, Scott; of the latter were Euripides, Dryden, Milton. This view was set forth in an article contributed to the British