Printed in Great Britain byButler & Tanner, Ltd.,Frome and London
FOOTNOTES:[1]The following is a letter written long afterwards by Tom Arnold to his sister Fan, with reference to Clough: “I loved him, oh! so well: and also respected him more profoundly than any man, anywhere near my own age, whom I ever met. His pure soul was without stain: he seemed incapable of being inflamed by wrath, or tempted to vice, or enslaved by any unworthy passion of any sort. As to ‘Philip’ something that he saw in me helped to suggest the character, that was all. There is much in Philip that is Clough himself and there is a dialectic force in him that certainly was never in me.”December 21, 1895.[2]“School-days with Miss Clough.” By T. C. Down.Cornhill, June, 1920.[3]According to the universal understanding of those days, in the case of a mixed marriage the boys followed the father’s faith and the girls the mother’s. Tom Arnold’s boys were, therefore, brought up as Catholics until their father’s reversion to Anglicanism in 1864.[4]Passages in a Wandering Life(T. Arnold), p. 185.[5]Jowett to Lewis Campbell, June, 1871.[6]Privately printed.[7]Life and Letters of H. Taine.Trans. by E. Sparrel-Bayly, Vol. III, p. 58.[8]He called her “the greatest and best person I have ever met, or shall ever meet, in this world.”—Letters of J. R. Green.Ed. Leslie Stephen, p. 284.[9]After the foundation of Somerville Hall Mrs. Ward was succeeded in the Secretaryship by Mrs. T. H. Green and Mr. Henry Butcher.[10]Now Mrs. Arthur Strong, Assistant Director of the British School at Rome.[11]The Editor of theSpectator.[12]This conversation has already appeared once in print, as an Appendix to the Westmorland Edition ofRobert Elsmere.[13]Mrs. T. H. Green; Mrs. Creighton; Mrs. A. H. Johnson; Miss Pater.[14]“The New Reformation,”Nineteenth Century, January, 1889.[15]On February 3, 1890.[16]Afterwards embodied in her book,Town Life in the Fifteenth Century.[17]Letters of Sarah Orne Jewett, edited by Annie Fields, p. 95.[18]See p. 91.[19]Introduction toHelbeck of Bannisdale, Autograph Edition, Houghton Mifflin & Co.[20]Introduction to the Autograph Edition.[21]Mr. Cropper’s brother had married Susan Arnold, sister of Tom.[22]He died in April, 1904.[23]Eleanorwas finally played with the following cast:Edward ManistyMr. CHARLES QUARTERMAINEFather BeneckeMr. STEPHEN POWYSReggie BrooklynMr. LESLIE FABERAlfredoMr. VICTOR BRIDGESLucy FosterMiss LILIAN BRAITHWAITEMadame VarianiMiss ROSINA FILIPPIAlice ManistyMiss ELIZABETH ROBINSMarieMiss MABEL ARCHDALLDalgettyMiss Beatrix de BurghandEleanor BurgoyneMiss MARION TERRY[24]See theMemoir of W. T. Arnold, by Mrs. Ward and C. E. Montague.[25]FromThe Associate, the quarterly magazine of the Passmore Edwards Settlement, for October, 1902.[26]Sir Hugh Bell at the unveiling of the memorial to Mrs. Ward at the Mary Ward Settlement, July, 1922.[27]In 1907 the City Education Authority of New York had no less than 100 school playgrounds equipped and opened under its own supervision.[28]Mr. Fairfield Osborn.[29]Mrs. Ward had spent a morning in the Parliamentary Library with Mr. Martin, the librarian, delighting in his detailed knowledge of Canadian history.[30]Mr. Woodall’s.[31]Mr. Harrison also deprecated the formation of a definite League. “It is to do the very thing that we are protesting against,” he wrote, “which is to accustom women to the mechanical artifices of political agitation.”[32]Now the National Council of Women.[33]What Is and What Might Be.By Edmond Holmes.[34]Henry James had become a naturalized British subject in July, 1915.[35]My doom hath come upon me, and would to God that IHad felt my hand in thy dear hand on the day I had to die.Sir Rennell Rodd’s translation, inLove, Worship and Death.[36]Col. John Buchan, Director of the Ministry of Information, wrote to her in December 1918, as follows:MYDEARMRS. WARD,As the Ministry of Information ceases its operations on Dec. 31st, I am taking this opportunity of writing to express to you, on behalf of the Ministry, our very cordial gratitude for the help which you have given so generously. It would have been almost impossible to essay the great task of enlightening foreign countries as to the justice of the Allied cause and the magnitude of the British effort without the co-operation of our leading writers, and we have been most fortunate in receiving that co-operation in full and ungrudged measure. To you in particular we are indebted for generous concessions with regard to the use of your books and writings, and I beg that you will accept this message of gratitude from myself and from the other members of the Staff.[37]Evening Play Centres for Children, by Janet Penrose Trevelyan. Methuen & Co.[38]See p. 241.[39]Sir Robert Jones, F.R.C.S., Chairman of the Central Committee for the care of Cripples, wrote to Miss Ward after her mother’s death: “One of the last pieces of work accomplished by Mrs. Ward for cripples was the insertion of the P.D. clause in the Fisher Education Act, and the reports obtained for that purpose are largely the groundwork and origin of this Committee, in whose work she took a deep interest.”[40]On October 23, 1919.[41]Now named, after its founder, the Mary Ward Settlement.
FOOTNOTES:
[1]The following is a letter written long afterwards by Tom Arnold to his sister Fan, with reference to Clough: “I loved him, oh! so well: and also respected him more profoundly than any man, anywhere near my own age, whom I ever met. His pure soul was without stain: he seemed incapable of being inflamed by wrath, or tempted to vice, or enslaved by any unworthy passion of any sort. As to ‘Philip’ something that he saw in me helped to suggest the character, that was all. There is much in Philip that is Clough himself and there is a dialectic force in him that certainly was never in me.”December 21, 1895.
[1]The following is a letter written long afterwards by Tom Arnold to his sister Fan, with reference to Clough: “I loved him, oh! so well: and also respected him more profoundly than any man, anywhere near my own age, whom I ever met. His pure soul was without stain: he seemed incapable of being inflamed by wrath, or tempted to vice, or enslaved by any unworthy passion of any sort. As to ‘Philip’ something that he saw in me helped to suggest the character, that was all. There is much in Philip that is Clough himself and there is a dialectic force in him that certainly was never in me.”
December 21, 1895.
[2]“School-days with Miss Clough.” By T. C. Down.Cornhill, June, 1920.
[2]“School-days with Miss Clough.” By T. C. Down.Cornhill, June, 1920.
[3]According to the universal understanding of those days, in the case of a mixed marriage the boys followed the father’s faith and the girls the mother’s. Tom Arnold’s boys were, therefore, brought up as Catholics until their father’s reversion to Anglicanism in 1864.
[3]According to the universal understanding of those days, in the case of a mixed marriage the boys followed the father’s faith and the girls the mother’s. Tom Arnold’s boys were, therefore, brought up as Catholics until their father’s reversion to Anglicanism in 1864.
[4]Passages in a Wandering Life(T. Arnold), p. 185.
[4]Passages in a Wandering Life(T. Arnold), p. 185.
[5]Jowett to Lewis Campbell, June, 1871.
[5]Jowett to Lewis Campbell, June, 1871.
[6]Privately printed.
[6]Privately printed.
[7]Life and Letters of H. Taine.Trans. by E. Sparrel-Bayly, Vol. III, p. 58.
[7]Life and Letters of H. Taine.Trans. by E. Sparrel-Bayly, Vol. III, p. 58.
[8]He called her “the greatest and best person I have ever met, or shall ever meet, in this world.”—Letters of J. R. Green.Ed. Leslie Stephen, p. 284.
[8]He called her “the greatest and best person I have ever met, or shall ever meet, in this world.”—Letters of J. R. Green.Ed. Leslie Stephen, p. 284.
[9]After the foundation of Somerville Hall Mrs. Ward was succeeded in the Secretaryship by Mrs. T. H. Green and Mr. Henry Butcher.
[9]After the foundation of Somerville Hall Mrs. Ward was succeeded in the Secretaryship by Mrs. T. H. Green and Mr. Henry Butcher.
[10]Now Mrs. Arthur Strong, Assistant Director of the British School at Rome.
[10]Now Mrs. Arthur Strong, Assistant Director of the British School at Rome.
[11]The Editor of theSpectator.
[11]The Editor of theSpectator.
[12]This conversation has already appeared once in print, as an Appendix to the Westmorland Edition ofRobert Elsmere.
[12]This conversation has already appeared once in print, as an Appendix to the Westmorland Edition ofRobert Elsmere.
[13]Mrs. T. H. Green; Mrs. Creighton; Mrs. A. H. Johnson; Miss Pater.
[13]Mrs. T. H. Green; Mrs. Creighton; Mrs. A. H. Johnson; Miss Pater.
[14]“The New Reformation,”Nineteenth Century, January, 1889.
[14]“The New Reformation,”Nineteenth Century, January, 1889.
[15]On February 3, 1890.
[15]On February 3, 1890.
[16]Afterwards embodied in her book,Town Life in the Fifteenth Century.
[16]Afterwards embodied in her book,Town Life in the Fifteenth Century.
[17]Letters of Sarah Orne Jewett, edited by Annie Fields, p. 95.
[17]Letters of Sarah Orne Jewett, edited by Annie Fields, p. 95.
[18]See p. 91.
[18]See p. 91.
[19]Introduction toHelbeck of Bannisdale, Autograph Edition, Houghton Mifflin & Co.
[19]Introduction toHelbeck of Bannisdale, Autograph Edition, Houghton Mifflin & Co.
[20]Introduction to the Autograph Edition.
[20]Introduction to the Autograph Edition.
[21]Mr. Cropper’s brother had married Susan Arnold, sister of Tom.
[21]Mr. Cropper’s brother had married Susan Arnold, sister of Tom.
[22]He died in April, 1904.
[22]He died in April, 1904.
[23]Eleanorwas finally played with the following cast:Edward ManistyMr. CHARLES QUARTERMAINEFather BeneckeMr. STEPHEN POWYSReggie BrooklynMr. LESLIE FABERAlfredoMr. VICTOR BRIDGESLucy FosterMiss LILIAN BRAITHWAITEMadame VarianiMiss ROSINA FILIPPIAlice ManistyMiss ELIZABETH ROBINSMarieMiss MABEL ARCHDALLDalgettyMiss Beatrix de BurghandEleanor BurgoyneMiss MARION TERRY
[23]Eleanorwas finally played with the following cast:
[24]See theMemoir of W. T. Arnold, by Mrs. Ward and C. E. Montague.
[24]See theMemoir of W. T. Arnold, by Mrs. Ward and C. E. Montague.
[25]FromThe Associate, the quarterly magazine of the Passmore Edwards Settlement, for October, 1902.
[25]FromThe Associate, the quarterly magazine of the Passmore Edwards Settlement, for October, 1902.
[26]Sir Hugh Bell at the unveiling of the memorial to Mrs. Ward at the Mary Ward Settlement, July, 1922.
[26]Sir Hugh Bell at the unveiling of the memorial to Mrs. Ward at the Mary Ward Settlement, July, 1922.
[27]In 1907 the City Education Authority of New York had no less than 100 school playgrounds equipped and opened under its own supervision.
[27]In 1907 the City Education Authority of New York had no less than 100 school playgrounds equipped and opened under its own supervision.
[28]Mr. Fairfield Osborn.
[28]Mr. Fairfield Osborn.
[29]Mrs. Ward had spent a morning in the Parliamentary Library with Mr. Martin, the librarian, delighting in his detailed knowledge of Canadian history.
[29]Mrs. Ward had spent a morning in the Parliamentary Library with Mr. Martin, the librarian, delighting in his detailed knowledge of Canadian history.
[30]Mr. Woodall’s.
[30]Mr. Woodall’s.
[31]Mr. Harrison also deprecated the formation of a definite League. “It is to do the very thing that we are protesting against,” he wrote, “which is to accustom women to the mechanical artifices of political agitation.”
[31]Mr. Harrison also deprecated the formation of a definite League. “It is to do the very thing that we are protesting against,” he wrote, “which is to accustom women to the mechanical artifices of political agitation.”
[32]Now the National Council of Women.
[32]Now the National Council of Women.
[33]What Is and What Might Be.By Edmond Holmes.
[33]What Is and What Might Be.By Edmond Holmes.
[34]Henry James had become a naturalized British subject in July, 1915.
[34]Henry James had become a naturalized British subject in July, 1915.
[35]My doom hath come upon me, and would to God that IHad felt my hand in thy dear hand on the day I had to die.Sir Rennell Rodd’s translation, inLove, Worship and Death.
[35]
My doom hath come upon me, and would to God that IHad felt my hand in thy dear hand on the day I had to die.
My doom hath come upon me, and would to God that IHad felt my hand in thy dear hand on the day I had to die.
Sir Rennell Rodd’s translation, inLove, Worship and Death.
Sir Rennell Rodd’s translation, inLove, Worship and Death.
[36]Col. John Buchan, Director of the Ministry of Information, wrote to her in December 1918, as follows:MYDEARMRS. WARD,As the Ministry of Information ceases its operations on Dec. 31st, I am taking this opportunity of writing to express to you, on behalf of the Ministry, our very cordial gratitude for the help which you have given so generously. It would have been almost impossible to essay the great task of enlightening foreign countries as to the justice of the Allied cause and the magnitude of the British effort without the co-operation of our leading writers, and we have been most fortunate in receiving that co-operation in full and ungrudged measure. To you in particular we are indebted for generous concessions with regard to the use of your books and writings, and I beg that you will accept this message of gratitude from myself and from the other members of the Staff.
[36]Col. John Buchan, Director of the Ministry of Information, wrote to her in December 1918, as follows:
MYDEARMRS. WARD,
As the Ministry of Information ceases its operations on Dec. 31st, I am taking this opportunity of writing to express to you, on behalf of the Ministry, our very cordial gratitude for the help which you have given so generously. It would have been almost impossible to essay the great task of enlightening foreign countries as to the justice of the Allied cause and the magnitude of the British effort without the co-operation of our leading writers, and we have been most fortunate in receiving that co-operation in full and ungrudged measure. To you in particular we are indebted for generous concessions with regard to the use of your books and writings, and I beg that you will accept this message of gratitude from myself and from the other members of the Staff.
[37]Evening Play Centres for Children, by Janet Penrose Trevelyan. Methuen & Co.
[37]Evening Play Centres for Children, by Janet Penrose Trevelyan. Methuen & Co.
[38]See p. 241.
[38]See p. 241.
[39]Sir Robert Jones, F.R.C.S., Chairman of the Central Committee for the care of Cripples, wrote to Miss Ward after her mother’s death: “One of the last pieces of work accomplished by Mrs. Ward for cripples was the insertion of the P.D. clause in the Fisher Education Act, and the reports obtained for that purpose are largely the groundwork and origin of this Committee, in whose work she took a deep interest.”
[39]Sir Robert Jones, F.R.C.S., Chairman of the Central Committee for the care of Cripples, wrote to Miss Ward after her mother’s death: “One of the last pieces of work accomplished by Mrs. Ward for cripples was the insertion of the P.D. clause in the Fisher Education Act, and the reports obtained for that purpose are largely the groundwork and origin of this Committee, in whose work she took a deep interest.”
[40]On October 23, 1919.
[40]On October 23, 1919.
[41]Now named, after its founder, the Mary Ward Settlement.
[41]Now named, after its founder, the Mary Ward Settlement.