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Froude; or the Historian as Preacher

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  03 November 2011

Paul Revere Frothingham
Affiliation:
Boston, Mass.

Extract

We have had abundant evidence of late, if evidence were needed i n the matter, that preaching is not of necessity confined to pulpits, nor a matter solely of the churches of the world. There are sermons which come from men of letters, as well as ministers, and from politicians who are genuine prophets. Whatever may be thought about the character of the sermons he delivers, and the nature of the texts from which he draws his inspiration, there can be no question of the fact that Theodore Roosevelt is essentially a preacher. His messages to Congress, which came with more than ministerial regularity and frequency, were essentially homiletical in form as well as hortatory in purpose, and his public addresses might well be collected under the Newmanesque title of Political and Plain Sermons.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © President and Fellows of Harvard College 1909

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References

1 Sloane, W. M., Atlantic Monthly, August, 1908, p. 280.Google Scholar

2 Short History of Modern English Literature, p. 373.

3 Dictionary of National Biography, Supplement, Vol. ii, p. 257.

4 Birrell, Augustine, Essays and Addresses, p. 163.Google Scholar

5 Volume xii, pp. 535–6.

6 Volume ix, pp. 301–3.

7 Volume vi, p. 383.

8 Volume vi, pp. 429–30.