No CrossRef data available.
Article contents
Reserve and Physical Imagery in the Tractarian Poetry of Isaac Williams (1802–65)
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 04 January 2016
Extract
The Oxford, or Tractarian, Movement began as a conservative reaction to the reforming measures of the 1820s and 1830s and in particular to the Whig government’s passing of the Irish Church Temporalities Bill in 1832. For the Tractarians, the cumulative effect of such legislation was that the authority of the Church was being seriously compromised by interference from the secular government, which could now include those who were not necessarily Anglicans or even Christians. While it was these overtly political concerns that moved John Keble to preach his ‘Assize Sermon’ which has. traditionally been seen as marking the beginning of the movement in July 1833, the Oxford Movement was to develop into a spiritual revival whose concerns went far beyond politics. In rejecting the established relationship between Church and state the Tractarians came to emphasize the Church’s innate spiritual autonomy and appealed increasingly to the authority of tradition as reflected in the writings of the church fathers of the third and fourth centuries. In doing so their emphasis on certain beliefs and practices of the primitive Church, such as baptismal regeneration, the real presence and the apostolic succession, was seen as betraying sympathy for Roman Catholicism and disloyalty towards the Church of England.
- Type
- Research Article
- Information
- Copyright
- Copyright © Ecclesiastical History Society 2012
References
1 Hylson-Smith, K., High Churchmanship in the Church of England (Edinburgh, 1993), 123–30.Google Scholar
2 Cf. Newman, J. H., Apologia Pro Vita Sua (London, 1945), 23.Google Scholar
3 Herring, G., What was the Oxford Movement? (London, 2002), 29–34.Google Scholar
4 Ibid. 37–43.
5 ODNB, s.n. ‘Keble, John (1792–1866)’. For further biographical information on John Keble, see Prickett, S., ‘Tractarian Poetry’, in Cronin, R., Chapman, A. and Harrison, A. H., eds, A Companion to Victorian Poetry (Oxford, 2002), 279–90, at 279 Google Scholar; Battiscombe, G., John Keble: A Study in Limitations (London, 1963)Google Scholar; Martin, B.W., John Keble: Priest, Professor and Poet (London, 1976)Google Scholar; Griffin, J. R., John Keble: The Saint of Anglicanism (Macon, GA, 1987)Google Scholar; Blair, K., ed., John Keble in Context (London, 2004).Google Scholar
6 Herring, , What was the Oxford Movement?, 21–2.Google Scholar
7 ODNB, s.n. ‘Williams, Isaac (1802–1865)’. For further biographical information on Williams, Isaac, see The Autobiography of Isaac Williams, ed. Prevost, G. (London, 1892), 1–186 Google Scholar; Jones, O.W., Isaac Williams and his Circle (London, 1971)Google Scholar; Williams, M. K., The Doctrine of the Church in the Writings of Isaac Williams (St Albans, 1983)Google Scholar; Church, R. W., The Oxford Movement: Twelve Years, 1833–1845 (London, 1891), 57–69.Google Scholar
8 Jones, , Isaac Williams, 154–62.Google Scholar
9 Tennyson, G. B., Victorian Devotional Poetry (London, 1981)CrossRefGoogle Scholar; Edgecombe, R. S., ‘Allegorical Topography and the Experience of Space in Isaac Williams’ Cathedral’, English Studies 3 (1999), 224–38 CrossRefGoogle Scholar; Prickett, , ‘Tractarian Poetry’, 279–90 Google Scholar; Blair, K., ‘Church Architecture, Tractarian Poetry and the Forms of Faith’, in Morgan, V. and Williams, C., eds, Shaping Belief: Culture, Politics and Religion in Nineteenth-Century Writing (Liverpool, 2008), 129–45.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
10 Tennyson, , Victorian Devotional Poetry, 171.Google Scholar
11 Blair, , ‘Church Architecture’, 129–30, 133–41.Google Scholar
12 See Williams, I., Tract 80, ‘On Reserve in Communicating Religious Knowledge’, Tracts for the Times, 4 (London, 1838), 1–83 Google Scholar; idem, Tract 87, ‘On Reserve in Communicating Religious Knowledge’, Tracts for the Times, 5 (London, 1838–40), 1–144.Google Scholar
13 This was written by the French Jesuit Anton Sucquet (1574–1627). The images in the volume were the work of the Flemish artist Boethius à Bolswert (1580–1633).
14 Cf. Williams, , Tract 80, 3.Google Scholar
15 Nockles, P. B., The Oxford Movement in Context: Anglican High Churchmanship 1760–1857 (Cambridge, 1994), 198–200.Google Scholar
16 Williams, , Tract 80, 3–5.Google Scholar
17 Williams, , Tract 87, 7.Google Scholar
18 Williams, I., ‘The Psalter, or Psalms of David in English Verse’, British Critic 27 (1840), 1–23, at 2.Google Scholar
19 Ibid. 23.
20 Ibid. 15.
21 Ibid.
22 Williams, I., The Seven Days, or the Old and New Creation (Oxford, 1850), 63–4 Google ScholarPubMed; Williams, I., The Altar, or Meditations in verse on the Great Christian Sacrifice (London, 1847), 31.Google Scholar
23 Williams, I., Thoughts in Past Years (London, 1848), 27 Google Scholar; Williams, , The Seven Days, 78.Google Scholar
24 Williams, I., The Christian Seasons (London, 1854), 85 Google Scholar; Williams, , The Altar, 87.Google Scholar
25 Williams, I., The Cathedral, or the Church Catholic and Apostolic in England (Oxford, 1838), 210–11.Google Scholar
26 Ibid. 211.
27 Williams, , The Seven Days, 3–4.Google Scholar
28 Williams, I., The Baptistery, or the Way of Eternal Life (Oxford, 1844), x.Google Scholar
29 Keble, J., The Christian Year (London, 1887), 46.Google Scholar
30 Ibid. 57–9.
31 Williams, , The Cathedral, v.Google Scholar
32 London, LPL, MS 4476, fols 96–7: Isaac Williams to Isaac Lloyd Williams (no date); with permission of the Trustees of Lambeth Palace Library.
33 Williams, , The Cathedral, 192–3.Google Scholar
34 Ibid. v.
35 Boneham, J., ‘Isaac Williams (1802–1865), the Oxford Movement and the High Churchmen: A Study of his Theological and Devotional Writings’ (Ph.D. thesis, Bangor University, 2009), 73, 79, 83, 95, 97, 100.Google Scholar
36 Williams, , The Altar, plates 1, 26, 29.Google Scholar
37 Cf. Härdelin, A., The Tractarian Understanding of the Eucharist (Uppsala, 1965), 203–4.Google Scholar
38 Williams, , The Altar, v Google Scholar; cf. Kempis, Thomas à, The Imitation of Christ (Oxford, 1849), 281.Google Scholar
39 Williams, , The Altar, 110.Google Scholar
40 Ibid., 10.
41 Ibid. 71.
42 Sykes, S.W. and Gilley, S.W., ‘“No Bishop, No Church!”: The Tractarian Impact on Anglicanism’, in Rowell, G., ed., Tradition Renewed: The Oxford Movement Conference Papers (London, 1986), 120–39.Google Scholar
43 Williams, , The Cathedral, 257–69.Google Scholar
44 Ibid. 43, quoting Ignatius of Antioch, Epistle to the Ephesians 4; cf. Ignatius, , Ephesians 4, in Howley, W., ed., The Genuine Epistles of the Apostolic Fathers (London, 1833), 159.Google Scholar
45 Williams, , The Cathedral, 43.Google Scholar
46 Cf. Newman, J. H., Tract 1, ‘Thoughts on the Ministerial Commission’, Tracts for the Times, 1 (London, 1834), 1–4, at 2 Google Scholar; Keble, J., Tract 4, ‘Adherence to the Apostolical Succession the Safest Course’, Tracts for the Times, 1, 1–8, at 4.Google Scholar
47 Williams, , The Cathedral, 43–4.Google Scholar
48 See Nockles, , Oxford Movement, 109–13.Google Scholar
49 Williams, , The Cathedral, 274–97.Google Scholar
50 Newman, J. H., ed., Lyra Apostolica (Derby, 1843), 115 Google Scholar
51 Williams, , The Cathedral (Oxford, 1848), 304.Google Scholar
52 Williams, , The Baptistery, 191.Google Scholar
53 Hunt, J. E., A History and Description of St. David’s Cathedral (Saffron Walden, 1966), 18–19, 36.Google Scholar
54 Williams, , The Baptistery, 191.Google Scholar