and keen perception of all forms of beauty, and with
the deepest desire to be reverent towards all that
had a right to reverence, would find himself in the
most irritating state of opposition and impatience
with much that passed as religion round him.
Principles not attempted to be understood and carried
into practice, smooth self-complacency among those
who looked down on a blind and unspiritual world, the
continual provocation of worthless reasoning and ignorant
platitudes, the dull unconscious stupidity of people
who could not see that the times were critical—that
truth had to be defended, and that it was no easy or
light-hearted business to defend it—threw
him into an habitual attitude of defiance, and half-amused,
half-earnest contradiction, which made him feared
by loose reasoners and pretentious talkers, and even
by quiet easy-going friends, who unexpectedly found
themselves led on blindfold, with the utmost gravity,
into traps and absurdities by the wiles of his mischievous
dialectic. This was the outside look of his relentless
earnestness. People who did not like him, or his
views, and who, perhaps, had winced under his irony,
naturally put down his strong language, which on occasion
could certainly be unceremonious, to flippancy and
arrogance. But within the circle of those whom
he trusted, or of those who needed at anytime his
help, another side disclosed itself—a side
of the most genuine warmth of affection, an awful reality
of devoutness, which it was his great and habitual
effort to keep hidden, a high simplicity of unworldliness
and generosity, and in spite of his daring mockeries
of what was commonplace or showy, the most sincere
and deeply felt humility with himself. Dangerous
as he was often thought to be in conversation, one
of the features of his character which has impressed
itself on the memory of one who knew him well, was
his “patient, winning considerateness in discussion,
which, with other qualities, endeared him to those
to whom he opened his heart."[22] “It is impossible,”
writes James Mozley in 1833, with a mixture of amusement,
speaking of the views about celibacy which were beginning
to be current, “to talk with Froude without
committing one’s self on such subjects as these,
so that by and by I expect the tergiversants will be
a considerable party.” His letters, with
their affectionately playful addresses, [Greek:
daimonie, ainotate, pepon], Carissime, “Sir,
my dear friend" or “[Greek: Argeion
och’ ariste], have you not been a spoon?”
are full of the most delightful ease and verve
and sympathy.
With a keen sense of English faults he was, as Cardinal Newman has said, “an Englishman to the backbone”; and he was, further, a fastidious, high-tempered English gentleman, in spite of his declaiming about “pampered aristocrats” and the “gentleman heresy.” His friends thought of him as of the “young Achilles,” with his high courage, and noble form, and “eagle eye,” made for such great things, but appointed so soon to die. “Who