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قراءة كتاب Recollections and Impressions, 1822-1890

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Recollections and Impressions, 1822-1890

Recollections and Impressions, 1822-1890

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دار النشر: Project Gutenberg
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Transcriber's Note :   This etext differs from the original in that it
corrects three minor typographical errors that do not affect the meaning.


RECOLLECTIONS AND
IMPRESSIONS

1822-1890

OCTAVIUS BROOKS FROTHINGHAM

AUTHOR OF "BOSTON UNITARIANISM, 1820-1850, A STUDY OF THE LIFE
AND WORK OF NATHANIEL LANGDON FROTHINGHAM,"
"THE RELIGION OF HUMANITY," ETC., ETC.


G. P. PUTNAM'S SONS
NEW YORK     LONDON
27 WEST TWENTY-THIRD ST.   27 KING WILLIAM ST., STRAND
The Knickerbocker Press
1891


Copyright, 1891
by
OCTAVIUS BROOKS FROTHINGHAM

The Knickerbocker Press, New York
Electrotyped, Printed, and Bound by G. P. Putnam's Sons


CONTENTS

I Parentage 1
II Education 19
II Divinity School 25
IV Salem 35
V The Crisis in Belief 53
VI Jersey City 65
VII New York 76
VIII War 104
IX The Free Religious Association 115
X The Progress of Religious Thought In America 133
XI The Clerical Profession 146
XII My Teachers 165
XIII My Companions 190
XIV My Friends 225
XV The Present Situation 248
XVI The Religious Future of America 272
XVII Confessions 289
  Index 303


RECOLLECTIONS AND IMPRESSIONS.


I.
PARENTAGE.

My father was, as I have said elsewhere, a clergyman in Boston, Massachusetts, a Unitarian minister to the First Church, standing in a long line of men, of whom the earliest was severely orthodox, while he abhorred orthodoxy. Yet he was ordained without hesitation, was more than acceptable to the best minds through a service of thirty-five years, and continued more and more unorthodox to the end; so gradually and insensibly did the Puritan tenets disappear one by one until the shadow of them only remained. We are assured that by 1780 nearly all the congregational pulpits were filled by Arminians. In 1815, the year of my father's ordination, they were well domesticated in New England, Calvinism having lost its hold on the minds of thinking people, and none but keen-eyed watchers on the tower seeing what course opinion was taking. How far the tendency towards the moral and practical view of religion as distinct from the speculative view had gone, is well illustrated in my father's case. He was a man of excellent education, one of the best scholars in a distinguished class at Harvard, an enthusiast for intellectual cultivation, singularly refined in perception, an acute critic, a careful, precise, elegant writer. His tastes were pre-eminently literary. This

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