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Robert Hugh Benson [Benson - Robert Hugh Benson Collection [11 Books]

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Robert Hugh Benson [Benson Robert Hugh Benson Collection [11 Books]

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ROBERT HUGH
BENSON

COLLECTION
BOOKS

COPYRIGHT 201 BY AETERNA PRESS .
ALL RIGHTS RESERVED.

PUBLISHED BY AETERNA PRESS .
COVER DESIGN BY AETERNA PRESS .

KINDLE E-BOOK:
EISBN-13: 978-1-78647-148-2

WEBSITE
WWW.AETERNAPRESS.COM

BOOKS INDEX
ROBERT HUGH BENSON COLLECTION

Robert Hugh Benson AFSC (18 November 1871 19 October 1914) was an English Anglican priest who in 1903 was received into the Roman Catholic Church in which he was ordained priest in 1904. He was lauded in his own day as one of the leading figures in English literature, having written the notable novel Lord of the World (1907). Benson was the youngest son of Edward White Benson (Archbishop of Canterbury) and his wife, Mary, and the younger brother of Edward Frederic Benson and A. C. Benson. Benson was educated at Eton College and then studied classics and theology at Trinity College, Cambridge, from 1890 to 1893. In 1895, Benson was ordained a priest in the Church of England by his father, who was the then Archbishop of Canterbury. After his father died suddenly in 1896, Benson was sent on a trip to the Middle East to recover his own health. While there he began to question the status of the Church of England and to consider the claims of the Roman Catholic Church. His own piety began to tend toward the High Church tradition, and he started exploring religious life in various Anglican communities, eventually obtaining permission to join the Community of the Resurrection.

BY WHAT
AUTHORITY?

ROBERT HUGH BENSON

COPYRIGHT 2015 BY AETERNA PRESS .
ALL RIGHTS RESERVED.

AVAILABLE IN PAPERBACK.

AUTHOR OF THE LIGHT INVISIBLE, THE KINGS ACHIEVEMENT, A BOOK OF THE LOVE OF JESUS, ETC.

BENIZIGER BROS. PRINTERS TO THE HOLY APOSTOLIC SEE, NEW YORK, CINCINNATI, CHICAGO.

I WISH TO ACKNOWLEDGE A GREAT DEBT OF GRATITUDE TO THE REVEREND DOM BEDE CAMM., O.S.B., WHO KINDLY READ THIS BOOK IN PROOF, AND MADE MANY VALUABLE CORRECTIONS AND SUGGESTIONS.

OCTOBER 27, 1904

PENATIBVS FOCISQVE CARIS NECNON TRIBVS CARIORIBVS APVD QVAS SCRIPSI IN QVARVM AVRES LEGI A QVIBVS ADMONITVS EMENDAVI HVNC LIBRVM D.

CONTENTS

CHAPTER I
THE SITUATION

CHAPTER II
THE HALL AND THE HOUSE

CHAPTER III
LONDON TOWN

CHAPTER IV
MARY CORBET

CHAPTER V
A RIDER FROM LONDON

CHAPTER VI
MR. STEWART

CHAPTER VII
THE DOOR IN THE GARDEN-WALL

CHAPTER VIII
THE TAKING OF MR. STEWART

CHAPTER IX
VILLAGE JUSTICE

CHAPTER X
A CONFESSOR

CHAPTER XI
MASTER CALVIN

CHAPTER XII
A WINDING-UP

CHAPTER I
ANTHONY IN LONDON

CHAPTER II
SOME NEW LESSONS

CHAPTER III
HUBERTS RETURN

CHAPTER IV
A COUNTER-MARCH

CHAPTER V
THE COMING OF THE JESUITS

CHAPTER VI
SOME CONTRASTS

CHAPTER VII
A MESSAGE FROM THE CITY

CHAPTER VIII
THE MASSING-HOUSE

CHAPTER IX
FROM FULHAM TO GREENWICH

CHAPTER X
THE APPEAL TO CSAR

CHAPTER XI
A STATION OF THE CROSS

CHAPTER XII
A STRIFE OF TONGUES

CHAPTER XIII
THE SPIRITUAL EXERCISES

CHAPTER XIV
EASTER DAY

CHAPTER I
THE COMING OF SPAIN

CHAPTER II
MEN OF WAR AND PEACE

CHAPTER III
HOME-COMING

CHAPTER IV
STANFIELD PLACE

CHAPTER V
JOSEPH LACKINGTON

CHAPTER VI
A DEPARTURE

CHAPTER VII
NORTHERN RELIGION

CHAPTER VIII
IN STANSTEAD WOODS

CHAPTER IX
THE ALARM

CHAPTER X
THE PASSAGE TO THE GARDEN-HOUSE

CHAPTER XI
THE GARDEN-HOUSE

CHAPTER XII
THE NIGHT-RIDE

CHAPTER XIII
IN PRISON

CHAPTER XIV
AN OPEN DOOR

CHAPTER XV
THE ROLLING OF THE STONE

BY WHAT AUTHORITY?
PART I
CHAPTER I
THE SITUATION

To the casual Londoner who lounged, intolerant and impatient, at the blacksmiths door while a horse was shod, or a cracked spoke mended, Great Keynes seemed but a poor backwater of a place, compared with the rush of the Brighton road eight miles to the east from which he had turned off, or the whirling cauldron of London City, twenty miles to the north, towards which he was travelling.

The triangular green, with its stocks and horse-pond, overlooked by the grey benignant church-tower, seemed a tame exchange for seething Cheapside and the crowded ways about the Temple or Whitehall; and it was strange to think that the solemn-faced rustics who stared respectfully at the gorgeous stranger were of the same human race as the quick-eyed, voluble townsmen who chattered and laughed and grimaced over the news that came up daily from the Continent or the North, and was tossed to and fro, embroidered and discredited alternately, all day long.

And yet the great waves and movements that, rising in the hearts of kings and politicians, or in the sudden strokes of Divine Providence, swept over Europe and England, eventually always rippled up into this placid country village; and the lives of Master Musgrave, who had retired upon his earnings, and of old Martin, who cobbled the ploughmens shoes, were definitely affected and changed by the plans of far-away Scottish gentlemen, and the hopes and fears of the inhabitants of South Europe. Through all the earlier part of Elizabeths reign, the menace of the Spanish Empire brooded low on the southern horizon, and a responsive mutter of storm sounded now and again from the north, where Mary Stuart reigned over mens hearts, if not their homes; and lovers of secular England shook their heads and were silent as they thought of their tiny country, so rent with internal strife, and ringed with danger.

For Great Keynes, however, as for most English villages and towns at this time, secular affairs were so deeply and intricately interwoven with ecclesiastical matters that none dared decide on the one question without considering its relation to the other; and ecclesiastical affairs, too, touched them more personally than any other, since every religious change scored a record of itself presently within the church that was as familiar to them as their own cottages.

On none had the religious changes fallen with more severity than on the Maxwell family that lived in the Hall, at the upper and southern end of the green. Old Sir Nicholas, though his convictions had survived the tempest of unrest and trouble that had swept over England, and he had remained a convinced and a stubborn Catholic, yet his spiritual system was sore and inflamed within him. To his simple and obstinate soul it was an irritating puzzle as to how any man could pass from the old to a new faith, and he had been known to lay his whip across the back of a servant who had professed a desire to try the new religion.

His wife, a stately lady, a few years younger than himself, did what she could to keep her lord quiet, and to save him from incurring by his indiscretion any further penalties beyond the enforced journeys before the Commission, and the fines inflicted on all who refused to attend their parish church. So the old man devoted himself to his estates and the further improvement of the house and gardens, and to the inculcation of sound religious principles into the minds of his two sons who were living at home with their parents; and strove to hold his tongue, and his hand, in public.

The elder of these two, Mr. James as he was commonly called, was rather a mysterious personage to the village, and to such neighbours as they had. He was often in town, and when at home, although extremely pleasant and courteous, never talked about himself and seemed to be only very moderately interested in the estate and the country-life generally. This, coupled with the fact that he would presumably succeed his father, gave rise to a good deal of gossip, and even some suspicion.

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