Loss and Gain
John Henry Newman
Revised September, 2001—NR.
Works | Home
Contents
[There are no
chapter titles in this book—NR.]
Top | Works | Home
Dedication
TO THE VERY REV.
CHARLES W. RUSSELL, D.D.,
PRESIDENT OF ST. PATRICK'S COLLEGE, MAYNOOTH
&c. &c.
{v} MY DEAR
DR. RUSSELL,—Now
that at length I take the step of printing my name in the Title-page of
this Volume, I trust I shall not be encroaching on the kindness you have
so long shown to me, if I venture to follow it up by placing yours in
the page which comes next, thus associating myself with you, and
recommending myself to my readers by the association.
Not that I am dreaming of bringing down upon you, in
whole or part, the criticisms, just or unjust, which lie against a
literary attempt which has in some quarters been thought out of keeping
with my antecedents and my position; but the warm and sympathetic
interest which you took in Oxford matters thirty years ago, and the
benefits which I derived personally from that interest, are reasons why
I am {vi} desirous of prefixing your name to a Tale, which, whatever its
faults, at least is a more intelligible and exact representation of the
thoughts, sentiments, and aspirations, then and there prevailing, than
was to be found in the anti-Catholic pamphlets, charges, sermons,
reviews, and story-books of the day.
These reasons, too, must be my apology, should I seem to
be asking your acceptance of a Volume, which, over and above its
intrinsic defects, is, in its very subject and style, hardly
commensurate with the theological reputation and the ecclesiastical
station of the person to whom it is presented.
I am, my dear Dr. Russell,
Your affectionate friend,
JOHN H. NEWMAN.
THE ORATORY,
Feb. 21, 1874.
Top | Works | Home
Advertisement
{vii} THE following tale is not
intended as a work of controversy in behalf of the Catholic Religion,
but as a description of what is understood by few, viz., the course of
thought and state of mind,—or rather one such course and state,—which
issues in conviction of its Divine origin.
Nor is it founded on fact, to use the common phrase. It
is not the history of any individual mind among the recent converts to
the Catholic Church. The principal characters are imaginary; and the
writer wishes to disclaim personal allusion in any. It is with this view
that he has feigned ecclesiastical bodies and places, to avoid the
chance, which might otherwise occur, of unintentionally suggesting to
the reader real individuals, who were far from his thoughts.
At the same time, free use has been made of sayings and
doings which were characteristic of the time and place in which the
scene is laid. And, moreover, when, as in a tale, a general truth or
fact is exhibited in individual specimens {viii} of it, it is impossible
that the ideal representation should not more or less coincide, in spite
of the author's endeavour, or even without his recognition, with its
existing instances or champions.
It must also be added, to prevent a further
misconception, that no proper representative is intended in this tale of
the religious opinions which had lately so much influence in the
University of Oxford.
Feb. 21, 1848.
Top | Works | Home
Advertisement
to Sixth Edition
A TALE, directed against the
Oxford converts to the Catholic Faith, was sent from England to the
author of this Volume in the summer of 1847, when he was resident at
Santa Croce in Rome. Its contents were as wantonly and preposterously
fanciful, as they were injurious to those whose motives and actions it
professed to represent; but a formal criticism or grave notice of it
seemed to him out of place.
The suitable answer lay rather in the publication of a
second tale; drawn up with a stricter regard to truth and probability,
and with at least some personal knowledge of Oxford, and some perception
of the various aspects of the religious phenomenon, which the work in
question handled so rudely and so unskilfully.
Especially was he desirous of dissipating the fog of
pomposity and solemn pretence, which its writer had thrown around the
personages introduced into it, by showing, as in a specimen, that those
who were smitten with love of the Catholic {ix} Church, were
nevertheless as able to write common-sense prose as other men.
Under these circumstances "Loss and Gain" was
given to the public.
Feb. 21, 1874.
Top | Works | Home
Title Page
LOSS AND GAIN
THE STORY OF A CONVERT
BY
JOHN HENRY CARDINAL NEWMAN
OF THE ORATORY
ADHUC MODICUM
ALIQUANTULUM |
QUI VENTURUS EST,
VENIET, ET NON TARDABIT |
JUSTUS AUTEM MEUS EX
FIDE VIVIT |
SIXTEENTH IMPRESSION
LONGMANS, GREEN,
AND CO.
39 PATERNOSTER ROW, LONDON
NEW YORK AND BOMBAY
1906
|
Top | Works | Home
Newman Reader Works of John Henry Newman
Copyright © 2007 by The National Institute for Newman Studies. All rights reserved.
|