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Robert Elsmere

by Humphry, Mrs. Ward

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"Robert Elsmere" by Mrs. Humphry Ward, published in 1888, recounts the spiritual crisis and subsequent social engagement of an Oxford-trained clergyman. The novel explores Elsmere's intellectual confrontation with German rationalist writings that challenge his Anglican faith. Rather than rejecting his religion entirely or converting to Catholicism, he seeks a new moral path through active social work among impoverished communities. The narrative examines the conflicts between faith, doubt, and social responsibility within Victorian society, reflecting contemporary debates surrounding religion and modernity.

The book became highly controversial and a bestseller upon its release, partly due to its frank treatment of religious doubt in a period when such topics were sensitive. Its reception included notable criticism from prominent figures, including Prime Minister William Ewart Gladstone. The novel engages with issues of faith, doubt, and social reform, set against the backdrop of late Victorian England’s religious landscape.

From the opening pages

The quotations given in the present book on pp. 58 , 330 , and 536 , are either literally or substantially taken from a volume of Lay Sermons, called The Witness of God , by the late Professor T. H. Green. WESTMORELAND It was a brilliant afternoon towards the end of May. The spring had been unusually cold and late, and it was evident from the general aspect of the lonely Westmoreland valley of Long Whindale that warmth and sunshine had only just penetrated to its bare green recesses, where the few scattered trees were fast rushing into their full summer dress, while at their feet, and along the bank of the stream, the flowers of March and April still lingered, as though they found it impossible to believe that their rough brother, the east wind, had at last deserted them. The narrow road, which was the only link between the farmhouses sheltered by the crags at the head of the valley and those far-away regions of town and civilisation suggested by the smoke wreaths of Whinborough on the southern horizon, was lined with masses of the white heckberry or bird-cherry, and ran, an arrowy line of white, through the greenness of the sloping pastures. The sides of some of the little becks running down into the main river and many of the plantations round the farms were gay with the same tree, so that the farmhouses, gray-roofed and gray-walled, standing in the hollows of the fells, seemed here and there to have been robbed of all their natural austerity of aspect, and to be masquerading in a dainty garb of white and green imposed upon them by the caprice of the spring. During the greater part of its course the valley of Long Whindale is tame and featureless. The hills at the lower part are low and rounded, and the sheep and cattle pasture over slopes unbroken either by wood or rock. The fields are bare and close shaven by the flocks which feed on them; the walls run either perpendicularly in many places up the fells or horizontally along them, so that, save for the wooded course of the tumbling river and the bush-grown hedges of the road, the whole valley looks like a green map divided by regular lines of grayish black. But as the walker penetrates farther, beyond a certain bend which the stream makes half…

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