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  • Seller image for Life and Work of Feodora Gleichen for sale by Barter Books Ltd

    Gleichen, Feodora

    Published by Gleichen, London, 1934

    Seller: Barter Books Ltd, Alnwick, NORTH, United Kingdom

    Association Member: IOBA

    Seller rating 5 out of 5 stars 5-star rating, Learn more about seller ratings

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    £ 48.30

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    Condition: Very Good. Privately Printed. VG : in very good condition without dust jacket. 260mm x 210mm (10" x 8"). 12pp + plates. 24 b/w plates. Blue hardback cloth cover with cream vellum spine.

  • Seller image for Original Autogramme Maxwell Gray, William Michael Rossetti, "Rita", Feodora Gleichen, George Frampton, NN, J.B. Johnson, Herbert Kardinal Vaughan, Father Ignatius of Jesus, NN. P. Raimondo (?) /// Autograph signiert signed signee for sale by Wimbauer Buchversand

    £ 1,332.11

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    Ships from Germany to U.S.A.

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    Blatt. Condition: Gut. festes Albumblatt mit Klebstreifenrückstand und Eckknick, mit aufmontiertem Cutouts /Brieffragmenten mit zum Teil ausführlichen eigenhändigen Zusätzen / Zitaten: von Maxwell Gray, William Michael Rossetti, "Rita" (Author of The Ending of my Days"), Lady Feodora Gleichen, George Frampton, ein unidentifizierter Connor . (?), ein unidentifizierter J. B. Johnson (?), Herbert Kardinal Vaughan, Father Ignatius of Jesus, O.S.B., Monk, sowie ein unidentizierter Geistlicher P. Raimondo (?) /// Autogramm Autograph signiert signed signee /// Joseph Leycester Lyne, known by his religious name as Father Ignatius of Jesus[1]: 7 (23 November 1837 - 16 October 1908), was an Anglican Benedictine monk. He commenced a movement to reintroduce monasticism into the Church of England.[2] Lyne was born in Trinity Square, in the parish of All Hallows-by-the-Tower, London, on 23 November 1837. He was the second son of seven children of Francis Lyne, merchant of the City of London, by his wife Louisa Genevieve (d. 1877), daughter of George Hanmer Leycester, of White Place, near Maidenhead, Berkshire, who came of the well-known Cheshire family, the Leycesters of Tabley.[3]: 494 In October 1847 Lyne entered St Paul's School, London, under Herbert Kynaston. In 1852 he suffered corporal punishment for a breach of discipline.[3]: 494 His biographer, Baroness Beatrice de Bertouch, four years before his death, described it as the event, "which not only endangered his life" but also "was the cause of a distressing condition of nerve collapse, the effects of which he feels to this day". Bertouch saw it as "the culminating link in a heavy chain of influences, and one which was destined to throw a strange psychological glamour over the entire atmosphere of this devotional and emotional career."[1]: 31 He was removed, and his education was completed at private schools in Spalding and Worcester.[3]: 494 He early developed advanced views of sacramental doctrine.[3]: 494 Ignatius of Llanthony Ministry Portrait of Father Ignatius c.1865 An acquaintance with Bishop Robert Eden procured Lyne's admission to Trinity College, Glenalmond. There he studied theology under William Bright, and impressed the warden, John Hannah, by his earnest piety.[3]: 494-495 After a year's lay work as catechist in Inverness, where his eccentricity and impatience of discipline brought him into collision with Bishop Eden, Lyne was ordained into the diaconate in 1860, on the express condition that he should remain a deacon and abstain from preaching for three years. He became curate to George Rundle Prynne, vicar of St Peter's, Plymouth, and soon started a guild for men and boys, called the Society of the Love of Jesus,[1]: 92 with himself as superior. Prynne, to Lyne's mother, wrote: "He was animated by a very true spirit of devotion in carrying out such work as was assigned to him; and his earnest and loving character largely won the affections of those among whom he ministered."[4] In Plymouth, Lyne formed two friendships which were very important in his future career; these two friends were Edward Bouverie Pusey and Priscilla Lydia Sellon.[5]: 164 According to Bertouch, these two were "the ghostly foster-parents of the monk's vocation, or at any rate of its consummation".[1]: 82 Almost up to his death, Pusey was the chosen administrator of the Sacrament of Penance to Ignatius. Pusey was his "friend, his confidant, his arbitrator in all situations difficult."[1]: 83 This Society grew to about forty members. Lyne went to Pusey and Sellon for advice about it. Sellon, with Pusey's encouragement, loaned him a house to begin his community life on a monastic pattern. He was encouraged by Sellon, and largely influenced by Pusey, who presented him with his first monastic habit. With two Brothers, he took possession of this house, but the existence of the community was cut short by Lyne's serious illness.[1]: 92-100 [4] In Bruges, Belgium, where he went to convalesce, he studied the Rule of Saint Bene.