Saint John Fisher
โ Scribed by McNabb, Vincent, O.P.
- Publisher
- Sheed & Ward
- Year
- 1935
- Tongue
- English
- Leaves
- 132
- Category
- Library
No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.
โฆ Synopsis
โDEAR reader! you are about to take part in perhaps the greatest tragedy of an age that wrote Hamlet and Macbeth. Greater even than the writerโs part will be yours, the readerโs and hearerโs part. Only your hearing ear and your seeing eye will bring the tragedy to its own. But your seeing eye and hearing ear must first recognise that a greater than Hamlet or Macbeth is here. They are but splendid fiction. But the tragedy of the first and only Cardinal to receive the martyrโs crown is as real as the Yorkshire moors where John Fisher was born, or as Tower Hill where the Cardinal Bishop of Rochester was beheaded. Do not expect anything melodramatic or miraculous in this tragedy of tragedies: all on the heroโs side is as sober in colouring as the heather on a Yorkshire moor. All is as normal as the steadiness of the hills or the falling of flakes of snow.
Search as you may in the plain tale of this Yorkshireman who was spokesman of Englandโs faith and chivalry, you will find no gesture, no stir, no noise, but only a humble self-distrusting quest of the best. But, dear reader, in this outwardly emotionless love of God and men to see a tragedy beyond all telling or seeing will call from you the best of your mind and heart.โ
โฆ Subjects
Katherine of Aragon, Wolf Hall, Margaret Beaufort, Renaissance, War of the Roses, Luther, Cromwell, English Reformation, Henry VII, Henry VIII, St. John Fisher, Thomas Auldley, Erasmus, St. Thomas More
๐ SIMILAR VOLUMES
St. John of Damascus (ca. 675-749) is generally regarded as the last great figure of Greek Patrology. Outstandingly important for his support of images in the Iconoclastic Controversy, this priest-monk of St. Sabbas near Jerusalem is known also for his treatment of Christian morality and asceticism