Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- LIST OF ILLUSTRATIONS
- INTRODUCTION TO THIS VOLUME
- BIBLIOGRAPHICAL NOTE
- “FORS CLAVIGERA”: VOLUME VII. (1877): LETTERS 73–84
- SYNOPSIS OF LETTERS 73–84
- LETTER 73 COMMISSARIAT
- LETTER 74 FATHER-LAW
- LETTER 75 STAR LAW
- LETTER 76 OUR BATTLE IS IMMORTAL
- LETTER 77 THE LORD THAT BOUGHT US
- LETTER 78 THE SWORD OF MICHAEL
- LETTER 79 LIFE GUARDS OF NEW LIFE
- LETTER 80 THE TWO CLAVIGERÆ
- LETTER 81 THE FIRST EPISTLE OF JOHN
- LETTER 82 HEAVENLY CHOIRS
- LETTER 83 HESIOD'S MEASURE
- LETTER 84 THE LAST WORDS OF THE VIRGIN
- “FORS CLAVIGERA”: VOLUME VIII. (1878–1884): LETTERS 85–96
- APPENDIX: ADDITIONAL PASSAGES FROM THE MANUSCRIPT OF, AND LETTERS RELATING TO, “FORS CLAVIGERA”
- INDEX
- Plate section
LETTER 81 - THE FIRST EPISTLE OF JOHN
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 07 September 2011
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- LIST OF ILLUSTRATIONS
- INTRODUCTION TO THIS VOLUME
- BIBLIOGRAPHICAL NOTE
- “FORS CLAVIGERA”: VOLUME VII. (1877): LETTERS 73–84
- SYNOPSIS OF LETTERS 73–84
- LETTER 73 COMMISSARIAT
- LETTER 74 FATHER-LAW
- LETTER 75 STAR LAW
- LETTER 76 OUR BATTLE IS IMMORTAL
- LETTER 77 THE LORD THAT BOUGHT US
- LETTER 78 THE SWORD OF MICHAEL
- LETTER 79 LIFE GUARDS OF NEW LIFE
- LETTER 80 THE TWO CLAVIGERÆ
- LETTER 81 THE FIRST EPISTLE OF JOHN
- LETTER 82 HEAVENLY CHOIRS
- LETTER 83 HESIOD'S MEASURE
- LETTER 84 THE LAST WORDS OF THE VIRGIN
- “FORS CLAVIGERA”: VOLUME VIII. (1878–1884): LETTERS 85–96
- APPENDIX: ADDITIONAL PASSAGES FROM THE MANUSCRIPT OF, AND LETTERS RELATING TO, “FORS CLAVIGERA”
- INDEX
- Plate section
Summary
Brantwood, 13th August, 1877
1. The Thirteenth,—and not a word yet from any of my lady-friends in defence of themselves! Are they going to be as mute as the Bishops?
But I have a delightful little note from the young lady whose praise of my goodness I permitted myself to quote in the last article of my August correspondence,—delightful in several ways, but chiefly because she has done, like a good girl, what she was asked to do, and told me the “wicked things that people say.”
“They say you are ‘unreasoning’ ‘intolerably conceited’ ‘self-asserting’; that you write about what you have no knowledge of (Politic. Econ.); and two or three have positively asserted, and tried to persuade me, that you are mad—really mad!! They make me so angry, I don't know what to do with myself.”
The first thing to be done with yourself, I should say, my dear, is to find out why you are angry. You would not be so, unless you clearly saw that all these sayings were malignant sayings, and come from people who would be very thankful if I were mad, or if they could find any other excuse for not doing as I bid, and as they are determined not to do. But suppose, instead of letting them make you angry, you serenely ask them what I have said that is wrong; and make them, if they are persons with any pretence to education, specify any article of my teaching, on any subject, which they think false, and give you their reason for thinking it so.
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- Information
- The Works of John Ruskin , pp. 191 - 219Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2010First published in: 1907