While an undergraduate, Boone won the chancellor's prize for Latin verse on The Foundation of the Persian Empire, and in 1817 the Newdigate for English verse on the subject of "The Farnese Hercules".[3] In 1820 he received the chancellor's prize for the Latin essay. He published Men and Things in 1823: a Poem in three Epistles with Notes, in which he showed admiration for George Canning.[1]
Boone wrote The Oxford Spy in Verse, the first four "dialogues" of which appeared in 1818, the fifth and last in 1819. This anonymous satire on Oxford University life created a sensation at the time of its publication.[1] The criticisms it articulated, from the students' point of view, of the university and its tuition, were well-informed, and reflected what some senior members took to be undergraduate concerns. They were also close to points raised at the time in the Edinburgh Review, in their concern for modernisation of the syllabus.[4][5]
In June 1822 the first number of The Council of Ten was published, a monthly periodical of which Boone was the editor and almost the sole contributor; it lasted a year.[1]
Boone was editor of the British Critic and Theological Review.[1] Appointed in 1834, he decided to sharpen the theological focus of the periodical, also cutting back on its function as journal of record for the clergy. He advocated a broad coalition of Protestants, giving immediate offence (according to Edward Churton, in correspondence with Arthur Philip Perceval).[6]
Boone then came under pressure from the Tractarians, to include their reviews. By 1837 his position was made untenable by John Henry Newman.[7] Boone's attempt to remain above the fray in the row over Renn Dickson Hampden had earned him the partisan Newman's enmity.[8] Newman, also, was being urged into a divisive approach that would see tractarian contributions as distinctive and noticeable in the Review.[6] In a slow-motion coup, the "mild" liberal views associated with Boone were pushed out, despite the efforts of Henry Handley Norris of the controlling Hackney Phalanx representing High Church orthodoxy, and Churton.[9]
Boone also wrote:[1]
- An Essay on the Study of Modern History, 1821.
- National Education: a Sermon, 1833.
- The Educational Economy of England, Part i. on the External Economy of Education; or the Means of providing Instruction for the People, 1838.
- The Need of Christianity to Cities: a Sermon, 1844. Connected with Charles Blomfield's efforts to expand Anglican church provision, this sermon has been called a "jeremiad" against contemporary urban life, attacking its "foul luxuriance".[10][11][12]
- One, Manifold, or, System; Introductory Argument, open letter addressed to Raikes Currie, 1848.
- Sermons on Various Subjects and Occasions, with a Brief Appendix on the Modern Philosophy of Unbelief, 1853.
- Two Sermons on the Prospect of a General War, 1854.
- The Position and Functions of Bishops in our Colonies; a Sermon, 1856.
- Sermons chiefly on the Theory of Belief, 1860.