Poets and Puritans: By T.R. Glover ...Methuen & Company, Limited, 1923 - 323 pages |
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Page 7
... prose . " And sure it is yet a most beautifull and sweet country as any is under heaven , seamed throughout with many goodly rivers , replenished with all sortes of fish , most abundantly sprinckled with many sweet Ilandes and goodly ...
... prose . " And sure it is yet a most beautifull and sweet country as any is under heaven , seamed throughout with many goodly rivers , replenished with all sortes of fish , most abundantly sprinckled with many sweet Ilandes and goodly ...
Page 27
... Prose Works ( 1738 ) , i . 147. Yet he also says ( P. L. , iv . 222 ) , “ Knowledge of good , bought dear by knowing ill . " See J. S. Harrison , Platonism in English Poetry of the 16th and 17th Centuries , ch . i . § 1 , for a ...
... Prose Works ( 1738 ) , i . 147. Yet he also says ( P. L. , iv . 222 ) , “ Knowledge of good , bought dear by knowing ill . " See J. S. Harrison , Platonism in English Poetry of the 16th and 17th Centuries , ch . i . § 1 , for a ...
Page 35
... can stir up rich fathers to bestow exquisite educa- tion upon their children , and so dedicate them to the service of the Gospel . ” — Animadversions , Prose i . 97 . ledge of God - and what was yet to break MILTON 35.
... can stir up rich fathers to bestow exquisite educa- tion upon their children , and so dedicate them to the service of the Gospel . ” — Animadversions , Prose i . 97 . ledge of God - and what was yet to break MILTON 35.
Page 36
... prose - enthusiasm and hero - worship . He lives in a great age , an age of freedom and of victory— and round about him are men for whom it is all common- place . How can it be ? How can they not feel the same " sovereign and reviving ...
... prose - enthusiasm and hero - worship . He lives in a great age , an age of freedom and of victory— and round about him are men for whom it is all common- place . How can it be ? How can they not feel the same " sovereign and reviving ...
Page 37
... Prose i . 90 , " For he being equally near to his whole Creation of Mankind . . . hath yet ever had this Island under the special indulgent eye of his Providence ; and pitying us first of all other Nations .... " He refers to Wiclif ...
... Prose i . 90 , " For he being equally near to his whole Creation of Mankind . . . hath yet ever had this Island under the special indulgent eye of his Providence ; and pitying us first of all other Nations .... " He refers to Wiclif ...
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Account of Corsica Aldeburgh allegory Areopagitica beauty Boswell Bunyan called Cambridge Carlyle Carlyle's Christian Church Church of England Coleridge Corsica Cowper Crabbe Crabbe's criticism Cromwell death doth Dr Johnson England English eternal Evelyn experience eyes Faerie Queene fancy father feeling French Revolution George Crabbe George Fox happy hath heart Heaven Hebrides Heroes Horace Walpole human humour imagination King knew Knight Lady Hesketh later Letter to Temple liberty lived London look Lord marriage Milton mind nature never Olney once Paoli Paradise Lost passage Pepys perhaps Pilgrim's Progress Plato poem poet poet's poetry poor Prelude Prose Puritan reader religion says seems sense soul Spenser spirit story strange talk tells things thou thought true truth Unwin verse wonder words Wordsworth writes wrote young