Poets and Puritans: By T.R. Glover ...Methuen & Company, Limited, 1923 - 323 pages |
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Page 22
... imagination of all that he read in the books ; with enchantments , with quarrels , battles , chal- lenges , wounds , amorous plaints , loves , torments and follies impossible . " 2 A knight errant , he held , " must be chaste in thought ...
... imagination of all that he read in the books ; with enchantments , with quarrels , battles , chal- lenges , wounds , amorous plaints , loves , torments and follies impossible . " 2 A knight errant , he held , " must be chaste in thought ...
Page 26
... imagination on fire ? And he seems to have lavished all his gifts on the the description.2 " The poet , " in Wordsworth's phrase , “ trusting to primary instincts , luxuriates among the felicities of love and wine . " Is it safely ...
... imagination on fire ? And he seems to have lavished all his gifts on the the description.2 " The poet , " in Wordsworth's phrase , “ trusting to primary instincts , luxuriates among the felicities of love and wine . " Is it safely ...
Page 45
... imagination . Here the thing is done by sound . The bright day dawns , and how does Milton bring it before us ? He hears and we hear , and from the hearing comes realization . Listen ! While the ploughman , near at hand , Whistles o'er ...
... imagination . Here the thing is done by sound . The bright day dawns , and how does Milton bring it before us ? He hears and we hear , and from the hearing comes realization . Listen ! While the ploughman , near at hand , Whistles o'er ...
Page 66
... imagination . It is only in Heaven and in Eden before the Fall that we find it hard to imagine with him . The secret he tells us himself , in Areopagitica . " Good and evil we know in the field of 66 POETS AND PURITANS.
... imagination . It is only in Heaven and in Eden before the Fall that we find it hard to imagine with him . The secret he tells us himself , in Areopagitica . " Good and evil we know in the field of 66 POETS AND PURITANS.
Page 68
... imagination to such highth ? ( P. L. , vi . 297. ) Under the symbol he is giving us a philosophy — a philo- sophy of human life , of law , disobedience , and doom , these familiar enough , and of " grace prevenient , " which is not now ...
... imagination to such highth ? ( P. L. , vi . 297. ) Under the symbol he is giving us a philosophy — a philo- sophy of human life , of law , disobedience , and doom , these familiar enough , and of " grace prevenient , " which is not now ...
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Common terms and phrases
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