A guide to English literature. 3. From Donne to MarvellBoris Ford Penguin Books, 1956 |
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Page 208
... ideas and experiences - even of his personal doubts and spites . Their mood ranges from the inspired faith of Areopagitica to the thinly disguised disillusionment of The Ready and Easy Way15 ; their style from the heights of poetic ...
... ideas and experiences - even of his personal doubts and spites . Their mood ranges from the inspired faith of Areopagitica to the thinly disguised disillusionment of The Ready and Easy Way15 ; their style from the heights of poetic ...
Page 212
... ideas of the Parliamentarians ; but the terms in which he thought were those of the new society , with the interests and behaviour of com- petitive men mercilessly revealed . Most of the paradoxes are the product of Hobbes's greatest ...
... ideas of the Parliamentarians ; but the terms in which he thought were those of the new society , with the interests and behaviour of com- petitive men mercilessly revealed . Most of the paradoxes are the product of Hobbes's greatest ...
Page 221
... ideas which , as personification , allegory , and symbolism , carried the artistic per- fection of the religious genre to its height . The book itself is surpris- ingly lacking in external event , since it makes the most of the growth ...
... ideas which , as personification , allegory , and symbolism , carried the artistic per- fection of the religious genre to its height . The book itself is surpris- ingly lacking in external event , since it makes the most of the growth ...
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Common terms and phrases
achieved appear argument authority became beginning body Book called Cambridge character characteristic Charles Christian Church Civil classical common complete concerned contemporary Court critical death described direct discussion divine Donne Donne's early effect Elizabethan English epigram Essays example experience expression feeling followed further gives hand Herbert History human ideas imagery influence intellectual interest Italy John Jonson kind language later learning less lines literary literature living London lyric manner Marvell meaning Metaphysical Milton mind moral nature Oxford passages period play poem poetic poetry poets political present prose published Puritan reader reading reason religious remains Restoration seems sense Seventeenth Century social society soul spirit style suggests theme things Thomas thou thought tion tone tradition universe verse whole writing wrote