A Guide to English Literature, Volume 3Cassell, 1964 |
From inside the book
Results 1-3 of 52
Page 43
... experience with such start- ling connexions between them , the whole process seems to work at a so much higher pressure , that in comparison the general Elizabethan use appears merely superficial and ingenious.2 When it fails , the ...
... experience with such start- ling connexions between them , the whole process seems to work at a so much higher pressure , that in comparison the general Elizabethan use appears merely superficial and ingenious.2 When it fails , the ...
Page 103
... experience may vary almost infinitely . In answering the criticisms of Professors C. S. Lewis and J. E. V. Crofts on Donne's love poetry , Mr Leishman and Mrs Bennett are right to insist on the need for a sensitive dis- crimination of ...
... experience may vary almost infinitely . In answering the criticisms of Professors C. S. Lewis and J. E. V. Crofts on Donne's love poetry , Mr Leishman and Mrs Bennett are right to insist on the need for a sensitive dis- crimination of ...
Page 177
... experience , that we can come to grasp the complexity of the great Psalm 22 , the Lord's Prayer , or Paradise Lost ; can come to see explicitly what was before only implicit to our less developed religious sensibility . It is probably ...
... experience , that we can come to grasp the complexity of the great Psalm 22 , the Lord's Prayer , or Paradise Lost ; can come to see explicitly what was before only implicit to our less developed religious sensibility . It is probably ...
Other editions - View all
Common terms and phrases
Andrew Marvell Anglican argument baroque Ben Jonson Browne Bunyan C. H. Herford Cambridge Carew Cavalier characteristic Charles Christian Church Civil classical common conceits contemporary Court Cowley Crashaw criticism death divine Donne's dramatic E. M. W. Tillyard effect elegies Elizabethan emotional English essay experience expression F. R. Leavis feeling Garden gentry Herbert Grierson History Hobbes Holy human imagery intellectual John Donne Jonson kind L. C. Knights language Latin Leviathan literary literature London lyric manner Marvell Marvell's medieval Metaphysical Poets Milton mind moral nature Oxford pamphlets Paradise Lost passages passion period philosophy Pilgrim's Progress poem poetic poetry political prose Puritan reader Religio Medici religion religious Renaissance Restoration Royalist satire sense Sermons seventeenth century Shakespeare Sir Thomas social society songs soul spirit stanza style Suckling suggests T. S. Eliot theme theological thou thought tion tone tradition universe Vaughan verse vols Waller whole words writing wrote