Cross-currents in 17th Century English Literature: The World, the Flesh, and the Spirit, Their Actions and ReactionsP. Smith, 1965 - 345 Seiten |
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Seite 68
... century are banal in style and the versification is unmusical doggerel . Its strength lay in the taste of the English people of all classes and in the organisation which had grown up to gratify that taste . For three centuries dramatic ...
... century are banal in style and the versification is unmusical doggerel . Its strength lay in the taste of the English people of all classes and in the organisation which had grown up to gratify that taste . For three centuries dramatic ...
Seite 337
... century is far from being the howling wilderness of barren scepticism which it seemed to Carlyle , that strange child of a marriage of Puritanism and rationalism . " The Eighteenth Century was a Sceptical Century ; in which little word ...
... century is far from being the howling wilderness of barren scepticism which it seemed to Carlyle , that strange child of a marriage of Puritanism and rationalism . " The Eighteenth Century was a Sceptical Century ; in which little word ...
Seite 338
... century was a century of great humani- tarian movements and witnessed two religious awakenings , the Wesleyan and the Evangelical , pre- cursors of the Catholic revival , Roman and Anglican . What then is one to say , if one can say ...
... century was a century of great humani- tarian movements and witnessed two religious awakenings , the Wesleyan and the Evangelical , pre- cursors of the Catholic revival , Roman and Anglican . What then is one to say , if one can say ...
Inhalt
RENAISSANCE AND REFORMATION | 1 |
EDMUND SPENSER | 29 |
COMEDY | 66 |
Urheberrecht | |
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accepted Aeschylus allegory Anglican audience Baxter Beaumont and Fletcher beauty Bunyan Cambridge Platonists Catholic century character Christ Christian Church conflict Coriolanus Court courtly criticism Dante death discipline divine doctrine Donne doth drama dramatists Dryden Elizabethan England English eternal ethical evil Faerie Queene faith father feeling God's grace hath heart Heaven HISTRIOMASTIX holy honour Hudibras human nature humanist ideal imagination imputed righteousness interest John Milton Jonson justice King learned literature loue love-poetry lover man's Marlowe marriage mediaeval ment mercy mind Montaigne moral never Othello pagan Paradise Lost passion Petrarch pious plays poem poet poetry political popular Presbyterian Protestant Protestantism Prynne Puritan reason Reformation religion religious Renaissance romance Saints Satan says secular sense serious sermons Shakespeare songs sonnets soul speak Spenser spirit story taste temper thee theme theology things thou thought tion tradition tragedy Troilus Troilus and Criseyde verse virtue words