A Gathered Church: The Literature of the English Dissenting Interest, 1700-1930Oxford University Press, 1978 - 152 Seiten In this provocative volume well-known poet and literary critic Donald Davie examines the dissenting voice in English literature, religion, and politics. Examining the works of writers such as Milton, Charles Blake, and George Eliot; pulpit-orators such as Robert Hall; scientists like Michael Faraday; and political activists such as Joseph Priestley, he considers such questions as: How did their voice develop after their death? And were these dissenters the religious bigots, political time-servers, and artistic philistines they are portrayed as? |
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Seite 5
... least satisfactory works ; but I'm inclined to think that they are unsatisfactory because of the intractability of the issues to which Eliot addressed himself , at least as much as because of any slackness or self - indulgence in Eliot ...
... least satisfactory works ; but I'm inclined to think that they are unsatisfactory because of the intractability of the issues to which Eliot addressed himself , at least as much as because of any slackness or self - indulgence in Eliot ...
Seite 33
... least as often as in Chapel . While we are about it , we may as well look at some things that have been said about Watts up to our own day . Here is Leslie Stephen in 1876 : The name of Watts , associated with certain hymns still dear ...
... least as often as in Chapel . While we are about it , we may as well look at some things that have been said about Watts up to our own day . Here is Leslie Stephen in 1876 : The name of Watts , associated with certain hymns still dear ...
Seite 104
... least that the first is an infallible register of the second . The history of English Dissent in the nineteenth century , as Mark Rutherford read it , disproves this cherished contention ; and I may as well say that I think Rutherford ...
... least that the first is an infallible register of the second . The history of English Dissent in the nineteenth century , as Mark Rutherford read it , disproves this cherished contention ; and I may as well say that I think Rutherford ...
Inhalt
Lecture | 1 |
Dissent in the Present Century | 91 |
Notes | 109 |
Urheberrecht | |
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A Gathered Church: The Literature of the English Dissenting Interest, 1700-1930 Donald Davie Eingeschränkte Leseprobe - 2012 |
A Gathered Church: The Literature of the English Dissenting Interest, 1700-1930 Donald Davie Eingeschränkte Leseprobe - 2011 |
A Gathered Church: The Literature of the English Dissenting Interest, 1700-1930 Donald Davie Keine Leseprobe verfügbar - 1978 |
Häufige Begriffe und Wortgruppen
admirable aesthetic Anglican Arminian Arnold Blake Bogue and Bennett Bunyan called Calvinism Calvinist candour certainly Chapel Charles Wesley Christ Christian Church clergy Congregational Congregationalism Congregationalists culture D. H. Lawrence declared devotion dissenting minister doctrine Doddridge's E. P. Thompson Edwards's eighteenth century Eliot England English Dissent Establishment Evangelical fact Faraday Faraday's George Halévy historians hymns instance intellectual Isaac Watts John Wesley Johnson Lawrence Lawrence's lecture Leslie Stephen less literary literature Lucy Aikin Mark Rutherford Matthew ment Methodists Miall mind nineteenth century Nonconformist Old Dissent Orthodox Dissent Particular Baptists Philip Doddridge philistinism photograph Doreen Davie poem poet poetry political Pope preached Priestley Protestant Psalms pulpit Puritanism quote R. W. Dale religion religious Robert Hall Scripture sect seems sense sentiments social Socinian spirit Spurgeon tarian theology thought tion tradition Unitarian verses Watts and Doddridge Watts's Wesley's Wesleyan Whitefield William Hale White words worship