The Great Poets and Their TheologyAmerican Baptist Publication Society, 1897 - 531 páginas |
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... human interest predominates Splendor of the Homeric poetry VIRGIL 50 · 51 52 54 55 56 57 59 61 THE POET OF THE ROMAN EMPIRE . Virgil's place in history . The poet a product of his time His early surroundings . • 65-103 67 68 69 His ...
... human interest predominates Splendor of the Homeric poetry VIRGIL 50 · 51 52 54 55 56 57 59 61 THE POET OF THE ROMAN EMPIRE . Virgil's place in history . The poet a product of his time His early surroundings . • 65-103 67 68 69 His ...
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... human delights me . With wonderful ease and simplicity he depicts to us , in noble metrical form , the whole world of human action and feeling . No strong He is him- Like Shakes- Homer reigns by right of possession , and both the poets ...
... human delights me . With wonderful ease and simplicity he depicts to us , in noble metrical form , the whole world of human action and feeling . No strong He is him- Like Shakes- Homer reigns by right of possession , and both the poets ...
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... human mind , this law of human thought , that later writers can imitate but never surpass them , this surely is a far greater demand upon our believing faculty than is the hypothesis of one author for them both . This conviction will be ...
... human mind , this law of human thought , that later writers can imitate but never surpass them , this surely is a far greater demand upon our believing faculty than is the hypothesis of one author for them both . This conviction will be ...
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... human nature de- mands a deity free from limitations and lifted above the finite ; secondly , that human imagination is utterly un- able to construct for itself such a deity , and when it at- tempts the task succeeds only in making a ...
... human nature de- mands a deity free from limitations and lifted above the finite ; secondly , that human imagination is utterly un- able to construct for itself such a deity , and when it at- tempts the task succeeds only in making a ...
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... human affairs everywhere a field for their activity ; the artistic instinct unconsciously wrought over this material ... humanity to rid itself of the thought of a moral God who would challenge its impurity and pun- ish its ...
... human affairs everywhere a field for their activity ; the artistic instinct unconsciously wrought over this material ... humanity to rid itself of the thought of a moral God who would challenge its impurity and pun- ish its ...
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Æneid Alfred Tennyson beauty believe Browning's called character Christ Christian church Coleridge conscience Dante Dante's dark death declared Divine Comedy doctrine dramatic earth Eclogues element epic eternal evil expression eyes fact faith Faust feeling freedom genius Georgics give God's gods Goethe Goethe's greatest Greek guilt heart heaven hell holiness Homer hope human nature ideal Iliad imagination immortal Italy John Milton King knowledge learned light literary literature live lost Macbeth man's means Milton mind Monist moral never Odyssey pantheistic Paradise Paradise Lost passion Peisistratus philosophy poem poet poet's poetic poetry punishment purgatory Puritan regard religion religious Robert Browning Roman Rome Satan Scripture seems sense Shakespeare song sorrow soul sphere spirit star story sublime sweet Tennyson thee theology things thou thought tion true truth universe verse Virgil voice whole words Wordsworth writing youth Zeus