The Great Poets and Their TheologyAmerican Baptist Publication Society, 1897 - 531 páginas |
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Página xi
... Regards the process of purification as a penal one The nine spheres of the " Paradiso " The rose of the blessed . . Light and love constitute Dante's heaven SHAKESPEARE THE UNIVERSALITY OF SHAKESPEARE Mysterious largeness of Shakespeare ...
... Regards the process of purification as a penal one The nine spheres of the " Paradiso " The rose of the blessed . . Light and love constitute Dante's heaven SHAKESPEARE THE UNIVERSALITY OF SHAKESPEARE Mysterious largeness of Shakespeare ...
Página 7
... regards the " Odyssey " as composed by a differ- ent and later author than the “ Iliad . ” So the combat- ants are as to numbers pretty evenly balanced , while genius and learning , though at one time they seemed mainly to favor the ...
... regards the " Odyssey " as composed by a differ- ent and later author than the “ Iliad . ” So the combat- ants are as to numbers pretty evenly balanced , while genius and learning , though at one time they seemed mainly to favor the ...
Página 8
... regard the performance not as illusion but as real life . Virgil gives us an instance of the second method the hero of the " Eneid " relates the preceding history to Dido ; but here the speaker is too evidently talking not so much to ...
... regard the performance not as illusion but as real life . Virgil gives us an instance of the second method the hero of the " Eneid " relates the preceding history to Dido ; but here the speaker is too evidently talking not so much to ...
Página 25
... Hil- precht of the University of Pennsylvania have brought to light at Nippur in Babylonia an inscription which he regards as earlier than 4000 B. C. Yet there are Old Testament critics who tell us that Recent evidence from Egypt.
... Hil- precht of the University of Pennsylvania have brought to light at Nippur in Babylonia an inscription which he regards as earlier than 4000 B. C. Yet there are Old Testament critics who tell us that Recent evidence from Egypt.
Página 41
... regard only their own honor and pleasure in the government they exercise . They are envious - Poseidon envies the Greeks their rampart , because it rivals the wall he had built for Troy , and he envies the Phæacians their prosperous ...
... regard only their own honor and pleasure in the government they exercise . They are envious - Poseidon envies the Greeks their rampart , because it rivals the wall he had built for Troy , and he envies the Phæacians their prosperous ...
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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