God and the Poets |
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Page 109
... beauty and danger : Brute beauty and valour and act , oh , air , pride , plume here Buckle ! AND the fire that breaks from thee then , a billion Times told lovelier , more dangerous , O my chevalier ! The windhover is the poet's ...
... beauty and danger : Brute beauty and valour and act , oh , air , pride , plume here Buckle ! AND the fire that breaks from thee then , a billion Times told lovelier , more dangerous , O my chevalier ! The windhover is the poet's ...
Page 172
... beauty of the earth , Things to be cherished like the thought of heaven ? Divinity must live within herself : Passions of rain , or moods of falling snow ; Grievings in loneliness , or unsubdued Elations when the forest blooms ; gusty ...
... beauty of the earth , Things to be cherished like the thought of heaven ? Divinity must live within herself : Passions of rain , or moods of falling snow ; Grievings in loneliness , or unsubdued Elations when the forest blooms ; gusty ...
Page 173
... beauty ' : if we lived for ever , the moment of experienced beauty would be less sharp , less poignant , less real . Although time and change bring forgetfulness of both sorrows and joys , they also bring maturity and new and valuable ...
... beauty ' : if we lived for ever , the moment of experienced beauty would be less sharp , less poignant , less real . Although time and change bring forgetfulness of both sorrows and joys , they also bring maturity and new and valuable ...
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Common terms and phrases
Adam Adam's antinomian argument argument from design Arnold beauty belief biblical Book of Job Burns Burns's C.S. Lewis called Calvinist Canto century Christ Christian creed Dante Dante's darkness death deism divine doctrine earth Edwin Muir Eliphaz eternal evil experience expression faith Fall feeling glory God's goes grace hast Heaven Hebrew Hopkins Hugh MacDiarmid human imagery images imagination innocent James Thomson Job's justice kind language lecture literature Lord MacDiarmid man's meaning Milton mind mood moral moving mystery Nature never night orthodox Paradise Lost paradox perhaps poem poet poet's poetic poetry praise Psalm reader reality religion religious Sangschaw Satan Scottish seems sense sing speech stanza Stevens suffering suggest symbolic tells Tennyson thee theodicy theology things Thomson thou thought tion tradition truth universe Victorian poet vision visionary voice W.B. Yeats Wallace Stevens warl Whitman wicked words