God and the Poets |
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Page 39
... course , was the one who fell first and Adam fell out of love for her and the desire to share her fate . Unknown to her , Satan had squatted by her ear in the form of a toad while she slept and given her nightmarish thoughts . She tells ...
... course , was the one who fell first and Adam fell out of love for her and the desire to share her fate . Unknown to her , Satan had squatted by her ear in the form of a toad while she slept and given her nightmarish thoughts . She tells ...
Page 93
... course deliberately aimless and exaggerated , and the result is parody , yet even here we cannot help feeling that there is an appropriate mood to which these objects point , and the mixture of the exotic and the fam- iliar achieves a ...
... course deliberately aimless and exaggerated , and the result is parody , yet even here we cannot help feeling that there is an appropriate mood to which these objects point , and the mixture of the exotic and the fam- iliar achieves a ...
Page 213
... course there are intrusive moments in some works of literature where the reader simply recoils and is unable to move beyond to the total pattern of meaning because of his hostility to some specific attitude or belief revealed explicitly ...
... course there are intrusive moments in some works of literature where the reader simply recoils and is unable to move beyond to the total pattern of meaning because of his hostility to some specific attitude or belief revealed explicitly ...
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Common terms and phrases
Adam Adam's antinomian argument argument from design Arnold beauty belief 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 English eternal evil experience expression faith Fall feeling Gifford Lectures 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 poem poet poet's poetic poetry praise Psalm reader reality religion religious Sangschaw Satan Scotland 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 Whitman wicked words