THE ART OF LETTERS1921 |
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17 psl.
... interest of Grace Abounding . But the tedious passages are extraor- dinarily few , considering that the author had the passions of a preacher . No doubt the fact that , when he wrote The Pilgrim's Progress , he was not definitely ...
... interest of Grace Abounding . But the tedious passages are extraor- dinarily few , considering that the author had the passions of a preacher . No doubt the fact that , when he wrote The Pilgrim's Progress , he was not definitely ...
31 psl.
... interest and even friendship was Ben Jonson . Jonson's Catholicism may have been a link be- tween them . But , more important than that , Jonson was , like Donne himself , an inflamed pedant . For each of them learning was the necessary ...
... interest and even friendship was Ben Jonson . Jonson's Catholicism may have been a link be- tween them . But , more important than that , Jonson was , like Donne himself , an inflamed pedant . For each of them learning was the necessary ...
32 psl.
... interest in recent years - the Donne who experienced more variously than any other poet of his time " the queasy pain of being beloved and loving . " Donne was curious of adventures of many kinds , but in nothing more than in love . As ...
... interest in recent years - the Donne who experienced more variously than any other poet of his time " the queasy pain of being beloved and loving . " Donne was curious of adventures of many kinds , but in nothing more than in love . As ...
42 psl.
... interest as suggesting the correct pronunciation of his name : John Donne ; Anne Donne ; Undone . His married life , however , in spite of a succession of mis- eries due to ill - health , debt and thwarted ambition , seems to have been ...
... interest as suggesting the correct pronunciation of his name : John Donne ; Anne Donne ; Undone . His married life , however , in spite of a succession of mis- eries due to ill - health , debt and thwarted ambition , seems to have been ...
44 psl.
... interest them . . . . Miserable and inhuman fortune , when I must practise my lying in the grave by lying still . " It does not surprise one to learn that a man thus assailed by wretchedness and given to looking in the mirror of his own ...
... interest them . . . . Miserable and inhuman fortune , when I must practise my lying in the grave by lying still . " It does not surprise one to learn that a man thus assailed by wretchedness and given to looking in the mirror of his own ...
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admiration Æschylus amusing artist beauty Ben Jonson book-review Bunyan called Campion Charles Lamb charming Coleridge confession Coriolanus Countess of Bedford Cowper criticism declares delight Diary Donne Donne's doubt Elizabethan English essay expression eyes fact fancy fear feel genius give Gosse Gray greatest Horace Horace Walpole human imagination interest Irish Jane Austen John Gilpin Johnson kind Lady Lamb laugh less letters literary literature lived look lover Madame du Deffand Matthew Arnold Meredith modern mood moral nature never noble passion Pepys perfect Pilgrim's Progress play pleasure poems poet poetic poetry Pope portrait praise prose Puritan reader regard religion rhymes romantic Saintsbury satires seems sense sentence Sermons Shakespeare Shelley Sir Henry Newbolt songs soul spirit story Strawberry Hill Swift Swinburne tells things thought tion to-day truth Unwin verse Walpole Whibley words Wordsworth write written wrote