Biographia Literaria ; Or, Biographical Sketches of My Literary Life and Opinions, Volumen1W. Pickering, 1847 |
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Página xxvi
... Milton . Now I verily think that I had never read the passage in the Omniana , when the lion illustration occurred to me ; I never yet have read the book through , though I have had it within reach all my life . It is not worth ...
... Milton . Now I verily think that I had never read the passage in the Omniana , when the lion illustration occurred to me ; I never yet have read the book through , though I have had it within reach all my life . It is not worth ...
Página cv
... such a " silly " work ! Shakespeare has been called silly by Puritans , Milton worse than silly by Prelatists and Papists , Wordsworth What more would we have a teacher of the Gospel to the good Works of the Justified . CV.
... such a " silly " work ! Shakespeare has been called silly by Puritans , Milton worse than silly by Prelatists and Papists , Wordsworth What more would we have a teacher of the Gospel to the good Works of the Justified . CV.
Página cxv
... Milton's Limbo with a living Faith apart in time from Love - and should not Mr. Newman's own Jus tification precedent to justifying Faith , go along with them ? In- deed I think this last is the Queen Chimæra of the whole tribe . 52 The ...
... Milton's Limbo with a living Faith apart in time from Love - and should not Mr. Newman's own Jus tification precedent to justifying Faith , go along with them ? In- deed I think this last is the Queen Chimæra of the whole tribe . 52 The ...
Página cxxvi
... Milton describes , 6 and which , my Father , when he visited Sicily knew , as other sojourners in Roman Catholic countries have known , to be actually provided by or in a church , which is rather too much all things to all men . 62 It ...
... Milton describes , 6 and which , my Father , when he visited Sicily knew , as other sojourners in Roman Catholic countries have known , to be actually provided by or in a church , which is rather too much all things to all men . 62 It ...
Página cxxviii
... Milton ; holds the memory of King Wil- liam infamous , and that of Cromwell execrable ; contemplates coldly the flames that consumed Latimer , and fires at remem- brance of the axe that beheaded Laud ; finds out that Dr. Arnold was over ...
... Milton ; holds the memory of King Wil- liam infamous , and that of Cromwell execrable ; contemplates coldly the flames that consumed Latimer , and fires at remem- brance of the axe that beheaded Laud ; finds out that Dr. Arnold was over ...
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admiration Antinomianism appear Archdeacon Hare Aristotle baptism believe Biographia Biographia Literaria called Catholic cause character Christ Christ's Hospital Christian Church Coleridge Coleridge's contained criticism deny divine doctrine edition Essay Eucharist evidence expressed faculties faith fancy Father feeling former genius grace habit heart Hobbes Holy human Hume ideas imagination intellectual Irenæus irreligion justifying language latter less literary Luther Lyrical Ballads Maasz means ment merit metaphysical Milton mind moral nature never notion object opinion original outward Pantheism party passage perhaps philosophy poems poet poetic poetry present principle quæ racter reader reason reference religion religious remarks Review S. T. Coleridge salvation Schelling Scripture seems sense Shakespeare shew Socinian Solifidian sonnets soul Southey speaks spirit suppose sure teaching Tertullian things thought tion true truth verse ward law whole words Wordsworth writings καὶ