William Cowper and the Eighteenth Century |
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Page 17
... expression . His essay reflected , again , the characteristic failure of intel- lectualism to observe two things at the same time . 66 66 The intellectual " notices one set of facts , and then , withdrawing into himself , becomes blind ...
... expression . His essay reflected , again , the characteristic failure of intel- lectualism to observe two things at the same time . 66 66 The intellectual " notices one set of facts , and then , withdrawing into himself , becomes blind ...
Page 124
... expressions of the personality , and , however much we stress the bodily aspect , that can in no way explain the content ... expression of an invasion [ by infection ] of the brain . The presence again of a substance having a ' depressor ...
... expressions of the personality , and , however much we stress the bodily aspect , that can in no way explain the content ... expression of an invasion [ by infection ] of the brain . The presence again of a substance having a ' depressor ...
Page 241
... expression in a letter to Hill : 66 " The very agreeable contents of your last came safe to hand in the shape of two notes for thirty pounds . I am to thank you likewise for a barrel of very good oysters , received about a fortnight ago ...
... expression in a letter to Hill : 66 " The very agreeable contents of your last came safe to hand in the shape of two notes for thirty pounds . I am to thank you likewise for a barrel of very good oysters , received about a fortnight ago ...
Contents
FOREWORD II | 11 |
AN EXTRAMUNDANE AND HIS WORLD | 34 |
THE EVANGELICAL REVIVAL | 158 |
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Arminian became Book brother called Calvinism Calvinistic cheerful Christian Church conversation cousin death despair divine effect eighteenth century England Evangelicalism fact faith father Fausset feeling garden Goldwin Smith happy Hayley heart human humour Huntingdon hymns hypochondria influence John Gilpin John Newton John Wesley Johnny Johnson Joseph Hill Lady Austen Lady Hesketh later Latitudinarians least less letter literary lived London Lord David Cecil Madan madness melancholy Memoir merely mind mood morbid never Newport Pagnell Newton Nonsense Club Olney Olney Hymns Orchard Side passage perhaps period poems poet poet's poetry preached realised reason recognised religion religious Revival says seems seen sense sincere sometimes soon speak spirit Task Theodora theology things thought town true truth Unwin verse Vicarage walk Wesley's Weston Weston Underwood whole wife William Bull William Cowper wish write written wrote