George Herbert: Sacred and ProfaneHelen Wilcox, Richard Todd VU University Press, 1995 - 211 pages |
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Page 16
Sacred and Profane Helen Wilcox, Richard Todd. 92 ) , showing him turning away from Hooker and the high Anglicans toward ... turn , the powerful accept- ance beyond resignation , the achievement of a kind of poise that , like litur- gical ...
Sacred and Profane Helen Wilcox, Richard Todd. 92 ) , showing him turning away from Hooker and the high Anglicans toward ... turn , the powerful accept- ance beyond resignation , the achievement of a kind of poise that , like litur- gical ...
Page 96
... turn upon him in a sense most true : For what Christ once in humbleness began , We him in glory call , The Son of ... turns to a " sense most true ” ” ( Equivocal Predication , p . 9 ) . However , if a pun is to have a ' sense most true ...
... turn upon him in a sense most true : For what Christ once in humbleness began , We him in glory call , The Son of ... turns to a " sense most true ” ” ( Equivocal Predication , p . 9 ) . However , if a pun is to have a ' sense most true ...
Page 125
... turn briefly to ' hard - core ' discourse theory as it has been developed by Michel Foucault and others is to turn and end now with the most diffi- cult questions about discourse and Herbert's poetry in relation to discourses of ...
... turn briefly to ' hard - core ' discourse theory as it has been developed by Michel Foucault and others is to turn and end now with the most diffi- cult questions about discourse and Herbert's poetry in relation to discourses of ...
Contents
Prolegomena | 3 |
Herbert and Kings | 33 |
Sacred Parody and George Herbert | 49 |
Copyright | |
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appears beginning called Cambridge century chapter Christ Christian Church close collection common connection context course Criticism devotional discourse divine early echo edited effect emblem English epigrams equivocal example expression eyes fact figure final George Herbert George Puttenham give God's grace hand heart Herbert's poem Herbert's poetry holy human idea interesting ironic irony John kind King language Latin letters lines liturgy London look Lord meaning metaphor mind nature offer opening original Oxford parody particular perhaps phrase poet poetic poetry Prayer present profane reader reading reference religious represents rhetorical sacred secular seems sense song sonnet soul speaker spiritual stanza suggests Temple thee things Thomas thou tion true turn understanding University Vaughan verse whole words writing