Two Poets of the Oxford Movement: John Keble and John Henry NewmanFairleigh Dickinson University Press, 1996 - 296 pages This book examines the poetry of two important figures in the Oxford Movement, a campaign that began by asserting the independence of the English Church from secular power and that went on to Catholicize the Protestant color of Anglicanism in the early nineteenth century. John Keble and John Henry Newman both conceived poetry as the instrument of religious persuasion: Keble through his Christian Year which, although it antedated the movement, was hailed as its Baptist cry; and Newman through his more aggressive contributions to Lyra Apostolica. After a brief introduction in which he discusses the nature of Tractarian poetry - members of the movement were given that nickname - author Rodney Stenning Edgecombe presents detailed readings of the two collections, stressing their value as poetry rather than as theological documents. He argues that both men possessed real lyric gifts which shifts in taste and the theological emphasis of earlier commentaries have tended to obscure. |
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Page 195
... hand " is , after all , anticipated by such lyrics as " Easter " : " Who takes thee by the hand . " The final stanza extends these blends of past and present , taking in more becalmments than Newman's actual delay on the voyage home ...
... hand " is , after all , anticipated by such lyrics as " Easter " : " Who takes thee by the hand . " The final stanza extends these blends of past and present , taking in more becalmments than Newman's actual delay on the voyage home ...
Page 226
... hand in stanza 1 with the " rough hand " of God in stanza 2 to sanctify energy and commitment to the struggle and to remind us that conversion is a disruptive event that can effect no compromise with the world . As though remembering ...
... hand in stanza 1 with the " rough hand " of God in stanza 2 to sanctify energy and commitment to the struggle and to remind us that conversion is a disruptive event that can effect no compromise with the world . As though remembering ...
Page 246
... hand of fellowship to the Church's Arian foes , but he adopted the central tenet of their heresy — that belief is after all only a form of words , and words are incapable of expressing divine truths . " 103 In the light of this ...
... hand of fellowship to the Church's Arian foes , but he adopted the central tenet of their heresy — that belief is after all only a form of words , and words are incapable of expressing divine truths . " 103 In the light of this ...
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angels Anglican begins belief Catholic Christ Christian Church claims Collins and Goldsmith comes Compare course Cross death divine earth edited England English eyes Faber fact faith fall fear feel figure final flowers gives God's Gray's hand heart Heaven Herbert Holy hope human hymn Ibid idea imaginative John Henry Newman John Keble Keble's later light London Lonsdale Lord lyric means mind morning move nature night offers once opening original Oxford Oxford Movement poem Poems of Gray poet Poetical poetry prayer present provides recalls rest Roman round saints seems sense Septuagesima Sunday sort soul spirit stanza suffering suggests Sunday taken takes thee things thou thought tion Tractarian Trinity truth turn University Press verse vision whereas Wordsworth