Spiritual Voices in Modern Literature |
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Page 18
... which startles us by a sense of being overlooked . Men behave themselves in different ways when such an impression comes to them , for it is pos- sible to dismiss the whole conception as the fan- tasy 18 SPIRITUAL VOICES.
... which startles us by a sense of being overlooked . Men behave themselves in different ways when such an impression comes to them , for it is pos- sible to dismiss the whole conception as the fan- tasy 18 SPIRITUAL VOICES.
Page 23
... down the the labyrinthine ways of my own mind . in the mist of tears , and under running laughter , up vistaed hopes , down chasméd fears . " But he found , as our • Lord declared , that when a man comes to him- IN MODERN LITERATURE 23.
... down the the labyrinthine ways of my own mind . in the mist of tears , and under running laughter , up vistaed hopes , down chasméd fears . " But he found , as our • Lord declared , that when a man comes to him- IN MODERN LITERATURE 23.
Page 24
Trevor H. Davies. Lord declared , that when a man comes to him- self he is not far from God . There is no single realm of the human mind which is without its witness . The laws of thought imply a Lawgiver as certainly as do those outward ...
Trevor H. Davies. Lord declared , that when a man comes to him- self he is not far from God . There is no single realm of the human mind which is without its witness . The laws of thought imply a Lawgiver as certainly as do those outward ...
Page 28
... comes yet more fleet- ' Lo ! naught contents thee , who content'st not me . ' And so the chase comes to an end . The poet had sought to escape God in God's own world , and , naturally , had failed . He is like the prophet , in that ...
... comes yet more fleet- ' Lo ! naught contents thee , who content'st not me . ' And so the chase comes to an end . The poet had sought to escape God in God's own world , and , naturally , had failed . He is like the prophet , in that ...
Page 34
... come ! " It was a habit of Coleridge to annotate the books he read with suggestions which occurred to him , and which illuminated the text by wonderful flashes of his genius . He would do this occasion- ally , even with books borrowed ...
... come ! " It was a habit of Coleridge to annotate the books he read with suggestions which occurred to him , and which illuminated the text by wonderful flashes of his genius . He would do this occasion- ally , even with books borrowed ...
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Common terms and phrases
ancient apostle appear Arthur Dimmesdale beauty become Bible bondage character Christian Church comes darkness David declared deed Dimmesdale Divine escape eternal evil experience eyes Fact of Conversion faith Father Felix flower Francis Thompson freedom give Gladstone glory God's grace hand heard heavens Hester Hester Prynne Holy hope human love Ibsen ideal imagination inspiration James Smetham Jesus Christ John Masefield John Ruskin Judas Iscariot king LAMP laws light lives look Lord Jesus Christ man's ment mind moral Morley NATHANIEL HAWTHORNE nature never obedience ODE TO DUTY ourselves passion Peer Gynt poem poet prayer present proclaimed prophet religion revealed Roger Chillingworth Ruskin Saul Kane Scarlet Letter seek seen selfishness Solvejg soul speak spirit stands strong supreme Tennyson thee things thou thought tion true truth turn unto uttered voice wonder words wrote