The Eclectic Review, Volume 3; Volume 116Samuel Greatheed, Daniel Parken, Theophilus Williams, Josiah Conder, Thomas Price, Jonathan Edwards Ryland, Edwin Paxton Hood C. Taylor, 1862 |
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Page 28
... mystery to mystery again ; From God to God , thro ' grandeur , grief , and strife , A hurried plunge into the dark inane Whence had we lately sprung . And is't for ever ? Ah ! sense is blind beyond the gaping clay , And all the eyes of ...
... mystery to mystery again ; From God to God , thro ' grandeur , grief , and strife , A hurried plunge into the dark inane Whence had we lately sprung . And is't for ever ? Ah ! sense is blind beyond the gaping clay , And all the eyes of ...
Page 130
... mystery ; the wonderful charm of mystery . There can be no highest , no impressive poetry , over which the spirit of mystery does not rise and brood ; and sacred poetry especially , from its very nature , indulges Poetry of the Cloister ...
... mystery ; the wonderful charm of mystery . There can be no highest , no impressive poetry , over which the spirit of mystery does not rise and brood ; and sacred poetry especially , from its very nature , indulges Poetry of the Cloister ...
Page 131
... mystery . The Christian system is the wisdom of God in a mystery ; and all its doctrines and all its truths and stories are suffused in the light of a mild mystery . ' These are the qualities of sacred poetry . To the degree to which ...
... mystery . The Christian system is the wisdom of God in a mystery ; and all its doctrines and all its truths and stories are suffused in the light of a mild mystery . ' These are the qualities of sacred poetry . To the degree to which ...
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