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 374
... pantheism , but too sublimely vague and grandly muddy for anything else , deserves to be placed beside Mark Antony's description of the crocodile to the drunken Lepidus . Yet if his trust is real , how much more so is ours , when we ...
... pantheism , but too sublimely vague and grandly muddy for anything else , deserves to be placed beside Mark Antony's description of the crocodile to the drunken Lepidus . Yet if his trust is real , how much more so is ours , when we ...
Page 375
... pantheism , and with Tauler phraseology approaching pantheism is the metaphorical expres- sion of a most Christian conviction . We can scarcely call Emerson either an acosmist , a theist , or a genuine pantheist . He flits abstractedly ...
... pantheism , and with Tauler phraseology approaching pantheism is the metaphorical expres- sion of a most Christian conviction . We can scarcely call Emerson either an acosmist , a theist , or a genuine pantheist . He flits abstractedly ...
Page 377
... pantheism of Keats , commonly so called , is no pantheism at all . It is the luscious love of natural forms , springing from an exultant , youthful heart , whose ravishment of wonder is as yet undissipated by theologic philosophizing ...
... pantheism of Keats , commonly so called , is no pantheism at all . It is the luscious love of natural forms , springing from an exultant , youthful heart , whose ravishment of wonder is as yet undissipated by theologic philosophizing ...
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