William Cowper: Poet of ParadiseEvangelical Press, 1993 - 688 pagina's |
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Pagina 250
... matter of course And yielded with pleasure when taken by force Alike the delight of the Poor & the Rich Tho ' the vulgar is apt to present me his breech . " The fact that Cowper sent Newton this rather vulgar riddle shows that he ...
... matter of course And yielded with pleasure when taken by force Alike the delight of the Poor & the Rich Tho ' the vulgar is apt to present me his breech . " The fact that Cowper sent Newton this rather vulgar riddle shows that he ...
Pagina 289
... matter and it goes far deeper . But when a Poet takes the pen , Far more alive than other men , He feels a gentle ... matters must be dealt with in verse . Given this fact any biographer would be neglecting his best sources if he did not ...
... matter and it goes far deeper . But when a Poet takes the pen , Far more alive than other men , He feels a gentle ... matters must be dealt with in verse . Given this fact any biographer would be neglecting his best sources if he did not ...
Pagina 430
... matter of self - preservation . On hearing of Pitt's venture Wilberforce went to have supper alone with him and ... matter weighed heavily on his heart . Newton made matters worse by addressing his reply not to Cowper but to Mrs Unwin ...
... matter of self - preservation . On hearing of Pitt's venture Wilberforce went to have supper alone with him and ... matter weighed heavily on his heart . Newton made matters worse by addressing his reply not to Cowper but to Mrs Unwin ...
Inhoudsopgave
Biographical table | 9 |
The early years | 33 |
Apprentice to the law | 49 |
Copyright | |
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Veelvoorkomende woorden en zinsdelen
asked became become began believed brother called cause Christ Christian church close concerning conversion cousin Cowper critics death Evangelical express fact faith feel felt friendship give given God's grace hand happy Hayley heart Hill hope hymns interest John John Newton Johnson kind knew Lady Hesketh language later least letter light lines live London look Lord lost Madan Mary matter means mind nature never Newton Olney once perhaps person poem poet poet's poetry poor praise preaching present published reason received referring seems sense sent Side soon spiritual suffered taken Task tells thee things thought told took translation true truth turned Unwin verse Weston William wish write written wrote young