| 1828 - 706 Seiten
...Allegory. Nay, the Allegory itself may sometimes be the truest part of the matter. John Bunyan, we hope, is nowise our best theologian; neither, unhappily, is...old Pilgrim's Progress, in the memory of so many men ? heavenly radiance, or fading, on this side and that, into vague expressive mystery; but true in both... | |
| 1828 - 710 Seiten
...Allegory. Nay, the Allegory itself may sometimes be the truest part of the matter. John Bunyan, we hope, is nowise our best theologian ; neither, unhappily, is...old Pilgrim's Progress, in the memory of so many men ? Under Goethe's management, this style of composition has often a singular charm. The reader is kept... | |
| Thomas Carlyle - 1838 - 476 Seiten
...Allegory. Nay, the Allegory itself may sometimes be the truest part of the matter. John Bunyan, we hope, is nowise our best theologian ; neither, unhappily, is...old Pilgrim's Progress, in the memory of so many men ? Under Goethe's management, this style of composition has often a singular charm. The reader is kept... | |
| Thomas Carlyle - 1840 - 862 Seiten
...Allegory. Nay, the Allegory itself may sometimes be the truest part of the matter. John Bunyan, we hope, is nowise our best theologian ; neither, unhappily, is...Pilgrim's Progress, in the memory of so many men? Under Goethe's management, this style of composition has often a singular charm. The reader is kept... | |
| Thomas Carlyle - 1845 - 594 Seiten
...Allegory. Nay, the Allegory itself may sometimes be the truest part of the matter. John Bunyan, we hope, is nowise our best theologian; neither, unhappily, is...attractive science ; yet, which of our compends and tteatises, nay, which of our romances and poems, lives in such mild sunshine as the good old Pilgrim'i... | |
| 1852 - 590 Seiten
...Allegory. Nay, the Allegory ilself may sometimes be the truest part of the matter. John Bunyan, we hope, is nowise our best theologian; neither, unhappily, is...poems, lives in such mild sunshine as the good old PUgrim'i Progress, in the memory of so many men? Under Goethe's management, this style of composition... | |
| Thomas Carlyle, Ralph Waldo Emerson - 1852 - 568 Seiten
...Allegory. Nay, the Allegory itself may sometimes be the truest part of the matter. John Bunyan, we hope, is nowise our best theologian; neither, unhappily, is...poems, lives in such mild sunshine as the good old Pilgrims Progress, in the memory of so many men 1 - . - ., Under Goethe's management, this style of... | |
| George Henry Lewes - 1855 - 482 Seiten
...neither unhappily is theology our most at» Subsequently reprinted in his Miscellanies, vol. i. tractive science ; yet which of our compends and treatises,...of men are fondly occupied with the Second Part of Faust in general, or with Helena in particular ? But while I am thus thrown into a position of antagonism... | |
| George Henry Lewes - 1856 - 544 Seiten
...theologian ; neither, unhappily, is theology our most attractive science ; yet which of our cempends and treatises, nay, which of our romances and poems, lives in such mild sunshine as the good old Pilgrims Progress in the memory of so many men.' But this, if I have not altogether mistaken the point,... | |
| George Henry Lewes - 1856 - 628 Seiten
...rests entirely on the share to be allotted to Meaning in a work of Art. Carlyle refers to Bunyan ar ' nowise our best theologian ; neither, unhappily, is...theology our most attractive science ; yet which of our cempends and treatises, nay, which of our romances and poems, lives in such mild sunshine as the good... | |
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