Poetic Prophecy in Western LiteratureJan Wojcik, Raymond-Jean Frontain In this collection of twelve essays, the editors attempt to define the poet as prophet in Western literature and to select the general attributes of prophetic writing. The essays focus, in the main, on the prophetic tradition in the English-speaking world, as well as on a sufficient number of writers outside that tradition, to prove that all prophetic writing shares common features. |
Contents
Preface | 9 |
Women and Prophecy | 55 |
John Drydens Interest in Prophecy Thomas F Woods | 81 |
Copyright | |
3 other sections not shown
Other editions - View all
Common terms and phrases
Absalom and Achitophel allegory Allen Ginsberg American ancient Antichrist apocalyptic argues Bible biblical prophets Blake Blake's Cambridge Platonist Cardenal Cardenal's century Christ Christian civil concerned consciousness contemporary critics culture death Discourse divine Dryden English epic Ernesto Cardenal essay eternal evil exegetes father future Gerhard von Rad God's heroic Heschel Huck human inspiration interpretation Isaiah Isaiah's prophecy Israel Jane Lead Jeremiah Jerusalem Jewish John Joseph king language Lead's Leaves of Grass literary literature London Lord Mann's medieval metaphor Milton modern moral mother myth nature Newton Oedipus Old Testament oracles Paradise Regained passage Piers Plowman plate poem poet poetic poetry political predictions prophecy prophetic readers redeem religion religious Revelation role Romantics Satan satire says Schneidau Scripture Second Isaiah's sense social society soul speaks spiritual superego symbol theodicy Thomas Mann thought tion truth University Press vision visionary voice Watson Whitman Wisdom words writing York