| Lindley Murray - 1996 - 228 pages
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| Jerome J. McGann - Literary Criticism - 1998 - 238 pages
...what th' eternal maker has ordain'd The pow'rs of man: we feel within ourselves His energy divine: he tells the heart He meant, he made us to behold...beholds and loves, the general orb Of life and being. (622-8) These deeply correspondent passages express a core experience of sensibility. The sublime gesture... | |
| Phyllis Cole - Literary Criticism - 1998 - 401 pages
...response to the beauties of nature: All declare For what the Eternal Maker has ordained The powers of man. He tells the heart He meant, He made us to behold...being; to be great like Him, Beneficent and active. 8 At least since Waldo's infancy, Mary had known such affirmations of the human capacity to hear in... | |
| Phyllis Cole - Biography & Autobiography - 2002 - 404 pages
...response to the beauties of nature: All declare For what the Eternal Maker has ordained The powers of man. He tells the heart He meant. He made us to behold...life and being; to be great like Him, Beneficent and active.6 At least since Waldo's infancy, Mary had known such affirmations of the human capacity to... | |
| Robin Dix - Poetry - 2000 - 304 pages
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| Samuel Taylor Coleridge - 2001 - 552 pages
...what the Eternal Maker has ordain'd The powers of man : we feel within ourselves His energy divine : he tells the heart He meant, he made, us to behold...— to be great like him, Beneficent and active.* That general illumination should precede revolution, is a truth as obvious, as that the vessel should... | |
| Jon Mee - History - 2005 - 342 pages
...to echo Akenside's poeticization of Shaftesbury: . . . we feel within ourselves His energy divine: he tells the heart, He meant, he made us to behold...life and being; to be great like him, beneficent and active.44 The end of Barbauld's poem does provide the standard disclaimer that acknowledges the impossibility... | |
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