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" We owe the great writers of the golden age of our literature to that fervid awakening of the public mind which shook to dust the oldest and most oppressive form of the Christian religion. "
Faust: A Tragedy - Page 5
by Johann Wolfgang von Goethe - 1847 - 8 pages
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The Hidden Text of Mill's Liberty

Stewart Justman - 1991 - 206 pages
...high feeling, a celebrant of love, an enemy of tyrants, a seer. Shelley in turn had said of Milton, "The sacred Milton was, let it ever be remembered, a Republican, and a bold enquirer into morals and religion."10 An extreme prude, Harriet was perhaps less bold in her inquiries,...
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The Cambridge Companion to British Romanticism

Stuart Curran - 1993 - 330 pages
...make the political issue clear in a brief reference to Milton in his preface to Prometheus Unbound: "the sacred Milton was, let it ever be remembered, a Republican, and a bold enquirer into morals and religion" (Poetry and Prose, p. 134). Wherever one senses the presence of...
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The Selected Poetry & Prose of Shelley

Percy Bysshe Shelley - 1994 - 752 pages
...produce philosophers and poets equal to those who (if we except Shakespeare) have never been surpassed. We owe the great writers of the golden age of our...let it ever be remembered, a republican, and a bold enquirer into morals and religion. The great writers of our own age are, we have reason to suppose,...
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The Ideology of Imagination: Subject and Society in the Discourse of Romanticism

Forest Pyle - 1995 - 240 pages
...Shelley invokes the critical "spirit" that gives rise to social revolutions and great literature alike: "We owe the great writers of the golden age of our...to the progress and development of the same spirit" (Poetry and Prose, 134). 3 It is such a reckoning of historical "debts" that results in Shelley's celebrated...
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The Romantic Reformation: Religious Politics in English Literature, 1789-1824

Robert M. Ryan - 1997 - 324 pages
...in Critical Essays on Keats, ed. Hermione de Almeida (Boston: GK Hall, 1990). "A sect of dissenters" We owe the great writers of the golden age of our...let it ever be remembered, a Republican, and a bold enquirer into morals and religion. The great writers of our own age are, we have reason to suppose,...
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The Complete Critical Guide to John Milton

Richard Bradford - 2001 - 236 pages
...sublimist parts are the revelations of Milton's own mind' (245). Shelley goes further and contends that 'Milton was, let it ever be remembered. a republican, and a bold inquirer into morals and religion' (Wittreich 1970: 532). This is from Shelley's 'Preface to Prometheus Vnbound' (1819) in which he also...
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Romanticism: Romanticism, belief, and philosophy

Michael O'Neill, Mark Sandy - 2006 - 362 pages
...Politics in English Literature 1789-1824 (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1997), pp. 13-42. We owe the great writers of the golden age of our...let it ever be remembered, a Republican, and a bold enquirer into morals and religion. The great writers of our own age are, we have reason to suppose,...
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An Anatomy of Skepticism

Manfred Weidhorn - 2006 - 441 pages
...organized religion consists of "large codes of fraud and woe." The debunking of religion is therefore good: We owe the great writers of the golden age of our...and most oppressive form of the Christian religion. The true source of religion is not revelation from God but inspiration in the poet. If religion is...
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