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England's Antiphon

"In this book I have sought to trace the course of our religious poetry from an early period of our literary history. ... [I]f its poetry be the cream of a people's thought, some true indications of the history of its religious feeling must be found in its religious verse, and I hope I have not altogether failed in setting forth these indications. My chief aim, however, will show itself to have been the mediating towards an intelligent and cordial sympathy betwixt my readers and the writers from whom I have quoted. In this I have some confidence of success. Heartily do I throw this my small pebble at the head of the great Sabbath-breaker Schism." - From the Preface (9 hr 27 min)

Chapters

Preface and Introduction

Chapter 1: Sacred Lyrics of the Thirteenth Century

Chapter 2: The Miracle Plays, and Other Poems of the Fourteenth Century

Chapter 2, continued

Chapter 3: The Fifteenth Century

Chapter 4: Introduction to the Elizabethan Era

Chapter 5: Spenser and His Friends

Chapter 5, continued

Chapter 6: Lord Bacon and His Coevals

Chapter 6, continued

Chapter 7: Dr. Donne

Chapter 8: Bishop Hall and George Sandys

Chapter 9: A Few of the Elizabethan Dramatists

Chapter 10: Sir John Beaumont and Drummond of Hawthornden

Chapter 11: The Brothers Fletcher

Chapter 12: Wither, Herrick, and Quarles

Chapter 13: George Herbert

Chapter 14: John Milton

Chapter 15: Edmund Waller, Thomas Brown, and Jeremy Taylor

Chapter 16: Henry More and Richard Baxter

Chapter 17: Crashaw and Marvell

Chapter 18: A Mount of Vision—Henry Vaughan

Chapter 18, continued

Chapter 19: The Plain

Chapter 20: The Roots of the Hills

Chapter 21: The New Vision

Chapter 22: The Fervour of the Implicit. Insight of the Heart

Chapter 23: The Questioning Fervour