Bunyan, John. Grace Abounding to the Chief of Sinners. George Larkin, 1666.
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Connections Sort descending | Author name | Excerpt |
---|---|---|
Cultural formation | John Bunyan | JB
's spiritual struggle dated back to his unregenerate teens. Under the influence of his first wife he began attending the establishedchurch
and developed exaggerated reverence for its priests, Bunyan, John. Grace Abounding to the Chief of Sinners. George Larkin, 1666. 5 |
Cultural formation | Elizabeth Joscelin | EJ
's parents came from the English landowning and professional classes. They were Anglican
s and their daughter evidently later leaned towards Puritanism
. |
Cultural formation | Elizabeth Stirredge | She grew up in a strict Puritan
, English household. Before she was ten she suffered religious fears: I was so filled with fears and doubts, that I could take no delight in any thing... |
Cultural formation | Dorothy Leigh | |
Cultural formation | Rachel Speght | |
Cultural formation | Anne Locke | AL
was born into the flourishing urban bourgeoisie of her time. She was apparently English, though the names of both her parents suggest Welsh extraction. Her father said he was neither Lutheran nor yet Tyndalin... |
Cultural formation | Anne Locke | Though no longer subject to persecution, AL
found herself still a dissenter from the established form of Christianity: in Patrick Collinson
's words, the very first documented protestant separatist from the Elizabethan church. Collinson also... |
Cultural formation | John Wilmot second Earl of Rochester | He was born of a mixed marriage, having a monarchist, cavalier father and a parliamentarian, Puritan
mother. Young John was ten when he succeeded to the earldom bestowed on his father for selfless and dangerous... |
Cultural formation | Hannah Allen | While living with her mother she suffered a period of religious questioning which deepened into spiritual despair. She recovered by reading the works of PuritanRobert Bolton
, where she found a passage that directly... |
Cultural formation | Anne Bacon | Her upper-class family were Protestants at a time when this was a bold thing to be, both in religious and intellectual terms. She became, like her parents, a fervent Puritan
. |
Cultural formation | John Dryden | |
Cultural formation | Fanny Fern | FF
was presumably white, and descended from Puritan
colonists who first settled in Boston,Massachusetts, in 1630. Her father, Nathaniel Willis
, was deeply, and strictly, religious. Sara, however, always resisted his form of Calvinism... |
Cultural formation | Katherine Philips | KP
came on both sides from middle-class Puritan
English families. Philips, Katherine. “Introduction and Textual Notes”. The Collected Works of Katherine Philips, The Matchless Orinda, Volume I: The Poems, edited by Patrick Thomas, Stump Cross Books, 1990, pp. 1-68. 1-2 Philips, Katherine. “Introduction and Textual Notes”. The Collected Works of Katherine Philips, The Matchless Orinda, Volume I: The Poems, edited by Patrick Thomas, Stump Cross Books, 1990, pp. 1-68. 5 |
Cultural formation | John Milton | |
Cultural formation | Agnes Beaumont | Hers was the first name that Bunyan entered as joining this Puritan
congregation, not long after his release from prison under the terms of Charles II
's Declaration of Indulgence (promulgated on 15 March 1672)... |
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