Baxter : Richard (1615-91), Presbyterian preacher.
... bare. Byron's Jehovah's vessels hold The godless Heathen's wine; does not quite succeed because of a rhetorical tinge that he has not been able to keep out of the expression. When Baxter (I think it was Baxter) writes I spoke as one who ne'er would speak again 223 And as a dying man to dying men! that might be taken as an example of strong and bare poetic language. I have written of ...
... × Simon Singh: Big Bang, p. 77. × Stephen Baxter: Revolutions in the Earth, p. 17. × Bertrand Russell on Religion, p. 177. ... John Carey (ed.): The Faber Book of Science, p. 136. × Stephen Baxter: op. cit., pp. 204, 206. × Tim Lewens: op. cit., p. 26. ...
... Byron's Jehovah's vessels hold The godless heathen's wine; does not quite succeed because of a rhetorical tinge that he has not been able to keep out of the expression. When Baxter (I think it was Baxter) writes I spoke as one who never would speak again And as a dying man to dying men, that might be taken as an example of strong and bare poetic language. I have written of Savitri ...
... as never sure to preach again! A wider poignancy, an elemental cry, has come in to replace the somewhat restricted though still keen feeling in a narrower context that is found in Baxter. (K.D.S ) Page 116 line: it can be expressed indeed by overhead poetry as no other can express it; but this poetry can deal with quite other things. I would certainly say that ...
... Arthème Fayard, 1997 Amzallag, Gérard Nissim: La Raison malmenée , CNRS Editions, 2002 — L’Homme végétal , Albin Michel, 2003 Arsac, Jacques: La science et le sens de la vie , Fayard, 1993 Baxter, Stephen: Revolutions in the Earth , Phoenix, 2003 Bassler, Moritz, and others (ed.): Mystique, mysticisme et modernité , PUS, 1998 Barash, David: Sociobiology – The Whisperings Within , ...
... preached as never sure to preach again! A wider poignancy, an elemental cry, has come in to replace the somewhat restricted though still keen feeling in a narrower context that is found in Baxter.(K.D.S.) Page 51 sense of the Infinite and the One which is pervasive in the Overhead planes; that need not be explicitly there in the overhead poetic expression or in the substance ...
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