Mysticism in English Literature by Caroline F. E. Spurgeon
page 149 of 156 (95%)
page 149 of 156 (95%)
![]() | ![]() |
|
man was the supreme manifestation of God; and on the other, occasional
lapses into Quietism and repudiation of the body. See _The Mystic, Way_, by E. Underhill, pp 22-28. [6] For an account of Boehme's philosophy, see pp. 91-93 below. [7] See his essay on him in _Representative Men._ [8] _Memoirs and Correspondence of C. Palmore_, by B. Champneys, 1901, vol. ii. pp. 84, 85. [9] _Selections from the German Mystics_, ed. Inge (Methuen, 1904), p. 4. [10] See his article on Rossetti in the _Nineteenth Century_ for March 1883. [11] _House of Life_, Sonnet xvii. [12] _House of Life_, Sonnets i., xxvii., lxxvii. [13] See _Religio Poetæ_, p. 1. [14] _Memoirs_, ed. Champneys, i. 146. [15] _The Angel in the House._ Bk. ii. prelude ii. [16] _The Angel in the House_, canto viii. prelude iv. [17] See pp. 113, 114 below. |
|