by Mason I. Lowance Jr.
Harvard University Press, 1980
Cloth: 978-0-674-50949-8
Library of Congress Classification PS243.L6
Dewey Decimal Classification 810.915

ABOUT THIS BOOK
ABOUT THIS BOOK

This is a study of New England figurative language from 1600 to 1850, from the English and Continental origins of Puritanism to the symbolic writings of Thoreau. It enriches our understanding of Puritan thought and expression and traces the influence of Puritanism on later American writing.

A common link among the writers of this period was a system of prophetic symbolism derived from Scripture. The Bible was the source of figures and types used to illustrate divine guidance in human affairs, and its prophetic language provided the Puritans with a method for explaining and projecting the course of history. Mason Lowance explores these modes of prophetic and metaphorical expression and the millennial impulse in American thinking. In the process he provides a cohesive approach to such diverse writers as Bradford, Cotton, Taylor, Increase and Cotton Mather, Edwards, Freneau, Barlow, Dwight, and Emerson. His book will be welcomed by all students of early American thought and literature.


See other books on: Christian art and symbolism | Homes and haunts | Metaphor | New England | Puritans
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