Attitudes of Some Nineteenth-century American Writers Toward Puritanism, Volume 1University of Wisconsin--Madison, 1942 - 970 pages |
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Common terms and phrases
abolitionism admiration American atheism attitudes toward Puritanism believe better Bible Boston brotherhood called Calvinism Calvinistic doctrine Channing character Christ Christian church clergy colonies conception Connecticut Cooper Cotton Mather creed criticism Deism Deists divine Dwight Emerson says Endicott England eternal evil faith Fate fathers fear freedom God's grace guilty Hawthorne Hawthorne's heart heaven Hilda human Ibid idea importance individual infidelity intellect James Fenimore Cooper Jefferson Jesus John Adams John Greenleaf Whittier Jonathan Edwards Journals laws liberalism liberty light live man's Milton mind ministers moral nature necessity never Over-Soul Paine passage persecution philosophy piety Pilgrims poem Poetical political predestination Quakers reason reform rejected religion religious revelation reverence Riverside Scarlet Letter Scriptures sectarian sects seems sense sermons sincere soul speaks spiritual stern theocracy theology things thinks Thomas Jefferson thought tion total depravity true truth Unitarianism universe views VIII Whittier whole witchcraft Writings York