-History. Choice Notes from 'Notes and Queries'. - Softcover

 
9781150417269: -History. Choice Notes from 'Notes and Queries'.

Zu dieser ISBN ist aktuell kein Angebot verfügbar.

Reseña del editor

This historic book may have numerous typos and missing text. Purchasers can download a free scanned copy of the original book (without typos) from the publisher. Not indexed. Not illustrated. 1858. Excerpt: ... In delving among what may be termed the popular religious literature of the latter years of the Commonwealth, and early part of the reign of Charles, we become aware of the existence of a kind of nightmare which the public of that age were evidently labouring under--a strong and vivid impression that some terrible calamity was impending over the metropolis. Puritanic tolerance was sorely tried by the licence of the new Court; and the pulpits were soon filled with enthusiasts of all sects, who railed in no measured terms against the monster city--the city Babylon--the bloody city! as they loved to term her; proclaiming, with all the fervour of fanaticism, that the measure of her iniquities was wellnigh full, and the day of her extinction at hand. The press echoed the cry; and for some years before and after the Restoration, it teemed with "warnings" and "visions," in which the approaching destruction is often plainly predicted. One of the earliest of these prefigurations occurs in that Leviathan of Sermons, God's Plea for Nineveh, or London's Precedent for Mercy, by Thomas Reeve: London, 1657. Speaking of London, he says: "It was Troy-novant, it is Troy le grand, and it will be Troy l'extinct."--p. 217. And again: "Methinks I see you bringing pick-axes to dig downe your owne 'walls, and kindling sparks that will set all in a flame from one end of the city to the other."--P. 214. And afterwards, in a strain of rough eloquence: "This goodly city of yours all in shreds, ye may seek for a threshold of your antient dwellings, for a pillar of your pleasant habitations, and not find them; all your spacious mansions and sumptuous monuments are then gone... Wo unto us, our sins have pulled down our houses, shaken down our city; we are the most harbourlesse featless...

„Über diesen Titel“ kann sich auf eine andere Ausgabe dieses Titels beziehen.

Weitere beliebte Ausgaben desselben Titels