William Cowper, HumanitarianUniversity of North Carolina Press, 1938 - 277 ページ |
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68 ページ
... course of reasoning was the necessity for meeting the argument of the anti - abolitionists that in their natural state Negroes are fierce and bloodthirsty , de- vouring each other . He intended to use essentially the same argument as ...
... course of reasoning was the necessity for meeting the argument of the anti - abolitionists that in their natural state Negroes are fierce and bloodthirsty , de- vouring each other . He intended to use essentially the same argument as ...
77 ページ
... course of the Omai digression , Cowper again at- tacks the lack of humanitarian aims in Britain's commerce and imperialism : Doing good , Disinterested good , is not our trade . We travel far , ' tis true , but not for nought ; And must ...
... course of the Omai digression , Cowper again at- tacks the lack of humanitarian aims in Britain's commerce and imperialism : Doing good , Disinterested good , is not our trade . We travel far , ' tis true , but not for nought ; And must ...
249 ページ
... course , does not mean that Cowper's sympathy was not very real or that his heart never got the better of his head . It is true that he often condemned in general what he could not condemn in the individual and that he had a A GREAT ...
... course , does not mean that Cowper's sympathy was not very real or that his heart never got the better of his head . It is true that he often condemned in general what he could not condemn in the individual and that he had a A GREAT ...
多く使われている語句
abolition abolitionist animal anti-slavery argued argument attack ballads benevolence brute cause charity Charles Churchill Christian Christopher Smart Clarkson Correspondence corruptions Cowper wrote cruelty didactic poems divine eighteenth century England English Essay Evangelical evidence evil fact feeling freedom Gentleman's Magazine give Granville Sharp Hastings human humanitarian Ibid idea ideal important India insists interest John justice kind Lady Hesketh letter liberty London Lord man's ment missionary moral nation nature Negro Newton Noble Savage Olney passage peace per's philanthropy philosophy poet poet's poetic poetry poor Pope Pope's poverty prison protest public schools reason reform religion religious Rousseau satire savage seems sentiment Shaftesbury Sir Leslie Stephen slave trade slavery Soame Jenyns social society Southey suffering sympathy Task things thought tion Tirocinium true truth tutor universities verse virtue Warren Hastings Wesley Wesley's Whig Wilberforce William Cowper William Law William Unwin writes written