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  2. New England Puritan culture and recreation - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/New_England_Puritan...

    In addition to the preparation poetry seen by Edward Taylor, the Puritan woman Anne Bradstreet wrote dense poetry of her own. She spoke in a deeply personal manner distant from the general understanding of the role of Puritan women. She used poetry as a mode of demonstrating her love for family, husband, and God.

  3. File:The Puritan guest, and other poems (IA ...

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  4. List of Puritan poets - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_Puritan_poets

    John Milton (1608–1674), most famous for his epic poem "Paradise Lost" (1667), was an English poet with religious beliefs emphasizing central Puritanical views.While the work acted as an expression of his despair over the failure of the Puritan Revolution against the English Catholic Church, it also indicated his optimism in human potential.

  5. Sonnet 105 - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sonnet_105

    The nature of that love has often been debated, namely whether it was romantic or platonic in nature, The consensus is generally that they are more romantic in nature, judging by the classic romantic language used in Sonnets like the famous 18th ("shall I compare thee to a Summer's day"), and the poet's lamentation that the youth was not born a ...

  6. I puritani - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/I_puritani

    In the seldom performed Malibran version, it is Elvira (i.e., the soprano) who sings, in a higher octave, the principal part of Credeasi, misera. An excerpt from "Credeasi, misera", act 3. The notes highlighted (above the high C) are among the highest demanded in tenor operatic repertoire and are usually sung falsetto or altogether transposed.

  7. Conversion narrative - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Conversion_narrative

    As defined by Patricia Caldwell, the conversion narrative was "a testimony of personal religious experience…spoken or read aloud to the entire congregation of a gathered church before admission as evidence of the applicant's visible sainthood" [1] Edmund S. Morgan describes the typical "morphology of conversion" related in the conversion narrative as involving the stages of "knowledge ...

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  9. Curfew Must Not Ring Tonight - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Curfew_Must_Not_Ring_Tonight

    An illustrated version of this poem is contained in Fables for Our Time and Famous Poems Illustrated by James Thurber (1940). The poem is mentioned by author Antonia White in her autobiography As Once in May. As a child she read it repeatedly until she knew it by heart. A parody poem Towser shall be Tied Tonight was written by Anonymous. Set in ...