Tuesday, March 18, 2014
Too Glad, to be True.
"Relief and buoyancy are the characteristic notes . . . It follows that
nearly every association which now clings to the word puritan has to be
eliminated when we are thinking of the early Protestants. Whatever they
were, they were not sour, gloomy, or severe; nor did their enemies bring
any such charge against them . . . Fore More, a Protestant was one
‘dronke of the new must of lewd lightnes of minde and vayne gladness of
harte’ . . . Protestantism was not too grim, but too glad, to be true . .
. Protestants are not ascetics but sensualists" (Lewis, English Literature in the 16th Century, p. 34).
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