Book Details
Format
Paperback / Softback
Book Series
Fyfield Books
ISBN-10
1857541189
ISBN-13
9781857541182
Edition
UK ed.
Publisher
Carcanet Press Ltd
Imprint
Fyfield Books
Country of Manufacture
GB
Country of Publication
GB
Publication Date
Oct 26th, 1995
Print length
176 Pages
Weight
248 grams
Dimensions
21.70 x 14.00 x 1.00 cms
Ksh 2,150.00
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A selection of sermons and other work by the Elizabethan/Jacobean divine, Lancelot Andrewes (1555-1626). In the pulpit, Andrewes initiated the metaphysical style of sermonizing - erudite, dramatic and poetic. His writings represent a voice from early Anglicanism.
Thanks to T. S. Eliot''s For Lancelot Andrewes: Essays on Style and Order (1928), the name of the great divine (1555-1626) lives, but his work is little known. This selection, the first for many years, reintroduces Andrewes as a substantial, engaging writer whose sermons, which ''rank with the finest English prose of their time'' (Eliot), and other work breathe the energy of a turbulent, formative period.
In the pulpit, Andrews initiated the ''witty'' or ''metaphysical'' style of sermonising, erudite, ornate, punning, allusive, full of sharp conceits and acutely analytical, yet frequently dramatic and poetic. He was admired by Lyly, Nashe and other contemporaries. Despite this fame, he remained a gentle, learned man, refusing two bishoprics offered by Elizabeth and trying, not always successfully, to steer clear of controversy. Under James I he became Bishop of Chichester, Ely, and finally Winchester, and contributed to the King James Bible. His Devotions affected Newman and churchmen of the nineteenth century. This good, lucid voice of the morning of Anglicanism has a place today, as a major prose writer and as a divine speaking to a Church whose memory has become foreshortened by politics and fashion.
P. E. Hewison lectures in English at the University of Aberdeen.
In the pulpit, Andrews initiated the ''witty'' or ''metaphysical'' style of sermonising, erudite, ornate, punning, allusive, full of sharp conceits and acutely analytical, yet frequently dramatic and poetic. He was admired by Lyly, Nashe and other contemporaries. Despite this fame, he remained a gentle, learned man, refusing two bishoprics offered by Elizabeth and trying, not always successfully, to steer clear of controversy. Under James I he became Bishop of Chichester, Ely, and finally Winchester, and contributed to the King James Bible. His Devotions affected Newman and churchmen of the nineteenth century. This good, lucid voice of the morning of Anglicanism has a place today, as a major prose writer and as a divine speaking to a Church whose memory has become foreshortened by politics and fashion.
P. E. Hewison lectures in English at the University of Aberdeen.
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