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Spurgeon, Caroline F. E., 1869-1942

"Mysticism in English Literature"

B.


Footnotes

[1] "The Religious Philosophy of William James," by J. B. Pratt, _Hibbert
Journal_, Oct. 1911, p. 232.
[2] On "Spirit," in _Philosophical Remains of R. L. Nettleship_, ed. A. C.
Bradley, 1901, pp. 23-32.
[3] _Republic_, ii. 376.
[4] _Symposium_, 211, 212.
[5] This distinction between East and West holds good on the whole,
although on the one side we find the heretical Brahmin followers of
_Bhakti_, and Ramananda and his great disciple, Kabir, who taught that
man was the supreme manifestation of God; and on the other, occasional
lapses into Quietism and repudiation of the body. See _The Mystic, Way_,
by E. Underhill, pp 22-28.
[6] For an account of Boehme's philosophy, see pp. 91-93 below.
[7] See his essay on him in _Representative Men._
[8] _Memoirs and Correspondence of C. Palmore_, by B. Champneys, 1901,
vol. ii. pp. 84, 85.
[9] _Selections from the German Mystics_, ed. Inge (Methuen, 1904), p.
4.
[10] See his article on Rossetti in the _Nineteenth Century_ for March
1883.
[11] _House of Life_, Sonnet xvii.
[12] _House of Life_, Sonnets i., xxvii., lxxvii.
[13] See _Religio Poetae_, p. 1.
[14] _Memoirs_, ed.


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