10 ENGLISH BOOKS RELATING TO «INTEMERATELY»
Discover the use of
intemerately in the following bibliographical selection. Books relating to
intemerately and brief extracts from same to provide context of its use in English literature.
... in some shallow places of the stream, (which stream, God be blessed, runs on
still currently, and constantly, and purely, and intemerately, as before) yet
because her corrections are not multiplied, because her absolute ruin is not
accelerated ...
John Donne, Henry Alford, 1839
2
The Works of John Donne, D.D., Dean of Saint Paul's, ...
... name therefore David pursues his prayer: for, from a river, from a cistern, a man
may take more water at once, than he can from the first spring and fountain-head;
but he cannot take the water so sincerely, so purely, so intemerately from.
take the water so sincerely, so purely, so intemerately from the channel as from
the fountain-head. Princes and great persons may raise their dependents faster
than God does his; but sudden riches come like a land-water, and bring much ...
... work, we cannot but remark, in passing, that the style is very bad. lnele ant and
awkward sentences constantly occur, and sometimes t e common rules of
grammar are violated. The volumes are hastily—now and then intemerately—
written.
5
The works of John Donne. With a memoir by H. Alford
... in some shallow places of the stream, (which stream, God be blessed, runs on
still currently, and constantly, and purely, and intemerately, as before) yet
because her corrections are not multiplied, because her absolute ruin is not
accelerated ...
John Donne, Henry Alford, 1839
6
The works of John Donne
... in some shallow places of the stream, (which stream, God be blessed, runs on
still currently, and constantly, and purely, and intemerately, as before) yet
because her corrections are not multiplied, because her absolute ruin is not
accelerated ...
John Donne, Henry Alford, 1839
7
The Sermons of John Donne
... of the main River, but onely a giddy and circular Eddy, in some shallow places
of the stream, (which stream, God be blessed, runs on still currantly, and
constantly, and purely, and intemerately, as before) yet because her corrections
are not ...
John Donne, Evelyn Mary Spearing Simpson, George Reuben Potter, 1984
8
John Donne's "desire of more": the subject of Anne More ...
Paul's explains in a sermon, we should address only God in our prayers: [A]ll that
can be had, is to be asked of him, and him onely[;] ... a man . . . cannot take the
water so sincerely, so purely, so intemerately from the channell as from the ...
... Name therefore David pursues his Prayer: for, from a River, from a Cisterne, a
man may take more water at once, then he can from the first spring and fountaine
head; But he cannot take the 830 water so sincerely, so purely, so intemerately ...
John Donne, George Reuben Potter, Evelyn Mary Spearing Simpson, 1959
10
Refiguring the Sacred Feminine: The Poems of John Donne, ...
... and him onely[;] ... a man . . . cannot take the water so sincerely, so purely, so
intemerately from the channell as from the fountaine head" [Sermons, 5:360).
Streams that show the head may be abused even when they have become
heavenly; ...
Theresa M. DiPasquale, 2008