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  1.  5
    Herbert’s The Temple as Early Modern Psychomachia.Michael Vander Weele - 2022 - Renascence 74 (3-4):211-251.
    One does not read very far in the second and by far the longest section of Herbert’s The Temple before the single-minded exhortations of the speaker in “The Church Porch” and the early Lenten “complaints” of Christ to his people in “The Sacrifice” turn to the unpredictable elements of the speaker’s human condition: puzzlement, striving, grief, joy. The quick movement between these elements is due not only to Herbert’s poetic sensibility, I argue, but also to his anthropological understanding and his (...)
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  2.  34
    Jane Eyre and the Tradition of Self-Assertion; or, Bronte's Socialization of Schiller's "Play Aesthetic".Michael Vander Weele - 2004 - Renascence 57 (1):4-28.
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    Jane Eyre and the Tradition of Self-Assertion; or, Bronte's Socialization of Schiller's.Michael Vander Weele - 2004 - Renascence 57 (1):4-28.
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