Shakespeare asked, "To be, or not to be?" Likewise, the author of this work asks a similar question of Puritan authors: "To please nor not to please God?" The Puritans eternal struggle is embodied by this singular phrase that the Puritans used in an attempt to decipher the rectitude of their own actions.
Shakespeare asked, "To be, or not to be?" Likewise, the author of this work asks a similar question of Puritan authors: "To please nor not to please God?" The Puritans eternal struggle is embodied by this singular phrase that the Puritans used in an attempt to decipher the rectitude of their own actions.
Introduction: "To Please God" or to "Not Please God": The Puritan Question Chapter 1: The Puritan Vernacular as a Means of Establishing Permanency in the New World Chapter 2: "It Pleased God": The Old English Puritan Vernacular Tradition As A Response To New England Chapter 3: Benjamin Franklin: Philadelphian, Philanthropist, Philanderer . . . Philistine? Chapter 4: The Puritan Frame of Mind
Introduction: "To Please God" or to "Not Please God": The Puritan Question Chapter 1: The Puritan Vernacular as a Means of Establishing Permanency in the New World Chapter 2: "It Pleased God": The Old English Puritan Vernacular Tradition As A Response To New England Chapter 3: Benjamin Franklin: Philadelphian, Philanthropist, Philanderer . . . Philistine? Chapter 4: The Puritan Frame of Mind
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