The Cambridge History of English and American Literature in 18 Volumes (190721). Volume VIII. The Age of Dryden.
IV. The Early Quakers.
§ 13. Ellwoods Collection of Poems on Various Subjects.
Of poetry, in the writings of the early quakers, there is nothing that deserves the name. Such versification as we find is, for the most part, prosaic disquisition on moral and spiritual themes, marked by piety without inspiration, and facility without imagination. Thomas Ellwood, in addition to the poems which are scattered through his autobiography, issued A Collection of Poems on Various Subjects, from which we extract the following:
| Hes a true lover, not who can subdue |
Monsters and giants for his mistress sake, |
And sighs perhaps, and weeps, with much ado |
For fear she should some other happy make; |
But who so far her happiness prefers |
Before his own, that he can be content |
To sacrifice his own to purchase hers, |
Though with the price of his own banishment. |
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