Descripción
12mo.pp. [xvi], 348, [xx]. A-Q¹². Roman letter some Italic, with box rule. Title within charming architecturalwoodcut border, small woodcut initials, typographical ornaments, near contemporary autograph of Degorry Polwhele at foot of t-p, C19th engraved armorial bookplate Parminter with motto Deo Favente on pastedown, John Sparrow s acquisition note J. S. from R G-H 1968 above, Robert S. Pirie s bookplate on rear pastedown. Light age yellowing. A very good copy, crisp and clean, in contemporary English vellum over thin boards, remains of ties, a little soiled. Definitive edition of this important work of meditations, full of the the epigrammatic concision and wit that are the hallmark of Hall s work. The first edition contained 91 meditations and here enlarged to 140. These meditations differ from his earlier works in that they focus on observations from nature and moments that occur in every day life. The Occasional Meditations show the latest development of Hall s meditative practices. In order to gain inspiration, Hall went directly to nature. He turns from focusing on scripture or other heavenly things to mediation on nature. This is different from the Lutheran tradition because it goes against the sola scriptura tradition….the meditations can focus on any object in nature… This focusing is the starting point for leading the reader to a religious or spiritual experience. Darrau: The Reception of English Puritan Literature in Germany. These meditations range from such as Upon the hearing of the street cries in London to Upon the sight of a great Library . The genre commonly associated with Hall and practised by other seventeenth century authors turns on a distinction from formal meditation. By its nature, contemporary commentary notes, the occasional meditation resists the formality of the meditative practice variously described as set, solemn, or deliberate. Bishop Hall stresses there may be much use, no rule for the meditative mode that depends upon suddain invention not composed by study. It is essentially occasional or, in the often-repeated synonyms, extemporal, sudden, quick, rapt, and ejaculatory. Hall offers the further distinction between meditation either extemporal and occasioned by outward occurrences offered to the mind; or deliberate and wrought out of our own heart. . Hall s fundamental distinction between the extemporal and the deliberate outward occurrences offered to the mind as opposed to those wrought from the heart, refines the accepted belief that meditation in general was a bending of the mind upon spiritual concerns. Later commentaries on the occasional meditation note a characteristic sudden fixing of the mind, a profitable minding, or a serious bending of the mind. Raymond A. Anselment Robert Boyle and the Art of Occasional Meditation . Joseph Hall (1574-1656), Bishop of Norwich, poet, moralist, satirist, controversialist (against Milton, i.a.), devotional writer, theological commentator, autobiographer and practical essayist, was one of the leading hommes de lettres of the Jacobean age. He was at the centre of public life under James I representing that King at the Synod of Dort in 1618, assisting in his negotiations with the Scots and in Lord Doncaster s French embassy and was foremost among the defenders of the temporal and spiritual powers of the Bishops in the Puritan Parliament of 1640-41. However, it is as a writer that Hall is now remembered. Fuller called him the English Seneca for his pure, plain, and full style . While Hall may not have been the first English satirist, as he claimed, he certainly introduced the Juvenalian satire into English. The National Archives at Kew record the will of Degory Polwhele, Doctor of Physic of Golden, Cornwall dated 1673. ESTC S103720. STC 16689. Not in Pforzheimer or Grolier. N° de ref. del artículo L2222
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