Difference between revisions of "Mark Pattison"
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Mark Pattison <ref name=" | |||
<p> | Mark Pattison <ref name="term_77931" /> | ||
==References == | <p> A distinguished English scholar, born at Hornby, Yorkshire; studied at Oxford, and was for a time carried away with the Tractarian Movement, but when his interest in it died out he gave himself to literature and philosophy; wrote in the famous "Essays and Reviews" a paper on "The Tendency of [[Religious]] [[Thought]] in England"; became rector of [[Lincoln]] College, Oxford; wrote his chief literary work, a "Life of Isaac Casaubon," a mere fragment of what it lay in him to do, and left an autobiography, which revealed a wounded spirit which no vulnerary known to him provided by the pharmacopoeia of earth or heaven could heal (1813-1889). </p> | ||
== References == | |||
<references> | <references> | ||
<ref name=" | <ref name="term_77931"> [https://bibleportal.com/encyclopedia/the-nuttall-encyclopedia/pattison,+mark Mark Pattison from The Nuttall Encyclopedia]</ref> | ||
</references> | </references> |
Latest revision as of 17:51, 15 October 2021
Mark Pattison [1]
A distinguished English scholar, born at Hornby, Yorkshire; studied at Oxford, and was for a time carried away with the Tractarian Movement, but when his interest in it died out he gave himself to literature and philosophy; wrote in the famous "Essays and Reviews" a paper on "The Tendency of Religious Thought in England"; became rector of Lincoln College, Oxford; wrote his chief literary work, a "Life of Isaac Casaubon," a mere fragment of what it lay in him to do, and left an autobiography, which revealed a wounded spirit which no vulnerary known to him provided by the pharmacopoeia of earth or heaven could heal (1813-1889).