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[Illustration: England's Antiphon]
ENGLAND'S ANTIPHON was originally published in 1868
In this book I have sought to trace the course of our religious poetryfrom an early period of our literary history.
This could hardly be done without reference to some of the principalphases of the religious history of the nation. To give anything like afull history of the religious feeling of a single county, would require alarge book, and—not to mention sermons—would involve a thoroughacquaintance with the hymns of the country,—a very wide subject, which Ihave not considered of sufficient importance from a literary point ofview to come within the scope of the volume.
But if its poetry be the cream of a people's thought, some trueindications of the history of its religious feeling must be found in itsreligious verse, and I hope I have not altogether failed in setting forththese indications.
My chief aim, however, will show itself to have been the mediatingtowards an intelligent and cordial sympathy betwixt my readers and thewriters from whom I have quoted. In this I have some confidence ofsuccess.
Heartily do I throw this my small pebble at the head of the great
Sabbath-breaker Schism.
If the act of worship be the highest human condition, it follows that thehighest human art must find material in the modes of worship. The firstpoetry of a nation will not be religious poetry: the n