Difference between revisions of "The Wandering Jew (1893 Buchanan), poem"
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''' The Wandering Jew: A Christmas Carol''' is a poem by [[Robert Williams Buchanan]]. | ''' The Wandering Jew: A Christmas Carol''' (1893) is a poem by [[Robert Williams Buchanan]]. | ||
==Editions and translations== | ==Editions and translations== | ||
Published in London (1893). | Published in London (1893). | ||
== | ==Abstract== | ||
The Wandering Jew of Buchanan’s apocalyptic vision is Jesus himself, who is arraigned before a mystic tribunal, accused of all the woes, and sins, and tragedies, all the delusions and disappointments of the 19th centuries of Christian history, and condemned to the desolate immortality of an everlasting outcast. The poem aroused bitter controversy. | The Wandering Jew of Buchanan’s apocalyptic vision is Jesus himself, who is arraigned before a mystic tribunal, accused of all the woes, and sins, and tragedies, all the delusions and disappointments of the 19th centuries of Christian history, and condemned to the desolate immortality of an everlasting outcast. The poem aroused bitter controversy. | ||
Revision as of 19:33, 11 September 2009
The Wandering Jew: A Christmas Carol (1893) is a poem by Robert Williams Buchanan.
Editions and translations
Published in London (1893).
Abstract
The Wandering Jew of Buchanan’s apocalyptic vision is Jesus himself, who is arraigned before a mystic tribunal, accused of all the woes, and sins, and tragedies, all the delusions and disappointments of the 19th centuries of Christian history, and condemned to the desolate immortality of an everlasting outcast. The poem aroused bitter controversy.