Abstract

The Moral American

Geismar, Maxwell | April 27, 1957 issue

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The article presents books and authors. Roger Burlingame's "The American Conscience," comes at the right time. It is a survey of moral behavior from the Plymouth Colony to the Great Depression; and one only wishes he had carried on this chronicle a little farther. What would lie say now? Where is the American conscience today? The witch trials of the late 17th century in New England were the last desperate attempt of the Calvinist clergy to maintain the "covenant." These persecutions were followed by a wave of public remorse and spiritual reform.

See Also:

LITERATURE; AUTHORS; BURLINGAME, Roger; AUTHORSHIP; BOOKS; CLERGY -- England
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