Hebrew Poetry

Hebrew Poetry is of two kinds, either lyric or gnomic, i.e. subjectively emotional or sententiously didactic, the former belonging to the active or stirring, and the latter to the reflective or quiet, periods of Hebrew history, and whether expressed in lyric or gnome rises in the conscience and terminates in action; for Hebrew thought needs to go no higher, since therein it finds and affirms God; and it seeks to go no farther, for therein it compasses all being, and requires no epic and no drama to work out its destiny. However individualistic in feature, as working through the conscience, it yet relates itself to the whole moral world, and however it may express itself, it beats in accord with the pulse of eternity. The lyric expression of the Hebrew temper we find in the Psalms and the Lamentations of Jeremiah, and the gnomic in the books of Proverbs and Ecclesiastes, while the book of Job, which is only dramatic in form, is partly lyric and partly dramatic.

Definition taken from The Nuttall Encyclopædia, edited by the Reverend James Wood (1907)

Hebrew * Hebrew Prophecy
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Heart of Midlothian
Heathenism
Heathfield, George Augustus Eliott, Lord
Heaven
Heave-Offering
Hebbel, Friedrich
Hebe
Heber, Reginald
Hébert, Jacques René
Hebrew
Hebrew Poetry
Hebrew Prophecy
Hebrews, Epistle to the
Hebrides
Hebron
Hecatæus of Miletus
Hecate
Hecker, Friedrich Karl Franz
Hecker, Justus Friedrich Karl
Heckmondwike
Hecla