Within the Essays he found "a worldly wise skepticism that braced him towards the superficial pieties demanded by his time". Melville then read Browne's Religio Medici which he adored, describing Browne to an acquaintance as "a kind of 'crack'd archangel'".[seventy two] History This Internet site incorporates age-restricted elements such as https://brettu875xjs6.verybigblog.com/profile