During that crisis of cultural-devotional identity of England, the identification and way of patronizing the God and His supremacy expounded by George Herbert (3 April, 1593-1 March, 1633) and Henry Vaughan (17 April 1621-23 April, 1695) managed the baffling minds of people, germinating the seeds of a new culture and identity of devotion into the heart of England. The word 'devotion' and its very sense were seemingly menial to them. The existence of God and His magnanimous milieu beyond the resistance of every creation were of inferior and subservient to them. People of vast materialistic things were unable and hardly remember to the epistemological and subtle concept of God. The charm and devotional practices, lust for God's grace was apparently different in the large and spectacular domain of the seventeenth century England.
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