Abstract

STUDIES of seventeenthand eighteenth-century New England appearing in the past decade have exhibited a renewed interest in expressions of popular piety as a means of probing the non-elite mentalit6 of the early English settlers, an interest that can be traced back to the work of Edmund S. Morgan in the 1940s and 1950s as well as that of some of his students.' Ironically enough, intellectual historian Perry Miller's brightest student, Morgan, first, and then certain other

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