The Poetical Works of Samuel Taylor Coleridge |
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Pagina viii
Some readers , he fears , may share his own opinion that they are too voluminous , but it is hoped that , on the whole , they may be found useful , not only to the student of the poems , but to those who wish to study more closely the ...
Some readers , he fears , may share his own opinion that they are too voluminous , but it is hoped that , on the whole , they may be found useful , not only to the student of the poems , but to those who wish to study more closely the ...
Pagina xiv
After six weeks of the Junior School at Hertford- where I was very happy on the whole , for I had plenty to eat and drink ' - he was removed , in September , to the great London school , being placed in the second , or “ Jeffries ' Ward ...
After six weeks of the Junior School at Hertford- where I was very happy on the whole , for I had plenty to eat and drink ' - he was removed , in September , to the great London school , being placed in the second , or “ Jeffries ' Ward ...
Pagina xvi
... how he read straight through a whole circulating library , of which he was made free by a singular incident ( his account of which is needlessly romantic ) ; and how he invaded the murky caves of the third - century Neo - Platonists ...
... how he read straight through a whole circulating library , of which he was made free by a singular incident ( his account of which is needlessly romantic ) ; and how he invaded the murky caves of the third - century Neo - Platonists ...
Pagina xviii
or originality ; perhaps ( but only perhaps ) less influenced by his work as a whole . As a matter of fact , however , it happened that the first breath of Nature , unsophisticated by the classical tradition , came to Coleridge from ...
or originality ; perhaps ( but only perhaps ) less influenced by his work as a whole . As a matter of fact , however , it happened that the first breath of Nature , unsophisticated by the classical tradition , came to Coleridge from ...
Pagina xix
... C. V. le Grice 3 describes Coleridge's rooms at this time as crowded by friends who came to hear their host declaim , and repeat “ whole passages verbatim ' from the political pamphlets which then swarmed from the press .
... C. V. le Grice 3 describes Coleridge's rooms at this time as crowded by friends who came to hear their host declaim , and repeat “ whole passages verbatim ' from the political pamphlets which then swarmed from the press .
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