单词 | Coleridge |
例句 | He read poems by the romantics William Wordsworth and Samuel Taylor Coleridge—“Where true Love burns Desire is Love’s pure flame....” Charles and Emma: The Darwins' Leap of Faith 2009-01-01T00:00:00Z Even in 1801 we can still catch Coleridge resolving that ‘before my thirtieth year I will thoroughly understand the whole of Newton’s works.’ The Invention of Science 2015-09-17T00:00:00Z The Coleridge poem gave me yet a new idea about writing. Bad Boy 2001-05-08T00:00:00Z The actress appeared in her father's 2000 film Pandaemonium, about the Romantic poets Wordsworth and Coleridge, and she hopes to work with him again. Sundance star to play Princess Margaret in royal film 2013-01-19T14:08:12Z Samuel Taylor Coleridge once defined him as “intellectual power deserted by all grace, all moral principle.” Trump, Troilus, and Cressida 2016-08-09T04:00:00Z While both Coleridge and Wordsworth are critiqued in "Mont Blanc", enquiry is more important than attack. Mont Blanc by Percy Bysshe Shelley 2013-03-11T13:41:42Z As Samuel Taylor Coleridge said of Shakespeare, the fellow is myriad-minded. Review: Francis Spufford’s First Novel Is a Swashbuckling Tale 2017-06-27T04:00:00Z When William Wordsworth visited in 1802 with his sister Dorothy and Samuel Coleridge, he called it simply "the Clyde's most majestic daughter". Scottish town that changed the world fights for its rights 2013-03-31T00:06:09Z In accepting the Shakespeare Prize, Larkin elegantly thanked “Professor Dr. Haas for his more than handsome laudatio, to which I listened with that willing suspension of disbelief recommended by Coleridge in another context.” Book review: ‘Philip Larkin: Life, Art and Love,’ by James Booth Shrewd enough to recognise that this was the kind of agent she wanted, Myerson sent her debut novel to Coleridge and has stayed with her ever since. Julie Myerson: a life in writing 2013-03-22T17:17:00Z Fiction was one solution to this quandary, allowing us to suspend disbelief in the way that Coleridge said was essential for literature. Lie to Me: Fiction in the Post-Truth Era 2017-01-15T05:00:00Z Other Romantics took the path of chemical obliteration — Coleridge's opium, Adele's cases of rosé. Breakup songs owe a lot to the lovelorn lyrics of the Romantics 2021-12-25T05:00:00Z I’m a bit of a “library cormorant,” to borrow Coleridge’s memorable phrase — always on the swim through books, gulping down this and that, here and there. The Classic Novel That Robert Macfarlane Just Couldn’t Finish 2020-11-19T05:00:00Z During one literary debate, Gabriel declares that “The three greatest English imaginations are Shakespeare, Coleridge and Shelley.” Review | If poets could solve a crime . . . 2018-06-01T04:00:00Z His father preferred Coleridge and used to challenge his son to Shakespeare reciting contests. Marlon James wins Booker Prize for novel on attempted assassination of Bob Marley 2015-10-13T04:00:00Z During the 1920s, Jones was regularly commissioned to produce book illustrations, most notably for Swift’s “Gulliver’s Travels,” the medieval “Chester Play of the Deluge,” the Book of Jonah and Coleridge’s “Rime of the Ancient Mariner.” Why isn’t David Jones famous? 2017-04-11T04:00:00Z I was half expecting ST Coleridge to turn up at the last moment and say he didn't believe a word of it. Suspension of Disbelief – review 2013-07-20T23:05:33Z Whereupon Tennyson insists “The one I count greater than them all — Wordsworth, Coleridge, Shelley, even Byron — is Keats.” Review | If poets could solve a crime . . . 2018-06-01T04:00:00Z First published anonymously, on the second edition Lewis, then an MP, included his name: Coleridge was only one of many who was scandalised to see that "the author of The Monk signs himself — a legislator!" Paul Murray's top 10 wicked clerics 2010-03-17T15:38:00Z Plagued with divisive thoughts "that tortured me", Coleridge went on suicidal climbing expeditions. Sticking the world together with words 2010-07-19T09:22:00Z A description by Wordsworth, Coleridge or Burns, a landscape by Crome, Gainsborough or Constable, is not merely nature, but nature reflected in and giving expression to a state of mind. Poem of the week: The Two Deserts by Coventry Patmore 2011-03-28T11:18:29Z The novel’s self-deprecating title comes from a poem that Samuel Taylor Coleridge wrote to Charles Lamb in 1794, describing his unflagging grief: Book review: ‘All My Puny Sorrows,’ by Miriam Toews Scholars and theatergoers have debated that question at least since Coleridge stood aghast at his "motiveless Malignity." 'Iago: A Novel' ? the morning after a bloody mess 2012-01-04T22:57:03Z Combining "length" with "rapidity," it should move, in Coleridge's indelible words, "like the hurricane and the whirlpool, absorbing while it advances." With age, the wisdom of staging 'Lear' becomes less clear 2014-08-13T04:00:00Z Playing Mary makes perfect sense for Shaw, who specializes in powerful, heart-pounding works, from a modern-dress "Medea" to Samuel Beckett's "Happy Days" to performing Samuel Taylor Coleridge's epic poem "The Rime of the Ancient Mariner." Fiona Shaw plays the Virgin Mary with 'no agenda' 2013-04-12T13:00:14Z As Quicksall notes, critic Harold Bloom classified it as “one of the most perfect distillations of the Romantic philosophy of Shelley, Byron, Coleridge, all those writers.” Hopelessly romantic: ‘Frankenstein’ at Book-It 2014-02-07T21:39:52Z To an extent, he was wishing to escape from himself into nature, the Romantic Nature espoused by Samuel Taylor Coleridge and William Wordsworth when they lived in the Quantocks. Our pursuit of spring continues, 100 years after Edward Thomas's 2013-03-28T13:57:39Z This week's poem, "Time's Acquittal" by Sara Coleridge, is the second in a group of three rather unusual poems, gathered under the heading, Dreams. Poem of the week: Time's Acquittal by Sara Coleridge 2011-01-10T10:49:35Z This interest in the subconscious is one poetic strand of several that connect Sara to her father, Samuel Taylor Coleridge. Poem of the week: Time's Acquittal by Sara Coleridge 2011-01-10T10:49:35Z Mr. Coogan does, in fact, smoke a joint, lighting up in the same house where Coleridge wrote “Dejection: An Ode” and indulged in opium, the soporific that enslaved him in “humiliation and debasement.” | ?The Trip': 2 Pairs of Sharp Elbows On White Tablecloths 2011-06-09T23:20:20Z Kate Moss outside her new London home, in which the poet Samuel Taylor Coleridge once lived. Constructive criticism: the week in architecture 2011-08-26T14:53:45Z “Compare London to Hong Kong — it’s suffering because it’s so reliant on Chinese customers,” Mr. Coleridge said. Watches See a ‘Brexit’ Boom 2016-11-01T04:00:00Z This week’s In Performance video is with Fiona Shaw, in an excerpt from a new staged reading of Samuel Taylor Coleridge’s 1798 poem “The Rime of the Ancient Mariner.” ArtsBeat: In Performance: Fiona Shaw of ‘Rime of the Ancient Mariner’ 2013-12-10T13:00:36Z Thus he goes to the Lake District to discover how Wordsworth, Coleridge and Keats changed the perception of wild uplands from places to avoid to theatres for the exploration of the human psyche. Ramble On by Sinclair McKay – review 2012-06-22T21:55:19Z It seemed to be written by someone who was, as Charles Lamb said of Samuel Taylor Coleridge, an archangel a little damaged. The Osage Indians Struck It Rich, Then Paid the Price 2017-04-12T04:00:00Z But another poet, Samuel Taylor Coleridge, did live and die here, and the house was owned by the writer JB Priestley, too. Constructive criticism: the week in architecture 2011-08-26T14:53:45Z Written by William Wordsworth and Samuel Taylor Coleridge, this collection of poems is commonly thought to have launched British Romanticism. What we can learn from reading Sylvia Plath’s copy of "The Great Gatsby" 2018-12-15T05:00:00Z In 1801, Samuel Taylor Coleridge calculated the impact ratio of scientists to poets like this: “The souls of 500 Sir Isaac Newtons would go to the making up of a Shakespeare or a Milton.” Must Science Conflict With Spirituality? 2018-06-25T04:00:00Z And if a marathon of two Brit Rich Littles doesn't appeal, attend to the pair's inspired improvs of a medieval hero leading his troops to battle, or of their exegesis of Coleridge's "Kubla Khan." The Trip: Great Impressions 2011-06-10T18:45:00Z Samuel Taylor Coleridge, who coined the word "marginalia", wrote his own marginal comments with an audience in mind – and even published some of them. It's my habit to share relics 2011-03-22T19:30:00Z The falls have impressed and inspired poets and writers for centuries, including Wordsworth, Coleridge, and JMW Turner. 20 of the world's best waterfalls: readers’ tips 2019-08-01T04:00:00Z The contrast is demonstrated by “Therefore All Seasons Shall Be Sweet to Thee,” an Adah Rose Gallery show that takes its title from a Coleridge poem. Review | In the galleries: Works draw on feeling, seeing and a penchant for jazz 2021-12-16T05:00:00Z Coleridge was instrumental in his initial rediscovery, but his reputation was only firmly reestablished by Eliot. Book review: ‘Music at Midnight: The Life and Poetry of George Herbert,’ by John Drury Coleridge was a fan, saying it gave him a “pleasurable sensation of warmth”. Is the growth in nitrous oxide misuse a laughing matter? 2014-08-13T04:00:00Z Byron’s clubfoot, Flannery O’Connor’s lupus, Coleridge’s opium addiction and whatever was wrong with Hemingway do interest many readers because these factors shaped the life experiences from which the great work sprang. Are literary classics obsolete? 2012-05-31T00:00:00Z Various passages mention Coleridge, Kafka, Proust, Freud and Lawrence, and at times O’Connor seems to be seeking a patron saint of literature. Flannery O’Connor Prayer Journal Published 2013-11-13T19:04:02Z I portrayed Coleridge's idea of immortality as a grim curse – Citizen Kane is the opposite: mortality as a punishment. Bard reputation: pop stars pick their favourite poets 2010-10-07T15:52:00Z That’s why creative connections often occur when people are most peaceful — relaxing under a tree, like Isaac Newton, or in a dream state, like Coleridge when he thought up “Kubla Khan.” The Mind Research Network and Charting Creativity 2010-05-07T23:07:00Z The calendar shoot took place in the Lake District this weekend, with Greta Hall, home to Southey and Coleridge, one of the locations. Naked poets bare all for calendar of male muses 2011-08-15T14:42:08Z Coleridge thought highly of her poems; she wrote admiringly of his. Poem of the week: Sappho and Phaon by Mary Robinson 2010-04-12T09:52:00Z Kate Moss outside her new London home, in which the poet Samuel Taylor Coleridge once lived. Constructive criticism: the week in architecture 2011-08-26T14:53:45Z “Christabel,” for instance, is titled after Samuel Taylor Coleridge’s unfinished poem about an evil sorceress who ensnares a virtuous maiden. Art Review: ‘Julia Margaret Cameron,’ at the Metropolitan Museum of Art 2013-08-22T19:55:31Z It is akin to Samuel Coleridge’s ancient mariner drowning at sea: Bras, bras everywhere, and not a one for sale. Women are over the underwire bra 2022-03-09T05:00:00Z Under the romantic spell of Wordsworth and Coleridge, a generation of young artists turned away from composing historical and biblical scenes in the studio to face their native landscape head on. Watercolour at Tate Britain - review 2011-02-05T00:05:30Z Coleridge's poetry, we know, had touched his imagination, and it seems very likely that he had fallen under the spell of Edward FitzGerald's The Rubáiyát of Omar Khayyám. Poem of the week: An Arab Love-Song by Francis Thompson 2012-12-17T10:52:15Z Both these poets superbly exemplify Coleridge's definition of the form: "The best words in their best order." Books of the year 2012: authors choose their favourites 2012-11-23T22:55:14Z As for the Rush song Xanadu, and its debt to Samuel Taylor Coleridge, it's kind of strange how that came about. Rush: 'Our fans feel vindicated' 2011-03-24T21:29:01Z While working as a publicist for a children's publisher, Myerson had been given a dressing-down by literary agent Gill Coleridge for not doing enough to promote one of her authors. Julie Myerson: a life in writing 2013-03-22T17:17:00Z Or, to apply our Coleridge Tea Test again here: To know that Proust dipped a madeleine in tea isn’t interesting; that his novel unpacks this into a disquisition on the architecture of memory is. Tom McCarthy Thinks the Wrong Kurt Vonnegut Book Is Famous 2022-01-20T05:00:00Z Byron ranked him with Coleridge as "the first of these times in point of power and genius". George Crabbe: The man behind Benjamin Britten 2013-06-14T17:00:01Z Macdonald mentions that in younger days he was able to complete “The Ivory Grin” while also toiling on his dissertation about Coleridge at the University of Michigan. ‘Meanwhile There Are Letters’ review: The rich friendship of Eudora Welty and Ross Macdonald 2015-08-05T04:00:00Z They are going to listen to a lecture by Coleridge, and Doyle's job is to explain it. Ten of the best: lectures 2011-03-12T00:06:46Z Both Coleridge and Eliot, who were writing about print, sound uncannily like ranters against the Internet and television. Arts & Leisure Preview: Is There a Future for Arts Criticism? 2010-03-31T18:33:00Z Sales by a rival retailer in Paris are down 50 percent, Mr. Coleridge noted, adding that even the highly publicized Oct. Watches See a ‘Brexit’ Boom 2016-11-01T04:00:00Z Samuel Taylor Coleridge is supposed to have been a spellbinding lecturer. Ten of the best: lectures 2011-03-12T00:06:46Z Coleridge said that seeing the fiery Edmund Kean act was “like reading Shakespeare by flashes of lightning”. Hallucinating history: when Stalin and Eisenstein reinvented a revolution 2017-10-24T04:00:00Z Today, Coleridge’s cottage is owned by the National Trust, and a 51-mile walking path called the Coleridge Way links his favorite spots. On Europe’s Goth Trail, From the Brontës to Byron 2015-09-08T04:00:00Z It's a short step from Hopkins to the full-blown pantheism of Samuel Taylor Coleridge's "The Eolian Harp". Poster poems: religion 2013-04-12T15:23:10Z Samuel Coleridge was writing about poetry when he discussed the “willing suspension of disbelief,” but it comes in handy when reading “Demon Camp,” a work of nonfiction by Jennifer Percy. ‘Demon Camp’: hounded by the dead and the devils of war 2014-02-19T20:12:24Z Holmes, biographer of Shelley and Coleridge, is perhaps best known for The Age of Wonder, his engaging study of the impact of science in the early industrial era. Book reviews roundup: Margaret Thatcher, Falling Upwards: How We Took to the Air and A Place in the Country 2013-05-03T16:29:01Z The idea of walking from Coleridge to D. H. Lawrence is quite interesting to me. Q&A: Walking ‘That Long Trailing Leg of Britain’ 2013-08-20T21:21:43Z In his poetry Hughes was torn between the mythic “vision” of Coleridge and the elegiac “authenticity” of Wordsworth. Prince of poetry 2015-10-22T04:00:00Z This transgression against the dead — or the delusion of such — fills the story with a mythic affliction that recalls the old sailor’s in Samuel Coleridge’s epic poem “The Rime of the Ancient Mariner.” In the Trenches of World War I, a Bloody Ritual Fueled by Guilt 2020-11-10T05:00:00Z In fact, Shaw is full of another project, involving The Rime of the Ancient Mariner, Coleridge's epic poem. Fiona Shaw: 'I'm not frightened of hard words' 2012-07-17T18:01:00Z Holmes is well known as the biographer of Shelley, Coleridge and others. 8 New Books We Recommend This Week 2017-03-29T04:00:00Z In the 19th century, Samuel Taylor Coleridge attended public chemistry lectures to expand his “stock of metaphors.” The Mysteries of Friendship, Illuminated by Spooky Quantum Physics 2019-04-01T04:00:00Z Scrolling through what's on, there's a smattering of Pope, Coleridge and Byron. A plea for old poetry 2010-10-02T11:59:00Z Shakespeare is able to conjure this implausible world, Coleridge observed, because “he adapts himself so admirably to the situation — in other words so puts himself into it.” Arts & Leisure Preview: ?Green Zone,? ?The Ghost Writer? and Conspiracy Comforts 2010-03-31T20:54:00Z Nicholas Coleridge, the chairman of the trustees of the Victoria and Albert Museum, said in a statement that the process of searching for Mr. Roth’s successor was underway. Director of the Victoria and Albert Museum to Step Down 2016-09-05T04:00:00Z Wordsworth and Coleridge, it is worth remembering, became towering figures of English Romanticism only after a trip to Germany in 1789. Kurt Schwitters: the pop art pioneer who brought order to chaos 2013-01-19T09:01:37Z A report of the investigation, overseen by Brisbane Archbishop Mark Coleridge, had been sent to the Vatican where the Dicastery for the Doctrine of the Faith was continuing to investigate, Costelloe said. Vatican considers child sexual abuse allegations against a former Australian bishop 2023-09-19T04:00:00Z She quotes William Wordsworth — “There hath past away a glory from the earth” — as a call to action and Samuel Taylor Coleridge as seeing “the divine as inseparable from nature.” Opinion | How King Charles can make himself relevant 2023-05-01T04:00:00Z A minister in the years before his arrest, Coleridge would often tell CJ that “comparison is the thief of joy.” 'Mom, they invited me!': Reliving the weekend when CJ Stroud caught up to Bryce Young 2023-04-26T04:00:00Z Here’s the appropriately macabre opening of Coleridge’s “The Crime of the Urchin Mary”: “It was an ancient crone who wrote / Silly rhymes for tots / Was stopped by a maid in a pinafore / With blood-red polkadots.” Review | 9 strangely wonderful books beyond the bestseller list 2023-02-24T05:00:00Z It was reptilian, insensate, Coleridge’s monster of “motiveless malignity.” Why the Chimera Is the Monster for Our Uncertain Age 2023-02-16T05:00:00Z This year, as he prepares to lead the No. 2 Buckeyes against No. 5 Notre Dame in the season opener on Saturday, Coleridge Bernard Stroud IV is a boss. Ohio State QB C.J. Stroud: ‘I barely touched my potential’ 2022-08-29T04:00:00Z Yesterday I did not have the energy to open my laptop and today I am attempting to wrest words from the slugs — and wondering if, like Coleridge, I can raise poetry from a fever dream. Column: COVID brain fog is real, and with everything everywhere happening at once, it's a mercy 2022-07-12T04:00:00Z As a scholar of English literature, Dr. Suleri Goodyear cultivated specialties in the writings of Wordsworth, Coleridge, Byron and Keats. Sara Suleri Goodyear, acclaimed Pakistani memoirist, dies at 68 2022-04-01T04:00:00Z Sam Davies, 23, was found with knife wounds to the chest in Coleridge Gardens on 27 May and later died. Sam Davies murder: Four guilty of Lincoln hitman killing 2022-04-06T04:00:00Z In the 19th century, Samuel Taylor Coleridge and Thomas De Quincey wrote freely about their use of opium, and Elizabeth Barrett Browning referred to a mixture of morphine and ether as “my elixir.” Where Have All the Artist-Addicts Gone? 2022-03-24T04:00:00Z The British romantic poets William Wordsworth and Samuel Taylor Coleridge both honored nature as the source of truth and beauty. World History: Patterns of Interaction 2012-01-01T00:00:00Z Instead I was reminded that I am also a citizen of the world — and that like Coleridge’s Xanadu, that world is both holy and enchanted and a savage place. Column: COVID brain fog is real, and with everything everywhere happening at once, it's a mercy 2022-07-12T04:00:00Z “Everything he touched, he made it work,” says then-owner James Coleridge. He’s the youngest Chief in his First Nation’s history. Now he’s leading their fight against climate change. The harbour was inspiration for Samuel Taylor Coleridge's poem the Rime of the Ancient Mariner, and that statue attracts many visitors. Watchet's missing goose Derek to get statue 2021-11-12T05:00:00Z Down in a narrow valley, with banks of trees either side, he found an old silk mill, where poet Samuel Coleridge had once sat to compose a piece. Everything I Do: How Bryan Adams' Robin Hood video was made 2021-09-05T04:00:00Z Nicholas Coleridge, co-chairman of the pageant, said the Platinum Jubilee weekend will be "something of a reopening ceremony for the United Kingdom, following a period of uncertainty and hardship". Queen's Platinum Jubilee: Reign to be marked at street pageant 2021-06-29T04:00:00Z Others, such as Archbishop Mark Coleridge of Brisbane, Australia, pointed to the challenges the Church now faces. Vatican ruling on same-sex couples prompts defiance, pain, confusion 2021-03-17T04:00:00Z Nearly a decade ago I developed a television pilot with David Milch, who often reiterated Coleridge’s dictum that poetry emerges in “the balance or reconciliation of opposite or discordant elements or qualities.” 'Judas' writer asks: Does art have a place in the face of social injustice? 2021-02-22T05:00:00Z In some respects it evokes Samuel Taylor Coleridge’s perception of the “motiveless malignity” of Shakespeare’s Iago. Column: Brace yourself for Trump's scorched-earth attacks on health and safety 2020-11-25T05:00:00Z Just up the road is Alfoxton Hall, where Coleridge and William Wordsworth once worked together, and Wordsworth lived. Everything I Do: How Bryan Adams' Robin Hood video was made 2021-09-05T04:00:00Z Over time, contestants revealed themselves to be more familiar with Dan Brown, author of “The Da Vinci Code,” than with the English poet Samuel Taylor Coleridge, the New Republic noted. Alex Trebek, quintessential quizmaster as ‘Jeopardy!’ host for three decades, dies at 80 2020-11-08T05:00:00Z In a Tweet, Archbishop Mark Coleridge of Brisbane, Australia, criticised Pompeo’s comments as an “attempt to pressgang the Holy See into a questionable domestic political/electoral agenda playing itself out on the international stage.” Vatican officials defend accord with China after Pompeo criticism 2020-09-22T04:00:00Z It’s a wonderfully mixed bag, but the whole is greater than the parts, and in the end, it’s Coleridge who is the star here. Perspective | Online arts experiences that click with me 2020-05-26T04:00:00Z In his first bulletin, Johnson did appear, if not exactly the recovered Beethoven, then a bit more, some thought, like Coleridge’s traumatised Wedding Guest, “a sadder and a wiser man/ he rose the morrow morn”. Did a near-death experience change Boris Johnson? | Catherine Bennett 2020-05-17T04:00:00Z As Robert Macfarlane, another of our readers, notes, Coleridge’s mythic work predicts the Anthropocene and the fatal disconnection between human and nature. Why Willem Dafoe, Iggy Pop and more are reading The Rime of the Ancient Mariner to us 2020-04-24T04:00:00Z There were signs her condition was improving when she was announced as a participant in an ongoing daily online reading of Samuel Taylor Coleridge’s Ancient Mariner, alongside such stars as Jeremy Irons and Tilda Swinton. Marianne Faithfull discharged from hospital after 22 days fighting Covid-19 2020-04-22T04:00:00Z Coleridge’s poem opens as the Ancient Mariner collars a reluctant Wedding Guest and begins telling him about a disastrous sea voyage. All alone online: Iggy Pop and Jeremy Irons lead mass Ancient Mariner reading 2020-04-17T04:00:00Z Over more than a half-century of scholarship, Dr. Steiner hopscotched from the Greek myth of Antigone to the works of Shakespeare, Coleridge, Proust and Borges. George Steiner, renowned literary critic, dies at 90 2020-02-05T05:00:00Z She found those same strains reading Keats and Coleridge in college, the first texts she loved. How to Write Fiction When the Planet Is Falling Apart 2020-02-05T05:00:00Z Coleridge left us an extraordinary circle in the air. Why Willem Dafoe, Iggy Pop and more are reading The Rime of the Ancient Mariner to us 2020-04-24T04:00:00Z The romantic poets – Coleridge, Byron, Keats – loved to swim. 'Wild swimming'? We used to just call it swimming | Rhiannon Lucy Cosslett 2020-01-29T05:00:00Z And women don’t need to read a Coleridge poem or a story about a Bavarian exorcism to know that some men hate women and want to hurt them. Review | What do old tales of exorcism and murder say about how men see women now? Not much. 2019-09-26T04:00:00Z “We acknowledge the pain that those abused by clergy have experienced through the long process of the trials and appeal of Cardinal Pell,” Coleridge said. Cardinal George Pell's conviction for child sexual abuse upheld 2019-08-21T04:00:00Z Beneath it, they found another letter, from a century earlier, signed by one of the founders of the Romantic school of poetry — “an actual letter from Samuel Taylor Coleridge, just sitting there.” Richard Macksey, Johns Hopkins professor with capacious mind and library, dies at 87 2019-07-26T04:00:00Z A fable must by definition revolve around an animal, and in Samuel Taylor Coleridge’s nightmare the slain albatross hangs around the fated sailor’s neck like a broken cross, an emblem of his sin against nature. Why Willem Dafoe, Iggy Pop and more are reading The Rime of the Ancient Mariner to us 2020-04-24T04:00:00Z It comes as no surprise, then, that Barron wrote both poetry and horror before turning to crime fiction with 2018’s “Blood Standard,” a novel that introduced former mob enforcer Isaiah Coleridge. Review: Barron’s ‘Black Mountain’ stars his ex-mob enforcer 2019-06-25T04:00:00Z When he manages to sleep, Coleridge is terrorized by a black wolf in dream sequences that are evocative of early Stephen King. Review: Laird Barron returns with an often bleak novel 2019-05-06T04:00:00Z In his poem The Nightingale, Samuel Taylor Coleridge described the bird’s song as made up of “murmurs musical and swift jug jug, / And one low piping sound more sweet than all”. Why nightingales are snubbing Berkeley Square for the Tiergarten 2019-04-13T04:00:00Z Among those watching how Francis would act was Archbishop Mark Coleridge of Brisbane, who tweeted: “She kissed his ring!” Pope Francis lets people kiss his ring again after video controversy 2019-03-27T04:00:00Z And it’s why a teenage girl crouched behind the sofa when the wild-eyed Coleridge came to her parents’ house to recite The Rime in person. Why Willem Dafoe, Iggy Pop and more are reading The Rime of the Ancient Mariner to us 2020-04-24T04:00:00Z At the start of that violent book, Coleridge appeared to be a predatory machine; but, by its conclusion, he vowed that from then on he would kill only those who have it coming. Review: Barron’s ‘Black Mountain’ stars his ex-mob enforcer 2019-06-25T04:00:00Z At the start of that violent book, Coleridge appeared to be such a predatory machine; but by its conclusion, he vowed that from then on he would kill only those who have it coming. Review: Laird Barron returns with an often bleak novel 2019-05-06T04:00:00Z Australia’s ranking bishop, Mark Coleridge, who delivered the homily at the final Mass of the summit, said Pell’s convictions “shocked many across Australia and around the world, including the Catholic Bishops of Australia.” Australian Cardinal Pell convicted of molesting 2 choirboys 2019-02-26T05:00:00Z But Brisbane Archbishop Mark Benedict Coleridge says the bishops agree that “everyone should be equal under the law and we respect the Australian legal system.” The Latest: Australian bishops shocked by Pell conviction 2019-02-26T05:00:00Z When published in 1798, Coleridge’s poem was seen as the work of “a mad German poet”. Why Willem Dafoe, Iggy Pop and more are reading The Rime of the Ancient Mariner to us 2020-04-24T04:00:00Z Barron’s new novel, “Black Mountain,” finds Coleridge working as a private investigator in the Catskills mountains of upstate New York. Review: Barron’s ‘Black Mountain’ stars his ex-mob enforcer 2019-06-25T04:00:00Z Barron’s new novel, “Black Mountain,” finds Coleridge working as a private investigator in the Catskills of upstate New York. Review: Laird Barron returns with an often bleak novel 2019-05-06T04:00:00Z “The bishops agree that everyone should be equal under the law and we respect the Australian legal system,” said Coleridge, who is president of the Australian Catholic Bishops Conference. Australian Cardinal Pell convicted of molesting 2 choirboys 2019-02-26T05:00:00Z Then, quoting Jesus’ commandment to “Love your enemy”, Coleridge said: We are 'our worst enemy', bishop says as abuse conference wraps up 2019-02-24T05:00:00Z Australian Archbishop Mark Coleridge was delivering the homily; Francis was to offer final remarks at the end of Mass. Francis presides at final Mass to conclude sex abuse summit 2019-02-24T05:00:00Z Because abuse in my country takes many forms: child labor, child soldiers,’ ” Coleridge said. Vatican abuse summit is ‘wake-up call’ for countries where scandals have not yet exploded 2019-02-23T05:00:00Z Was it an artistic ecstasy, like the visions of Romantic poets including Blake and Coleridge, or an episode of mental illness? How The Scream became the ultimate image for our political age 2019-01-16T05:00:00Z The long list of inventions and great works said to have been generated in dreams includes the periodic table, the sewing machine, Coleridge’s “Kubla Khan,” Paul McCartney’s “Let It Be,” and Mary Shelley’s “Frankenstein.” Why We Sleep, and Why We Often Can’t 2018-12-03T05:00:00Z “Until trust is rebuilt,” said Archbishop Mark Coleridge, president of the Australian Catholic Bishops Conference, “all the apologies in the world will miss the mark.” ‘We Say Sorry’: Australia Formally Apologizes to Victims of Child Sexual Abuse 2018-10-22T04:00:00Z See if you can write a poem like Coleridge’s! “Cecilia Awakened” 2018-09-10T04:00:00Z “Until trust is rebuilt, all the apologies in the world will miss the mark,” Archbishop Coleridge said, adding that the church was taking significant steps toward reform. Australia’s Catholic Leaders Reject Call to Report Sex Abuse Heard in Confessions 2018-08-31T04:00:00Z Australian Catholic Bishops Conference president, Archbishop Mark Coleridge, said too many priests, brothers, sisters and lay people in Australia failed in their duty to protect and honour the dignity of children. Catholic church rejects royal commission call to disclose abuse reported in confession 2018-08-30T04:00:00Z “This decision may bring some comfort to them, despite the ongoing pain they bear,” Mark Coleridge, the archbishop of Canberra-Goulburn and president of the conference, said in a statement. Pope Accepts Resignation of Australian Archbishop for Covering Up Sex Abuse 2018-07-30T04:00:00Z Sand, sand everywhere, nor any grain to use, to paraphrase Coleridge. Riddle of the sands: the truth behind stolen beaches and dredged islands 2018-07-01T04:00:00Z Isaiah Coleridge, muscle for the Chicago mob’s Alaska subsidiary, isn’t your typical Mafia hit man. Action is fast-paced in Laird Barron’s ‘Blood Standard’ 2018-05-29T04:00:00Z Generations of scientists, artists and walkers all over the world—including the English poets William Wordsworth, Samuel Taylor Coleridge and Robert Southey—were influenced by his traveller’s diaries. Exploring German Wanderlust 2018-05-22T04:00:00Z “There will be no cover-up,” Coleridge said on Friday. Catholic church rejects royal commission call to disclose abuse reported in confession 2018-08-30T04:00:00Z He loves Coleridge and Shakespeare and is currently teaching his students Joseph Conrad’s Heart of Darkness. The teachers of Idlib on the impossible struggle to educate their students 2018-04-18T04:00:00Z Coleridge compares the problem to sailing on the ocean at night. Leaders like Zuma may be doomed. But they fight every inch of the way | Martin Kettle 2018-02-14T05:00:00Z I thought poetry was Coleridge and Blake, and I was the Cajun William Blake. Poet laureate committed to showing the ‘power of language’ 2017-12-22T05:00:00Z In 1797, an unexpected visitor to the English cottage of the poet Samuel Taylor Coleridge became a literary metaphor for unwanted distraction that disturbs creativity. London scientists feel the noise The publisher's chairman Nicholas Coleridge called Elvin "one of the all time greats", saying he knew she was the "perfect Glamour editor" from the moment he met her. Glamour editor Jo Elvin steps down 2017-10-12T04:00:00Z Coleridge and Keats both dedicated sonnets to Kosciuszko, while Lord Byron roared that he embodied the “sound that crashes in the tyrant’s ear”. Tadeusz Kosciuszko, Poland’s all-American hero 2017-09-20T04:00:00Z Archbishop Mark Coleridge of Brisbane appeared to recognise that it can be hard for non-Catholics to understand why this is not the case: Australia church abuse: Why priests can't spill confession secrets - BBC News 2017-08-14T04:00:00Z V&A chairman Nicholas Coleridge said he raised the museum "to new heights". Martin Roth, former head of London's V&A, dies at 62 - BBC News 2017-08-07T04:00:00Z Some scholars claim that Coleridge got stuck on Kubla Khan and then invented the Person from Porlock to excuse its fragmentary composition. London scientists feel the noise You can go out, walk the dog, grill a few veggie dogs, build a small lean-to, read some Coleridge and all you’ll miss is a medium-length replay review and maybe a meeting on the mound. When the Nationals have Max Scherzer on the mound, you better not look away 2017-06-27T04:00:00Z As a child, she sneaked downstairs one evening to hear Coleridge recite his “Ancient Mariner”; in her teens, she, too, “read with ardour” accounts of early Arctic voyages. Literature’s Arctic Obsession 2017-04-17T04:00:00Z The archbishop of Brisbane, Mark Coleridge, released a video to Catholic school parents and churches warning them to expect some “grim moments”. 4,444 victims: extent of abuse in Catholic church in Australia revealed 2017-02-05T05:00:00Z Samuel Taylor Coleridge developed this into a fine art, deploying in his marginalia the abbreviations “LM” for “ludicrous metaphor” or simply “N” for “nonsense”. Witty marginalia – just another reason to love the printed book | Steven Poole 2017-01-06T05:00:00Z The poets Byron, Shelley, Keats and Coleridge were regular drinkers here. Tales from the bar - a tour of London's 'great pubs' - BBC News 2017-01-02T05:00:00Z The figure of Death in Samuel Taylor Coleridge's 1798 poem The Rime of the Ancient Mariner clearly displays symptoms of the disease. Medical research: Mariners' malady : Nature : Nature Research 2016-12-13T05:00:00Z This unusual subgenre found a kind of epigraph in Samuel Taylor Coleridge’s great cautionary tale in verse, the 1798 “Rime of the Ancient Mariner.” Literature’s Arctic Obsession 2017-04-17T04:00:00Z All fiction depends on what Samuel Taylor Coleridge called “the willing suspension of disbelief,” the reader’s decision to put the argumentative, quibbling part of his mind into neutral and go along for the narrative ride. How Jack Reacher Was Built 2016-11-06T04:00:00Z Coleridge went so far as to use red ink, like a splenetic schoolmaster, which seems excessive to me. Witty marginalia – just another reason to love the printed book | Steven Poole 2017-01-06T05:00:00Z Coleridge believed the clean air on the hill at Highgate was beneficial in his attempts to cure himself of opium addiction. Tales from the bar - a tour of London's 'great pubs' - BBC News 2017-01-02T05:00:00Z Coleridge had his “person from Porlock,” whose knock at the door of his cottage both interrupted and made possible the composition of “Kubla Khan.” The Man Who Invented the Drug Memoir 2016-10-10T04:00:00Z “Using the name Elena helped only to reinforce the truth of the story I was telling. Even those who write need that “willing suspension of disbelief ”, as Coleridge called it. Elena Ferrante in her own words: ‘To relinquish my anonymity would be very painful’ 2016-10-03T04:00:00Z Fure takes inspiration from Coleridge’s “The Rime of the Ancient Mariner”—in particular, from the image of the albatross struck from the sky. Alan Gilbert’s Triumphant Biennial 2016-06-20T04:00:00Z But then, he was Coleridge – and friends actually lent him books so he’d write in them. Witty marginalia – just another reason to love the printed book | Steven Poole 2017-01-06T05:00:00Z It pained Coleridge to admit that he nonetheless admired the man “very greatly.” The Prude Who Invented the Modern Novel 2016-05-16T04:00:00Z Wordsworth and Coleridge had no idea they were “Romantics.” The Man Who Invented the Drug Memoir 2016-10-10T04:00:00Z “Swans sing before they die —” said poet Samuel Taylor Coleridge, “’Twere no bad thing/Should certain persons die before they sing.” Expect knowledge 2016-04-19T04:00:00Z Later Thursday, Coleridge sent out another tweet, asking fellow members of the clergy if they had seen apostolic exhortation yet. Speculation surrounds Pope Francis' long-awaited document on families and divorce 2016-04-07T04:00:00Z Timothy Coleridge, councillor for the ward in Kensington and Chelsea said he would raise the issue with the borough's parking department. Knightsbridge gold supercars given parking tickets - BBC News 2016-03-30T04:00:00Z “So oozy, hypocritical, praise-mad, canting, envious, concupiscent,” Samuel Coleridge described him in his notebooks. The Prude Who Invented the Modern Novel 2016-05-16T04:00:00Z Even those who write need that “willing suspension of disbelief ”, as Coleridge called it. Elena Ferrante: 'Anonymity lets me concentrate exclusively on writing' 2016-02-19T05:00:00Z In the process Mr. Mabey achieves a new brand of romantic science—Coleridge’s notebooks for the common reader. The Land Was Theirs 2016-01-15T05:00:00Z Coleridge wrote of Shakespeare's imagination "kindling like a meteor... one sentence begetting the next naturally... the meaning all inwoven". A Point of View: Is there any such thing as a wise person? - BBC News 2016-01-02T05:00:00Z He quoted the poet Samuel Coleridge and biblical verses and told the audience that workers should not be oppressed. Media mogul Redstone gets encouragement from friend turning 90 2015-12-06T05:00:00Z But Nicholas Coleridge, chairman of the V&A, said no offer had ever been made. V&A Museum denies rejecting Margaret Thatcher's wardrobe - BBC News 2015-11-05T05:00:00Z “He has proven himself to be a man of surprises,” said Archbishop Mark Coleridge of Brisbane, Australia. Pope lectures Catholic elders at closing of synod on family 2015-10-24T04:00:00Z “Marriage and the family raise all kinds of issues; the sheer range is why this work has proven to be so challenging,” Archbishop Mark Coleridge of Brisbane, Australia, said Monday. Voice Is Sought at the Vatican on Remarriage 2015-10-24T04:00:00Z “Some of them are talking now like this is Armageddon,” Archbishop Mark Coleridge of Brisbane, Australia, said in an interview with The Washington Post. Vatican meeting reveals growing Catholic divide over divorce and homosexuality 2015-10-22T04:00:00Z “I don’t think we’re ever going to get consensus on some of these hot-button issues,” Australian Archbishop Mark Coleridge told reporters Monday. Pope signals change with family synod 2015-10-19T04:00:00Z Coleridge, who took up the role of chairman on Tuesday this week, said there was "stupefied surprise" at the V&A about the Daily Telegraph story. V&A Museum denies rejecting Margaret Thatcher's wardrobe - BBC News 2015-11-05T05:00:00Z Despite soaking up the material — she enthusiastically analyzes the poetry of Samuel Taylor Coleridge — she struggled to finish projects and, on some days, to show up to class at all. Summer Graduation Academy offers a last chance at on-time graduation 2015-08-30T04:00:00Z Coleridge, denouncing “a contemptible democratical oligarchy of glib economists”, asked: “Is the increasing number of wealthy individuals that which ought to be understood by the wealth of the nation?” How to think about Islamic State 2015-07-24T04:00:00Z Sir Patrick used to have an unblighted view across the Heath—essentially, the same view that Coleridge had seen from his second-floor window two centuries earlier. London’s Most Mysterious Mansion 2015-05-23T04:00:00Z Virtual-reality developers and fans regularly cite the “suspension of disbelief,” a notion advanced 200 years ago by the poet and aesthetic philosopher Samuel Taylor Coleridge. Virtual Reality Fails Its Way to Success 2014-11-14T05:00:00Z Speaking to Radio 4 on Thursday, Coleridge agreed. V&A Museum denies rejecting Margaret Thatcher's wardrobe - BBC News 2015-11-05T05:00:00Z Instead, I followed Jim Morrison’s credo, the credo of Coleridge and, at one point, Wordsworth, the credo of self-discovery through self-destruction I so willfully subscribed to until this moment: Billy Idol: Sex, Drugs, 'Charmed Life,' and the Crash That Nearly Killed Me 2014-09-30T04:00:00Z Leon Wright, 26, of Coleridge Road, Crouch End, was acquitted of conspiracy to commit robbery. Gang jailed for Selfridges robbery 2014-08-19T04:00:00Z Sadly slower off the mark than Coleridge, I read a volume of Raymond Chandler's short stories, Trouble is My Business, when I was 17. Raymond Chandler's Red Wind carried me to California 2014-08-04T04:00:00Z Coleridge, of course, was talking about a reader willingly setting aside his skepticism about a story after being invited to do so by certain literary effects. Virtual Reality Fails Its Way to Success 2014-11-14T05:00:00Z "Lady Thatcher was an iconic figure who used fashion as a political weapon and certainly knew the power of clothes", said Coleridge. V&A Museum denies rejecting Margaret Thatcher's wardrobe - BBC News 2015-11-05T05:00:00Z Samuel Taylor Coleridge stopped off in 1804, en route for a new job with the governor of Malta. Gibraltar – 'an emblem of waste and loneliness' 2014-08-01T04:00:00Z With lyrics based on the Samuel Taylor Coleridge poem Kubla Khan, it goes way beyond their previous power-trio approach with added keyboard, bass pedals and an array of orchestral percussion. Rush: 10 of the best 2014-05-28T04:00:00Z Sir Paul Coleridge, who spoke as he retired from the High Court's family division, called for "the tide" of family breakdown to be stemmed. Judge makes family breakdown plea 2014-04-17T13:00:27Z Oculus programmers often talk, as Coleridge’s fellow poets might have talked, about how to keep audiences under their spells. Virtual Reality Fails Its Way to Success 2014-11-14T05:00:00Z Coleridge said that while there had been "some sort of informal conversation" in 2011 or 2012, there had been no follow-through. V&A Museum denies rejecting Margaret Thatcher's wardrobe - BBC News 2015-11-05T05:00:00Z I took out my notebook, nodded to the ghosts of Defoe, Coleridge, Thackeray et al, and started writing. Gibraltar – 'an emblem of waste and loneliness' 2014-08-01T04:00:00Z Understanding the stories of scripture requires what Samuel Taylor Coleridge once called a “willing suspension of disbelief”—a suspension that in turn creates what Coleridge thought of as “poetic faith.” The God of Noah: Great, But Not Always Good 2014-03-30T21:52:48Z Samuel Taylor Coleridge described the aura in the poem “Constancy to an Ideal Object.” Why the 'Venus Rainbow' Is Actually a Glory 2014-03-14T17:50:00Z As Coleridge said, “The very deep did rot: O Christ!/That ever this should be!” Helium high 2014-02-19T18:50:03.680Z The presiding judge Mr Justice Coleridge said the pair - who he described as "people of the highest calibre and integrity" - were victims of the "most appalling scam". Charities voice 'miracle baby' fears 2013-10-17T14:41:32Z Mr Gray, of Coleridge Street, set fire to his ex-girlfriend's flat, on Wellington Road, Blackburn, Lancashire, on New Year's Day after their relationship ended. High suicide-risk prisoner 'failed' 2013-09-25T16:54:31Z In the essay, she praised a number of famous androgynous writers, including Shakespeare, Keats, Sterne, Cowper, Lamb, and Coleridge. Blurred Lines, Androgyny and Creativity 2013-09-01T20:45:01.870Z Keats and Coleridge once walked here, both enthralled by the birdsong of nightingales. Hampstead Heath protests over mansions of the megarich 2013-04-13T23:04:30Z Ms. Shaw's delivery of Coleridge's epic "Rime of the Ancient Mariner" - an achievement both fascinating and florid- is on view through Jan. 13 within the atmospheric depths of a venue well beneath Waterloo Station. IHT Rendezvous: What to See on the London Stage in 2013 2013-01-10T11:23:43Z Sir Paul Coleridge, who founded the Marriage Foundation, tells the paper that the coalition should instead focus on supporting people who are already married. Debate continues over gay marriage 2012-12-26T05:42:57Z The presiding judge Mr Justice Coleridge added the case was "extraordinary, bizarre and worrying". 'Scammed' parents can keep child 2012-10-18T16:22:28Z Coleridge's Ancient Mariner, when he was "Alone on the wide, wide sea," found that "So lonely 'twas that God himself Scarce seem�d there to be." From Egypt to Japan 2012-04-19T02:00:28.147Z And the addition about Carlyle or Coleridge—or Coleridge!—is just the gratuitous insolence of one-eyed dulness. The Contemporary Review, Volume 36, October 1879 2012-04-18T02:00:17.060Z "I can never look upon a mountain without thinking of Coleridge's Hymn before Sunrise: 'Earth with her thousand voices, praises God.'" Treasure of Kings Being the Story of the Discovery of the \\"Big Fish,\\" or the Quest of the Greater Treasure of the Incas of Peru. 2012-04-09T02:00:30.007Z Major Jackson, with Major Coleridge, commands the companies of the Loyal Lancashires that were detailed with him from Kimberley, where his regiment lies, for duty at this camp. The Siege of Mafeking (1900) 2012-04-04T02:01:01.773Z At the High Court on Thursday, Mr Justice Coleridge ruled that the pair, who he described as people of the "highest calibre", should be given custody of the girl who is nearly two years old. 'Scammed' parents can keep child 2012-10-18T16:22:28Z The customary form of hexameter in English verse is exemplified by Coleridge’s descriptive line:— “In the hex | ameter | rises the | fountain’s | silvery | column.” Encyclopaedia Britannica, 11th Edition, Volume 13, Slice 4 "Hero" to "Hindu Chronology" 2012-04-04T02:00:56.447Z I had almost as soon try to read Carlyle or Coleridge.” The Contemporary Review, Volume 36, October 1879 2012-04-18T02:00:17.060Z Sometimes several sentences succeed each other in which his hearers hardly seem to make out any meaning whatever, and Brigham Young appears a grotesque kind of Coleridge. Modern Leaders: Being a Series of Biographical Sketches 2012-04-01T02:00:10.050Z Who could have supposed, at the end of the eighteenth century, when poetry in England seemed dead, that a great galaxy of stars--Wordsworth, Coleridge, Byron, Shelley, Keats--was on the very eve of rising? One Day at a Time and Other Talks on Life and Religion 2012-03-31T02:00:20.873Z But Mr Justice Coleridge decided the pair were victims of the "most appalling scam". 'Scammed' parents can keep child 2012-10-18T16:22:28Z Bacon died here in 1626; Coleridge and Andrew Marvell, the poets, were residents. Encyclopaedia Britannica, 11th Edition, Volume 13, Slice 4 "Hero" to "Hindu Chronology" 2012-04-04T02:00:56.447Z Wiser, it seems to me, it is to accept some such teaching as that of Coleridge in "Aids to Reflection." Letters to the Clergy On The Lord's Prayer and the Church 2012-03-29T02:00:12.080Z He was for a while a pupil of the Rev. Derwent Coleridge, son of the poet, and he finally studied at Magdalene College, Cambridge. Modern Leaders: Being a Series of Biographical Sketches 2012-04-01T02:00:10.050Z For what Coleridge has said of nations, is equally true of individuals. The Portland Sketch Book 2012-03-28T02:00:28.847Z Coleridge, who expressed for the Benthamite theories a very cordial detestation, sometimes glided into them himself. History of European Morals From Augustus to Charlemagne (Vol. 1 of 2) 2012-03-28T02:00:20.770Z But if Mr. Coleridge is satisfied with the wandering Moods of his Mind, perhaps this is no reason that others may not reap the solid benefit. Winterslow Essays and Characters Written There 2012-03-27T02:00:25.647Z It would be a practical impossibility to charge a jury in such a case, so as to embody Lord Coleridge’s view of the law. Theological Essays 2012-03-27T02:00:21.867Z The subject seems to have been suggested by Coleridge; who, among his many unfulfilled intentions, designed writing "The Brook," a poem which in his hands would surely have been a masterly performance. Harper's New Monthly Magazine, Vol. 1. No 1, June 1850 2012-03-21T02:00:31.390Z —I am not familiar with the Coleridge Papers, under that title, nor indeed am I quite sure that I know at all to what papers MR. Notes and Queries, Vol. IV, Number 108, November 22, 1851 A Medium of Inter-communication for Literary Men, Artists, Antiquaries, Genealogists, etc. 2012-03-20T02:00:10.797Z Coleridge in his younger days was an enthusiastic admirer of Hartley; but chiefly, I believe, on account of his theory of vibrations. History of European Morals From Augustus to Charlemagne (Vol. 1 of 2) 2012-03-28T02:00:20.770Z I can hardly consider Mr. Coleridge a deserter from the cause he first espoused, unless one could tell what cause he ever heartily espoused, or what party he ever belonged to, in downright earnest. Winterslow Essays and Characters Written There 2012-03-27T02:00:25.647Z There cannot be perfect intelligence without understanding; but following Coleridge, “understanding is the faculty of judging according to sense.” Theological Essays 2012-03-27T02:00:21.867Z Of Wordsworth and Bowles, both poets, and both friends of Coleridge, Lamb, Southey, and Crabbe, more detailed mention is made in preceding pages. Harper's New Monthly Magazine, Vol. 1. No 1, June 1850 2012-03-21T02:00:31.390Z Are we ever likely to receive from any member of Coleridge's family, or from his friend Mr. J. H. Green, the fragments, if not the entire work, of his Logosophia? Notes and Queries, Vol. IV, Number 108, November 22, 1851 A Medium of Inter-communication for Literary Men, Artists, Antiquaries, Genealogists, etc. 2012-03-20T02:00:10.797Z By standing firm as a rock, 'without or life or motion,' as the poet Coleridge beautifully says, and staring with unflinching gaze into the opposing optics. Settlers and Scouts 2012-03-17T02:01:06.297Z I had been reading Coleridge’s description of England in his fine Ode on the Departing Year, and I applied it, con amore, to the objects before me. Winterslow Essays and Characters Written There 2012-03-27T02:00:25.647Z S. T. Coleridge wrote to Charles Lamb averring that the book must be his work. Encyclopaedia Britannica, 11th Edition, Volume 13, Slice 6 "Home, Daniel" to "Hortensius, Quintus" 2012-03-15T02:00:32.250Z He was every year maturing his own principles of poetry and making good the remark of Coleridge, that to admire on principle is the only way to imitate without loss of originality. Harper's New Monthly Magazine, Vol. 1. No 1, June 1850 2012-03-21T02:00:31.390Z Among the strange theories concerning the regeneration of mankind, to which the great French convulsion gave birth, was a day-dream of Southey, Coleridge, and Lloyd, three young geniuses, then sojourning at Bristol. Sketches of Reforms and Reformers, of Great Britain and Ireland 2012-03-12T03:00:20.310Z He must have talked well—though one imagines that, like Coleridge on Highgate Hill, he probably preferred the listener who sat "like a passive bucket to be pumped into." The Conflict of Religions in the Early Roman Empire 2012-03-11T03:00:13.983Z When I got there, the organ was playing the 100th Psalm, and when it was done, Mr. Coleridge rose and gave out his text, ‘And he went up into the mountain to pray, himself, alone.’ Winterslow Essays and Characters Written There 2012-03-27T02:00:25.647Z Mr. T. W. Higginson quotes Prescott as saying that The Skeleton in Armor and The Wreck of the Hesperus were the best imaginative poetry since Coleridge. William Hickling Prescott 2012-03-11T03:00:12.297Z Coleridge was then in his twenty-fourth year, and Wordsworth in his twenty-sixth. Harper's New Monthly Magazine, Vol. 1. No 1, June 1850 2012-03-21T02:00:31.390Z Wordsworth early became acquainted with Coleridge and Southey, participated in their French enthusiasm, and, like them, his first poetic dreams were of freedom. Sketches of Reforms and Reformers, of Great Britain and Ireland 2012-03-12T03:00:20.310Z This work, generally known to the reader through Mr. Coleridge's translation, affords an imperfect illustration of our meaning. Life Without and Life Within or, Reviews, Narratives, Essays, and poems. 2012-03-05T03:00:13.070Z Coleridge, in truth, met me half-way on the ground of philosophy, or I should not have been won over to his imaginative creed. Winterslow Essays and Characters Written There 2012-03-27T02:00:25.647Z The great romantic movement which in England found expression in Byron and Shelley and the exquisitely irregular metres of Coleridge had as yet awakened no true responsive echo on this side of the Atlantic. William Hickling Prescott 2012-03-11T03:00:12.297Z What was thought of these poems by a few youthful admirers may be gathered from the account given by Coleridge in his "Biographia Literaria." Harper's New Monthly Magazine, Vol. 1. No 1, June 1850 2012-03-21T02:00:31.390Z Lloyd sunk into obscurity, Southey atoned for his Susquehanna sins by spending a long life in hostility to civil and religious freedom, and Coleridge lived and died a moderate friend of liberty and reform. Sketches of Reforms and Reformers, of Great Britain and Ireland 2012-03-12T03:00:20.310Z But in English we know but of one, Coleridge's Wallenstein, where the reader will feel the electric current undiminished by the medium through which it comes to him. Life Without and Life Within or, Reviews, Narratives, Essays, and poems. 2012-03-05T03:00:13.070Z Coleridge, in his person, was rather above the common size, inclining to the corpulent, or like Lord Hamlet, ‘somewhat fat and pursy.’ Winterslow Essays and Characters Written There 2012-03-27T02:00:25.647Z Coleridge, who knew him well at Malta, always spoke of him in the highest terms. Nooks and Corners of the New England Coast 2012-02-22T03:00:25.113Z Among all the brilliant young men who gathered at the feet of Samuel Taylor Coleridge, eager to 117learn from this "rapt one of the god-like brow," none surpassed him in admiration, and possibly in ability. The Last Words of Distinguished Men and Women (Real and Traditional) 2012-02-22T03:00:24.020Z Coleridge then puts and argues the two alternatives. Transcendentalism in New England A History 2012-02-18T03:00:16.210Z Such guests as Lamb, Hazlitt, Coleridge, Hood, and Cornwall came to this humble home, and here Shelley met Keats, the "Adonais" of his elegy. A Literary Pilgrimage Among the Haunts of Famous British Authors 2012-02-17T03:00:36.500Z Mr. Coleridge, indeed, sets down this outrageous want of keeping to an excess of sympathy, and there is, after all, some truth in his suggestion. Winterslow Essays and Characters Written There 2012-03-27T02:00:25.647Z Coleridge was justified in claiming the German word Lustspiel for the so-called comedies of Shakespeare, we have a far greater right to appropriate this wide and pregnant title to the plays of Aristophanes. Browning and His Century 2012-02-15T03:00:39.033Z Coleridge pronounced the Pantheism of Spinoza preferable to modern Deism, which he held to be but "the hypocrisy of Materialism." The Last Words of Distinguished Men and Women (Real and Traditional) 2012-02-22T03:00:24.020Z Coleridge was a vital thinker; his mind was a flame; his thoughts burned within him, and issued from him in language that trembled and throbbed with the force of the ideas committed to it. Transcendentalism in New England A History 2012-02-18T03:00:16.210Z The houseHome of Coleridge is a neat brick structure of two stories, in which we may see the room where the poet lodged and where he breathed out his melancholy life. A Literary Pilgrimage Among the Haunts of Famous British Authors 2012-02-17T03:00:36.500Z Coleridge used to tell me, that this pertinacity was owing to a want of sympathy with others. Winterslow Essays and Characters Written There 2012-03-27T02:00:25.647Z If he could not overcome a foolish fancy, how could he hope to scale the heights of the Western Circuit, or hurl Coleridge and Follett from their pride of place? Chippinge Borough 2012-02-15T03:00:32.210Z It was not strange that Coleridge selected him to complete the development of that "Spiritual Philosophy" which was the great unaccomplished work of his life. The Last Words of Distinguished Men and Women (Real and Traditional) 2012-02-22T03:00:24.020Z The influence of Coleridge was greatly assisted by contemporary magazines, which helped by their furious efforts to crush him, and won sympathy for him by their attempts to laugh and hoot him down. Transcendentalism in New England A History 2012-02-18T03:00:16.210Z Remembering Coleridge's "Hymn to Mont Blanc," which is supposed to be written "before sunrise in the Vale of Chamouni," we were up in the morning to catch the earliest dawn. From the Lakes of Killarney to the Golden Horn 2012-02-15T03:00:25.610Z Blake, Wordsworth, Coleridge, attempted a return to the Elizabethan and to the even earlier ballad forms. Irradiations; Sand and Spray 2012-02-14T03:00:28.347Z He purchased a beautiful estate on the banks of Windermere, not far from the residences of Southey, Coleridge and Wordsworth, and yielded himself to the full enjoyment of every pleasure. The Genius of Scotland or Sketches of Scottish Scenery, Literature and Religion 2012-02-11T03:03:41.800Z An extract from this masque is given in Lamb’s Dramatic Poets, and it was highly praised by Coleridge. Encyclopaedia Britannica, 11th Edition, Volume 7, Slice 9 "Dagupan" to "David" 2012-02-11T03:03:39.807Z The objects at which Mr. Coleridge aims, it seems to me, are in a great measure accomplished by the philosophy of Cousin. Transcendentalism in New England A History 2012-02-18T03:00:16.210Z Coleridge speaks also of Mont Blanc as rising from a "silent sea of pines." From the Lakes of Killarney to the Golden Horn 2012-02-15T03:00:25.610Z Mr. Coleridge listened to him kindly, and after expressing the warmest sympathy for him, loaned him money enough to support his family during the severe weather and to enable him to continue his experiments. Inventors 2012-02-08T03:00:16.647Z These found expression suited to immediate public approval, not in Wordsworth but Kotzebue, not in Coleridge but Colman, not in Southey but in melodrama. Tragedy 2012-01-31T03:00:19.343Z In later times Coleridge, Charles Lamb and others expended some of their most genial criticisms on this poet. Encyclopaedia Britannica, 11th Edition, Volume 7, Slice 9 "Dagupan" to "David" 2012-02-11T03:03:39.807Z This philosophy demolishes, by one of the most beautiful specimens of scientific analysis that is anywhere to be met with, the system of sensation, against which Mr. Coleridge utters such eloquent and pathetic denunciations. Transcendentalism in New England A History 2012-02-18T03:00:16.210Z Cologne has got an ill name from Coleridge's ill-favored compliment, which implied that its streets had not always 128 the fragrance of that Cologne water which it exports to all countries. From the Lakes of Killarney to the Golden Horn 2012-02-15T03:00:25.610Z It came, for example, to Wordsworth and Coleridge long after their best work was done. The Life of George Borrow 2012-01-26T03:00:14.707Z Wordsworth, Coleridge, Byron, Shelley, Landor, Scott, Keats, and many other lesser poets wrote tragedies, and most were not unwilling to have these acted. Tragedy 2012-01-31T03:00:19.343Z Edinburgh Review for July, 1851, p. 78., on the Poems and Memoir of Hartley Coleridge. Notes and Queries, Vol. IV, Number 100, September 27, 1851 A Medium of Inter-communication for Literary Men, Artists, Antiquaries, Genealogists, etc. 2012-01-25T03:00:37.190Z The philosophical ideas of Schelling commended themselves at once to Coleridge, who was a born idealist, of audacious genius, speculative, imaginative, original, capable of any such abstract achievement as the German undertook. Transcendentalism in New England A History 2012-02-18T03:00:16.210Z Coleridge, speaking of the Indian seas, bonitos and albicores played around the bows, dolphins gleamed in our wake, ever and anon a shark, and once a great emerald-coloured48 whale, kept us company. The Monarchs of the Main, Volume I (of 3) Or, Adventures of the Buccaneers 2012-01-23T03:00:11.530Z About this time I took much delight in Wordsworth's and Coleridge's poetry; and can boast that I read the Excursion twice through. Charles Darwin: His Life in an Autobiographical Chapter, and in a Selected Series of His Published Letters 2012-01-22T03:00:19.733Z Schiller's "Wallenstein," translated by Coleridge, and "Mary Stuart" at least encouraged the prevailing fondness for historical themes and the study of passion. Tragedy 2012-01-31T03:00:19.343Z Verses composed in sleep are by no means uncommon, but apart from Coleridge’s “Kubla Khan,” are perhaps seldom as consecutive as these. Fifty-One Years of Victorian Life 2012-01-15T03:00:15.917Z The question of Coleridge's alleged plagiarism from Schelling does not concern us here. Transcendentalism in New England A History 2012-02-18T03:00:16.210Z Comparing Cowley's and Crashaw's 'Hope,' Coleridge thus pronounces on them: 'Crashaw seems in his poems to have given the first ebullience of his imagination, unshapen into form, or much of what we now term sweetness. The Complete Works of Richard Crashaw, Volume II (of 2) 2012-01-14T03:00:20.483Z A few doubly or trebly gifted men, Dryden, Coleridge, Poe, Arnold, Pater, Henley, Stevenson, Henry James, could do first-rate work in more than one genre, including criticism. The Critical Game 2012-01-05T03:00:38.527Z Coleridge gave these in an Elizabethan profusion that must have overwhelmed the managers. Tragedy 2012-01-31T03:00:19.343Z In its weird supernaturalism it anticipated Scott, and in its unearthly atmosphere it clearly anticipated Coleridge. The Poems of Philip Freneau, Volume I (of III) 2012-01-04T03:00:43.800Z What, but the same latent idealism that came to deliberate and formal expression in Coleridge, and suggested in the one what was proclaimed by the other? Transcendentalism in New England A History 2012-02-18T03:00:16.210Z Coleridge makes another critical remark which it may be worth while to adduce and perhaps qualify. The Complete Works of Richard Crashaw, Volume II (of 2) 2012-01-14T03:00:20.483Z We read Pater on Coleridge, not for Coleridge but for Pater, and we read Coleridge for Coleridge, not for Shakespeare. The Critical Game 2012-01-05T03:00:38.527Z The play is more human, though feebler, than the contemporary plays of Miss Baillie, Wordsworth, and Coleridge. Tragedy 2012-01-31T03:00:19.343Z With the "House of Night" he became one of the earliest pioneers in that dimly-lighted region which was soon to be exploited by Coleridge and Poe. The Poems of Philip Freneau, Volume I (of III) 2012-01-04T03:00:43.800Z The works of Coleridge made familiar the leading ideas of Schelling. Transcendentalism in New England A History 2012-02-18T03:00:16.210Z Coleridge went to the theatre, but afterwards resought the sergeant, who was extremely sorry to see him, and saying with evident emotion, “Then it must be so,” enrolled him. Curiosities of Impecuniosity 2011-12-31T03:00:16.190Z Hartley Coleridge met Tennyson in 1835, and, “after the fourth bottom of gin,” deliberately thanked Heaven for having brought them acquainted. Tennyson and His Friends 2011-12-28T03:00:32.373Z Coleridge planned a revenge play, with a characteristic modification; the avenger was to seek, instead of blood, the remorse of the villain. Tragedy 2012-01-31T03:00:19.343Z He had not the breadth, the length, or the height of S. T. Coleridge's mind, but he had much of his subtlety, his learning, his occasional sweetness, and his tremulous tenderness. Harper's New Monthly Magazine, Vol. 3, No. 15, August, 1851 2011-12-27T03:00:07.217Z Henry, C. L., publishes elements of psychology, 75; his admiration for Coleridge, 89. Transcendentalism in New England A History 2012-02-18T03:00:16.210Z Southey stated about this time that if he and Coleridge could get £150 a year between them, they would marry and retire into the country. Curiosities of Impecuniosity 2011-12-31T03:00:16.190Z T. “I liked Hartley Coleridge, ‘Massa’ Hartley’ as the rustics called him. Tennyson and His Friends 2011-12-28T03:00:32.373Z Goethe, Schiller, Fichte, Jean Paul, Mme. de St�el, and Rousseau won readers in the original, as well as in translations; and the influence of Shelley, Wordsworth, Coleridge, and Carlyle increased rapidly. Liberty In The Nineteenth Century 2011-12-24T03:08:02.240Z And so it fared with poor Hartley Coleridge. Harper's New Monthly Magazine, Vol. 3, No. 15, August, 1851 2011-12-27T03:00:07.217Z The abatement is painfully just; but while Coleridge lived, this very indolence and moral imbecility added to the interest he excited, and gave a mystic splendor as of a divine inspiration to his mental performances. Transcendentalism in New England A History 2012-02-18T03:00:16.210Z “I do not know,” said Coleridge, “as I never tried, but I’ll let a Frenchman run me through the body, before I’ll run away.” Curiosities of Impecuniosity 2011-12-31T03:00:16.190Z Hartley Coleridge, he said, spoke of Pindar as the “Newmarket Poet.” Tennyson and His Friends 2011-12-28T03:00:32.373Z This system is peculiarly that of Schelling, who was then expounding it in Germany; but the credit for it in America was given to his disciples, and especially to Coleridge. Liberty In The Nineteenth Century 2011-12-24T03:08:02.240Z While reading Hartley Coleridge's life, we have been often grieved, but never for a moment have been tempted to anger. Harper's New Monthly Magazine, Vol. 3, No. 15, August, 1851 2011-12-27T03:00:07.217Z The "Philosophy of Nature" was published in 1797, the year before Coleridge's visit. Transcendentalism in New England A History 2012-02-18T03:00:16.210Z “That will do,” said the general; and Coleridge was turned into the ranks. Curiosities of Impecuniosity 2011-12-31T03:00:16.190Z Mary Coleridge, at that time a shy, timid girl, was more than once asked to dictate the particular poems she wanted him to recite. Tennyson and His Friends 2011-12-28T03:00:32.373Z I could not help thinking of the words of Coleridge in that weird poem, “The Ancient Mariner.” Wild Life in the Land of the Giants A Tale of Two Brothers 2011-12-12T03:00:34.923Z A curiosity, Hartley Coleridge commenced life by being—and a curiosity, somewhat battered and soiled, he continued to the end. Harper's New Monthly Magazine, Vol. 3, No. 15, August, 1851 2011-12-27T03:00:07.217Z The name of Coleridge was spoken with profound reverence, his books were studied industriously, and the terminology of transcendentalism was as familiar as commonplace in the circles of divines and men of letters. Transcendentalism in New England A History 2012-02-18T03:00:16.210Z At this time many men of literary and intellectual eminence resided in Bristol; among these were Coleridge and Southey. Heroes of Science Chemists 2011-12-09T03:00:21.047Z The penny-a-liners evidently confounded your uncle, S. T. Coleridge, with myself—anyhow, if he wasn’t quite certain, he gave your relative the benefit of the doubt.” Tennyson and His Friends 2011-12-28T03:00:32.373Z I should speak differently if, reading him earlier, I had learned from him instead of Coleridge the lesson of intellectual detachment. Letters of Lord Acton To Mary, Daughter of the Right Hon. W. E. Gladstone 2011-12-06T03:00:20.687Z Mr. Patten Wilson's illustrations to Coleridge's 'Poems' have the careful fulness of drawings well thought out, and worked upon with the whole idea realised in the imagination. English Book-Illustration of To-day Appreciations of the Work of Living English Illustrators With Lists of Their Books 2011-11-30T03:00:10.703Z At present Hegel is the prophet of these believers, Schelling is obsolete, and Coleridge, the English Schelling, has had his day. Transcendentalism in New England A History 2012-02-18T03:00:16.210Z Southey and Coleridge breathed the gas; the poets only laughed a little. Heroes of Science Chemists 2011-12-09T03:00:21.047Z I have given a copy of Alfred’s second volume to Hartley Coleridge, who, I trust, will make more of it. Tennyson and His Friends 2011-12-28T03:00:32.373Z It is by accident, by the accident that I read Coleridge first, that Carlyle never did me any good. Letters of Lord Acton To Mary, Daughter of the Right Hon. W. E. Gladstone 2011-12-06T03:00:20.687Z As Coleridge phrased it: "All thoughts, all passions, all delights, Whatever stirs this mortal frame, All are but ministers of Love And feed his sacred flame." The Book of Life 2011-11-25T03:00:13.343Z When I got there the organ was playing the hundredth psalm, and when it was done Mr. Coleridge rose and gave out his text. Transcendentalism in New England A History 2012-02-18T03:00:16.210Z A Secularist is intended to be a reasoner, that is as Coleridge defined him, one who inquires what a thing is, and not only what it is, but why it is what it is. English Secularism A Confession Of Belief 2011-11-24T03:00:50.030Z The parts which are not Coleridge’s own might have been better, but they are well enough. Tennyson and His Friends 2011-12-28T03:00:32.373Z Next came the dogma of illumination, which may be said to have begun with Coleridge and ended with Maurice. The Book Of God In The Light Of The Higher Criticism 2011-11-24T03:00:46.897Z In a house still standing William Wordsworth lived from 1799 to 1808, and it was subsequently occupied by Thomas de Quincey and by Hartley Coleridge. Encyclopaedia Britannica, 11th Edition, Volume 12, Slice 3 "Gordon, Lord George" to "Grasses" 2011-11-13T03:00:13.177Z The readers of Lamb, Hazlitt, Wordsworth, Southey and the brilliant essayists that made so fascinating the English literature of the first third of our century must perforce be introduced to Coleridge. Transcendentalism in New England A History 2012-02-18T03:00:16.210Z Undeterred by the formidable names of Goethe and Coleridge, Mr. Venable pronounces untenable the theories which those great authors propounded to account for the extraordinary figure of the Prince of Denmark. More Portmanteau Plays 2011-11-11T03:00:27.887Z I read the review of Coleridge in the Quarterly the other day. Tennyson and His Friends 2011-12-28T03:00:32.373Z Seeing Coleridge last night reminded me forcibly of past times; his beautiful descriptions reminded me of Shelley’s conversations. The Life and Letters of Mary Wollstonecraft Shelley, Volume II (of 2) 2011-11-10T03:00:10.110Z Several books arrive, among others Coleridge’s Christabel, which Shelley reads aloud to me before going to bed. The Life and Letters of Mary Wollstonecraft Shelley, Volume I (of 2) 2011-11-10T03:00:08.903Z Coleridge found himself at home there by virtue of his natural genius, and also by the introduction given him by Wm. Transcendentalism in New England A History 2012-02-18T03:00:16.210Z The notice of Grasmere concludes with a then unpublished song by H. Coleridge—"'I have lived, and I have loved,'" with the autograph of the Poet. The Legendary and Poetical Remains of John Roby author of 'Traditions of Lancashire', with a sketch of his literary life and character 2011-11-07T02:00:18.317Z Mary was the letter-writer of the family, and a very clever woman, and her letters show that she knew her Shakespeare, Wordsworth, Keats, and Coleridge as well as her brother’s poems. Tennyson and His Friends 2011-12-28T03:00:32.373Z I never forgot the advice of Coleridge," he said, "that a literary man should have a regular calling. Life of Oliver Wendell Holmes 2011-11-01T02:00:25.563Z Mr. Morgan told me the other day that Coleridge improved in health under the care of the apothecary, and was writing fast a continuation of Christabel. The Life and Letters of Mary Wollstonecraft Shelley, Volume I (of 2) 2011-11-10T03:00:08.903Z A more serene and beneficent influence proceeded from the poet Wordsworth, whose fame rose along with that of Coleridge, struggled against the same opposition, and obtained even a steadier lustre. Transcendentalism in New England A History 2012-02-18T03:00:16.210Z Whenever I begin to read the book, I fall at once into that illusion which Coleridge has so well explained. The Brothers' War 2011-11-01T02:00:24.007Z His opinions underwent a change in the direction of theism, influenced, he says, by his acquaintance with Coleridge. Encyclopaedia Britannica, 11th Edition, Volume 12, Slice 2 "Gloss" to "Gordon, Charles George" 2011-10-31T02:00:28.703Z The description of the nightingale on its high branches, too, is a noticeably accurate touch, as we compare it, for example, with Coleridge's nightingale descriptions. Studies in Medi?val Life and Literature 2011-10-29T02:00:13.050Z Coleridge is living at Highgate; he is living with an apothecary, to whom he pays £5 a week for board, lodging, and medical advice. The Life and Letters of Mary Wollstonecraft Shelley, Volume I (of 2) 2011-11-10T03:00:08.903Z He had no sympathy with Helvetius, D'Holbach, Diderot or Voltaire, those fierce disturbers of intellectual peace; he had as little with William Law and Coleridge, dreamers and visionaries, who substituted vapor for solid earth. Transcendentalism in New England A History 2012-02-18T03:00:16.210Z And so with Coleridge's "Singeth a quiet tune," or Keats's Full of sweet dreams and health and quiet breathing. Leaves in the Wind 2011-10-28T02:00:25.937Z Probably he found opportunity to visit the writer whose works he 'loved most in our literature,' and it would be on some similar excursion that he obtained an encouraging expression of opinion from Hartley Coleridge. The Bront? Family, Vol. 1 of 2 with special reference to Patrick Branwell Bront? 2011-10-27T02:00:24.317Z Coleridge says of Wordsworth: "Since Milton, I know of no poet with so many felicitous and unforgetable lines." Rambles with John Burroughs 2011-10-22T02:00:31.317Z He has given us a volume of his poetry—true, genuine poetry—not such as Coleridge’s or Wordsworth’s, but Miss Seward’s and Dr. Darwin’s— Dying swains to sighing Delias. The Life and Letters of Mary Wollstonecraft Shelley, Volume I (of 2) 2011-11-10T03:00:08.903Z It was about this time also that he began his study of Berkeley and Coleridge, and deserted his early phenomenalism for the conception of a spiritual will as the universal cause. Encyclopaedia Britannica, 11th Edition, Volume 11, Slice 1 "Franciscans" to "French Language" 2011-10-22T02:00:29.487Z As Coleridge says, he is the only animal that looks upward to man, strains to catch his meanings, hungers for his approval. Leaves in the Wind 2011-10-28T02:00:25.937Z He felt too keenly that the sanctity of Coleridge's life had been broken in upon by those who lacked both accurate knowledge and just discretion. The Bront? Family, Vol. 1 of 2 with special reference to Patrick Branwell Bront? 2011-10-27T02:00:24.317Z Perhaps Mr. Dowden, in speaking of Coleridge's poetry, comes nearer than any one else to the truth about Burroughs' poetry. Rambles with John Burroughs 2011-10-22T02:00:31.317Z She was constantly in company with Lamb, Hazlitt, Coleridge, Constable, and many more, hitherto known to her only by name. The Life and Letters of Mary Wollstonecraft Shelley, Volume I (of 2) 2011-11-10T03:00:08.903Z Read his "Song of the Bell," and his drama of "Wallenstein," translated by Coleridge. The World's Best Books : A Key to the Treasures of Literature 2011-10-20T02:00:20.857Z Macaulay talked as though he were addressing a public meeting, and Coleridge as though he were engaged in an argument with space and eternity. Leaves in the Wind 2011-10-28T02:00:25.937Z The younger Coleridge—besides the prestige of his fathers name—had already become known as an occasional contributor to 'Blackwood's Magazine,' wherein first appeared his poem of 'Leonard and Susan,' so much admired. The Bront? Family, Vol. 1 of 2 with special reference to Patrick Branwell Bront? 2011-10-27T02:00:24.317Z Coleridge affirmed the shaping power of imagination to be so vitally human that the joy of life consists in it. Atlantic Classics 2011-10-16T02:00:18.497Z Ask him, likewise, to lend me his Coleridge’s poems, which I will take great care of. The Life and Letters of Mary Wollstonecraft Shelley, Volume I (of 2) 2011-11-10T03:00:08.903Z The account of the conversational powers of Coleridge, given in Carlyle's Life of Sterling e. The World's Best Books : A Key to the Treasures of Literature 2011-10-20T02:00:20.857Z "I think, Charles, that you never heard me preach," said Coleridge once, speaking of his pulpit days. Leaves in the Wind 2011-10-28T02:00:25.937Z Mr. Bingley entered into an engagement to enable him to publish two volumes of poems, and a series of 'Biographical notices of the Worthies of Yorkshire and Lancashire,' which Hartley Coleridge was to write. The Bront? Family, Vol. 1 of 2 with special reference to Patrick Branwell Bront? 2011-10-27T02:00:24.317Z Before the romantic movement in France Diderot in that country, Lessing and some of his successors in Germany, Hazlitt, Coleridge and Lamb in England, had been admirable critics and reviewers. Encyclopaedia Britannica, 11th Edition, Volume 11, Slice 2 "French Literature" to "Frost, William" 2011-10-14T02:00:26.280Z The memoir of Thomas Poole, already referred to, gives the experiences of a Somerset gentleman, a friend of Coleridge. The Life Of Thomas Paine, Vol. II. (of II) With A History of His Literary, Political and Religious Career in America France, and England 2011-10-12T02:00:47.957Z So that Coleridge might have called it as he did the corresponding European species, "Most beautiful Of forest trees—the lady of the woods." Forest Life and Forest Trees: comprising winter camp-life among the loggers, and wild-wood adventure. with Descriptions of lumbering operations on the various rivers of Maine and New Brunswick 2011-10-11T02:01:03.847Z Yet what wonderful effects Wordsworth, Coleridge and Keats extract from it! Leaves in the Wind 2011-10-28T02:00:25.937Z Charlotte, therefore, in the December of 1836, determined to submit some of her poems to the judgment of Southey; and it would seem that she also consulted Hartley Coleridge. The Bront? Family, Vol. 1 of 2 with special reference to Patrick Branwell Bront? 2011-10-27T02:00:24.317Z He is a greater dramatist than Byron; and whether in the dramas or prose romances, he shows that vast sympathy with, and knowledge of, human nature which neither Byron, Shelley, Coleridge, nor Wordsworth had. Victor Hugo: His Life and Works 2011-10-07T02:00:23.887Z Coleridge, Southey, Wordsworth, were leaders in the revolutionary cult at Oxford and Cambridge. The Life Of Thomas Paine, Vol. II. (of II) With A History of His Literary, Political and Religious Career in America France, and England 2011-10-12T02:00:47.957Z But now, to quote the wondrous words of Coleridge’s “Ancient Mariner—” ... The Island of Gold A Sailor's Yarn 2011-10-03T02:00:28.483Z It was because, among its other qualities, Southey's writing was so free from the shock of the dazzling word that Coleridge held it to be the perfect example of pure prose. Leaves in the Wind 2011-10-28T02:00:25.937Z Indeed, a young publisher of that district, Mr. F. E. Bingley, had sufficient appreciation of genius, and enterprise enough, to bring him to Leeds for the purpose of publishing works from Hartley Coleridge's hand. The Bront? Family, Vol. 1 of 2 with special reference to Patrick Branwell Bront? 2011-10-27T02:00:24.317Z Every commentator is indebted to him, and almost every one has abused him, from Warburton and Pope to Coleridge, and without Theobald's notes and most sagacious amendments, ordinary readers would be puzzled to read Shakspeare. Notes and Queries, Vol. IV, Number 89, July 12, 1851 A Medium of Inter-communication for Literary Men, Artists, Antiquaries, Geneologists, etc. 2011-10-01T02:00:34.553Z Blake felt the pristine thrills of the great new birth in the poetry of Wordsworth, introduced to him by Mr. Crabb Robinson, and also in personal acquaintance with Coleridge, a genius somewhat akin to himself. William Blake A Study of His Life and Art Work 2011-09-13T02:00:35.943Z —S. T. Coleridge has explained this paradox in The Friend, vol. iii. p. Notes and Queries, Number 85, June 14, 1851 A Medium of Inter-communication for Literary Men, Artists, Antiquaries, Geneologists, etc. 2011-09-13T02:00:32.783Z Many of his works edited by H. N. Coleridge, husband of his only daughter Sara. English Lands Letters and Kings Queen Anne and the Georges 2011-08-29T02:01:10.603Z He has not the glitter of Hazlitt—a writer whom it is a shame to depreciate; nor does he ever make the least pretence of aspiring to the chair of Coleridge. Res Judicat? Papers and Essays 2011-08-24T02:00:18.157Z The difference in punctuation in the two sentences following is based on the same principle: Nether Stowey, where Coleridge wrote The Rime of the Ancient Mariner, is a few miles from Bridgewater. A Foreword to the Panama-Pacific International Exposition 2011-08-20T02:00:13.567Z Looking through Shelley once again, I came upon the line descriptive of Coleridge, “flagging wearily through darkness and despair,” “A hooded eagle among blinking owls.” Punch, or the London Charivari, Vol. 93, October 29, 1887 2011-08-20T02:00:11.307Z Coleridge was so confounded with the justice of the retort that he followed and gave him a shilling—the only one he had. A History of the Cries of London Ancient and Modern 2011-08-19T02:00:15.893Z Coleridge, however, was there as an occupant of a portion of the future Southey home in 1800. English Lands Letters and Kings Queen Anne and the Georges 2011-08-29T02:01:10.603Z His letters to Coleridge in September and October, 1769, might very well appear in the early chapters of a saint's life. Res Judicat? Papers and Essays 2011-08-24T02:00:18.157Z Nether Stowey is completely identified by its name; the statement about Coleridge is therefore supplementary and parenthetic. A Foreword to the Panama-Pacific International Exposition 2011-08-20T02:00:13.567Z Was it not Coleridge's cow that calved while he was writing "Kubla Khan"? Hints to Pilgrims 2011-08-18T02:00:23.727Z Hartley was the son of David Hartley, the philosopher, from whom Hartley Coleridge, the poet, derived his name. Benjamin Franklin; Self-Revealed, Volume I (of 2) A Biographical and Critical Study Based Mainly on his own Writings 2011-08-16T02:00:37.443Z Of this and of Coleridge and of Wordsworth, we shall have somewhat to say in the chapter we open upon next. English Lands Letters and Kings Queen Anne and the Georges 2011-08-29T02:01:10.603Z The first is to Coleridge, and is dated May 27, 1796; the last is to Mrs. Dyer, and was written on December 22, 1834. Res Judicat? Papers and Essays 2011-08-24T02:00:18.157Z Coleridge, Robert Southey and others, Fuller’s works have received much attention. Encyclopaedia Britannica, 11th Edition, Volume 11, Slice 3 "Frost" to "Fyzabad" 2011-08-15T02:00:28.473Z I have no doubt—other theories to the contrary—that "Kubla Khan" broke off suddenly because Coleridge dropped off to sleep. Hints to Pilgrims 2011-08-18T02:00:23.727Z A graceful writer, to whom Wordsworth and Coleridge attributed their own poetic inspiration. A Brief Handbook of English Authors 2011-08-15T02:00:26.603Z And what a strange, odd friendship it seems when we contrast the tender and delicious quietude of the Essays of Elia with the portentous flow of Coleridge's speech! English Lands Letters and Kings Queen Anne and the Georges 2011-08-29T02:01:10.603Z Coleridge, in a well-known passage in his Table Talk—too long to be quoted—said Gibbon was a man of immense reading; but he had no philosophy. Res Judicat? Papers and Essays 2011-08-24T02:00:18.157Z He co-operated with its first editor, Herbert Coleridge, and after his death was for some time principal editor during the preliminary period of the collection of material. Encyclopaedia Britannica, 11th Edition, Volume 11, Slice 3 "Frost" to "Fyzabad" 2011-08-15T02:00:28.473Z Coleridge told Hazlitt that he liked to compose "walking over uneven ground, or breaking through the straggling branches of a copse-wood." Hints to Pilgrims 2011-08-18T02:00:23.727Z Best known, however, by his Reminiscences of Coleridge and Southey. A Brief Handbook of English Authors 2011-08-15T02:00:26.603Z Only for those few early years does this nymph enter for much into the career of Coleridge. English Lands Letters and Kings Queen Anne and the Georges 2011-08-29T02:01:10.603Z Wordsworth, Coleridge, Brougham, Canning! was ever a fives player so described before? Res Judicat? Papers and Essays 2011-08-24T02:00:18.157Z We know, too, that the boy Hartley Coleridge distinguished among the "Hartleys" a picture Hartley and a shadow Hartley. Children's Ways 2011-08-11T02:00:16.473Z Certain literary fragments extant are probably portions of large works the authors had in view but did not finish; Coleridge's "Kubla Khan," for instance. The Lure of the Pen A book for Would-Be Authors 2011-07-26T02:00:15.573Z Wordsworth and Shelley are beginning to be known, but they are pronounced more difficult of comprehension than Shakspeare himself; yet I met with a German lady who could repeat Coleridge's "Ancient Mariner" by heart. Visits and Sketches at Home and Abroad with Tales and Miscellanies Now First Collected Vol. I (of 3) 2011-07-24T02:00:11.383Z The Wordsworths make the trip with him; and after a stay of a twelve-month—mostly in Gottingen—Coleridge returns, with his translation of Wallenstein; but this counts for little. English Lands Letters and Kings Queen Anne and the Georges 2011-08-29T02:01:10.603Z Lamb's relations towards Coleridge and Wordsworth are exceedingly interesting. Res Judicat? Papers and Essays 2011-08-24T02:00:18.157Z You and I have often talked of Southey’s and Coleridge’s pantisocracy—I believe the time has come for some such an enterprise. Crying for the Light, Vol. 3 [of 3] or Fifty Years Ago 2011-07-23T02:00:11.900Z To Lamb, he continually sent gifts, and Coleridge dined at his table every Sunday for nineteen years. Bygones Worth Remembering, Vol. 1 (of 2) 2011-07-22T02:00:20.507Z But after his death Coleridge was found to have a real cause of suffering, and the wonder was that he did not complain more. Bygones Worth Remembering, Vol. 2 (of 2) 2011-07-22T02:00:17.663Z Scott would be greater than Shelley, and Cowper than Coleridge. Critical Studies 2011-07-21T02:00:20.463Z He would keep repeating to himself, 'Coleridge is dead!' Res Judicat? Papers and Essays 2011-08-24T02:00:18.157Z Then, to Coleridge’s high satisfaction, the gentleman exclaimed, ‘It is sublime.’ Oxford Lectures on Poetry 2011-07-19T02:00:15.897Z The last citation relates to a trial in which Lord Chief Justice Coleridge was concerned, and Henry Thomas Buckle made a splendid defence of a poor well-sinker who was afraid of killing the world. Bygones Worth Remembering, Vol. 1 (of 2) 2011-07-22T02:00:20.507Z Coleridge complained of ailments of which no physical sign was apparent, and he was thought, like Mr. Spencer, to be an imaginary invalid. Bygones Worth Remembering, Vol. 2 (of 2) 2011-07-22T02:00:17.663Z The ‘seven spirits’ are in the Apocalypse, also in Coleridge and Byron,—a common image.” The Browning Cyclop?dia A Guide to the Study of the Works of Robert Browning 2011-07-16T02:00:19.397Z Sir Paul Coleridge says the situation is only going to get worse with cuts to Legal Aid. AUDIO: Top family lawyer on divorce 'epidemic' 2011-07-13T11:50:17Z And the main source of the feeling thus expressed seems to be the ‘angelic strength’ or ‘fiery force’ of which Coleridge wrote. Oxford Lectures on Poetry 2011-07-19T02:00:15.897Z Some years later Lord Coleridge informed me that he did not press the case against Pooley, and that he had no idea he was of uncertain mind, nor did his father suspect it. Bygones Worth Remembering, Vol. 1 (of 2) 2011-07-22T02:00:20.507Z The poet Coleridge denounced "talented" as a barbarous word in 1832, though a few years later it was being used by William Gladstone. Why do some Americanisms irritate people? 2011-07-13T10:41:51Z Coleridge, too, in Kubla Khan, with “music loud and long would build that dome in air.” The Browning Cyclop?dia A Guide to the Study of the Works of Robert Browning 2011-07-16T02:00:19.397Z Burns, too, and Wordsworth and Coleridge, with Keats and Shelley—all these dwelt midway between poverty and riches. Right Living as a Fine Art A Study of Channing's Symphony as an Outline of the Ideal Life and Character 2011-07-12T02:00:36.983Z Now, unless the clause here about the ‘giant power’ may be taken to restrict the rivalry to the quality of 282 angelic strength, Coleridge’s doubt seems to show a lapse in critical judgment. Oxford Lectures on Poetry 2011-07-19T02:00:15.897Z The facts I have related of the Coleridges were not known to me when I first saw Mr. Buckle, who wrote upon the information I gave him. Bygones Worth Remembering, Vol. 1 (of 2) 2011-07-22T02:00:20.507Z For Coleridge's simile of "A painted ship upon a painted ocean" is only a poet's licence, and grates upon a seaman as the sole picture in that wonderful work which is not literally true. The Log of a Sea-Waif Being Recollections of the First Four Years of My Sea Life 2011-07-09T02:00:13.057Z To see Kean, said Coleridge, was to read Shakespeare by flashes of lightning. The English Stage Being an Account of the Victorian Drama 2011-07-04T02:00:21.750Z Only Albert Pike, says 'Coleridge' and 'Powers' for 'Porter' and 'passions.' The International Monthly, Volume 4, No. 3, October, 1851 2011-07-02T02:00:11.323Z And we must add that this style has certain special defects, unmentioned by Coleridge, as well as the quality which he points out in it. Oxford Lectures on Poetry 2011-07-19T02:00:15.897Z And, despite Schiller and Coleridge, it is scarcely Jupiter who “brings whate’er is good,” or Venus “who brings everything that’s fair.” The Complete Works of Josh Billings 2011-07-01T02:00:13.387Z In the model distich quoted by Coleridge— "In the hexameter rises the fountain's silvery column, In the pentameter still falling in melody back;" the pentameter is a better verse than the hexameter. Blackwood's Edinburgh Magazine, Volume 60, No. 372, October 1846 2011-06-29T02:00:23.750Z Dr. Coleridge "considered it to be a contagious nervous disease, the acme or intensest form of which is catalepsy." Second Edition of A Discovery Concerning Ghosts With a Rap at the "Spirit-Rappers" 2011-06-26T02:00:08.797Z Maurice he was led to the study of Coleridge, whose writings had a profound influence upon his faith and opinions. Encyclopaedia Britannica, 11th Edition, Volume 10, Slice 2 "Fairbanks, Erastus" to "Fens" 2011-06-19T02:00:16.580Z So that here too we feel the angelic strength of which Coleridge speaks. Oxford Lectures on Poetry 2011-07-19T02:00:15.897Z Coleridge was unpunctual, unbusiness-like, improvident, and dreamy, to the full extent to which poets are said proverbially to be. The International Monthly, Volume 4, No. 2, September, 1851 2011-06-14T02:00:20.590Z But for Hazlitt Coleridge was in politics an apostate not to be pardoned, while for the Blackwood group he was no enemy but an ally. Life of John Keats His Life and Poetry, his Friends, Critics and After-fame 2011-06-10T02:00:19.290Z What he expected to learn from Coleridge, it is hard to say: certainly his curriculum included a good many hardships, makeshifts and contretemps to which he had never looked forward. A Day with Samuel Taylor Coleridge 2011-06-08T02:00:18.910Z Two, most eminent in genius, stand by the side of the monk of Bury—Coleridge and Gray. Amenities of Literature Consisting of Sketches and Characters of English Literature 2011-06-03T02:00:19.227Z The ode is one of the longest and most ambitious forms of lyric, and some of the most 184 famous poems of Wordsworth, Coleridge, and Keats are odes. Oxford Lectures on Poetry 2011-07-19T02:00:15.897Z Coleridge decorated this cottage with all the graces that his imagination and fancy could throw around it. The International Monthly, Volume 4, No. 2, September, 1851 2011-06-14T02:00:20.590Z It is here that we seem to catch an echo, varied and new-modulated but in no sense weakened, from Coleridge’s Kubla Khan,— Life of John Keats His Life and Poetry, his Friends, Critics and After-fame 2011-06-10T02:00:19.290Z "What can ail the lad?" asked Coleridge, in amazement. A Day with Samuel Taylor Coleridge 2011-06-08T02:00:18.910Z She married another Coleridge of genius, her cousin, Henry Nelson, whose untimely death threw a burden upon her, as editor of her father’s literary remains, that absorbed her time and energies. The Age of Tennyson 2011-05-31T02:00:36.607Z Or perhaps he accepted from Coleridge a formulation of his moral which was not quite true even to his own thoughts at that time. Oxford Lectures on Poetry 2011-07-19T02:00:15.897Z Southey, Coleridge, and Lovell, three poets, married three sisters, the Misses Fricker of Bristol. The International Monthly, Volume 4, No. 2, September, 1851 2011-06-14T02:00:20.590Z Its inaccuracy in details is evident, but there is much sense as well as kindness in Coleridge’s remarks on the reviews and their effect:— Life of John Keats His Life and Poetry, his Friends, Critics and After-fame 2011-06-10T02:00:19.290Z Coleridge betook himself to the garden and called over the back hedge to the neighbour for whose companionship he had taken this inefficient little cottage. A Day with Samuel Taylor Coleridge 2011-06-08T02:00:18.910Z It is composed of two parts, separated by The Lay of Elena, a lyrical piece in which may be detected echoes both of Wordsworth and Coleridge, with an occasional suggestion of Scott. The Age of Tennyson 2011-05-31T02:00:36.607Z And when we turn to the poets themselves, and especially to their prose writings, letters, and 180 recorded conversation, and even to the critiques of Hazlitt, of Lamb, and of Coleridge, we cannot reject it. Oxford Lectures on Poetry 2011-07-19T02:00:15.897Z Whatever Coleridge touched failed: his fourpenny paper, the Watchman, was an abortion; and the verses he wrote for a London paper did little for him. The International Monthly, Volume 4, No. 2, September, 1851 2011-06-14T02:00:20.590Z He passed on, but in a few moments sprung back and said, ‘Mr Coleridge, allow me the honour of shaking your hand.’ Life of John Keats His Life and Poetry, his Friends, Critics and After-fame 2011-06-10T02:00:19.290Z Thomas Poole, his friend and benefactor, was a well-to-do tanner, well-educated and a devout student of literature: he discerned the potentialities of great things in Coleridge, and felt honoured by his acquaintanceship. A Day with Samuel Taylor Coleridge 2011-06-08T02:00:18.910Z Coleridge made Maurice more orthodox than he had previously been, but also preserved him from narrowness. The Age of Tennyson 2011-05-31T02:00:36.607Z The ideas of Wordsworth and of Coleridge about poetry have often been discussed and are familiar. Oxford Lectures on Poetry 2011-07-19T02:00:15.897Z The great and unquestionable genius of Coleridge was expended chiefly on projections. The International Monthly, Volume 4, No. 2, September, 1851 2011-06-14T02:00:20.590Z Then ensued the period of expansion, in which Wordsworth and Coleridge and Scott had been the most conspicuous leaders, each after his manner, in reconquering the freedom of poetry. Life of John Keats His Life and Poetry, his Friends, Critics and After-fame 2011-06-10T02:00:19.290Z True, true,—I may have neglected him to some extent," murmured Coleridge with a pained air, "but indeed, my good Poole, if you knew what the Wordsworths have been to me! A Day with Samuel Taylor Coleridge 2011-06-08T02:00:18.910Z Thanks to Coleridge, reason fills a greater space in Maurice than it does in the Tractarians. The Age of Tennyson 2011-05-31T02:00:36.607Z He has no discussions, like those of Wordsworth and Coleridge, on diction. Oxford Lectures on Poetry 2011-07-19T02:00:15.897Z We fear the life of Mrs. Coleridge was not a happy one, good and affectionate though she was as a wife and mother. The International Monthly, Volume 4, No. 2, September, 1851 2011-06-14T02:00:20.590Z It is amusing to note how the time and distance covered by his own encyclop�dic volubility shrank afterwards in Coleridge’s memory. Life of John Keats His Life and Poetry, his Friends, Critics and After-fame 2011-06-10T02:00:19.290Z Two people were coming down Coleridge's garden,—a "gaunt and Don-Quixote-like" man in striped pantaloons and a brown fustian jacket, and a slender, pleasing, dark-haired woman in her early twenties. A Day with Samuel Taylor Coleridge 2011-06-08T02:00:18.910Z It was however under their influence, and under the gradually growing influence of Lamb, Coleridge and Hazlitt, that the criticism of this period grew up. The Age of Tennyson 2011-05-31T02:00:36.607Z His few references to Coleridge are critical, and his amusing description of Coleridge’s talk is not more reverential than Carlyle’s. Oxford Lectures on Poetry 2011-07-19T02:00:15.897Z Coleridge, however, wanted application, and could scarcely be induced to work, even though the prospect of liberal remuneration was offered to him. The International Monthly, Volume 4, No. 2, September, 1851 2011-06-14T02:00:20.590Z After he had left us a little way, he came back, and said, “Let me carry away the memory, Coleridge, of having pressed your hand!” Life of John Keats His Life and Poetry, his Friends, Critics and After-fame 2011-06-10T02:00:19.290Z "We are off for a long walk this lovely noon," explained Dorothy, "and taking our lunch with us: will you come, Mr. Coleridge?" A Day with Samuel Taylor Coleridge 2011-06-08T02:00:18.910Z The description of Chamouni has been said to rival the great hymn of Coleridge, and that of the Coliseum the celebrated stanzas of Byron on the same subject. The Age of Tennyson 2011-05-31T02:00:36.607Z If, I may add, she had said ‘majestic,’ the anti-climax would have been slighter still, and, in fact, in one version of the story Coleridge says that ‘majestic’ was the word he himself chose. Oxford Lectures on Poetry 2011-07-19T02:00:15.897Z There can not be perfect intelligence without understanding; but following Coleridge, "understanding is the faculty of judging according to sense." A Few Words About the Devil And Other Biographical Sketches and Essays 2011-05-31T02:00:28.247Z Its pace and movement are nearer to Chaucer in The Romaunt of the Rose or The House of Fame than to Coleridge or Scott or any other model of 438 Keats’s own time. Life of John Keats His Life and Poetry, his Friends, Critics and After-fame 2011-06-10T02:00:19.290Z It was nearly eight o'clock when Coleridge parted from the Wordsworths at the gate of Alfoxden. A Day with Samuel Taylor Coleridge 2011-06-08T02:00:18.910Z From Coleridge also Maurice derived some of the mysticism, if not mistiness, which characterised his thought. The Age of Tennyson 2011-05-31T02:00:36.607Z Coleridge’s one page of general criticism on Antony and Cleopatra contains some notable remarks. Oxford Lectures on Poetry 2011-07-19T02:00:15.897Z Samuel Taylor Coleridge says, "A sin is an evil which has its ground or origin in the agent, and not in the compulsion of circumstances...." A Few Words About the Devil And Other Biographical Sketches and Essays 2011-05-31T02:00:28.247Z Will it be believed that less than three years later the same Coleridge was being praised and solicited—and what is more, successfully solicited—for contributions? Life of John Keats His Life and Poetry, his Friends, Critics and After-fame 2011-06-10T02:00:19.290Z Coleridge tried to frame his thoughts into words, as he strode homeward with his loose shambling gait, continually shifting from one side of the path to the other after his notorious "corkscrew" habit. A Day with Samuel Taylor Coleridge 2011-06-08T02:00:18.910Z This attracted the attention of Coleridge, who bestowed warm but discriminating praise upon the sonnets. The Age of Tennyson 2011-05-31T02:00:36.607Z Coleridge’s view of this matter, it need hardly be said, is far from indisputable; but it must be judged by our knowledge of Shakespeare’s mind and not of his material alone. Oxford Lectures on Poetry 2011-07-19T02:00:15.897Z "But," says S. T. Coleridge, "where there is no discontinuity, there can be no origination." A Few Words About the Devil And Other Biographical Sketches and Essays 2011-05-31T02:00:28.247Z Coleridge, for instance, would let go by a fine isolated verisimilitude caught from the Penetralium of mystery, from being incapable of remaining content with half-knowledge. Life of John Keats His Life and Poetry, his Friends, Critics and After-fame 2011-06-10T02:00:19.290Z Coleridge, though so prolific a conversationalist, and so prone to speech, knew when there was a time to be silent. A Day with Samuel Taylor Coleridge 2011-06-08T02:00:18.910Z Derwent Coleridge tells a story of his brother, which shows that Wordsworth accurately described Hartley as one ‘whose fancies from afar are brought,’ and who made ‘a mock apparel’ of his words. The Age of Tennyson 2011-05-31T02:00:36.607Z There is, then, in Castelvetro's argument this modicum of truth, that poetry appeals to no specialized knowledge, but that its function is, as Coleridge says, to give a definite and immediate pleasure. A History of Literary Criticism in the Renaissance With special reference to the influence of Italy in the formation and development of modern classicism 2011-05-30T02:00:13.147Z Well, I wish I could think that those lines of mine in "Geotheos" were worthy to be mentioned with Keats' "magic casements" and Coleridge's "woman wailing for her demon lover." The Letters of Ambrose Bierce With a Memoir by George Sterling 2011-05-26T02:00:19.673Z He was found guilty of intent to do grievous bodily harm, and was sentenced by Lord Chief Justice Coleridge to fifteen years’ penal servitude. Norfolk Annals A Chronological Record of Remarkable Events in the Nineteeth Century, Vol. 2 2011-05-25T02:00:19.650Z He had an immense proposal for an epic, which should take ten years for collecting material, five for writing and five for revising—nobody could accuse Coleridge of undue haste! A Day with Samuel Taylor Coleridge 2011-06-08T02:00:18.910Z Though Hartley Coleridge wrote prose as well, his name is now associated only with his poems. The Age of Tennyson 2011-05-31T02:00:36.607Z It is a small thing to say, but I venture to agree with him.—Ever sincerely yours, Coleridge. The Life, Letters and Work of Frederic Leighton Volume II 2011-05-22T02:00:17.943Z Whatever it was, it gave us what Coleridge pronounced the best sonnet in our language; and Lang's admiration of Homer has given us at least the next best. The Letters of Ambrose Bierce With a Memoir by George Sterling 2011-05-26T02:00:19.673Z Now come Rabelais, boldly declared by Coleridge one of the great creative minds of literature; and Montaigne, with those essays of his, still living, and, indeed, certain always to live. French Classics 2011-05-22T02:00:12.620Z Samuel Taylor Coleridge was in his twenty-sixth year: pale, stoutish, black-haired: not an immediately attractive man. A Day with Samuel Taylor Coleridge 2011-06-08T02:00:18.910Z There are many suggestions of Wordsworth, but Hartley Coleridge is not an imitative poet. The Age of Tennyson 2011-05-31T02:00:36.607Z In other words, the transition from metaphysics to love is easy; as Mr. Coleridge’s writings can amply testify. Mirror of the Months 2011-05-21T02:00:10.227Z "From the standard of pure poetry, Miss Lowell's poem, 'The Book of the Hours of Sister Clotilde' is one of the loveliest in our poetry, worthy of companionship to the great romantic lyrics of Coleridge." Songs and Satires 2011-05-20T02:00:37.050Z Coleridge, in his metaphysical way, keen at the moment on the scent of illustrations for the philosophy of Kant, said, “Pantagruel is the Reason; Panurge the Understanding.” French Classics 2011-05-22T02:00:12.620Z Coleridge had deliberately set himself down at Nether Stowey to be near his friend Tom Poole, and to support himself by "a mixture of literature and husbandry." A Day with Samuel Taylor Coleridge 2011-06-08T02:00:18.910Z Coleridge, Carlyle, Lockhart, Thackeray and Southey were among the early contributors. The Age of Tennyson 2011-05-31T02:00:36.607Z We hazard little concerning the importance or difficulties of the work, when we quote the remark of Coleridge, that the history of a word is often more important than that of a campaign. The International Monthly, Volume 4, No. 1, August, 1851 2011-05-18T02:00:11.200Z Is this Coleridge and Southey again with their Pantisocracy and Susquehanna Paradise? From the Easy Chair, series 3 2011-05-14T02:00:12.237Z Coleridge’s Cologne, with its numerous stenches, is nothing to it. Cities of the Dawn 2011-05-13T02:00:10.047Z Coleridge could never be without a friend, without a listener: and a listener was a desideratum to him. A Day with Samuel Taylor Coleridge 2011-06-08T02:00:18.910Z England had triplets at a birth, Coleridge, Southey and Wordsworth, And these three are widely famed, And the "Lake Poets" they were named. Poems of James McIntyre 2011-05-11T02:00:21.477Z He came, we must remember, half-way between the Pantisocracy of Coleridge and his friends and the still cruder vagaries of our young intellectuals. The Victorian Age The Rede Lecture for 1922 2011-05-11T02:00:18.513Z He and Coleridge have different worlds behind them. Oscar Wilde A Critical Study 2011-05-04T02:00:14.580Z It is sometimes treated as if it were simply a long monotonous harangue of some talker like Coleridge, the outflow of whose ideas and words subordinates or puts to silence a whole company. Browning and the Dramatic Monologue 2011-04-30T02:00:14.330Z So you cannot be surprised that the faithful, kindly Thomas Poole, already busy in his tan-yard, hearing Coleridge calling at the hedge, instantly forsook his proper tasks and hurried to salute his comrade. A Day with Samuel Taylor Coleridge 2011-06-08T02:00:18.910Z Coleridge said, “His is the happiest family I ever saw.” The Lure of the Camera 2011-04-27T02:00:25.413Z Years brought the philosophic mind to Carlyle, Southey, Wordsworth and Coleridge. The Victorian Age The Rede Lecture for 1922 2011-05-11T02:00:18.513Z Coleridge, whose originality there is no more need to question than Wilde's, gave Kant's ideas a different colouring. Oscar Wilde A Critical Study 2011-05-04T02:00:14.580Z A monologue is often conceived as a kind of stilted conversational oration; and the word monologue is apt to call to mind some talker, like Coleridge, who monopolized the whole conversation. Browning and the Dramatic Monologue 2011-04-30T02:00:14.330Z "Jealousy!" repeated Coleridge, rolling his fine eyes wildly. A Day with Samuel Taylor Coleridge 2011-06-08T02:00:18.910Z Tichborne I incline to think the real man, and the blacker they make him the more certainly they identify him: so far I regard Coleridge as his best advocate. Charles Lever, His Life in His Letters, Vol. II 2011-04-15T02:00:16.987Z In Hartley Coleridge's life of Marvell this is told in a silly, theatrical way, unworthy and not even characteristic of the man. Essays 2011-04-15T02:00:16.160Z |
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