Biographia Literaria ; Or, Biographical Sketches of My Literary Life and Opinions, Volumen1W. Pickering, 1847 |
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Página iv
... nature and genesis of the Imagination or Plastic Power - On Pedantry and pedantic expressions - Advice to young authors re- specting publication - Various anecdotes of the Au- thor's literary life , and the progress of his opinions in ...
... nature and genesis of the Imagination or Plastic Power - On Pedantry and pedantic expressions - Advice to young authors re- specting publication - Various anecdotes of the Au- thor's literary life , and the progress of his opinions in ...
Página ix
... relation of the Philosophy of Nature to the 2 From Mr. Hare's defence of Coleridge in the British Ma- gazine of January 1835 , pp . 20 , 21 . 1 66 improved doctrine of Fichte , ) he had just Bodily Languor and an incautious Mind . ix.
... relation of the Philosophy of Nature to the 2 From Mr. Hare's defence of Coleridge in the British Ma- gazine of January 1835 , pp . 20 , 21 . 1 66 improved doctrine of Fichte , ) he had just Bodily Languor and an incautious Mind . ix.
Página xii
... to purloin , he never would have stolen half a dozen pages from the head and front of that very work of Schelling's which was One of the largest extracts my Father accompanies with these xii True Nature of Plagiarism.
... to purloin , he never would have stolen half a dozen pages from the head and front of that very work of Schelling's which was One of the largest extracts my Father accompanies with these xii True Nature of Plagiarism.
Página xiii
... mentions ; and the latter , from its subject , would attract them the most . " - Brit . Mag . of 1835 , p . 20 . 5 See p . 255 . Most of these extracts the Writer in Blackwood re- fers alien from the Nature of Coleridge . XII.
... mentions ; and the latter , from its subject , would attract them the most . " - Brit . Mag . of 1835 , p . 20 . 5 See p . 255 . Most of these extracts the Writer in Blackwood re- fers alien from the Nature of Coleridge . XII.
Página xviii
... natural gifts , than from an inordinate desire to parade and exalt them . He was goaded into some degree of egotism by the charges continually brought against him , that he suffered his powers to lie dormant , or to spend themselves in ...
... natural gifts , than from an inordinate desire to parade and exalt them . He was goaded into some degree of egotism by the charges continually brought against him , that he suffered his powers to lie dormant , or to spend themselves in ...
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admiration Antinomianism appear Archdeacon Hare Aristotle baptism believe Biographia Biographia Literaria called Catholic cause character Christ Christ's Hospital Christian Church Coleridge Coleridge's contained criticism deny divine doctrine edition Essay Eucharist evidence expressed faculties faith fancy Father feeling former genius grace habit heart Hobbes Holy human Hume ideas imagination intellectual Irenæus irreligion justifying language latter less literary Luther Lyrical Ballads Maasz means ment merit metaphysical Milton mind moral nature never notion object opinion original outward Pantheism party passage perhaps philosophy poems poet poetic poetry present principle quæ racter reader reason reference religion religious remarks Review S. T. Coleridge salvation Schelling Scripture seems sense Shakespeare shew Socinian Solifidian sonnets soul Southey speaks spirit suppose sure teaching Tertullian things thought tion true truth verse ward law whole words Wordsworth writings καὶ