Biographia Literaria ; Or, Biographical Sketches of My Literary Life and Opinions, Volumen1W. Pickering, 1847 |
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Página xl
... moral being of Coleridge but to the frame of his intellect , and was in close connection with that which constituted his pe- culiar intellectual strength , his power of abstracting and referring to universal principles , often rendered ...
... moral being of Coleridge but to the frame of his intellect , and was in close connection with that which constituted his pe- culiar intellectual strength , his power of abstracting and referring to universal principles , often rendered ...
Página xlii
... moral and mental distinctions more clearly ; yet his judgments of particular persons were often rela- and gives to Des Cartes , what is not to be found in the latter and is to be found in the former . ( See chapter v . ) This he did in ...
... moral and mental distinctions more clearly ; yet his judgments of particular persons were often rela- and gives to Des Cartes , what is not to be found in the latter and is to be found in the former . ( See chapter v . ) This he did in ...
Página xlviii
... moral sense , that , through life , his associ- ates , with few exceptions , were distinguished by high qualities of head and heart ; from first to last of his course here below he was a discoverer and a proclaimer of excellence both in ...
... moral sense , that , through life , his associ- ates , with few exceptions , were distinguished by high qualities of head and heart ; from first to last of his course here below he was a discoverer and a proclaimer of excellence both in ...
Página liv
... moral , and this may have been brought out , —I think such defects are never caused or implanted , by circumstances ; but it is hardly fair play to impute such defects to a writer or describe them as having corrupted his opinions , when ...
... moral , and this may have been brought out , —I think such defects are never caused or implanted , by circumstances ; but it is hardly fair play to impute such defects to a writer or describe them as having corrupted his opinions , when ...
Página lvi
... moral and spiritual sense : but such was never my fa- ther's situation . When he is described as having been impaired in his religious mind by editing a newspaper , would any one guess the fact to be this , that , in his youth , he put ...
... moral and spiritual sense : but such was never my fa- ther's situation . When he is described as having been impaired in his religious mind by editing a newspaper , would any one guess the fact to be this , that , in his youth , he put ...
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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