ColeridgeMacmillan, 1968 - 244 من الصفحات "The enigmatic personality of Samuel Taylor Coleridge has fascinated the English-speaking world for more than a century and a half. The moving and deeply disturbing story of his life, the manysidedness of his mind and achievement, and the extraordinary nature of his three distinct careers have made him one of the most compelling--and elusive--figures in English letters. Here, in a definitive, all-encompassing critical biography that is a major literary event, Walter Jackson Bate lays open the vast range of Coleridge's interests and talents, and probes the underlying unity of his complex achievements as a major poet, as one of the supreme critics and interpreters of literature, and as one of the seminal religious thinkers of modern times..." -- Book jacket. |
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الصفحة 65
... final summing up by the poet himself . The same mistake is often made with the close of Keats's " Ode on a Grecian Urn , " and with similar results . The less sophisticated are pleased to have what they conceive to be an authoritative ...
... final summing up by the poet himself . The same mistake is often made with the close of Keats's " Ode on a Grecian Urn , " and with similar results . The less sophisticated are pleased to have what they conceive to be an authoritative ...
الصفحة 204
... Final Years MEANWHILE COLERIDGE'S LIFE at Highgate was starting to settle into the pattern described by Carlyle in the rough , vivid passages in the Life of Sterling that have been anthologized for a century ( " Coleridge sat on the ...
... Final Years MEANWHILE COLERIDGE'S LIFE at Highgate was starting to settle into the pattern described by Carlyle in the rough , vivid passages in the Life of Sterling that have been anthologized for a century ( " Coleridge sat on the ...
الصفحة 213
... final years of his life he was absorbed mainly in the study of the Bible and commentary on it . It is as though Coleridge , now finding himself in " my decay of life , " were resolved to do what he knew he could do , trusting that this ...
... final years of his life he was absorbed mainly in the study of the Bible and commentary on it . It is as though Coleridge , now finding himself in " my decay of life , " were resolved to do what he knew he could do , trusting that this ...
المحتوى
Nether Stowey | 22 |
Wordsworths Arrival Coleridge as a Poet | 36 |
The Ancient Mariner Christabel and Kubla | 55 |
حقوق النشر | |
5 من الأقسام الأخرى غير ظاهرة
طبعات أخرى - عرض جميع المقتطفات
عبارات ومصطلحات مألوفة
admiration albatross Alfoxden Ancient Mariner appear beauty become began begin Biographia Bristol brother Cambridge century Charles Lamb Christ's Hospital Christabel Christian Cole Coleridge Coleridge's conception conversation poems course critical Culbone discussion distinction dynamic philosophy eager English Eolian epistemology especially essay fact feeling felt Fricker German Gillman guilt habits Hartley heart Henrik Steffens Highgate hope human idea ideal imagination insight interest Jakob Boehme Joseph Cottle Kubla Khan later laudanum least lectures letter logic London magnum opus means Meanwhile mind months moral nature Nether Stowey never notebooks once opium Opus Maximum Ottery pantheism pantisocracy poet poetry Poole premise psychological published reading reason religious ridge Sara Sarah Schelling seemed sense Shakespeare Southey speak spirit suggest symbol talk Tetractys thing thinking thought tion Tom Poole truth trying turn Unitarian unity universal walk Wedgwood whole word Wordsworth writing written wrote