Nineteenth Century PoetsShiva Lal Agarwala, 1967 - 422 páginas |
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Página 79
... Coleridge anticipates Wordsworth's " language really used by men " . What Coleridge ridiculed here as the Mint of Invention was described by him approvingly later as " reflection on the acts of the mind itself " . To Thelwall also Coleridge ...
... Coleridge anticipates Wordsworth's " language really used by men " . What Coleridge ridiculed here as the Mint of Invention was described by him approvingly later as " reflection on the acts of the mind itself " . To Thelwall also Coleridge ...
Página 85
... Coleridge believed in the efficacy of indolence . He was telling Southey in 1799 , ( December 24 ) : " Be idle - be very idle ! The habits of your mind are such that you will necessarily do much - but be as idle as you can . " This is ...
... Coleridge believed in the efficacy of indolence . He was telling Southey in 1799 , ( December 24 ) : " Be idle - be very idle ! The habits of your mind are such that you will necessarily do much - but be as idle as you can . " This is ...
Página 111
... Coleridge's romantic attitude as opposed to the neo - classical emphasis on expression . Coleridge as a critic is at his best when he conforms to positions that he had held in common with Wordsworth and not when he talks like an ...
... Coleridge's romantic attitude as opposed to the neo - classical emphasis on expression . Coleridge as a critic is at his best when he conforms to positions that he had held in common with Wordsworth and not when he talks like an ...
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