Notes and Lectures Upon Shakespeare and Some of the Old Poets and Dramatists and Other Literary Remains of S.T. Coleridge, Volume 2W. Pickering, 1849 - Literature |
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Page 20
... words . I mean , that the language of the English metrical romance is less romanized , and has fewer words , not originally of a northern origin , than the same romances in the Norman - French ; which is the more striking , because the ...
... words . I mean , that the language of the English metrical romance is less romanized , and has fewer words , not originally of a northern origin , than the same romances in the Norman - French ; which is the more striking , because the ...
Page 160
... words originally equivalent , I have cherished the wish to use the word ' poesy ' as the generic or common term , and to distinguish that species of poesy which is not muta poesis by its usual name ' poetry ; ' while of all the other ...
... words originally equivalent , I have cherished the wish to use the word ' poesy ' as the generic or common term , and to distinguish that species of poesy which is not muta poesis by its usual name ' poetry ; ' while of all the other ...
Page 177
... word can never be mistaken ; whereas in the latter writers , as especially in Pope , the use of words is for the most part purely arbitrary , so that the context will rarely show the true specific sense , but only that something of the ...
... word can never be mistaken ; whereas in the latter writers , as especially in Pope , the use of words is for the most part purely arbitrary , so that the context will rarely show the true specific sense , but only that something of the ...
Contents
A COURSE OF LECTURES | 1 |
General Character of the Gothic Mind | 7 |
The Troubadours Boccaccio Petrarch | 18 |
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ÆSCHYLUS allegory ancient Greece Beaumont and Fletcher beauty Ben Jonson Cervantes character Christian Coleridge common contemplated Crusoe Dante Dante's devil distinct divine Don Quixote dramatic especially evil excellence excite existence express exquisite fact Faery Queene fancy feeling former genius give Gothic Gothic Literature Goths Greece Greek Hayley Hence human humour idea images imagination imitation individual instance intellect interest Jonson judgment language latter least Lecture less Lord Massinger mean Milton mind moral nations nature nomos object observe original pantheism Paradise Lost passage passion perfect perhaps person Petrarch philosophy Plato pleasure poem poet poetry polytheism present principle produced Quixote's Rabelais racter reader reason religion Roman S. T. COLERidge Sancho sense Shakspeare Shakspeare's soul Spenser spirit style symbol taste thing thou thought tion Tom Jones true truth understanding verse whole words writers