Blackwood's Magazine, Volume 47W. Blackwood., 1840 - England |
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Page 262
... Coleridge used to say happened in all cases of importance , that extremes meet : for Casuistiçal Ethics will be most consult- ed by two classes the most opposite to each other - by those who seek ex- cuses for evading their duties , and ...
... Coleridge used to say happened in all cases of importance , that extremes meet : for Casuistiçal Ethics will be most consult- ed by two classes the most opposite to each other - by those who seek ex- cuses for evading their duties , and ...
Page 287
... Coleridge's plagiarisms to their true sources , fixing their pre- cise amount , or nearly so , ( as far , at least , as Schelling is concerned , ) and arguing the whole question on its broadest grounds , both literary an moral . We are ...
... Coleridge's plagiarisms to their true sources , fixing their pre- cise amount , or nearly so , ( as far , at least , as Schelling is concerned , ) and arguing the whole question on its broadest grounds , both literary an moral . We are ...
Page 288
... Coleridge was in- debted to Schelling , or else he does not choose to speak out . He talks of Coleridge having transferred into his work " half - a - dozen pages , " or little more , of Schelling . By our Lady ! they are nearer twenty ...
... Coleridge was in- debted to Schelling , or else he does not choose to speak out . He talks of Coleridge having transferred into his work " half - a - dozen pages , " or little more , of Schelling . By our Lady ! they are nearer twenty ...
Page 289
... Coleridge's dealings with Schelling really are ? Do they cover the whole extent of his obligation to him ? or do they not rather lead the reader to rank him ( from his own showing ) al- most pari passu with the German philo- sopher in ...
... Coleridge's dealings with Schelling really are ? Do they cover the whole extent of his obligation to him ? or do they not rather lead the reader to rank him ( from his own showing ) al- most pari passu with the German philo- sopher in ...
Page 290
... Coleridge , having " borne the burden and the heat of the day , " and . having made good his own indepen- dent advances in philosophy , had , in the person of Schelling , fallen in with a fellow - labourer moving along the same ...
... Coleridge , having " borne the burden and the heat of the day , " and . having made good his own indepen- dent advances in philosophy , had , in the person of Schelling , fallen in with a fellow - labourer moving along the same ...
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Common terms and phrases
Affghanistan Agolanti appears Aubrey beauty British called Casuistry character Chartists cheeta Christian Coleridge colour Cosm dark Deerbrook Don Manuel door doubt earth empire English entered Essenes eyes Faust fear feel Gammon Ginevra give Goethe Goth Gothic Government Greek Greek tragedy Grimm's law hand head hear heart heaven Herat honour hope human India Josephus judicial combat king land language light look Lord means ment mind Miss moral nations nature never night o'er once opium original passed passion peace perhaps Persia present racter reader rhyme round scene Schelling seems seen servant sion soul spirit stand supposed Tag-rag Teutonic Teutonic languages thee thing thou thought tiger tion Titian Titmouse translation truth turned voice whole Wolfgang Menzel words Yatton