New Approaches to Coleridge: Biographical and Critical EssaysDonald Sultana To find more information about Rowman and Littlefield titles, please visit www.rowmanlittlefield.com. |
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Page 179
... symbols ' , the corporeal forms themselves have no substance , and the function of the symbols is to refer the beholder to God . There may be some doubts as to whether this happened , and in quite this way , because , as will appear ...
... symbols ' , the corporeal forms themselves have no substance , and the function of the symbols is to refer the beholder to God . There may be some doubts as to whether this happened , and in quite this way , because , as will appear ...
Page 180
... symbols is to remind us of ' the Creator in illo tempore ' . In the symbol Christesen analyses most closely , an ice - scene from a letter of 1799 , he finds that ' God appears in the text of the world as he appears in the Book of Job ...
... symbols is to remind us of ' the Creator in illo tempore ' . In the symbol Christesen analyses most closely , an ice - scene from a letter of 1799 , he finds that ' God appears in the text of the world as he appears in the Book of Job ...
Page 186
... symbols to shape themselves around the inner emotions . Certainly , with the reverie and vision , it marks the difference between the three major poems and the conversation poems and its use by Coleridge was the most important step in ...
... symbols to shape themselves around the inner emotions . Certainly , with the reverie and vision , it marks the difference between the three major poems and the conversation poems and its use by Coleridge was the most important step in ...
Contents
Introduction by Donald Sultana | 7 |
List of Abbreviations | 16 |
Coleridge | 38 |
Copyright | |
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Aids to Reflection Ancient Mariner Aristophanes audience Ball Ball's Biographia Literaria Blackwood's Blackwood's Magazine Byron Christabel Clevedon Coleridge wrote Coleridge's Conversation Poems Courier Cowper criticism Critique on Bertram December version described discussion Dorothy Wordsworth drama Drury Lane Edinburgh Review edition Egypt Emerson England English Eolian Eolian Harp essay Frere Frere's translations genius German Hazlitt ibid ideas imagery Imagination influence John John Hookham Frere July draft Kubla Khan Lamb language later letter Lime-Tree Bower literary literature Lockhart London Ludwig Tieck M.H. Abrams Magazine Malta Maturin Melville mind ministry Nature notebook Observations on Egypt pantheism passage philosophical play poet poetic poetry political paper Professor Erdman published Reason reference religious Romantic S.T. Coleridge Samuel Taylor Coleridge Schlegel Scott sense Shakespeare soul Southey spirit Stuart style suggested symbols theatre theory Thoreau thought Tieck Transcendentalists Wordsworth writing written Zapolya