| 1844 - 784 стор.
...Hobbes, Locke, and Hume, for the two latter of whom in particular, he feels the most righteous contempt. I am grieved that you never met Coleridge : all other men whom I bare known are mere children to him, and yet all is palsied by a total want of moral strength. He will... | |
| 1844 - 618 стор.
...where a pure pure old English word does as well, ought to be hung, drawn and quartered for high treason against his mother-tongue. ' I am grieved that you...friends to the world ; yet many of his scattered poems arc such, that a man of feeling will see that the author was capable of executing the greatest works.... | |
| John Warden Robberds - 1843 - 550 стор.
...Hobbes, Locke and Hume, for the two latter of whom in particular he feels the most righteous contempt. I am grieved that you never met Coleridge : all other...author was capable of executing the greatest works. " The sonnets you speak of are not mine : nothing of mine has yet appeared in the Post except the ballad... | |
| 1843 - 544 стор.
...Hobbes, Locke and Hume, for the two latter of whom in particular he feels the most righteous contempt. 1 am grieved that you never met Coleridge : all other...author was capable of executing the greatest works. " The sonnets you speak of are not mine : nothing of mine has yet appeared in the Post except the ballad... | |
| 1844 - 734 стор.
...Hobbes, Locke, and Hume ; for the two latter of whom in particular he feels the most righteous contempt. I am grieved that you never met Coleridge ; all other...author was capable of executing the greatest works," &c. Mr. Southey writes to his friend on the latter mentioning that he was going to modernize or refashion... | |
| 1844 - 752 стор.
...Hobbes, Locke, and Hume ; for the two latter of whom in particular he feels the most righteous contempt. I am grieved that you never met Coleridge ; all other...strength. He will leave nothing behind him to justify tbe opinion of his friends to the world ;| yet many of his scattered poems are such, that a man of... | |
| Samuel Greatheed, Daniel Parken, Theophilus Williams, Josiah Conder, Thomas Price, Jonathan Edwards Ryland, Edwin Paxton Hood - 1844 - 766 стор.
...Hobbes, Locke, and Hume, for the two latter of whom in particular, he feels the most righteous contempt. I am grieved that you never met Coleridge : all other men whom I have known are mere children to him, and yet all is palsied by a total want of moral strength. He will leave... | |
| George Sandby - 1848 - 404 стор.
...the views and statements of that deep-thinking man ? Southey says in a letter to William Taylor, " I am grieved that you never met Coleridge : all other...whom I have ever known, are mere children to him." Again, " It grieves me to the heart, that when he (Coleridge) is gone, nobody will believe what a mind... | |
| Sir Hall Caine - 1883 - 302 стор.
...by the tribute of the best minds of his own time and later times. ' I am grieved,' writes Southey, that you never met Coleridge ; all other men whom I have ever known are mere children to him.' ' His fancy and diction,' says Scott, ' would long ago have placed him above all his contemporaries... | |
| 1887 - 548 стор.
...SAMUEL TAYLOR COLERIDGE. [IN TWO PARTS.— I. THE MAN] "I AM grieved," said Son they, " that you uever met Coleridge ; all other men whom I have ever known...is palsied by a total want of moral strength." "He is like a lump of coal, rich with gas," said Walter Scott, "which lies expending itself in putt's and... | |
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