Biographia Literaria, 第 1 卷 |
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第 1 到 3 筆結果,共 79 筆
第 liii 頁
By the only method which could command assent ( the appeal to incontrovert- ible principles ) they exposed the unreasonableness of the prevailing individualism in questions of taste , and of the mistaken theories on which it leaned .
By the only method which could command assent ( the appeal to incontrovert- ible principles ) they exposed the unreasonableness of the prevailing individualism in questions of taste , and of the mistaken theories on which it leaned .
第 250 頁
PAGE 110 1. 5. To establish this distinction was one main object of The Friend . To Stuart Coleridge spoke of The Friend as ' a work for the development of Principles ' ( Letters from the Late Poets to D. Stuart , 1880 , p .
PAGE 110 1. 5. To establish this distinction was one main object of The Friend . To Stuart Coleridge spoke of The Friend as ' a work for the development of Principles ' ( Letters from the Late Poets to D. Stuart , 1880 , p .
第 253 頁
15. how opposite even then my principles were . According to Dr. Carlyon ( Early Years , & c . , i . 27 : quoted , Life , p . 41 ) Coleridge while still at Cambridge had occasion to correct a misapprehension on the part of the Master of ...
15. how opposite even then my principles were . According to Dr. Carlyon ( Early Years , & c . , i . 27 : quoted , Life , p . 41 ) Coleridge while still at Cambridge had occasion to correct a misapprehension on the part of the Master of ...
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according actual appear association attempt become Biog Biographia cause chapter Coleridge Coleridge's common conception concerning consciousness criticism direction distinction doubt edition effect equally Essay existence experience express fact faculty fancy feelings force former genius give ground hand heart human idea images imagination immediate important impressions instance intellectual intelligence interest knowledge known language learned least lectures less Letters light lines literary living meaning mere merely mind moral nature never notions object once opinions original PAGE passage philosopher poems poet poetic poetry possible present principles published question reader reason reference remains result Review sense sonnets soul speak spirit theory things thought tion true truth understanding universal volume whole Wordsworth writings written