A Book I Value: Selected MarginaliaPrinceton University Press, 2021-06-08 - 272 psl. Coleridge is such a celebrity that many who have never read "The Rime of the Ancient Mariner" have a fair idea who he was, and yet the common impression of him is not flattering. He is typically seen as a youthful genius transformed by drugs and philosophy into a tedious sage. It is time for a change of image. A Book I Value offers a one-volume sampling of Coleridge's encyclopedic marginalia, revealing a figure more complex but also more humanly attractive--clever, curious, playful, intense--than the one we are used to. |
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... copies in the first place, some had to be pawned, some were lost at sea or on the road. His attitude toward books was rather casual, perhaps because he could never count on keeping them. He used to borrow books for years on end ...
... copies in the first place , some had to be pawned , some were lost at sea or on the road . His attitude to- ward books was rather casual , perhaps because he could never count on keeping them . He used to borrow books for years on end ...
... copy of the plays into the lecture hall ( # 102-12 ) . As time went on and the mass of marginalia grew steadily , he began to see the notes in his books as a resource susceptible of infinite reconfiguration and hence a way of beating ...
... copy approved explanatory glosses and eventually to add their own , in printed books just as previously in manuscripts . In the century before Coleridge became a celebrated anno- tator , the great expansion of publishing in Britain ...
... copies of classical works with other editions , and children put the translations of hard words directly into their textbooks . Lawyers kept records of new statutes and significant judgments that affected the law by entering them in ...
Turinys
X | 18 |
XI | 20 |
XII | 21 |
XIII | 22 |
XIV | 24 |
XV | 25 |
XVI | 27 |
XVII | 34 |
XVIII | 36 |
XIX | 37 |
XX | 39 |
XXIII | 43 |
XXIV | 45 |
XXVI | 46 |
XXVII | 53 |
XXVIII | 54 |
XXIX | 55 |
XXX | 56 |
XXXI | 59 |
XXXII | 60 |
XXXIII | 62 |
XXXIV | 63 |
XXXV | 65 |
XXXVI | 66 |
XXXVII | 68 |
XXXVIII | 70 |
XXXIX | 71 |
XL | 73 |
XLI | 74 |
XLII | 75 |
XLIII | 77 |
XLIV | 79 |
XLV | 84 |
XLVI | 98 |
XLVII | 99 |
XLVIII | 100 |
XLIX | 101 |
L | 106 |
LI | 108 |
LIII | 114 |
LIV | 115 |
LV | 116 |
LVI | 117 |
LXVIII | 147 |
LXIX | 148 |
LXX | 150 |
LXXI | 153 |
LXXII | 158 |
LXXIII | 160 |
LXXIV | 162 |
LXXV | 163 |
LXXVI | 164 |
LXXVII | 165 |
LXXVIII | 167 |
LXXIX | 168 |
LXXX | 170 |
LXXXI | 171 |
LXXXII | 174 |
LXXXIV | 179 |
LXXXV | 182 |
LXXXVI | 184 |
LXXXVII | 188 |
LXXXVIII | 190 |
LXXXIX | 191 |
XC | 193 |
XCI | 197 |
XCII | 198 |
XCIII | 199 |
XCV | 202 |
XCVI | 203 |
XCVII | 207 |
XCVIII | 213 |
XCIX | 216 |
C | 217 |
CI | 220 |
CIII | 223 |
CIV | 224 |
CV | 226 |
CVI | 228 |
CVII | 231 |
CVIII | 232 |
CIX | 234 |
CX | 235 |
CXI | 236 |
CXII | 237 |