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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... things , if altogether unknown , affect not . ( 3. ) There must be a suitableness best mem or agreement of that good thing with the nature of those which should affect it ; otherwise indeed how good soever it is , it is not good to them ...
... Thing , the one the Form , the other the Substance , farewell to all Philosophy and to all Ethics " ( # 61 ) ; " I would not give a groat for a man , whose Heart does not sometimes betray his Judgement " ( # 235 ) . Rude ? " And thus ...
... things often are , wonder- fully simple . Traditionally , the virtues of the marginal note are accuracy ( as it improves or illuminates the text ) and compression . If it lends itself to aphorism , that may be because it has to fit into ...
... things . Coleridge loved a joke but was himself constitutionally serious . And this fact leads to the aspect of his thinking that is perhaps the most difficult for a modern reader to grasp sympathetically , his bedrock of belief . In ...
... things from the writer's point of view . Hence his repeated injunctions to readers to ex- ercise historical imagination , to put themselves in the writer's place , to see how it must unavoidably come about , under those circumstances ...
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 |