| Macvey Napier, James Grahame - 1818 - 64 Seiten
...inconsistencies, that the same writer, or at least his sworn brother, the LEOPARD, has praised Byron's Parisina, and Coleridge's Christabel, poems which sin as heinously...libeller and his associates have honour, religion, and morals continually in their mouths, but that they may shew, by way of contrast, how thoroughly... | |
| Sir Hall Caine - 1883 - 302 Seiten
...the poem of " Rimini "] or at least his sworn brother, the Leopard, has praised Byron's " Parisina," and Coleridge's " Christabel " — poems which sin...purity and decency as it is well possible to imagine.' Allusion of this kind to ' Christabel' ought to have been enough to laugh the anonymous critic or critics... | |
| Andrew Lang - 1897 - 472 Seiten
...makes " obscene parodies on the Psalms." Wilson "has praised Coleridge's ' Christabel,' which sins as heinously against purity and decency as it is well possible to imagine." The author of " Hypocrisy Unveiled " was clearly of "a nice morality." Finally the Leopard and the... | |
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