| 1844 - 752 Seiten
...never being designed to be understood. Coleridge and I have often talked of making a great work on English literature ! but Coleridge only talks, and,...thousand-thousand-fold the mightiest of his generation," &c. Mr. Southey in the same letter, speaking of the barren and unproductive soil which he had found... | |
| 1844 - 734 Seiten
...never being designed to be understood. Coleridge and I have often talked of making a great work on English literature ! but Coleridge only talks, and,...what a mind goes with him, — how infinitely and ten thousaud-thousand-fold the mightiest of his generation," &c. Mr. Southey in the same letter, speaking... | |
| 1848 - 632 Seiten
...Coleridge was dying, he could not help expressing it to William Taylor — a less partial judge : — ' Coleridge and I have often talked of making a great...what a mind goes with him, — how infinitely and ten thousand-thousand fold, the mightiest of his generation.' This was written in June, 1803 ; in December... | |
| 1848 - 636 Seiten
...upon English literature : but Coleridge only talks, and, poor fellow ! he will not do that Inng, 1 fear; and then I shall begin, in my turn, to feel...what a mind goes with him — how infinitely and ten thousand-thousand fold, the mightiest of his generation. This was written in June, 1803 ; in Decembet... | |
| John Holmes Agnew, Walter Hilliard Bidwell - 1848 - 602 Seiten
...came up to them, would just lift up his leg and pass on. It vexes and grieves me to the heart, lhat when he is gone, as go he will, nobody will believe...what a mind goes with him — how infinitely and ten thousand-thousand fold, the mighliest of his generation." This was written in June, 1S03 : in December... | |
| 1848 - 638 Seiten
...Coleridge was dying, he could not help expressing it to William Taylor — a less partial judge : — Coleridge and I have often talked of making a great...what a mind goes with him — how infinitely and ten thousand-thousand fold, the mightiest of his generation. This was written in June, 1803 ; in December... | |
| Kathleen Elizabeth Royds Innes - 1911 - 142 Seiten
...while aware of his achievements, " It vexes and grieves me to the heart that when he is gone . . . nobody will believe what a mind goes with him — how infinitely and ten-thousand-fold the mightiest of his generation. ' ' Yet the sense of what he might have done must... | |
| Robert Southey - 1912 - 600 Seiten
...abridgement ; he requested long articles from me, because he was short of matter. Why refashion ' Drayton ' ? In the first place, you could write a better poem...true faith, and our aptitudes determine our destiny, it I be not exalted into my own old owl-eyed Simorgh, I shall certainly make my appearance in the next... | |
| John Livingston Lowes - 1927 - 694 Seiten
...great work upon English literature; but Coleridge only talks." Then, a moment later, Southey goes on: It provokes me when I hear a set of puppies yelping...thousand-thousand-fold the mightiest of his generation. 17 AP, pp. 39-40. , 18 AP, p. 206. See p. 269, above. 19 Essays and Tales, by John Sterling, ed. Hare... | |
| John Livingston Lowes - 1927 - 688 Seiten
...great work upon English literature; but Coleridge only talks.' Then, a moment later, Southey goes on: It provokes me when I hear a set of puppies yelping...infinitely and ten thousand-thousand-fold the mightiest of hu generation. 17 AP, pp. 39-40. 18 AP, p. 206. See p. 269, above. 19 Essays and Tales, by John Sterling,... | |
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