Coleridge as Poet and Religious Thinker: Inspiration and Revelation |
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Page 9
... without sensuous incarnation.2 It is the classic English statement of a relationship which is explored repeatedly in ... which the spiritual casts on the physical and that the spiritual only has sense in relation to the physical .
... without sensuous incarnation.2 It is the classic English statement of a relationship which is explored repeatedly in ... which the spiritual casts on the physical and that the spiritual only has sense in relation to the physical .
Page 91
Furthermore , polarity is discussed in the Lyceums - Fragmente as the relationship between Bedingt und Unbedingt ... ( as of the secondary Imagination in Coleridge ) to strike up fertile relationships between seeming opposites .
Furthermore , polarity is discussed in the Lyceums - Fragmente as the relationship between Bedingt und Unbedingt ... ( as of the secondary Imagination in Coleridge ) to strike up fertile relationships between seeming opposites .
Page 120
... since things must first be given before one is in a position to apprehend relations between them . ... which is the ' fixed and necessary Relation of Object to Subject ' , is established : not merely from the logical completeness of ...
... since things must first be given before one is in a position to apprehend relations between them . ... which is the ' fixed and necessary Relation of Object to Subject ' , is established : not merely from the logical completeness of ...
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Contents
THE ROMANTIC CONTEXT | 8 |
KUBLA KHAN THE RIME OF THE ANCIENT | 43 |
THE CRITICAL PROSE | 73 |
Copyright | |
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Coleridge as Poet and Religious Thinker: Inspiration and Revelation David Jasper Limited preview - 1985 |
Common terms and phrases
activity Aids Ancient Mariner artist Beautiful becomes beginning belief Biographia Literaria Chapter Christian Coleridge Coleridge's concern consciousness context continued create creation creative criticism described discussion distinction divine doctrine early effect English Essays established eternal evil experience expression faith Farrer final finite fragment Friend further given historical human ideas Imagination important individual infinite inspiration intellectual irony John Kant knowledge language later Lectures letter light linked literary literature Logic London meaning merely mind moral mystery narrative nature object opposites organic original Oxford particular perceived person philosophical poem poet poetic poetry Polar position present principle reader reading reason reference reflection relation relationship religion religious remains revelation Romantic Schlegel seems sense Spirit structure suggests symbol theology theory things thought tradition true truth understanding unity universal vision whole Wordsworth writings wrote