Biographia Literaria ; Or, Biographical Sketches of My Literary Life and Opinions, Volume 1W. Pickering, 1847 - Aesthetics |
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Page xix
... understanding from its wonted mode of movement to set it upon new tasks necessary to the completeness and efficiency of what has been produced of another kind , but uninteresting in them- selves to the mind of the producer . He loved to ...
... understanding from its wonted mode of movement to set it upon new tasks necessary to the completeness and efficiency of what has been produced of another kind , but uninteresting in them- selves to the mind of the producer . He loved to ...
Page lviii
... understanding , as the ever- lasting organ of the Spirit of Truth ? The weakest in- tellect can receive doctrine implicitly as well as the strongest , and to hand on that which has been already settled and defined requires no great ...
... understanding , as the ever- lasting organ of the Spirit of Truth ? The weakest in- tellect can receive doctrine implicitly as well as the strongest , and to hand on that which has been already settled and defined requires no great ...
Page lxxx
... the laws of the human understanding , and either af- 20 See remarks on this subject in the Mission of the Comforter , pp . 476-7 . tially accordant with that of the Church . lxxxi firms lxxx His ultimate scheme of Baptism substan-
... the laws of the human understanding , and either af- 20 See remarks on this subject in the Mission of the Comforter , pp . 476-7 . tially accordant with that of the Church . lxxxi firms lxxx His ultimate scheme of Baptism substan-
Page cxv
... understanding to divine truth ; though it is more than belief ; and intellectual assent or perception is the means whereby we obtain the faith of the heart , which is joined with love . The one may not indeed precede the other in time ...
... understanding to divine truth ; though it is more than belief ; and intellectual assent or perception is the means whereby we obtain the faith of the heart , which is joined with love . The one may not indeed precede the other in time ...
Page cxix
... understanding and sometimes in the will , whereas it is in both ; but he always described it as a work of the Holy Ghost , ( Comm . chap . iii . ver . 11. ) he calls it a be- lieving with the heart , and he declares that it cannot be ...
... understanding and sometimes in the will , whereas it is in both ; but he always described it as a work of the Holy Ghost , ( Comm . chap . iii . ver . 11. ) he calls it a be- lieving with the heart , and he declares that it cannot be ...
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admiration Antinomianism appear Archdeacon Hare Aristotle baptism believe Biographia Biographia Literaria called Catholic cause character Christ Christ's Hospital Christian Church Coleridge Coleridge's contained criticism deny divine doctrine edition Essay Eucharist evidence expressed faculties faith fancy Father feeling former genius grace habit heart Hobbes Holy human Hume ideas imagination intellectual Irenæus irreligion justifying language latter less literary Luther Lyrical Ballads Maasz means ment merit metaphysical Milton mind moral nature never notion object opinion original outward Pantheism party passage perhaps philosophy poems poet poetic poetry present principle quæ racter reader reason reference religion religious remarks Review S. T. Coleridge salvation Schelling Scripture seems sense Shakespeare shew Socinian Solifidian sonnets soul Southey speaks spirit suppose sure teaching Tertullian things thought tion true truth verse ward law whole words Wordsworth writings καὶ