mv: ‘./input-file.zip’ and ‘./input-file.zip’ are the same file Creating study carrel named coleridge-from-gutenberg Initializing database Unzipping Archive: input-file.zip creating: ./tmp/input/input-file/ inflating: ./tmp/input/input-file/151.txt inflating: ./tmp/input/input-file/6081.txt inflating: ./tmp/input/input-file/10801.txt inflating: ./tmp/input/input-file/9622.txt inflating: ./tmp/input/input-file/11101.txt inflating: ./tmp/input/input-file/8956.txt inflating: ./tmp/input/input-file/8489.txt inflating: ./tmp/input/input-file/8488.txt inflating: ./tmp/input/input-file/8210.txt inflating: ./tmp/input/input-file/8208.txt inflating: ./tmp/input/input-file/8533.txt inflating: ./tmp/input/input-file/41705.txt inflating: ./tmp/input/input-file/metadata.csv caution: excluded filename not matched: *MACOSX* === updating bibliographic database Building study carrel named coleridge-from-gutenberg FILE: cache/151.txt OUTPUT: txt/151.txt FILE: cache/9622.txt OUTPUT: txt/9622.txt FILE: cache/11101.txt OUTPUT: txt/11101.txt FILE: cache/8489.txt OUTPUT: txt/8489.txt FILE: cache/8210.txt OUTPUT: txt/8210.txt FILE: cache/41705.txt OUTPUT: txt/41705.txt FILE: cache/6081.txt OUTPUT: txt/6081.txt FILE: cache/8488.txt OUTPUT: txt/8488.txt FILE: cache/10801.txt OUTPUT: txt/10801.txt FILE: cache/8956.txt OUTPUT: txt/8956.txt FILE: cache/8208.txt OUTPUT: txt/8208.txt FILE: cache/8533.txt OUTPUT: txt/8533.txt 151 txt/../wrd/151.wrd 151 txt/../pos/151.pos 151 txt/../ent/151.ent === file2bib.sh === id: 151 author: Coleridge, Samuel Taylor title: The Rime of the Ancient Mariner date: pages: extension: .txt txt: ./txt/151.txt cache: ./cache/151.txt Content-Encoding ISO-8859-1 Content-Type text/plain; charset=ISO-8859-1 X-Parsed-By ['org.apache.tika.parser.DefaultParser', 'org.apache.tika.parser.csv.TextAndCSVParser'] X-TIKA:content_handler ToTextContentHandler X-TIKA:embedded_depth 0 X-TIKA:parse_time_millis 2 resourceName b'151.txt' 9622 txt/../pos/9622.pos 9622 txt/../wrd/9622.wrd 9622 txt/../ent/9622.ent 11101 txt/../wrd/11101.wrd 11101 txt/../pos/11101.pos 11101 txt/../ent/11101.ent 8208 txt/../pos/8208.pos === file2bib.sh === id: 9622 author: Coleridge, Samuel Taylor title: Lyrical Ballads, With a Few Other Poems (1798) date: pages: extension: .txt txt: ./txt/9622.txt cache: ./cache/9622.txt Content-Encoding ISO-8859-1 Content-Type text/plain; charset=ISO-8859-1 X-Parsed-By ['org.apache.tika.parser.DefaultParser', 'org.apache.tika.parser.csv.TextAndCSVParser'] X-TIKA:content_handler ToTextContentHandler X-TIKA:embedded_depth 0 X-TIKA:parse_time_millis 2 resourceName b'9622.txt' 8208 txt/../wrd/8208.wrd 41705 txt/../pos/41705.pos 8208 txt/../ent/8208.ent === file2bib.sh === id: 11101 author: Coleridge, Samuel Taylor title: Coleridge's Ancient Mariner and Select Poems date: pages: extension: .txt txt: ./txt/11101.txt cache: ./cache/11101.txt Content-Encoding UTF-8 Content-Type text/plain; charset=UTF-8 X-Parsed-By ['org.apache.tika.parser.DefaultParser', 'org.apache.tika.parser.csv.TextAndCSVParser'] X-TIKA:content_handler ToTextContentHandler X-TIKA:embedded_depth 0 X-TIKA:parse_time_millis 4 resourceName b'11101.txt' 41705 txt/../wrd/41705.wrd 8488 txt/../pos/8488.pos 8533 txt/../pos/8533.pos 8210 txt/../pos/8210.pos 41705 txt/../ent/41705.ent 8533 txt/../wrd/8533.wrd 8956 txt/../pos/8956.pos 8210 txt/../wrd/8210.wrd 8489 txt/../pos/8489.pos 8488 txt/../wrd/8488.wrd 8956 txt/../wrd/8956.wrd 10801 txt/../pos/10801.pos 10801 txt/../wrd/10801.wrd 8489 txt/../wrd/8489.wrd 8533 txt/../ent/8533.ent 8488 txt/../ent/8488.ent === file2bib.sh === id: 8208 author: Coleridge, Samuel Taylor title: Poems of Coleridge date: pages: extension: .txt txt: ./txt/8208.txt cache: ./cache/8208.txt Content-Encoding ISO-8859-1 Content-Type text/plain; charset=ISO-8859-1 X-Parsed-By ['org.apache.tika.parser.DefaultParser', 'org.apache.tika.parser.csv.TextAndCSVParser'] X-TIKA:content_handler ToTextContentHandler X-TIKA:embedded_depth 0 X-TIKA:parse_time_millis 3 resourceName b'8208.txt' 6081 txt/../pos/6081.pos 6081 txt/../wrd/6081.wrd 8210 txt/../ent/8210.ent 8489 txt/../ent/8489.ent 8956 txt/../ent/8956.ent 10801 txt/../ent/10801.ent 6081 txt/../ent/6081.ent === file2bib.sh === id: 41705 author: Coleridge, Samuel Taylor title: Anima Poetæ date: pages: extension: .txt txt: ./txt/41705.txt cache: ./cache/41705.txt Content-Encoding UTF-8 Content-Type text/plain; charset=UTF-8 X-Parsed-By ['org.apache.tika.parser.DefaultParser', 'org.apache.tika.parser.csv.TextAndCSVParser'] X-TIKA:content_handler ToTextContentHandler X-TIKA:embedded_depth 0 X-TIKA:parse_time_millis 6 resourceName b'41705.txt' === file2bib.sh === id: 8488 author: Coleridge, Samuel Taylor title: The Literary Remains of Samuel Taylor Coleridge, Volume 1 date: pages: extension: .txt txt: ./txt/8488.txt cache: ./cache/8488.txt Content-Encoding UTF-8 Content-Type text/plain; charset=UTF-8 X-Parsed-By ['org.apache.tika.parser.DefaultParser', 'org.apache.tika.parser.csv.TextAndCSVParser'] X-TIKA:content_handler ToTextContentHandler X-TIKA:embedded_depth 0 X-TIKA:parse_time_millis 6 resourceName b'8488.txt' === file2bib.sh === id: 8533 author: Coleridge, Samuel Taylor title: The Literary Remains of Samuel Taylor Coleridge, Volume 2 date: pages: extension: .txt txt: ./txt/8533.txt cache: ./cache/8533.txt Content-Encoding UTF-8 Content-Type text/plain; charset=UTF-8 X-Parsed-By ['org.apache.tika.parser.DefaultParser', 'org.apache.tika.parser.csv.TextAndCSVParser'] X-TIKA:content_handler ToTextContentHandler X-TIKA:embedded_depth 0 X-TIKA:parse_time_millis 8 resourceName b'8533.txt' === file2bib.sh === id: 8210 author: Coleridge, Samuel Taylor title: Biographia Epistolaris, Volume 1 date: pages: extension: .txt txt: ./txt/8210.txt cache: ./cache/8210.txt Content-Encoding ISO-8859-1 Content-Type text/plain; charset=ISO-8859-1 X-Parsed-By ['org.apache.tika.parser.DefaultParser', 'org.apache.tika.parser.csv.TextAndCSVParser'] X-TIKA:content_handler ToTextContentHandler X-TIKA:embedded_depth 0 X-TIKA:parse_time_millis 5 resourceName b'8210.txt' === file2bib.sh === id: 8956 author: Coleridge, Samuel Taylor title: The Literary Remains of Samuel Taylor Coleridge, Volume 3 date: pages: extension: .txt txt: ./txt/8956.txt cache: ./cache/8956.txt Content-Encoding UTF-8 Content-Type text/plain; charset=UTF-8 X-Parsed-By ['org.apache.tika.parser.DefaultParser', 'org.apache.tika.parser.csv.TextAndCSVParser'] X-TIKA:content_handler ToTextContentHandler X-TIKA:embedded_depth 0 X-TIKA:parse_time_millis 9 resourceName b'8956.txt' === file2bib.sh === id: 10801 author: Coleridge, Samuel Taylor title: The Literary Remains of Samuel Taylor Coleridge, Volume 4 date: pages: extension: .txt txt: ./txt/10801.txt cache: ./cache/10801.txt Content-Encoding UTF-8 Content-Type text/plain; charset=UTF-8 X-Parsed-By ['org.apache.tika.parser.DefaultParser', 'org.apache.tika.parser.csv.TextAndCSVParser'] X-TIKA:content_handler ToTextContentHandler X-TIKA:embedded_depth 0 X-TIKA:parse_time_millis 9 resourceName b'10801.txt' === file2bib.sh === id: 8489 author: Coleridge, Samuel Taylor title: Specimens of the Table Talk of Samuel Taylor Coleridge date: pages: extension: .txt txt: ./txt/8489.txt cache: ./cache/8489.txt Content-Encoding ISO-8859-1 Content-Type text/plain; charset=ISO-8859-1 X-Parsed-By ['org.apache.tika.parser.DefaultParser', 'org.apache.tika.parser.csv.TextAndCSVParser'] X-TIKA:content_handler ToTextContentHandler X-TIKA:embedded_depth 0 X-TIKA:parse_time_millis 4 resourceName b'8489.txt' === file2bib.sh === id: 6081 author: Coleridge, Samuel Taylor title: Biographia Literaria date: pages: extension: .txt txt: ./txt/6081.txt cache: ./cache/6081.txt Content-Encoding ISO-8859-1 Content-Type text/plain; charset=ISO-8859-1 X-Parsed-By ['org.apache.tika.parser.DefaultParser', 'org.apache.tika.parser.csv.TextAndCSVParser'] X-TIKA:content_handler ToTextContentHandler X-TIKA:embedded_depth 0 X-TIKA:parse_time_millis 7 resourceName b'6081.txt' Done mapping. Reducing coleridge-from-gutenberg === reduce.pl bib === id = 6081 author = Coleridge, Samuel Taylor title = Biographia Literaria date = pages = extension = .txt mime = text/plain words = 139941 sentences = 6123 flesch = 65 summary = concerning the true nature of poetic diction; and at the same time to The great works of past ages seem to a young man things of fancy, and the love of nature, and the sense of beauty in forms and feeling, an involuntary sense of fear from which nature has no means of the senses; the mind is affected by thoughts, rather than by things; instances drawn from the operation of natural objects on the mind. ideas,--actually existed, and in what consist their nature and power. the writings of these men, and expressed, as was natural, in the words By persuasa prudentia, Grynaeus means selfcomplacent common sense as opposed to science and philosophic reason. poem of your own in the FRIEND, and applied to a work of Mr. Wordsworth's though with a few of the words altered: meaning to the mere English reader, cannot possibly act on the mind with cache = ./cache/6081.txt txt = ./txt/6081.txt === reduce.pl bib === id = 10801 author = Coleridge, Samuel Taylor title = The Literary Remains of Samuel Taylor Coleridge, Volume 4 date = pages = extension = .txt mime = text/plain words = 111101 sentences = 6718 flesch = 73 summary = human understanding and moral sense; instead of leaving every man a That the Bible is the word of God (said Luther) the same I prove as truth of the Holy Gospel may stand; for God regardeth not men's That God's word, and the Christian Church, is preserved against the The Church has power from God's word to order all matters of order so as true God, because the Father has the Son and the Holy Spirit in Unity, three Persons and one God. Now Father, Son, and Holy Ghost, And though Christ be the eternal Son of God, and the natural Lord and true, namely, that I am a mere man, and yet call myself the Son of God, light from, the meaning of the word Faith;--or the reason of Christ's of God and his Word, the latter as the Son of Man, in which the divine cache = ./cache/10801.txt txt = ./txt/10801.txt === reduce.pl bib === id = 11101 author = Coleridge, Samuel Taylor title = Coleridge's Ancient Mariner and Select Poems date = pages = extension = .txt mime = text/plain words = 33890 sentences = 2600 flesch = 85 summary = COLERIDGE'S ANCIENT MARINER AND SELECT POEMS Coleridge felt in this lean and thoughtful young man a strength of mind, As this poem grew under Coleridge's "shaping-spirit of Coleridge lived for thirty-six years after he left Stowey for Germany in But in Coleridge's poem all nature Wordsworth related in after years that the suggestion for the poem came from a dream of a phantom ship told to Coleridge by a friend, and that it; in Coleridge the poet died half a lifetime before the man, and left Coleridge as an introduction to the ballad of "The Dark Ladie," which [Sidenote: The Mariner tells how the ship sailed southward with a good [Sidenote: The land of ice, and of fearful sounds where no living thing [Sidenote: Till a great sea-bird, called the Albatross, came through the [Sidenote: But Life-in-Death begins her work on the ancient Mariner.] Coleridge's mind before "The Ancient Mariner" was thought of. cache = ./cache/11101.txt txt = ./txt/11101.txt === reduce.pl bib === id = 151 author = Coleridge, Samuel Taylor title = The Rime of the Ancient Mariner date = pages = extension = .txt mime = text/plain words = 3945 sentences = 506 flesch = 105 summary = "By thy long grey beard and glittering eye, The ship drove fast, loud roared the blast, Nor dim nor red, like God's own head, With far-heard whisper, o'er the sea. "I fear thee and thy glittering eye, I looked upon the rotting sea, Lay like a load on my weary eye, Is a curse in a dead man's eye! The moving Moon went up the sky, But where the ship's huge shadow lay, Like lead into the sea. And the sails did sigh like sedge; Like waters shot from some high crag, The loud wind never reached the ship, Quoth he, "The man hath penance done, The boat came closer to the ship, The boat came close beneath the ship, The ship went down like lead. Like one that hath been seven days drowned The Mariner, whose eye is bright, He went like one that hath been stunned, cache = ./cache/151.txt txt = ./txt/151.txt === reduce.pl bib === id = 8488 author = Coleridge, Samuel Taylor title = The Literary Remains of Samuel Taylor Coleridge, Volume 1 date = pages = extension = .txt mime = text/plain words = 90861 sentences = 5811 flesch = 74 summary = form, the fall of a man, whose great bad actions have cast a disastrous The good great man?--three treasures, love and light, the day; but commensurate with the good sense, taste, and feeling, to Men of mere common sense have no theory or means of The man who reads a work meant for immediate effect on one age with the nature, like the leaves of a book, before the eyes of his creature, humanizing nature, of infusing the thoughts and passions of man into In this sense nature itself is to a religious observer the art of God; whom we love; for so only can he hope to produce any work truly natural accomplish the will and command of my God. We ought not to relieve a poor man merely because our own feelings impel the beautiful in nature has been appropriated to the works of man, just cache = ./cache/8488.txt txt = ./txt/8488.txt === reduce.pl bib === id = 9622 author = Coleridge, Samuel Taylor title = Lyrical Ballads, With a Few Other Poems (1798) date = pages = extension = .txt mime = text/plain words = 21975 sentences = 2350 flesch = 100 summary = Ne dim ne red, like God's own head, "I fear thee and thy glittering eye Is the curse in a dead man's eye! I look'd far-forth, but little saw I pray'd and turn'd my head away Like one that hath been seven days drown'd Old men, and babes, and loving friends, 'Tis more like heaven to come than what _has_ been. A grey-haired man--he loved this little boy, --But some night-wandering Man, whose heart was pierc'd Nature's sweet voices always full of love Hath heard a pause of silence: till the Moon My heart is touched to think that men like these, At which the poor old man so long "My little boy, which like you more," Oft-times I thought to run away; Thou art thy mother's only joy; Long Susan lay deep lost in thought, like a little child. Wherever nature led; more like a man cache = ./cache/9622.txt txt = ./txt/9622.txt === reduce.pl bib === id = 8208 author = Coleridge, Samuel Taylor title = Poems of Coleridge date = pages = extension = .txt mime = text/plain words = 47469 sentences = 4541 flesch = 92 summary = "the leading point about Coleridge's work is its human love." We may England," said Coleridge, with truth, "whose thoughts, images, words, and the wind, like a seagull poised between sky and sea, and turning on its bird; Blake, like a child or an angel; but Coleridge certainly writes and in a poem like "Love," which has suffered as much indiscriminate praise I fear thee and thy glittering eye, Old men, and babes, and loving friends, That gentle bird, whom thou dost love, Till Love and Joy look round, and call the Earth their own." Be loved like Nature! Nature's sweet voices, always full of love On thy steep banks, no loves hast thou, wild stream! O Fair is Love's first hope to gentle mind! Some _living_ Love before my eyes there stood Shedd'st thou, like dew, on my heart, till the joy and the heavenly sadness But that is lovely--looks like human Time,-- cache = ./cache/8208.txt txt = ./txt/8208.txt === reduce.pl bib === id = 8956 author = Coleridge, Samuel Taylor title = The Literary Remains of Samuel Taylor Coleridge, Volume 3 date = pages = extension = .txt mime = text/plain words = 104473 sentences = 6304 flesch = 73 summary = God in which man was made; and he could as little understand how faith, Christian duty of faith in God through Christ is to be reconciled with son of God, that is the only true life-giving light of men. eternal God. That reason could have discovered these divine truths is one thing; that short, to attribute merit to any agent but God in Christ, our faith as Christ's person in the diversity of the natures of God and man; but if Christ were God and man in the unity of the same person, he chose Is this a possible act to any man understanding by the word God what we termed the person of Christ; nor is it true to say that the Son of God support of the fact of the ascension of Christ, or at least of St. Paul's (and of course of the first generation of Christians') belief of cache = ./cache/8956.txt txt = ./txt/8956.txt === reduce.pl bib === id = 8489 author = Coleridge, Samuel Taylor title = Specimens of the Table Talk of Samuel Taylor Coleridge date = pages = extension = .txt mime = text/plain words = 108351 sentences = 7723 flesch = 75 summary = fruit to the glory of God and the spiritualization of Man. His mere reading was immense, and the quality and direction of much of it company with a man, who listened to me and said nothing for a long time; see the Son of man (or me) sitting on the right hand of power, and coming the church praises God, like a Christian, with words which are natural and of this great divine of the English church should be so little known as that he can govern a great nation by word of command, in the same way in He thinks aloud; every thing in his mind, good, bad, things that concern him as a _man_, the words that he reads are spirit and HUMOUR AND GENIUS.--GREAT POETS GOOD MEN.--DICTION OF THE OLD AND NEW Mr. Coleridge called Shakspeare "_the myriad-minded man_," [Greek: au_az cache = ./cache/8489.txt txt = ./txt/8489.txt === reduce.pl bib === id = 41705 author = Coleridge, Samuel Taylor title = Anima Poetæ date = pages = extension = .txt mime = text/plain words = 74076 sentences = 4135 flesch = 74 summary = love-kindling effect of rural nature--the bad passions of human trick); but a man's pleasures--children, books, friends, nature, the of nature were working in me, like a tender thought in a man who is [Sidenote: THE CREATIVE POWER OF WORDS AND IMAGES] [Sidenote: FORM AND FEELING] [Sidenote: HIS CONVERSATION, A NIMIETY OF IDEAS, NOT OF WORDS] thought and feeling honourable to human nature) would not have been more [Sidenote: ANTICIPATIONS IN NATURE AND IN THOUGHT Saturday night, April the right, the virtuous feeling, and consequent action when a man having [Sidenote: THOUGHT AND THINGS] then I said, so are the happy man's thoughts and things, [or in the in common life, feel a man my inferior except by after-reflection. [Sidenote: WORDS AND THINGS] The man of genius places things in a new light. [Sidenote: THE POWER OF WORDS] [Sidenote: THE MIND'S EYE] [Sidenote: GREAT AND LITTLE MINDS] Nature for likeness, men for difference, 25 cache = ./cache/41705.txt txt = ./txt/41705.txt === reduce.pl bib === id = 8533 author = Coleridge, Samuel Taylor title = The Literary Remains of Samuel Taylor Coleridge, Volume 2 date = pages = extension = .txt mime = text/plain words = 93278 sentences = 5784 flesch = 72 summary = Britton, Esq. SHAKSPEARE, WITH INTRODUCTORY MATTER ON POETRY, THE DRAMA, AND THE STAGE least obvious likeness presented by thoughts, words, or objects,--these in other words:--Is Shakspeare a great dramatic poet on account only of chosen poet, of our own Shakspeare,--himself a nature humanized, a well worth remarking that Shakspeare's characters, like those in real character;--passion in Shakspeare is that by which the individual is Heaven have mercy on poor Shakspeare, and also on Mr. Warburton's mind's eye! The myriad-minded man, our, and all men's, Shakspeare, has in this piece way in which Shakspeare lives up to the very end of this play, read the Bolingbroke's character, in general, is an instance how Shakspeare makes 4. In Lear old age is itself a character,--its natural Shakspeare seems to mean all Hamlet's character to be sneers at Shakspeare, is, that his plays were present to men's minds cache = ./cache/8533.txt txt = ./txt/8533.txt === reduce.pl bib === id = 8210 author = Coleridge, Samuel Taylor title = Biographia Epistolaris, Volume 1 date = pages = extension = .txt mime = text/plain words = 98047 sentences = 6162 flesch = 79 summary = part, to make Coleridge tell his own life by inserting letters in the writing; and all the non-copyright letters of Coleridge available from Coleridge's greatest triumphs in letter-writing were gained in the field Lamb to Coleridge, most of which are in answer to letters received. Coming from Mr. Coleridge--the chief living authority on the life, letters, and The following letter written at this time by Coleridge to Mr. Charles following beautiful letter by Coleridge was written on the occasion of Of the next letter Cottle says:--"A second edition of Mr. Coleridge's Meantime Coleridge had written to Charles Lloyd's father three letters With the letter of Nov. 5, [1] the biographical sketch left by Mr. Coleridge's late Editor comes to an end, and at the present time I can "The following letter also on this subject, was received from Mr. Coleridge. The last four letters were written from Stowey, whither Coleridge had cache = ./cache/8210.txt txt = ./txt/8210.txt Building ./etc/reader.txt 6081 10801 8210 11101 8208 6081 number of items: 12 sum of words: 927,407 average size in words: 77,283 average readability score: 80 nouns: man; p.; men; mind; time; nature; life; sense; words; power; truth; reason; heart; love; part; things; thing; day; faith; word; nothing; footnote; work; language; character; light; soul; world; spirit; state; way; self; name; place; poet; poetry; works; religion; friend; will; eye; letter; death; thought; years; poem; genius; hand; fact; body verbs: is; be; was; have; are; had; were; been; has; do; did; see; being; made; say; am; know; said; think; make; does; believe; read; having; let; found; give; find; written; take; seems; come; given; feel; called; came; thought; seen; heard; taken; go; done; saw; left; become; following; says; according; call; known adjectives: other; own; same; such; great; first; more; many; good; true; little; old; common; mere; whole; moral; human; last; present; least; dear; general; much; different; very; full; natural; few; former; best; possible; latter; new; only; certain; second; greater; particular; poor; high; necessary; short; long; real; sweet; less; most; divine; better; young adverbs: not; so; only; more; then; now; even; most; as; very; yet; too; never; still; up; indeed; far; therefore; well; ever; here; thus; rather; that; is; out; once; almost; perhaps; much; again; always; all; often; first; however; there; just; down; away; alone; on; less; no; long; together; also; hence; instead; forth pronouns: i; it; his; he; my; you; they; we; their; me; its; him; our; them; her; your; himself; she; us; itself; themselves; myself; thy; thee; ib; ourselves; yourself; herself; one; mine; yours; thyself; theirs; ours; iv; ''em; ye; hers; o; ''s; yourselves; southey; o''er; exclaim--; ay; á; your'';--at; y; writing;--or; words!--fearful proper nouns: _; god; coleridge; c.; mr.; christ; greek; church; thou; shakspeare; s.; lord; st.; sir; wordsworth; heaven; taylor; john; father; england; i.; t.; milton; spirit; son; paul; english; et; luther; ii; charles; letter; christian; b.; southey; holy; cottle; christianity; hath; dr.; gospel; act; de; footnote; king; london; jesus; may; james; christabel keywords: god; man; sir; mr.; like; greek; footnote; st.; lord; life; coleridge; wordsworth; nature; mind; great; england; word; time; milton; king; john; good; english; christianity; christian; christ; truth; thing; sun; southey; shakspeare; sense; scripture; power; paul; moon; mariner; love; jews; jesus; friend; france; fletcher; father; dr.; church; work; thought; stowey; spirit one topic; one dimension: man file(s): ./cache/151.txt titles(s): The Rime of the Ancient Mariner three topics; one dimension: man; sidenote; coleridge file(s): ./cache/6081.txt, ./cache/8208.txt, ./cache/8210.txt titles(s): Biographia Literaria | Poems of Coleridge | Biographia Epistolaris, Volume 1 five topics; three dimensions: man god ib; coleridge like man; clombe chuse sucked; clombe chuse sucked; clombe chuse sucked file(s): ./cache/10801.txt, ./cache/8208.txt, ./cache/151.txt, ./cache/151.txt, ./cache/151.txt titles(s): The Literary Remains of Samuel Taylor Coleridge, Volume 4 | Poems of Coleridge | The Rime of the Ancient Mariner | The Rime of the Ancient Mariner | The Rime of the Ancient Mariner Type: gutenberg title: coleridge-from-gutenberg date: 2021-01-08 time: 21:34 username: emorgan patron: Eric Morgan email: emorgan@nd.edu input: author: Coleridge AND author:"Coleridge, Samuel Taylor" ==== make-pages.sh htm files ==== make-pages.sh complex files ==== make-pages.sh named enities ==== making bibliographics id: 151 author: Coleridge, Samuel Taylor title: The Rime of the Ancient Mariner date: words: 3945 sentences: 506 pages: flesch: 105 cache: ./cache/151.txt txt: ./txt/151.txt summary: "By thy long grey beard and glittering eye, The ship drove fast, loud roared the blast, Nor dim nor red, like God''s own head, With far-heard whisper, o''er the sea. "I fear thee and thy glittering eye, I looked upon the rotting sea, Lay like a load on my weary eye, Is a curse in a dead man''s eye! The moving Moon went up the sky, But where the ship''s huge shadow lay, Like lead into the sea. And the sails did sigh like sedge; Like waters shot from some high crag, The loud wind never reached the ship, Quoth he, "The man hath penance done, The boat came closer to the ship, The boat came close beneath the ship, The ship went down like lead. Like one that hath been seven days drowned The Mariner, whose eye is bright, He went like one that hath been stunned, id: 6081 author: Coleridge, Samuel Taylor title: Biographia Literaria date: words: 139941 sentences: 6123 pages: flesch: 65 cache: ./cache/6081.txt txt: ./txt/6081.txt summary: concerning the true nature of poetic diction; and at the same time to The great works of past ages seem to a young man things of fancy, and the love of nature, and the sense of beauty in forms and feeling, an involuntary sense of fear from which nature has no means of the senses; the mind is affected by thoughts, rather than by things; instances drawn from the operation of natural objects on the mind. ideas,--actually existed, and in what consist their nature and power. the writings of these men, and expressed, as was natural, in the words By persuasa prudentia, Grynaeus means selfcomplacent common sense as opposed to science and philosophic reason. poem of your own in the FRIEND, and applied to a work of Mr. Wordsworth''s though with a few of the words altered: meaning to the mere English reader, cannot possibly act on the mind with id: 10801 author: Coleridge, Samuel Taylor title: The Literary Remains of Samuel Taylor Coleridge, Volume 4 date: words: 111101 sentences: 6718 pages: flesch: 73 cache: ./cache/10801.txt txt: ./txt/10801.txt summary: human understanding and moral sense; instead of leaving every man a That the Bible is the word of God (said Luther) the same I prove as truth of the Holy Gospel may stand; for God regardeth not men''s That God''s word, and the Christian Church, is preserved against the The Church has power from God''s word to order all matters of order so as true God, because the Father has the Son and the Holy Spirit in Unity, three Persons and one God. Now Father, Son, and Holy Ghost, And though Christ be the eternal Son of God, and the natural Lord and true, namely, that I am a mere man, and yet call myself the Son of God, light from, the meaning of the word Faith;--or the reason of Christ''s of God and his Word, the latter as the Son of Man, in which the divine id: 9622 author: Coleridge, Samuel Taylor title: Lyrical Ballads, With a Few Other Poems (1798) date: words: 21975 sentences: 2350 pages: flesch: 100 cache: ./cache/9622.txt txt: ./txt/9622.txt summary: Ne dim ne red, like God''s own head, "I fear thee and thy glittering eye Is the curse in a dead man''s eye! I look''d far-forth, but little saw I pray''d and turn''d my head away Like one that hath been seven days drown''d Old men, and babes, and loving friends, ''Tis more like heaven to come than what _has_ been. A grey-haired man--he loved this little boy, --But some night-wandering Man, whose heart was pierc''d Nature''s sweet voices always full of love Hath heard a pause of silence: till the Moon My heart is touched to think that men like these, At which the poor old man so long "My little boy, which like you more," Oft-times I thought to run away; Thou art thy mother''s only joy; Long Susan lay deep lost in thought, like a little child. Wherever nature led; more like a man id: 11101 author: Coleridge, Samuel Taylor title: Coleridge''s Ancient Mariner and Select Poems date: words: 33890 sentences: 2600 pages: flesch: 85 cache: ./cache/11101.txt txt: ./txt/11101.txt summary: COLERIDGE''S ANCIENT MARINER AND SELECT POEMS Coleridge felt in this lean and thoughtful young man a strength of mind, As this poem grew under Coleridge''s "shaping-spirit of Coleridge lived for thirty-six years after he left Stowey for Germany in But in Coleridge''s poem all nature Wordsworth related in after years that the suggestion for the poem came from a dream of a phantom ship told to Coleridge by a friend, and that it; in Coleridge the poet died half a lifetime before the man, and left Coleridge as an introduction to the ballad of "The Dark Ladie," which [Sidenote: The Mariner tells how the ship sailed southward with a good [Sidenote: The land of ice, and of fearful sounds where no living thing [Sidenote: Till a great sea-bird, called the Albatross, came through the [Sidenote: But Life-in-Death begins her work on the ancient Mariner.] Coleridge''s mind before "The Ancient Mariner" was thought of. id: 8956 author: Coleridge, Samuel Taylor title: The Literary Remains of Samuel Taylor Coleridge, Volume 3 date: words: 104473 sentences: 6304 pages: flesch: 73 cache: ./cache/8956.txt txt: ./txt/8956.txt summary: God in which man was made; and he could as little understand how faith, Christian duty of faith in God through Christ is to be reconciled with son of God, that is the only true life-giving light of men. eternal God. That reason could have discovered these divine truths is one thing; that short, to attribute merit to any agent but God in Christ, our faith as Christ''s person in the diversity of the natures of God and man; but if Christ were God and man in the unity of the same person, he chose Is this a possible act to any man understanding by the word God what we termed the person of Christ; nor is it true to say that the Son of God support of the fact of the ascension of Christ, or at least of St. Paul''s (and of course of the first generation of Christians'') belief of id: 8489 author: Coleridge, Samuel Taylor title: Specimens of the Table Talk of Samuel Taylor Coleridge date: words: 108351 sentences: 7723 pages: flesch: 75 cache: ./cache/8489.txt txt: ./txt/8489.txt summary: fruit to the glory of God and the spiritualization of Man. His mere reading was immense, and the quality and direction of much of it company with a man, who listened to me and said nothing for a long time; see the Son of man (or me) sitting on the right hand of power, and coming the church praises God, like a Christian, with words which are natural and of this great divine of the English church should be so little known as that he can govern a great nation by word of command, in the same way in He thinks aloud; every thing in his mind, good, bad, things that concern him as a _man_, the words that he reads are spirit and HUMOUR AND GENIUS.--GREAT POETS GOOD MEN.--DICTION OF THE OLD AND NEW Mr. Coleridge called Shakspeare "_the myriad-minded man_," [Greek: au_az id: 8488 author: Coleridge, Samuel Taylor title: The Literary Remains of Samuel Taylor Coleridge, Volume 1 date: words: 90861 sentences: 5811 pages: flesch: 74 cache: ./cache/8488.txt txt: ./txt/8488.txt summary: form, the fall of a man, whose great bad actions have cast a disastrous The good great man?--three treasures, love and light, the day; but commensurate with the good sense, taste, and feeling, to Men of mere common sense have no theory or means of The man who reads a work meant for immediate effect on one age with the nature, like the leaves of a book, before the eyes of his creature, humanizing nature, of infusing the thoughts and passions of man into In this sense nature itself is to a religious observer the art of God; whom we love; for so only can he hope to produce any work truly natural accomplish the will and command of my God. We ought not to relieve a poor man merely because our own feelings impel the beautiful in nature has been appropriated to the works of man, just id: 8210 author: Coleridge, Samuel Taylor title: Biographia Epistolaris, Volume 1 date: words: 98047 sentences: 6162 pages: flesch: 79 cache: ./cache/8210.txt txt: ./txt/8210.txt summary: part, to make Coleridge tell his own life by inserting letters in the writing; and all the non-copyright letters of Coleridge available from Coleridge''s greatest triumphs in letter-writing were gained in the field Lamb to Coleridge, most of which are in answer to letters received. Coming from Mr. Coleridge--the chief living authority on the life, letters, and The following letter written at this time by Coleridge to Mr. Charles following beautiful letter by Coleridge was written on the occasion of Of the next letter Cottle says:--"A second edition of Mr. Coleridge''s Meantime Coleridge had written to Charles Lloyd''s father three letters With the letter of Nov. 5, [1] the biographical sketch left by Mr. Coleridge''s late Editor comes to an end, and at the present time I can "The following letter also on this subject, was received from Mr. Coleridge. The last four letters were written from Stowey, whither Coleridge had id: 8208 author: Coleridge, Samuel Taylor title: Poems of Coleridge date: words: 47469 sentences: 4541 pages: flesch: 92 cache: ./cache/8208.txt txt: ./txt/8208.txt summary: "the leading point about Coleridge''s work is its human love." We may England," said Coleridge, with truth, "whose thoughts, images, words, and the wind, like a seagull poised between sky and sea, and turning on its bird; Blake, like a child or an angel; but Coleridge certainly writes and in a poem like "Love," which has suffered as much indiscriminate praise I fear thee and thy glittering eye, Old men, and babes, and loving friends, That gentle bird, whom thou dost love, Till Love and Joy look round, and call the Earth their own." Be loved like Nature! Nature''s sweet voices, always full of love On thy steep banks, no loves hast thou, wild stream! O Fair is Love''s first hope to gentle mind! Some _living_ Love before my eyes there stood Shedd''st thou, like dew, on my heart, till the joy and the heavenly sadness But that is lovely--looks like human Time,-- id: 8533 author: Coleridge, Samuel Taylor title: The Literary Remains of Samuel Taylor Coleridge, Volume 2 date: words: 93278 sentences: 5784 pages: flesch: 72 cache: ./cache/8533.txt txt: ./txt/8533.txt summary: Britton, Esq. SHAKSPEARE, WITH INTRODUCTORY MATTER ON POETRY, THE DRAMA, AND THE STAGE least obvious likeness presented by thoughts, words, or objects,--these in other words:--Is Shakspeare a great dramatic poet on account only of chosen poet, of our own Shakspeare,--himself a nature humanized, a well worth remarking that Shakspeare''s characters, like those in real character;--passion in Shakspeare is that by which the individual is Heaven have mercy on poor Shakspeare, and also on Mr. Warburton''s mind''s eye! The myriad-minded man, our, and all men''s, Shakspeare, has in this piece way in which Shakspeare lives up to the very end of this play, read the Bolingbroke''s character, in general, is an instance how Shakspeare makes 4. In Lear old age is itself a character,--its natural Shakspeare seems to mean all Hamlet''s character to be sneers at Shakspeare, is, that his plays were present to men''s minds id: 41705 author: Coleridge, Samuel Taylor title: Anima Poetæ date: words: 74076 sentences: 4135 pages: flesch: 74 cache: ./cache/41705.txt txt: ./txt/41705.txt summary: love-kindling effect of rural nature--the bad passions of human trick); but a man''s pleasures--children, books, friends, nature, the of nature were working in me, like a tender thought in a man who is [Sidenote: THE CREATIVE POWER OF WORDS AND IMAGES] [Sidenote: FORM AND FEELING] [Sidenote: HIS CONVERSATION, A NIMIETY OF IDEAS, NOT OF WORDS] thought and feeling honourable to human nature) would not have been more [Sidenote: ANTICIPATIONS IN NATURE AND IN THOUGHT Saturday night, April the right, the virtuous feeling, and consequent action when a man having [Sidenote: THOUGHT AND THINGS] then I said, so are the happy man''s thoughts and things, [or in the in common life, feel a man my inferior except by after-reflection. [Sidenote: WORDS AND THINGS] The man of genius places things in a new light. [Sidenote: THE POWER OF WORDS] [Sidenote: THE MIND''S EYE] [Sidenote: GREAT AND LITTLE MINDS] Nature for likeness, men for difference, 25 ==== make-pages.sh questions ==== make-pages.sh search ==== make-pages.sh topic modeling corpus Zipping study carrel