PR l'/-':^:-^l : f.,t.'^|; ■ ^-^■^\'^^\^, '.' ;.;,'!:.')" •'.'■' •■:iT:; ' i.'iifJi* '• •^'.-1'/' ■," :.:;;:^^ ;r..b;;-v.;:,. '':;',»'■'■.' ':rl.|r »• ii\:r/X^ •:■ " V'v,,'.*t. .''!':"'[' »'/''♦- '.'l !,* m' '■■ h'l'.M:/."* '/::/'' ^ ; ''.'•'zT-'" !.. , -. M«l • ^ ,': J ■'•' 'I:2:n^'^^■ ^■_-, 1,^ ';!*,jiJi'/. .-■ ^H' r" -'. ' . 'ii;,' •;';•';'/■''• ,';,•.'''•»-',. ^ /••-■ '' " ■*?' ',' .'1 ■ :, ,,.'/•■. "• ' * .i"ir-»»-''- ''* '.".*.*.''>' I ' ■/;!. vi '';:•"> '-'-. ' ;: ' ' Klu ■ '1-';,''. !'.?:>■ 5;;:' ■••''•:;: ;.'._iTf'**<'' ''i^r/r •r ,: r,:* ;>'^w"^ •''-',; ;."'::;.'ii' "*. '..'!' '">,' '■M::-^xr' .•fli:'"" 9d/^o <: ^ ^'>-.. :<,:---/. ,.„.<.- ^Mr^ % %..^'' <^o^ J^ .<^ °^ ^^%:'-'^^\v:^r% ^z.0^ SAMUEL TAYLOR COLEiilDGE. IReablngs for Students SELECTIONS FROM THE PROSE WRITINGS OF / I.-'" SAMUEL TAYLOR COLERIDGE EDITED WITH INTRODUCTION AND NOTES BY HENRY A. BEERS Professor of English Literature in Yale College NEW YORK HENRY HOLT AND COMPANY 3y- Copyright, 1893, BY HENRY HOLT «& CO. 1^ - 3 l PREFACE. The design of this volume is to make accessible, in a convenient form, some of the best passages in Coleridge's prose. The Biographia Liter aria and Table Talk will always be favorite books with scholars; but it is to be feared that the ponderous essays of The Friend and Aids to Reflection are not often disturbed now- adays by scholars, to say nothing of the general reader. It is injurious to the memory of Coleridge, one of the most subtle and stimulating of English thinkers, that posterity should know him merely as a poet, and, as to all the rest of his work, should be contented to take his greatness upon trust, and as a literary tradi- tion. He devoted the last thirty years of his life to the study and eloquent exposition of some of the high- est themes that can engage the human mind : the being of God, the nature and limits of knowledge, the prin- ciples of literary art, and the political constitution of his country. His reasonings, upon all of these sub- jects, have deeply influenced the best thought of England and America. It may seem that an unduly large proportion of these selections belongs to the department of literary criticism. But I believe it will be found that Cole- IV PREFA CE, ridge's literary criticisms are of more general interest to-day than his philosophical and political writings. In these latter departments his speculations have an historical importance, but they do not, in Matthew Arnold's phrase, flow in the main current of the time, which has set strongly in an opposite direction. It is hoped that this volume may be found useful for classes in college, and it has accordingly been furnished with an introduction, a short biographical notice, and notes on the text. The notes are by way of explaining references not easily looked up, rather than of making critical comments. Words — like draw- cansir^ e. g.^ — which are defined in the ordinary English dictionaries, are not explained in the notes; nor are references to well-known names such as Plato, Hooker, Ariosto, etc. References to the text of Coleridge's writings are to Harper's edition of his complete works edited by W. G. T. Shedd, in seven volumes INTRODUCTION. " I HAVE laid too many eggs," v/rote Coleridge, ** in the hot sands of this wilderness, the world, with ostrich carelessness and ostrich oblivion. The greater part indeed have been trod under foot, and are for- gotten ; but yet no small number have crept forth into life, some to furnish feathers for the caps of others, and still more to plume the shafts in the quivers of my enemies, of them that unprovoked have lain in wait against my soul." And again : ** He was one of those who with long and large arm still col- lected precious armfuls, in whatever direction he pressed forward, yet still took up so much more than he could keep together, that those who followed him gleaned more from his continual droppings than he himself brought home ; — nay, made stately corn-ricks therewith, while the reaper himself was still seen only with his armful of newly cut sheaves." And still again : " My prose writings have been charged with a disproportionate demand on the atten- tion ; with an excess of refinement in the mode of arriving at truths ; with beating the ground for that which might have been run down by the eye ; with the length and laborious construction of my periods ; in short, with obscurity and the love of paradox. . . Would that the criterion of a scholar's utility were the VI INTRODUCTION. numbei and moral value of the truths which he has been the means of throwing into the general circula- tion ; or the number and value of the minds, whom by his conversation or letters, he has excited into activity, and supplied with the germs of their aftergrowth ! A distinguished rank might not indeed, even then, be awarded to my exertions; but I should dare look forward with confidence to an honorable acquittal." These passages serve to explain and define Cole- ridge's unique position in the history of English thought. As a poet, his high place is secure. The spiritual wildness of his imagination, and his une- qualed sense of melody and diction, have given immortality not only to finished works like The Ancient Mariner^ France^ and Frost at Midnight^ but to frag- ments such as Christabel, Kubla Khan^ The Dark LadiCy and The Three Graves. Coleridge's verse is of enduring distinction and was historically of such importance that a German scholar has maintained his claim to rank, even before Scott, as the founder and head of the English romantic school.* And though this claim cannot be admitted in its entirety, it is with- out question that the uncompleted Chrisiahely which circulated in MS. for many years before its publica- tion in 1816 ; which was read and recited in literary circles throughout the kingdom, and was known and admired by Byron and Scott ; became, as to form and verse, the model of Scott's metrical romances and Byron's eastern tales. But Coleridge was not perhaps primarily, he cer- * Samuel Taylor Coleridge und die englische Romantik, ALOIS Brandl. mTRODUCTIObr. vn tainly was not exclusively, a poet. " Logician, meta- physician, bard,'* is the order of the titles given him by Charles Lamb, his schoolfellow at Christ's Hospi- tal, in his well-known description of the " inspired charity boy " unfolding the mysteries of lamblichus or Plotinus, to the wonder of some chance passer through the cloisters of the old Grey Friars. Coleridge tells us himself, in the Biographia Lit- erarta, that even before his fifteenth year he had be- wildered himself in metaphysics and theological con- troversy to such an extent that history, poetry, and romances lost all interest for him. From this pursuit he was withdrawn by a suddenly wakened enthusiasm for the sonnets of the Rev. Wm. Lisle Bowles. '' Well would it have been for me perhaps had I never relapsed into the same mental disease ; if I had con- tinued to pluck the flowers and reap the harvest from the cultivated surface, instead of delving in the unwholesome quicksilver mines of metaphysic lore. And if in after-time I have sought a refuge from bodily pain and mismanaged sensibility in abstruse researches, which exercised the strength and subtilty of the understanding without awakening the feelings of the heart ; still there was a long and blessed inter- val, during which my natural faculties were allowed to expand, and my original tendencies to develop them- selves ; — my fancy, and the love of nature, and the sense of beauty in forms and sounds."* ^ There was a time when, tho' my path was rough, This joy within me dallied with distress, And all misfortmies were but as the stuff Whence fancy made me dreams of happiness : Vlil MTRODUCTtOl^, In this threnody over his dead imagination, Cole- ridge was perhaps partly self-deceived. His devotion to abstruse researches during the last thirty years of his life was not merely by way of " refuge "; it was the final predominance in him of something which was as much a part of his "" natural man," his ** original tend- encies," as was his poetic faculty. In the greatest poets the *^ years that bring the philosophic mind" do not destroy the creative energy of the imagination. Rather do they enrich and strengthen it, though often modifying its mode of expression in the direction of greater restraint, even sometimes unto austerity or bareness. Lear is not less imaginative than Romeo and Juliet^ nox Paradise Lost — ** unchanged to hoarse or mute " — than Comus. But in minds in which the will, the understanding, and the emotional imagination are less finely balanced, it often happens that the development of their powers is successive rather than simultaneous. A man will be a poet in youth and a philosopher For hope grew round me like the twining vine, And fruits and foliage, not my own, seemed mine. But now afflictions bow me down to earth : Nor care I that they rob me of my mirth, But oh ! each visitation Suspends what nature gave me at my birth, My shaping spirit of Imagination. For not to think of what I needs must feel, But to be still and patient, all I can ; And haply by abstruse research to steal From my own nature all the natural man — This was my sole resource, my only plan ; Till that which suits a part infects the whole. And now is almost grown the habit of my soul. Dejection : a7i Ode. April 4, 1802. INTRODUCTION, IX in middle age. Coleridge is only one among many instances of thinkers who have passed through a stage of poetic productiveness, and then lost their singing voices and " stooped to truth." Nor is it wise to lament, with Swinburne, that in Coleridge the poet was spoiled in the theologian and the metaphysician. The time which his inquiring spirit devoted to specu- lative problems was not altogether wasted time. The poet cannot, without peril, consciously isolate the realm of art, or cut away the domain of beauty from the whole territory of human thought and knowledge. Be this as it may, the "long and blessed interval" during which the bard prevailed over the logician and metaphysician, was not so very long in the compari- son. Coleridge's blossoming time was brief and was practically confined to the two years, 1797-98, which he spent in intimate association with Wordsworth at Nether Stowey and Alfoxden. To those years belong The Ancient Mariner^ the first part of Christabel^ Love^ Kubla Khan^ the ode to France, and the fine blank verse poems, Frost at Midnighty The Nightingale^ and Fears in Solitude, With a few exceptions, this list includes everything of high value which he wrote in verse. In September, 1798, he sailed for Germany in company with Wordsworth and the latter's sister Dor- othy. He parted from them immediately on his arrival in Hamburg and spent the next nine months, mainly at Ratzeburg and Gottingen, in assiduous study of German literature and philosophy. This was the turn- ing point in Coleridge's literary life. When he returned to England in the summer of 1799, ^^ "^otX. in him had given place to the philosopher. Shortly after his X INTRODUCTION, arrival in London, in November, 1799, he made in six weeks his noble version of Wallenstein j and in the autumn of 1800, at Keswick in the Lake Country, whither he had followed Wordsworth, he added a sec- ond part to ChristabeL But translation — even such translation as Wallenstein — is not original creation ; and a comparison between the first and second parts of Christabel shows a distinct falling off in poetic power. The fairyland which was the scene of the romance, as originally conceived, has become Cumber- land, and there is mention of Windermere and Borrow- dale and other Lake Country localities. The magic glamour has faded into the light of common day, and even that splendid passage which Byron admired : Alas ! they had been friends in youth, etc. — is of deeper stress than accords with the romantic tone in which the story was first pitched. The fact that Christabel was left unfinished is not needed, as evi- dence, to prove that Coleridge could never have fin- ished it in the spirit in which it was begun. In turning from verse to prose, Coleridge did not leave the poet quite behind him. There are eloquent passages, and passages marked by imaginative beauty ; in all his writings. But the '' shaping spirit," the artis- tic skill which distinguishes his verse, seems to have deserted him. None of his books are wholes. With loftier endowments than his friends De Quincey and Lamb, he added no masterpiece to our prose literature ; nothing at all comparable in general and enduring interest with the Confessions of an English Opium pater or the Essays of Elia. It must be confessed, INTRODUCTION, XI indeed, that his writings, as a whole, are not interest- ing, and that in parts they are almost unreadable. A select circle of readers delights in them for the stimu- lating quality of their thought and their frequent flashes of insight. But they have no popular attrac- tiveness, and in turning their pages it is easy to see why Coleridge is an influence and not a classic. His abstract subjects, his subtle dialectic, his longueurs^ and above all his eternal discursiveness, repel and fatigue. He carried digression to a science alike in his conver- sations and his books. And although De Quincey asserts that this wandering was only apparent, and due to " the compass and huge circuit by which his illus- trations moved . . . before they began to revolve *'; yet he acknowledges that " long before this coming round commenced, most people had lost him, and, naturally enough, supposed that he had lost himself." The unsystematic and fragmentary nature of Cole- ridge*s writings is largely accounted for by defects of character. With a sensitive conscience, a devout and tender heart, and a sympathy with everything that is lovely and of good report; he had a weakness of will and a lack of high spirit, and even of ordinary self-respect, which made him an object of contempt to men who were morally and intellectually his inferiors. His unpracticality and shiftlessness ; his constitutional indolence and habits of procrastination ; his willing- ness to accept gifts of money from men on whom he had no special claim, to allow his sons to be sent to the university at the expense of his friends, to take a pen- sion from the King and to leave his family dependent upon his brother-in-law, Southey, are things which Xll INTRODUCTION. one finds it impossible to reconcile with an honorable pride. Hazlitt said that the moment any action pre- sented itself to Coleridge in the light of a duty, that moment he was unable to perform it. He was sadly conscious of his own failing. The character of Ham- let had a peculiar fascination for him because he saw in it a likeness to himself, the same morbid energy of the speculative reason, the same paralysis of the will. '^ Hamlet's character,'* he said, "is the preval- ence of the abstracting and generalizing habit over the practical. . . I have a smack of Hamlet my- self."* Wordsworth's steadfastness of purpose aroused in his friend *' Sense of past youth, and manhood come in vain ; And genius given and knowledge won in vain ; And all which I had culled in wood-walks wild, And all which patient toil had reared, and all Commune with thee had opened out — but flowers Strewed on my corse and borne upon my bier In the same coffin, for the self -same grave." f In the famous picture or caricature of Coleridge at Highgate, which Carlyle drew in his Life of Sterling, he describes him as flabby and irresolute in appear- ance, hanging loosely on his knees, with stooping shoulders and shuffling gait. " A lady once remarked he never could fix which side of the garden-walk would suit him best, but continually shifted, corkscrew fashion, and kept trying both " — a little physical trait significant of a corresponding hesitancy in character. His head is described as well shaped and the eyes — ^ Table Talk, \ To William Wordsworth, 1805. INTRODUCTION. Xlll hazel, or dark gray — as fine, but the lower lip had a tendency to droop, and the nose, said Hazlitt, was insignificant. For a number of years Coleridge was a slave to the opium habit, and opium eaters, according to De Quincey, though good fellows in general, never finish anything. There was a very German turn to Cole- ridge's mind, and one remembers Heine's taunt about Faust, and Schelling's God, and the Prussian Consti- tution, and other things unfinished. Coleridge had, for instance, G^r^W//VM^//, /. ^., not thoroughness in the English sense, but an instinct for going back to first principles, for being ** basic*' and "central" in the discussion even of subjects like literary criticism or contemporary politics. "Bentham and Coleridge," wrote J. S. Mill, "agreed in perceiving that the groundwork of all other philosophy must be laid in the philosophy of the mind. To lay this foundation deeply and strongly, and to raise a superstructure in accordance with it, were the objects to which their lives were devoted." Coleridge was always laying foundations, but the superstructure seldom got raised. Among other things which he projected were a History of British Litera- ture in eight volumes, a monumental Logosophia^ or philosophical system, and an epic poem on the Fall of Jerusalem. " I schemed it at twenty-five," he said of the last, "but alas ! venturum expectat." At the end of his uncompleted ballad. The Three Graves^ the poet wrote, ^'Carmen reliquum in futurum tempus relegatum. To-morrow ! and to-morrow ! and to-morrow ! — " a pathetic outcry, which might not inappropriately stand XIV INTRODUCTION. as the motto of his whole life. Besides the physical inertness which made him prefer speculation to action, talking to writing, there should also be mentioned among the causes of his comparatively small perform- ance, the poverty which continually disturbed him and drove him to newspaper writing and other kinds of hack-work. *^ From circumstances," he wrote in 1821, " the main portion of my harvest is still on the ground, ripe indeed, and only waiting, a few for the sickle, but a large part only for the sheaving and carting and housing ; but from all this I must turn away, must let them rot as they lie, and be as though they had never been, for I must go and gather blackberries and earth-nuts, or pick mushrooms and gild oak-apples for the palates and fancies of chance customers." But while, from all these causes, Coleridge's prose writings are, as a whole, unsatisfactory, their impor- tance in another way can hardly be overestimated. His thoughts live on in the impulses which they have awakened in other minds, and take on ever hew forms and combinations, lost and scattered in the general mass of opinion which they have helped to create. It was in his suggestiveness that his great service to pos- terity resided. He was what J. S. Mill calls a ** semi- nal mind," and his thinking had that power of stimu- lating thought in others which is the mark and the privilege of original genius. Many a man has owed to some pregnant saying of Coleridge's, if not the birth in himself of a new intellectual life, at least the starting of fruitful trains of reflection, which have modified his whole view of certain subjects. On everything that he left is set the seal of high mental authority. In the- INTRODUCTION. XV ology, in philosophy, in political speculation and lit- erary criticism, he set currents flowing which are flow- ing yet. Talk was the medium through which Coleridge most strongly influenced his own and the younger genera- tion. Wonderful things are told of his eloquent mon- ologues by Hazlitt, Lamb, De Quincey, Talfourd, Car- lyle, and indeed by all who had listened to him. ** No talk in his century or any other could be more sur- prising,*' is the testimony of Carlyle, in his admiring but not altogether respectful report of the matter. At the house of Mr. Gillman, at Highgate, where Cole- ridge found an asylum during the last years of his life (1816-1834), he held a sort of philosophical salon, and was eagerly resorted to by *^ young, inquiring men," to whom he was as an oracle, "a kind of prophetic or magician character.*' Among these young seekers after truth were Edward Irving, Julius Hare, Arthur Hallam, F. D. Maurice, and many others, through wliose writings the master's teaching became operative upon the general body of English opinion. It is now time to consider briefly what the character and tendency of that teaching were in the various departments of literary criticism, politics, theology, and metaphysics. As a literary critic, if certain deduc- tions be made in favor of his violent prejudice against the French nation, Coleridge is unsurpassed for fine- ness of insight and breadth of comprehension. His writings in this department are of more lasting interest than in any other, yet they are even less consecutive than his political and theological works. His critical opinions have to be gathered from scattered sources. XVI INTRODUCTION, He was seldom capable of insulating a subject and treating it with firmness and fullness in a single essay. But his hints are weighty enough to have compelled all subsequent critics to think his thoughts over again. Modern English criticism goes back to Coleridge for its starting point, as German philosophy goes to Kant. He represented in theory, as in practice, the reaction against eighteenth century academicism, the Popean tradition in poetry, and the shallow maxims of pseudo- classicism, just as the Critical Philosophy represents the reaction against the dogmatism of Wolf. He revolutionized, for one thing, the traditional view of Shakspeare. He pointed out that what had been cur- rently regarded as the accidental products of a wild and irregular genius in our great dramatist, were like- wise the results of a profound art : that Shakspeare was " correct " in a truer sense than Racine. He did this for the English public at the same time that Schlegel was doing it for the Germans, but in a great measure independently of Schlegel."^ * Schlegel's lectures, Ueber Dramatische Kunst und Litter atur^ were delivered at Vienna in the spring of 1808, and published in 1809. Coleridge's first series of lectures, on poetry and art, was delivered in the spring of 1808 before the Royal Institution. He claimed that in these lectures he had already anticipated the prin- ciples of Shakspearean criticism which he was afterward accused of borrowing from wSchlegel. No reports of this first series of lectures exist. In 1 8 1 i-i 2 he delivered a second course, of seventeen lectures, on Shakspeare and Milton, before the London Philo- sophical Society, seven of which were published in 1856 by Mr. J, Payne Collier, from shorthand notes taken at the time. In 18 18 a third course of lectures, on a wide variety of literary topics, was given at a lecture room in Flower de Luce Court, near the Temple. INTRODUCTION. xvil Coleridge's method in criticism is always psycho- logical. In this, as in all other provinces of thought, he was still endeavoring to lay his groundwork in the philosophy of the mind. It must be acknowledged that this method is sometimes exasperating to the merely literary reader. It is going a good way back for a start when, in the Biographia Literaria, the author is led on from his history of the inception of the Lyrical Ballads^ to pursue a chance hint as to the proportions of fancy and imagination in Wordsworth's poetry, through ten stricken chapters, in which he discusses the law of association of ideas, the Hartleian, Cartesian, and Kantian systems ; throws in a chapter of digression and anecdotes, winds up with an analysis of the imagination or ^^ esemplastic power," and finally, in Chapter XIV., brings round again to the Lyrical Ballads, Coleridge, like Lamb, did much to revive an inter- est in the old English dramatists, poets, and humorists of the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries. The The fourth, fifth, and sixth of this series were devoted to Shak- speare and " comprised," as the prospectus announced, '' the sub- stance of Mr. Coleridge's former courses on the same subject, enlarged and varied by subsequent study and reflection." These were the lectures which, partly written out and partly in the shape of rough, preparatory notes, were published in the first and second volumes of the Literary Remains (1836). They contain a number of passages borrowed, in substance, from Schlegel's Dramatic Lectures, but engrafted with original matter of so high value that ho harsher name than interpretation will fit such borrowing. Coleridge was certainly never guilty of intentional plagiarism, though his vague, forgetful habit of mind made him careless in his manner of acknowledging literary debts. XViu INTRODUCTION, terminology of criticism is in his debt for many of those convenient distinctions, familiar to-day, but which he was among the first to introduce, or to enforce and illustrate : the distinction between fancy and imagination, genius and talent, wit and humor, a copy and an imitation, etc. His definitions and apothegms are met with everywhere. ** Every man is born an Aristotelian or a Platonist." *^ Prose is words in their best order ; poetry, the best words in the best order," and the like. Of equal authority are the numerous critical dicta scattered through his writings, e. g.^ that Hebrew poetry had sublimity, and Greek had not ; that Shakspeare is sometimes coarse but never gross. ; that Othello was not naturally jealous, but Leontes, in the Winter s Tale, was ; that Polonius was "the personified memory of wisdom no longer actually possessed." Next to his notes on Shakspeare, the most important contributions of Coleridge to lit- erary criticism are to be found in the chapters of the Biographia Literaria devoted to the discussion of Wordsworth's poetry and to the theory of poetic dic- tion announced in the preface to the Lyrical Ballads ; and in particular, in Chapters IV., XIV.-XXH.: and in various passages scattered through his volume of Table Talkf" * The Biographia Literaria (1817), was described by its author as a history of his literary life and opinions, and as a treatise on the true nature of poetic diction. Though without sequence or conclusion, the Biographia Literaria is, perhaps, that one among his prose books which lovers of Coleridge turn to oftenest and would miss most. It is exceedingly rich in thought, and its analy- sis of the principles of poetic composition is profound. Coleridge's Table Talk (1835), consists of selections from notes INTRODUCTION-. Xix In politics, theology, and metaphysics, as in literary criticism, Coleridge represents the reaction against the spirit of the eighteenth century. In youth, as is well known, he was, like his friends Wordsworth and Southey, a "friend of liberty," a sympathizer with the principles of the French Revolution, and a fierce denouncer of the acts of the Pitt and Grenville minis- try. In 1794 he joined Southey in the composition of a revolutionary drama on the Fall of Robespierre, In 1795 — ^^ y^^^ ^^ ^^^^ ^^^d Southey's marriage to the two Misses Fricker, at Bristol — he was projecting with Southey and Lovell a Pantisocracy or community on the banks of the Susquehanna. This visionary scheme was abandoned, chiefly for want of funds, and by 1798, as appears from his ode to France, Coleridge had learned to despair of any good accruing to liberty from the course of the French revolutionists. " The sensual and the dark rebel in vain, Slaves by their own compulsion." of his conversations, taken during the last twelve years of his life (1822-34), by his nephew and son-in-law, Henry Nelson Cole- ridge. It exhibits, better than any other single volume, the range of his reading and the fullness of his mind. As specimens of the familiar discourse of the most wonderful talker of his time, these notes are of the greatest interest ; but to compare them, as has been done, on the one hand with Bacon's Essays, and on the other, with Dr. Johnson's talk, as reported by Boswell, is misleading. Bacon's Essays were condensed, but deliberately arranged written thoughts, not paragraphs caught here and there — '' Sunny islets of the blest and the intelligible," as Carlyle describes them, emerging from floods of "lawlessly meandering discourse." As to John- son's talk, its charm is its colloquial character, its aptness in rejoinder, while Coleridge was great in monologue only. XX mTRODUCTIOISr. By 1799, the year of his return from Germany, his conversion was complete. In after life, indeed, he strenuously denied that he had ever been a Jacobin : he had only been a Pantisocrat. To the political doctrine of the Revolution — the doctrine, viz., that monarchy, class distinctions, a state church, and in fact all the institutions of society, as then constituted, were absurd in theory and corrupt in fact and ought to be utterly abolished and a new beginning made on the abstract principles of universal liberty and equality — to this destructive reform, this root and branch democracy, Coleridge opposed the view that any belief or institution which human society had built up, must have had a rational idea at the bot- tom of it ; must have served at some time a useful end. He proposed to inquire what this idea was : the idea, e. g., which underlay monarchy, or aristocracy, or the Church of England. Is there not something in each of these which is useful or, perhaps, even necessary ? May we not preserve this useful part, while modifying the institution to suit modern needs ? If the institu- tion has wandered away from its original idea, may we not, without destroying it altogether, recall it to that idea, and make it once more a benefit to society, rather than a nuisance and an anachronism ? *' By Cole- ridge," says J. S. Mill, ** men have been led to ask themselves, in regard to any ancient or received opinion, not * Is it true,' but * What is the meaning of it ? * . . . He looked at it from within and endeav- ored to see it with the eye of a believer in it. . . The very fact that any doctrine had been believed by thoughtful men, and received by whole nations or gen- INTRODUCTION. XXI erations of mankind was part of the problem to be solved." * Such then was Coleridge's conservatism ; and it is evident how far this reverent and enlightened wish to find whatever of good could be found in the ancient beliefs and institutions of England, differed from the stupid bigotry and mere junkerism of the rabble of Tory statesmen and churchmen whose prej- udices Coleridge armed with reasons. So far, Coleridge's political doctrines were in line with that whole historical method of inquiry which has been applied, since his time, with such valuable results in the various sciences of man. They were in line with the later writings of Burke, though Burke still called himself a Whig, and Coleridge became, in fact if not in name, a Tory. Indeed the indurating effects of age, and of the long holding of any par- ticular set of doctrines, is sadly apparent in Cole- ridge's case, when one finds his liberal conservatism gradually giving way to a somewhat intolerant ob- structionism ; finds him opposing the Reform Bill of 1832, Catholic emancipation, the admission of dis- senters to the universities, and the repeal of the corn laws, nay, even apologizing for the burning of Serve- tus. " A right to protection," he says, " I can un- derstand ; but a right to toleration seems to me a contradiction in terms.'' f * Coleridge : London and Westminster Review^ March, 1840. f Table Talk, 498, and see p. 117 of these selections. The most important source for a knowledge of Coleridge's political opinions is the series of essays entitled The Friend, and especially the first section (Essays I. -XVI.), " On the Principles of Political Knowledge." These were originally issued in the form of a xxil INTRODUCTION, " If it be true as Lord Bacon affirms," wrote J. S. Mill in 1840, *^that a knowledge of the speculative opinions of the men between twenty and thirty years of age is the great source of political prophecy, the existence of Coleridge will show itself by no slight or ambiguous traces in the coming history of our country, for no one has contributed more to shape the opinions of those among its younger men, who can be said to have opinions at all." Among these younger men were Thomas Arnold of Rugby, Julius Hare, F. D. Maurice, and other theologians popularly identified with that Broad Church Party * which traces its in- tellectual origin to the writings and conversations of Coleridge. As a young man, he had been a Uni- tarian and had preached from Unitarian pulpits in Taunton and Shrewsbury. His opinions finally crys- weekly journal, which ran through twenty-seven numbers (August, 1809-March, 1 8 10) and were recast and published in book form in 1 81 8. Coleridge was residing with Wordsworth at Allan Bank, when he undertook this most unpractical experiment in journalism, " to aid in the formation of fixed principles in politics, morals, and religion." A newspaper filled with fundamentals and high abstrac- tions was doomed to failure. But to make failure more sure, the editor regaled his readers with ' ' literary amusements interspersed " — designated in the reprint of 1818 as *' First Landing Place," *' Second Landing Place," etc. — and consisting of essays on the distinction between the Reason and the Understanding, and notices of the life and character of Sir Alexander Ball, the Governor of Malta, whom Coleridge served as secretary, during his sojourn at the island in 1804-05. * Maurice always protested against the term ' ' Broad Church Party " and against the notion that there were — or should be — par- ties in the Church. IN TROD UCTION. XXIU tallized into trinitarian orthodoxy, and he became even somewhat violently anti-Socinian. The national Church establishment too, he zealously upheld, though he took no narrow view of its functions ; considering it is an endowment for the advancement of civilization in the community ; a fund for the support, not of a priestly class merely, but of the clerisy of the nation, /..d"., the learned of all denominations and of all arts. This is the ideal of a national Church laid down in his treatise. On the Constitution of the Church and State (1830). On the subjects of Apostolic Succession, and the divine ordination of the episcopal form of church government, Coleridge seems to have held very much the same opinions as were held by the author of Ecclesiastical Polity, to whose authority, as to that of Coleridge, Broad-church men are accustomed to refer. But on these points, as on all others of doctrine and discipline, he made complete submission of his private judgment, and " could still," says Carlyle, *^ say, and point to the Church of England, with its singular old rubrics and surplices at Allhallowtide, Esto per- petual * The change in Coleridge's religious beliefs was accompanied or preceded by a corresponding change in his philosophy. In his youth he had been an admirer of Hartley and accepted his system, a modi- fication of the empirical philosophy of Locke, which * The fullest statement of Coleridge's theology is to be looked for in his Aids to Reflection^ put forth in 1825, and many times reprinted. It is in the shape of a series of aphorisms, comment- ing on passages from Leighton, Taylor, Field, Hooker, Burnet, and other old English divines. XXIV INTRODUCTION, he afterward disputed in the Biographia Literaria (Chaps. V. and VI.). But when he went to Germany, he made acquaintance with the transcendental philos- ophy of Kant and of his continuators, Fichte and Schelling, which had such power upon the general lit- erature of Germany, but was known in England only by hearsay, until Coleridge — and in a much less degree, Carlyle — introduced some of its ideas in their writings. Coleridge was the electric spark which marked the contact of English and German thought. He originated nothing in this province, but his acute and sympathetic genius made itself the conductor of more systematic thinkers. Through him they reached the merely literary classes, and inspired men like Emerson and Carlyle. He was never weary of expounding the Kantian distinction between the Reason ( Vernunft) and the Understanding ( Verstand). In the Biographia Liter aria^ he affirms that his main object in starting The Friend vj2i^ to establish this dis- tinction, which became to him very much what Charles I. was to poor Mr. Dick and his memorial, and turns up constantly in the most unexpected places. But the transcendental idealism, or identity philos- ophy, of Schelling had, at one time, a specially strong fascination for Coleridge, as it has had for many minds in which reason has been colored by imagination. Schelling was himself a poet, and his system has a certain symmetry which gratifies the artistic instinct, while it flatters the reason by its promise to reduce all principles to one. The outside universe — nature — has no existence independent of the mind ; nor has the mind -existence, independent of the universe. In IMTRODUCTlOAt. XXV every act of knowledge, subject and object are identi- cal ; /. ^^/isonly because it has not come to its age of discretion and choice. The weeds, you see, have taken the liberty to grow, and I thought it unfair in me to prejudice 15 the soil toward roses and strawberries." — Table Talk, vi. 339. Much as the Romans owed to Greece in the begin- ning, while their mind was, as it were, tuning itself to an after-effort of its own music; it suffered more in 20 proportion by the influence of Greek literature sub- sequently, when it was already mature, and ought to have worked for itself. It then became a superfeta- tion upon, and not an ingredient in, the national char- acter. With the exception of the stern pragmatic his- 25 torian and the moral satirist, it left nothing original to the Latin Muse. — Table Talk, vi. 397. It is extraordinary that the Germans should not have retained or assumed the two beautifully discriminated APHORISMS, SENTENCES, SHORT SAVINGS. 13S sounds of the soft and hard theta; as in, i^Ay thoughts — the thin ether that^ etc. How particularly fine the hard theta is in an English termination, as in that grand word — Death — for which the Germans gutturize a 5 sound that puts you in mind of nothing but a loath- some toad. — Table Talk^y'i, 399. Could you ever discover anything sublime, in our sense of the term, in the classic Greek literature? I never couldo Sublimity is Hebrew by birth. — Table 10 Talk^ vio 406. The free class in a slave state is always, in one sense, the most patriotic class of people in an empire; for their patriotism is not simply the patriotism of other people, but an aggregate of lust of power, and distinc- iStion, and supremacy^ — Table Talk, vi. 441. The Romans would never have subdued the Italian tribes if they had not boldly left Italy and conquered foreign nations; and so, at last, crushed their next-door neighbors by external pressure. — Table Talk, vi. 445. 20 The principle of the Gothic architecture is Infinity made imaginable. It is no doubt a sublimer effort of genius than the Greek style; but then it depends much more on execution for its effect. — Table Talk, vi. 461. 25 Imitation is the mesothesis of Likeness and Differ- ence. The difference is as essential to it as the like- 136 APHORISMS, SENTENCES, SHORT SAYINGS. ness ; for without the difference, it would be a Copy or Fac-simile. But, to borrow a term from astronomy, it is a librating mesothesis: for it may verge more to likeness, as in painting, or more to difference, as in sculpture. — Table Talk, vi. 468. NOTES. 3 : 6. Anicius Manlius Severinus Boetius, or Boethius, was a Roman poet and philosopher, born about 470-75, A. d. He was executed by order of Theodoric, King of the Ostrogoths ; and while imprisoned in the baptistry of the church at Ticinum (Pavia), wrote his famous work, Di Consolatione Philosophies. This was a dialogue, in alternate verse and prose, between the author and Philosophy. It was a favorite manual of morality during the Middle Ages, and was translated into English by King Alfred. Boethius is usually regarded as the last ' ' classical " Latin writer. 3 : 8. Caius Sollius Apollinaris Sidonius was a Gallo-Roman author of verse and prose, born, probably, at Lyons about 431 A. D. ; died about 482. His prose writings consist of 147 letters in very barbarous Latin. His poems, which include panegyrics to several successive Roman emperors, are said to be superior, in their latinity, to his epistles, but characterized by over-subtlety of thought and an obscure and figurative style. 4:31. The Rev. Wm. Lisle Bowles was an English clergyman and poet. He wrote much on antiquarian and ecclesiastical sub- jects, but his most memorable publications were a volume of Sonnets (1789), which had great influence on Coleridge (see Biographia Liter aria ^ iii. 149-63) ; and his edition of Pope (1806), which led to a celebrated controversy with Byron and Campbell. His sister Caroline was Southey's second wife. 5:1. Robert Sou they was Poet Laureate from 1813 to 1843. 5 : 21. Samuel Daniel (1562-1619) was the author of many poems, historical, contemplative, and dramatic]; the longest of which was his Civil Wars of York and Lancaster ; and the best, his Epistle to the Countess of Cumberland, a favorite with Wordsworth, He 137 13S NOTES. was called by his contemporaries " well-languaged Daniel." ** Writing two hundred and fifty years ago," says Lowell, ^'he stands in no need of a glossary, and I have noted scarce a dozen words, and not more turns of phrase, in his works, that have be- come obsolete." ** No writer of the period," says Saintsbury, ** has such a command of pure English " {History of Elizabethan Literature). 7 : 3. The lines upon which this charge rests are chiefly the following : Our birth is but a sleep and a forgetting ; The soul that rises with us, our life's star, Hath had elsewhere its setting, And Cometh from afar : Not in entire forgetfulness, And not in utter nakedness, But trailing clouds of glory do we come From God, who is our home. (Stanza v.) Hence in a season of calm weather, Though inland far we be. Our souls have sight of that immortal sea Which brought us hither. (Stanza ix.) In his note on the *' Ode" (Centenary Edition, v. 103), Words- worth protested against the conclusion that he meant to inculcate belief in a prior state of existence. '* It is far too shadowy a notion to be recommended to faith, as more than an element in our instincts of immortality. But let us bear in mind that, though the idea is not advanced in revelation, there is nothing there to contradict it, and the fall of man presents an analogy in its favor. Accordingly a pre-existent state has entered into the popular creeds of many nations ; and, among all persons acquainted with classic literature, is known as an ingredient in Platonic philos- ophy. . . I took hold of the notion of pre-existence as having sufficient foundation in humanity for authorizing me to make for my purpose the best use of it I could as a poet." For the Platonic doctrine of reminiscence see especially Meno^ Jowett's transla- tion, i. 269 (ist ed.), Phcedrus, i. 584, and Phccdo, i. 418-24. 10 ; 9, The dramatic unities, or so-called " rules of A-dstotle," SELECTIONS FROM COLERIDGE. 139 as expounded by the French classical critics, were : ist, the unity of place, which required that the scene should remain the same throughout the play ; 2d, the unity of time, which limited the duration of the events represented to twenty-four hours ; or — as more strictly applied — to the time that it took to act them ; and 3d, the unity of action, which meant, practically, that there should be one plot and one set of characters. 12 : 6. Claude Gele'e, commonly called Claude Lorraine, from his birthplace ; a French landscape painter, born in 1600, died about 1680. 13 : I. Sir George Rowland Beaumont ; was a patron of artists, a collector, and an amateur, painter. He was an intimate friend of Wordsworth, who wrote a number of Inscriptions for his grounds at Coleorton. See also Wordsworth's Epistle to Sir Geo. Rowland^ Bart. ; Elegiac Stanzas suggested by a Picture of Peele Castle in a Storm, etc., etc. 13: 28. ** It is false that any representation is mistaken for reality ; that any dramatic fable in its materiality was ever cred- ible, or, for a single moment was ever credited. . . The truth is, that the spectators are always in their senses, and know, from the first act to the last, that the stage is only a stage, and that the players are only players. . . The delight of tragedy pro- ceeds from our consciousness of fiction ; if we thought murders and treasons real, they would please no more.'' — Preface to Shakspeare. 17 : 26. Ferrauwith pleasure heard the Christian Knight, Then both agreed to adjourn the bloody fight ; And now, so firmly were they bound to peace, So far did rage and rival hatred cease, That, in no wise, the Pagan prince would view Brave Amon's son on foot his way pursue, But courteous bade him mount his steed behind, Then took the track Angelica to find. O noble minds, by knights of old possessed ! Two faiths they knew, one love their hearts professed ; And still their limbs the smarting anguish feel Of strokes inflicted by the hostile steel. Through winding paths and lonely woods they go, Yet no suspicion their brave bosoms know. — Hoole's translation. I40 NOTES. 19 : 1. Schiller's tragedy Die Rduber was published in 1781, and presented in the same year at the Mannheim Theater. *' Schiller commenced it," says Carlyle, " in his nineteenth year ; and the circumstances under which it was composed are to be traced in all its parts. . . A rude simplicity, combined with a gloomy and overpowering force, are its chief characteristics. . . Everything indicates the condition of a keen and powerful intel- lect, which had studied men in books only. . . The perusal of the Robbers produces an effect powerful even to pain ; we are absolutely wounded by the catastrophe ; our minds are darkened and distressed, as if we had witnessed the execution of a criminal. It is in vain that we rebel against the inconsistencies and cru- dities of the work ; its faults are redeemed by the living energy that pervades it.'' Life of Schiller, Part I. See Coleridge's son- net, To the Author of the Robbers, Harper's ed., vii. 63. 19:9. This historical tragedy, published in 1799, is ^^ three parts : WallensteitCs Camp, The Piccolomini, and WallensteitC s Death. Coleridge translated only the last two parts. See his Preface to the Translation, Harper's ed.,vii. 481. 19:24, Published in 1803. *' The Braut von Messina wsls an experiment ; an attempt to exhibit a modern subject and mod- ern sentiments in an antique garb. . . The experiment was not successful. . . For its specimens of lyrical poetry, tender, affect- ing, sometimes exquisitely beautiful, the Bride of Messina will long deserve a careful perusal ; but as exemplifying a new form of the drama it has found no imitators, and is likely to find none." Carlyle, Life of Schiller, Part III. 21 : 19. Lucina, in Fletcher's tragedy Valentinian, is a Roman matron who is betrayed to the Emperor, and emulating Lucretia, puts herself to death. 22:18. Aecius, in the same play, is a Roman general, so extravagantly loyal to the imperial person that, although a man of stainless honor and a true friend to Maximus, the husband of the wronged Lucina, he threatens Maximus with death if he attempts to avenge his disgrace upon Valentinian. 22 : 30. A debauched ruffian and murderer in Measure for Measure. 24:14. -'A vainglorious knight, wholly consecrated to SELECTIONS FROM COLERIDGE, 141 singularity/' in Jonson's comedy, Every Man out of his Humor. 24 : 14. A swaggering coward and braggadocio in Every Man in his Humor. 25 : 17. A character in Jonson's comedy, Epicene^ or the Silent Woman, who has an exaggerated horror of noise. Upon this single " humor '' or eccentricity, the whole action of the play is made to hinge. 25 : 25. A red-nosed and bibulous follower of Sir John Fal- staff. " Oh, thou art a perpetual triumph, an everlasting bon- fire-light ! Thou hast saved me a thousand marks in links and torches, walking with thee in the night betwixt tavern and tavern ; but the sack that thou hast drunk me would have brought me lights as good cheap, at the dearest chandler's in Europe," Henry IV. Part I. Act III. scene 3. 26 : 5. Samuel Richardson, the first modern English novelist, author of Pamela, Clarissa Harlowe^ and Sir Charles Grandison. 26 : 10. George Chapman, a voluminous dramatic author, and the continuator of Marlowe's poem. Hero and Leander^ issued his version of the Iliad in 1598-1611 ; and. of the Odyssey vci 1614-15. 33 : 2. Be thou blest, Bertram, and succeed thy father In manners, as in shape. Thy blood and virtue Contend for empire in thee, and thy goodness Share with thy birthright. Love all, trust a few. Do wrong to none : be able for thine enemy Rather in power than use ; and keep thy friend Under thy own life's key ; be checked for silence, But never taxed for speech. --AlVs Well that Ends Well,, \. 1. 33: 18. See Hamdet, I. 3. 34 : 2. The foolish captain of the watch in Much Ado about Nothing. 34:8. August Friedrich Ferdinand von Kotzebue (1761- 18 19) was a popular and prolific German playwright. His melo- drama, The Stranger (an adaptation of Menschenhass und Reue), still keeps the stage in England and America. 36 : 7. Pietro Antonio Domenico Bonaventura Trapassi, whose surname was changed to Metastasio^ wg§ an Italian poet 142 NOTES. (1698-1782), author of many operas and lyrical dramas, largely classical in subject, which were set to music by Sardi, Mozart, and other famous composers. 38 : 2. Shakspeare (whom you and every playhouse bill, Style the divine, the matchless— what you will—) For gain, not glory, winged his roving flight, And grew immortal in his own despite. — Pope, Epistle to Augustus. 40 : 29. Zoilus, a grammarian and critic of uncertain date, but probably about 270 B. c, became famous for his captious assaults upon Homer. 42:31. Jean Jacques Rousseau, who, in his Discours sur VOfigine de V Inegaliie parnii les Hommes (1753), maintained that private property was a crime, and that civilization had corrupted rather than improved the morals of mankind. 53: 5. This five-act tragedy was composed originally in 1797, under the title of Osorio. It was offered in vain to Drury Lane and Covent Garden theaters. Sheridan, who was proprietor of the former, said, ''Coleridge sent me a play, and in one scene (a cavern) the water was said to drip, drip, drip — in fact it was all dripping." In 18 13 Bryon induced the managers of Drury Eane to accept it, and it was recast for the stage under a new title. See Biographical Sketch, p. xxix. 58 : 10. The Spanish play of this name, by Gabriel Tellez, was founded on traditions concerning a certain Don Juan Tenorio of Seville, supposed to have lived in the fourteenth century. Moliere and Corneille, in France ; Goldoni, in Italy ; Gliick and Mozart, in Germany, and Byron in England have made Don Juan the subject of dramas, operas, and poems. 59 : 25. Jean Baptiste Carrier, a member of the French Con- vention, infamous for his cruelties, who was guillotined at Paris in 1794. He was sent to Nantes in 1793 to suppress the re- bellion in La Vendee. Under his orders hundreds of prisoners, including women and children, were drowned in the Loire. Barges were towed out into the stream, with the victims under hatches, and scuttled and sunk. These were the famous NoyadeSy or Drowniftgs, which Carrier reported to the Convention as the *' translation of culprits." " Sentence of deportation," he wrote, SELECTIONS FROM COLERIDGE, 143 "was executed vertically''' "By degrees," says Carlyle, "day- light itself witnesses Noyades : women and men are tied together, feet and feet, hands and hands ; and flung in ; this they call Mdriage Republicain, See Carlyle, French Revolution, Book V. chap, iii., and Swinburne's poem Les Noyades, 6l : 10. Giovanni Battista Cipriani (1727-85), an Italian painter and engraver, who took up his residence in London in 1755, and was one of the first members of the Royal Academy. His subjects were historical, and his painting is said to be feeble, although graceful and correct. He excelled as a draughtsman and engraver. 66:1. John Hacket (i 592-1670) was made Bishop of Lich- field and Coventry in 1661, and restored Lichfield Cathedral, injured in the Civil Wars. His Century of Sermons was pub- lished with a memoir of the author in 1675. His SciHnia Rese- rata^ a life of his patron Archbishop Williams, was printed in 1693. " What a delightful and instructive book Bishop Hacket's Life of Archbishop Williams is ! You learn more from it of that which is valuable toward an insight into the times preceding the Civil War, than from all the ponderous histories and memoirs now composed about that period " {Table Talky vi. 459). 69 : 30. Hugh Latimer, Bishop of Worcester, burned at the stake at Oxford, 1555, with the other Protestant martyrs, Cran- mer and Ridley. His sermons, which have been many times reprinted, are marked by sincerity of feeling, and a homely, popu- lar style. See The Ploughers, and Seven Sermons^ in Arber's English reprints. 70 : 17. Sir Francis Walsingham, Ambassador to France and Minister of Foreign Affairs under Queen Elizabeth. His state papers were published in 1655, under the title of The Complete Ambassador, Many of his letters and dispatches are quoted in Froude's History of England, 73:4. Isaac Barrow (1630-77), a mathematician and theo- logian, professor of Greek and Mathematics at Cambridge and Vice Chancellor of the university. His English writings consist mainly of sermons. 73 • ^' Sir Roger L'Estrange, a royalist pamphleteer, who took an active part in the Civil War, and was appointed censor of the 144 NOTES. press after the Restoration. His writings are coarse and violent in style. 73 •6. Jeremy Collier, a non-juring bishop (1650-1 726) best known for his Short View of the Profaneness and Immorality of the English Stage. He also wrote a church history and several volumes of moral essays. 73 ; 13. Roger North's life of his brother Francis, Lord Guil- ford, Keeper of the Great Seal, was published, together with the lives of his other brothers, Dudley and John, in 1740-42. Macaulay calls him *' a most intolerant Tory, a most affected and pedantic writer." 73 • 29. Coleridge has reference here, of course, only to Cowley's pleasant prose essays, not to his frigid and artificial verse. 74 : 4. Author of Discourses concerning Government, a re- publican statesman of the time of the Civil War, executed in 1682 for alleged complicity in the Rye House plot. 84 : 9. Samuel Whitbread (1758-1815) was a prominent Whig statesman and a leader of his party in the House of Commons. 84 : 17. William Whitehead was appointed Poet Laureate on the death of Colley Cibber in 1758. A Charge to the Poets^SiS printed in 174 1, so that he could hardly have been '* exerting the preroga- tive of his laureateship " in writing it. 87:3. Dr. Erasmus Darwin (1731-1802), author of The Botanic Garden, was a practicing physician at Lichfield. 87 : 3. William Roscoe, the historian, author of the Life of Lorenzo de^ Medici, etc. , was an active member of the Liverpool bar and of the House of Commons. He died in 1831. 89 : 16. A ridiculous parson in Fielding's y^i-^/// Andrews. 93 : 10. Johann Gottfried von Herder, one of the most versa- tile and influential of German writers, was court preacher and member of the consistory at Weimar (i 776-1 803). De Quincey calls him the German Coleridge. 96: 25. The rough burr-thistle, spreading wide Amang the bearded bear, I turned the weeder-clips aside. And spared the symbol dear. — Burns' Answer to Verses Addressed to the Poet by the Goodivi/e of Wauchope House. SELECTIONS FROM COLERIDGE. 145 98 : II. Johann Philipp Palm, a German publisher, of Nurem- berg, for sending through the mails a pamphlet against Bona- parte entitled Deutschland in seiner tie fen Erniedrigung^ was tried by a French military commission and shot at Braunau (1806), where a life-sized bronze statue was erected to his memory in 1866. 100 : 10. The butterfly, emblem of the immortal soul {^vxh) See the beautiful myth of Cupid and Psyche in the Golden Ass of Apuleius. 101 : 23. Samuel Daniel, Epistle to the Countess of Cumberland. 103 • 15- Johann Christian von Wolf (i 679-1 754), the German philosopher and mathematician. 104 : 12. At the castle of the Wartburg, near Eisenach, in Thuringia, Luther was in hiding in 1521-22, for some ten months, following his appearance at the Diet of Worms. He busied him- self in this retreat with his translation of the New Testament. 104 : 26. The Latin version of the Scriptures made by Jerome in the fourth century and accepted by the Roman Catholic Church as the only authentic text. 105 : 18. The Septuagint is a Greek version of the Bible sup- posed to have been made by seventy translators at Alexandria in the time of the Ptolemies. 108 : 4. Jean Jacques Rousseau. 111:7. ** All things are artificial, for Nature is the art of God.'' Sir Thomas Browne, Religio Medici. 113:20. Domenico Cimarosa (1754-1801), an Italian musical composer. Coleridge alludes to his opera Gli Orazi {The Horatii). 116 : 16. See p. 7*3 note, 116:20. George Berkeley, Dean of Derry and Bishop of Cloyne, maintained in his Treatise concerning the Principles of Human Knowledge (1710) and Dialogues between Hylas and Philonous (17 13) that matter has no existence independent of mind. 121 : 8. The famous burlesque romance, satirizing the Puritans, published in 1663-64 by Samuel Butler. 124:25. A Neo- Platonic philosopher of the third century. His works exist in fifty-four books, called Enneads. The passage 146 NOTES. cited is from Ennead III. viii. 3, p. 634, Creuzer's ed., Oxford, 1835. According to Charles Lamb, Plotinus seems to have been among Coleridge's schoolboy studies at Christ's Hospital. See Introduction, p. vii. 134 ; 7. John Thelwall, an English author of liberal opinions, who was once prosecuted for high treason, in company with Home Tooke, the author of the Diversions of Purley. Coleridge, in his radical days, had known Thelwall in the South of England ''among the Quantocks." They died in the same year, 1834. jEuQlisb IReaMngs tor Stu&ents. This collection is planned to supply English master- pieces in editions at once competently edited and inex- pensive. The aim will be to fill vacancies now existing because of subject, treatment, or price. The volumes will be of convenient size and serviceably bound. Coleridge : Prose Extracts. Selections chosen and edited with introduction and notes by Henry A. Beers, Professor in Yale College, xxix + 148 pp. i6mo. Boards. Teachers' price, 30 cents ; postage 4 cents additional. The selections, varying in length from a paragraph to ten or twenty pages, will be mainly from Table Talk and Biographia Literaria^ but also in part from The Friend^ Notes on Shakspeare^ and other writings. They have been chosen, so far as may be, to illustrate the range and variety of Coleridge's thought, and, to emphasize this purpose, have been grouped by subjects. The introduc- tion briefly summarizes the author's intellectual position and influence. De Quincey : Joan of Arc and The English Mail Coach. Edited with an introduction and notes by James Morgan Hart, Professor in Cornell University, xxvi + 138 pp. i6mo. Boards. Teachers' price, 30 cents ; postage 4 cents additional. These essays have been chosen as fairly representative of the two most notable phases of the author's work, and as at the same time attractive to the novice in literary study. The introduction sketches the leading facts of De Quincey's life, and indicates some of the prominent English "fadings for Students. features of his style. Allusions and other points of un- usual difficulty are explained in the notes. This volume and the one containing the Essays on BoswelVs Johnson (see below) are used at Cornell University as foundation for elementary rhetorical study. Dryden : Select Plays. Edited with a brief introduction and notes by James W. Bright, Assistant Professor in the Johns Hopkins University. About loo pp. i2mo. \^In p7'-epa7'ation.'\ Aside from their representing the principal literary ac- tivity, in point of quantity, of one of the foremost English writers, Dryden's plays have a peculiar interest in having been among the first to be played upon the reopening of the theatres under Charles II. Goldsmith : Present State of Polite Learning. Edited with introduction and notes by J. M. Hart, Professor in Cornell University. About loo pp. i6mo. \Iit preparation^ There are many reasons, some of them obvious, for giving this essay a place in the English Readings series. One that may be mentioned is the remarkably clear insight it affords into the entire eighteenth-century way of criticising. The introduction and notes will direct the student's attention along this line of observation, Lyly : Endimion. With introduction and notes by George P. Baker, Instructor in Harvard College. About loo pp. i6mo. \Ready soon.] Lyly's plays really show him to a better advantage than does the EuphueSy by which he is chiefly remembered, and his place in English dramatic history makes it de- sirable that one at least should be easily accessible. English "Tradings for Students. Macaulay and Carlyle : Croker's Bosweirs John- son. The complete essays, with brief notes and an introduction by James Morgan Hart, Professor in Cornell University. A preliminary edition, without notes, is now supplied. 93 pp. i2mo. Boards. Teachers' price, 30 cents ; postage 4 cents additional. These parallel treatments of Croker's editing, and of the characters of Boswell and Dr. Johnson, afford an unusual opportunity for comparative study. The two essays present a constant contrast in intellectual and moral methods of criticism which cannot fail to turn the attention of students to important principles of biographi- cal writing, while equally important principles of diction are impressively illustrated in the two strongly marked styles. The essays also offer an excellent introduction to the study of the literary history of Johnson's times. Marlowe : Edward 11. With the best passages from Tamburlaine the Great, and from his Poems. With brief notes and an introductory essay by Edward T. Mc- Laughlin, Professor in Yale College. [In press.] Aside from the intrinsic value of Edward II., as Mar- lowe's most important work, the play is of great interest in connection with Shakespere. The earlier chronicle drama was in Shakespere's memory as he was writing Richard 11, as various passages prove, and a comparison of the two plays (sketched in the introduction) affords basis for a study in the development of the Elizabethan drama. Since Tamburlaine has really no plot and character-development, extracts that illustrate its poeti- cal quality lose nothing for lack of a context. The unobjectionable beginning of Hero and Leander is per- haps the finest narrative verse of the sixteenth century. English "fadings for Students. Specimens of Argumentation. I. Classic. Chosen and edited by George P. Baker, Instructor in English in Harvard College, and Non-resident Lecturer on Argumentative Composition in Wellesley College. \^In preparation.'] Specimens of Argumentation. II. Modern. Chosen and edited by George P. Baker. i6mo. i86 pp. Boards. [In press.] This compilation includes Lord Chatham's speech on the withdrawal of troops from Boston, Lord Mansfield's argument in the Evans case, the first letj:er of Junius, the first of Huxley's American addresses on evolution, Erskine's defence of Lord George Gordon, and an ad- dress of Beecher's in Liverpool during the cotton riots. The choice and editing has been controlled by the needs of the courses in " Forensics" in Harvard College. The earlier selections offer excellent material for practice in drawing briefs, a type of such a brief being given in the volume. The notes aim to point out the conditions under which each argument was made, the difficulties to be overcome, and wherein the power of the argument lies. It is thought that the collection, as a whole, will be found to contain available illustrations of all the main principles of argumentation, including the handling of evidence, persuasion, and scientific exposition. HENRY HOLT & CO., Publishers, New York. 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