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I have heard of reasons manifold Why Love must needs be blind, But this the best of all I hold,- His eyes are in his mind.
Samuel Taylor Coleridge
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Samuel Taylor Coleridge
Age: 61 †
Born: 1772
Born: October 21
Died: 1834
Died: July 25
Critic
Literary Critic
Philosopher
Poet
Theologian
Ottery St Mary
Devon
S. T. Coleridge
Needs
Blind
Mind
Hold
Love
Heard
Life
Eyes
Eye
Best
Reason
Manifold
Must
Reasons
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Brute animals have the vowel sounds man only can utter consonants.
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Thou rising Sun! thou blue rejoicing Sky! Yea! every thing that is and will be free! Bear witness for me, whereso'er ye be, With what deep worship I have still adored The spirit of divinest Liberty.
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And to be wroth with one we loveā¦Doth work like madness in the brain.
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Ancestral voices prophesying war.
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On the Greek stage a drama, or acted story, consisted in reality of three dramas, called together a trilogy, and performed consecutively in the course of one day.
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We should manage our thoughts as shepherds do their flowers in making a garland: first, select the choicest, and then dispose them in the most proper places, that every one may reflect a part of its color and brightness on the next.
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I must reject fluids and ethers of all kinds, magnetical, electrical, and universal, to whatever quintessential thinness they may be treble distilled, and as it were super-substantiated.
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A sight to dream of, not to tell!
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A stately pleasure-dome decree.
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One thought includes all thought, in the sense that a grain of sand includes the universe.
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All sympathy not consistent with acknowledged virtue is but disguised selfishness.
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Oh sleep! it is a gentle thing, Beloved from pole to pole.
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The act of praying is the very highest energy of which the human mind is capable praying, that is, with the total concentration of the faculties. The great mass of worldly men and of learned men are absolutely incapable of prayer.
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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.
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Democracy is the healthful lifeblood which circulates through the veins and arteries, which supports the system, but which ought never to appear externally, and as the mere blood itself.
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Summer has set in with its usual severity.
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The history of man for the nine months preceding his birth would, probably, be far more interesting and contain events of greater moment than all the three score and ten years that follow it.
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A woman in a single state may be happy and may be miserable but most happy, most miserable, these are epithets belonging to a wife.
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So lonely 'twas that God himself Scarce seemed there to be.
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The nightmare Life-in-Death was she.
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