FOOTNOTES
1. No one who recollects the equally singular manner in which another
most distinguished metaphysician--the late Dean Hansel--was wont to
quaver forth his admirably turned and often highly eloquent phrases of
philosophical exposition, can fail to be reminded of him by the above
description. No two temperaments or histories however could be more
dissimilar. The two philosophers resembled each other in nothing save
the "om-mject" and "sum-mject" of their studies.
2. The Longmans told Coleridge that the greater part of the first
edition of the Lyrical Ballads had been sold to seafaring men, who,
having heard of the _Ancient Mariner_, took the volume for a naval
song-book.
INDEX
Adams, Dr.,
_Aeolian Harp,_
circumstances under which it was written,
Coleridge's opinion of,
_Aids to Reflection,_ its popularity,
its value as a spiritual manual,
its inferiority from a literary point of view,
Allan Bank,
Allsop, Mr. Thomas,
_Ancient Mariner,_
how and when first conceived,
its uniqueness,
Wordsworth's account of its origin
and of his suggestions,
a sublime "pot-boiler,"
realistic force of its narrative,
its vividness of imagery,
its wonderful word-pictures,
its evenness of execution,
examples of its consummate art,
its chief characteristics,
Anecdotes,
Ball, Sir Alexander,
Beaumont, Lady,
Berkeley,
_Biographia Literaria,_
its interest, critical and illustrative,
its main value,
its analysis of the principles of poetry,
its examination of Wordsworth's theory,
its contents,
_Blackwood's Magazine,_
Coleridge's contributions to,
Bonaparte,
_Borderers_ (Wordsworth's),
Bowles, William Lisle,
Burke,
sonnet to,
Byron,
Calne, Coleridge at,
_Cambridge Intelligencer _(Flower's),
Carlyle, description of Coleridge by,
Carrlyon, Dr.
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