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Article: Shakespeare, Coleridge, intellecturition.(Samuel Taylor Coleridge's criticism of William Shakespeare)(Critical essay)
- Article from:
- Studies in Romanticism
- Article date:
- March 22, 2007
- Author:
CopyrightCOPYRIGHT 2007 Boston University. This material is published under license from the publisher through the Gale Group, Farmington Hills, Michigan. All inquiries regarding rights should be directed to the Gale Group. (Hide copyright information)
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HUNDREDS AND HUNDREDS OF PAGES OF THE BOLLINGEN COLLECTED Works of Samuel Taylor Coleridge are given over to Coleridge's notes, comments, reflections, marginalia, and lectures on Shakespeare. These testify en masse to the remarkable gregariousness of Coleridge the Shakespearean. The poems and plays, like so much else that Coleridge read, sponsored earnest, lifelong pedagogical relations between Coleridge and his family, friends, readers, and audiences. (1) It fell to Coleridge first to understand then to explain Shakespeare. What he read, he could not help but talk about. And talk about. (2) He is relentlessly analytical, even when he experiences pleasure. Indeed, ...
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Article: Tragedies of William Shakespeare and Sonnets: The ...
Monarch Notes;
700+ words
... ... book. Eighteenth Century: In his preface to The Plays of William Shakespeare (1793) Stevens has nothing but contempt for the sonnets ... praise which is often uncritically fulsome. Samuel Taylor Coleridge entered in the marginalia on his copy of R. Anderson ...
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