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Samuel Taylor Coleridge

Read through the most famous quotes from Samuel Taylor Coleridge




The love of a mother is the veil of a softer light between the heart and the heavenly Father.


— Samuel Taylor Coleridge


#between #father #heart #heavenly #heavenly father

Sympathy constitutes friendship; but in love there is a sort of antipathy, or opposing passion. Each strives to be the other, and both together make up one whole.


— Samuel Taylor Coleridge


#antipathy #both #constitutes #each #friendship

No mind is thoroughly well organized that is deficient in a sense of humor.


— Samuel Taylor Coleridge


#humor #mind #organized #sense #sense of humor

No one does anything from a single motive.


— Samuel Taylor Coleridge


#does #motive #single

Our own heart, and not other men's opinions form our true honor.


— Samuel Taylor Coleridge


#heart #honor #men #opinions #other

Reviewers are usually people who would have been, poets, historians, biographer, if they could. They have tried their talents at one thing or another and have failed; therefore they turn critic.


— Samuel Taylor Coleridge


#been #biographer #could #critic #failed

The most happy marriage I can picture or imagine to myself would be the union of a deaf man to a blind woman.


— Samuel Taylor Coleridge


#deaf #happy #happy marriage #i #i can

As I live and am a man, this is an unexaggerated tale - my dreams become the substances of my life.


— Samuel Taylor Coleridge


#become #dreams #i #life #live

Brute animals have the vowel sounds; man only can utter consonants.


— Samuel Taylor Coleridge


#consonants #man #only #sounds #utter

How like herrings and onions our vices are in the morning after we have committed them.


— Samuel Taylor Coleridge


#committed #how #like #morning #onions






About Samuel Taylor Coleridge

Samuel Taylor Coleridge Quotes




Did you know about Samuel Taylor Coleridge?

William Hazlitt a Unitarian minister's son was in the congregation having walked from Wem in order to hear him. These events cut cruelly into the hearts of old men: but the good Dr. To Coleridge the "cinque spotted spider" making its way upstream "by fits and starts" [Biographia Literaria] is not merely a comment on the intermittent nature of creativity imagination or spiritual progress but the journey and destination of his life.

Throughout his adult life Coleridge suffered from crippling bouts of anxiety and depression; it has been speculated by some that he suffered from bipolar disorder a condition not identified during his lifetime. He wrote the poems The Rime of the Ancient Mariner and Kubla Khan as well as the major prose work Biographia Literaria. He was treated for these concerns with laudanum which fostered a lifelong opium addiction.

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