|
_"April_ 21.—Richmond._
"Before breakfast we went into Mr. May's delightful book-room, where he was again silent in admiration of the prospect. After breakfast, we walked to church. He seemed full of calm piety, and said he always felt the most delightful sensations in a Sunday church-yard,—that it struck him as if God had given to man fifty-two springs in every year. After the service, he was vehement against the sermon, as common-place, and invidious in its tone towards the poor. Then he gave many texts from the lessons and gospel of the day, as affording fit subjects for discourses. He ridiculed the absurdity of refusing to believe every thing that you could not understand; and mentioned a rebuke of Dr. Parr's to a man of the name of Frith, and that of another clergyman to a young man, who said he would believe nothing which he could not understand:—'Then, young man, your creed will be the shortest of any man's I know.'
"As we walked up Mr. Cambridge's meadows towards Twickenham, he criticised Johnson and Gray as poets, and did not seem to allow them high merit. The excellence of verse, he said, was to be untranslatable into any other words without detriment to the beauty of the passage;—the position of a single word could not be altered in Milton without injury. Gray's personifications, he said, were mere printer's devils' personifications— persons with a capital letter, abstract qualities with a small one. He thought Collins had more genius than Gray, who was a singular instance of a man of taste, poetic feeling, and fancy, without imagination. He contrasted Dryden's opening of the 10th satire of Juvenal with Johnson's:—
"'Let observation, with extensive view, Survey mankind from Ganges to Peru.'
which was as much as to say,—
"'Let observation with extensive observation observe mankind.'
"After dinner he told us a humorous story of his enthusiastic fondness for Quakerism, when he was at Cambridge, and his attending one of their meetings, which had entirely cured him. When the little children came in, he was in raptures with them, and descanted upon the delightful mode of treating them now, in comparison with what he had experienced in childhood. He lamented the haughtiness with which Englishmen treated all foreigners abroad, and the facility with which our government had always given up any people which had allied itself to us, at the end of a war; and he particularly remarked upon our abandonment of Minorca. These two things, he said, made us universally disliked on the Continent; though, as a people, most highly respected. He thought a war with America inevitable; and expressed his opinion, that the United States were unfortunate in the prematureness of their separation from this country, before they had in themselves the materials of moral society—before they had a gentry and a learned class,—the former looking backwards, and giving the sense of stability—the latter looking forwards, and regulating the feelings of the people.
"Afterwards, in the drawing-room, he sat down by Professor Rigaud, with whom he entered into a discussion of Kant's System of Metaphysics. The little knots of the company were speedily silent: Mr. C.'s voice grew louder; and abstruse as the subject was, yet his language was so ready, so energetic, and so eloquent, and his illustrations so very neat and apposite, that the ladies even paid him the most solicitous and respectful attention. They were really entertained with Kant's Metaphysics! At last I took one of them, a very sweet singer, to the piano-forte; and, when there was a pause, she began an Italian air. She was anxious to please him, and he was enraptured. His frame quivered with emotion, and there was a titter of uncommon delight on his countenance. When it was over, he praised the singer warmly, and prayed she might finish those strains in heaven!
"This is nearly all, except some anecdotes, which I recollect of our meeting with this most interesting, most wonderful man. Some of his topics and arguments I have enumerated; but the connection and the words are lost. And nothing that I can say can give any notion of his eloquence and manner,—of the hold which he soon got on his audience—of the variety of his stores of information—or, finally, of the artlessness of his habits, or the modesty and temper with which he listened to, and answered arguments, contradictory to his own."—J. T. C.
The following address has been printed before; but it cannot be too widely circulated, and it will form an appropriate conclusion to this volume.
To Adam Steinmetz K——.
MY DEAR GODCHILD,
I offer up the same fervent prayer for you now, as I did kneeling before the altar, when you were baptized into Christ, and solemnly received as a living member of his spiritual body, the Church.
Years must pass before you will be able to read, with an understanding heart, what I now write. But I trust that the all-gracious God, the Father of our Lord Jesus Christ, the Father of Mercies, who, by his only-begotten Son, (all mercies in one sovereign mercy!) has redeemed you from the evil ground, and willed you to be born out of darkness, but into light—out of death, but into life—out of sin, but into righteousness, even into the Lord our Righteousness; I trust that He will graciously hear the prayers of your dear parents, and be with you as the spirit of health and growth in body and mind!
My dear Godchild!—You received from Christ's minister at the baptismal font, as your Christian name, the name of a most dear friend of your father's, and who was to me even as a son, the late Adam Steinmetz, whose fervent aspiration, and ever-paramount aim, even from early youth, was to be a Christian in thought, word, and deed—in will, mind, and affections.
I too, your Godfather, have known what the enjoyments and advantages of this life are, and what the more refined pleasures which learning and intellectual power can bestow; and with all the experience that more than threescore years can give, I now, on the eve of my departure, declare to you, (and earnestly pray that you may hereafter live and act on the conviction,) that health is a great blessing,—competence obtained by honourable industry a great blessing,—and a great blessing it is to have kind, faithful, and loving friends and relatives; but that the greatest of all blessings, as it is the most ennobling of all privileges, is to be indeed a Christian. But I have been likewise, through a large portion of my later life, a sufferer, sorely afflicted with bodily pains, languors, and manifold infirmities; and, for the last three or four years, have, with few and brief intervals, been confined to a sick-room, and, at this moment, in great weakness and heaviness, write from a sick-bed, hopeless of a recovery, yet without prospect of a speedy removal; and I, thus on the very brink of the grave, solemnly bear witness to you, that the Almighty Redeemer, most gracious in his promises to them that truly seek him, is faithful to perform what he hath promised, and has preserved, under all my pains and infirmities, the inward peace that passeth all understanding, with the supporting assurance of a reconciled God, who will not withdraw his spirit from me in the conflict, and in his own time will deliver me from the Evil One!
O, my dear Godchild! eminently blessed are those who begin early to seek, fear, and love their God, trusting wholly in the righteousness and mediation of their Lord, Redeemer, Saviour, and everlasting High Priest, Jesus Christ!
O preserve this as a legacy and bequest from your unseen Godfather and friend,
S. T. COLERIDGE.
Grove, Highgate, July 13. 1834.
He died on the 25th day of the same month.
INDEX.
* * * * *
A.
Abraham. Abuse, Eloquence of. Acoustics. Acts, Origin of. Adiaphori. Advocate, Duties and Needs of an. Aeschylus, Sophocles, and Euripides. Alchemy. All and the Whole. America, United States of. American Union, Northern and Southern States of the. Americans, the. Anarchy, Mental. Ancient Mariner. Animal Being, Scale of. Ant and Bee. Architecture, Gothic. Ariosto and Tasso. Aristotle. Army and Navy, House of Commons appointing the Officers of the. Article, Ninth. Asgill. ——-and Defoe. Astrology. Atheist. Autumn Day.
B.
Bacon. Ball, Sir Alexander. Baptismal Service. Barrow and Dryden. Bartram's Travels. Baxter. Beaumont and Fletcher. ——'s Dramas. Beauty. Behmen, Jacob. Bentley. Berkeley. Bertram, Character of. Bestial Theory. Bible, Study of the. ——, Version of the. Biblical Commentators. Biographia Literaria. Bitters and Tonics. Black. Black, Colonel. Blumenbach and Kant's Races. Books of Moses, Genuineness of. Boswell. Bourrienne. Bowyer. British Schoolmen. Brooke, Lord. Brown and Darwin. Bull and Waterland. Burke. Burnet. Buonaparte. Byron, Lord. ——and H. Walpole's "Mysterious Mother." ——, his Versification, and Don Juan.
C.
Caesarean Operation. Cambridge Petition to admit Dissenters. Canning. Capital. Catholicity. Cavalier Slang. Character, Differences of. Charles I. Chaucer. Children, Gracefulness of, Chillingworth, Christ, Divinity of, Christ's Hospital, Christian Sabbath, Christianity, ——, Scope of, Church, ——, High Prizes and Revenues of the, ——, National, ——of England, ——of Rome, Churchmen, Church Singing, Citizens and Christians, Claudian, Clergy, Celibacy of the, Coleridge's (Mr.) System, Colonization, Colours, ——, Non-perception of, Commons, House of, ——, the Reformed House of, Compounds, Latin, Consolation in Distress, Constantine, Constitution, English, Corn Laws, Coronation Oaths, Crabbe and Southey, Cramp, Charm for, Craniology, Crisis,
D.
Dancing, English and Greek, Daniel, Davy, Sir H., Democracy, ——, with Slavery, Devotional Spirit, De vi Minimorum, Dictation and Inspiration, Diction of the Old and New Testament Version, Diplomatists, modern, Disfranchisement, Dissenters, Diversions of Purley, Divines, old, Divinity, Dobrizhoffer, Dog, Don Quixote, Douw's (Gerard) "Schoolmaster," and Titian's "Venus," Dramatists, the Old, Drayton and Daniel, Dreams, ——and Ghosts, Difference between Stories of, Dryden, ——and Pope, Dual, Neuter plural, and Verb singular,
E.
Education, Egyptian Antiquaries, Eldon's (Lord) Doctrine as to Grammar Schools, Electricity, Elegy, Energy of Man and other Animals, England, ——and Holland, English and German, Envy, Epidemic Disease, Epistles to the Ephesians and Colossians, ——to the Hebrews, ——to the Romans, Erasmus, Etymology of the final Ive, Eucharist, the, Euripides, Euthanasia, Evangelicals, Mock,
F.
Faith, ——, Articles of, ——and Belief Fantasy and Imagination, Fatalism and Providence, Fathers, the, Faust, Fees, Barristers' and Physicians', Fielding and Richardson, Fine Arts, Patronage of the, Flaccus, Valerius, Flogging, Food, Fox and Pitt, French, the, ——Gendarmerie, ——Hereditary Peerage, Abolition of the,
G.
Galileo, Newton, Kepler, Bacon, Galvanism, Gas, Hydro-carbonic, Gender of the Sun in German, Genius, Genius, Criterion of. ——, Feminine. ——, Metaphysical. ——of the Spanish and Italians. German. ——Blank Verse. ——and English. Ghosts, Gibbon, Gifford's Massier, Giotto, Gnosis, God, Proof of Existence of, ——'s Providence, Goethe, Good and the True, the, Government, Grammar, Gray and Cotton Great Minds androgynous, ——Poets, good Men, Greek, ——, Italian, and English, pure Ages of, ——Accent and Quantity, ——Drama, ——Particles, Grey, Earl,
H.
Hacket's Life of Archbishop Williams, Hahnemann, Hall, Captain B., ——and the Americans, Hamlet, Hampden's Speech, Harmony, Heat, Hebrew, Hermesianax, Herodotus, Hesiod, Hieronimo, History, ——, Jewish, Hobbism, Holland and Belgium, ——and the Dutch, Homer, Homeric Heroes in Shakspeare, Hooker, Hooker and Bull, Horner, Humour and Genius, Hypothesis, Hysteria,
I.
Iapetic and Semitic, Ideal Tory and Whig, Ideal Truths, Reverence for, Ideas, Imitation and Copy, Incarnation, Inherited Disease, Insects, Interest, Monied, Investigation, Methods of, Ireland, Union with, Irish Church, Iron, Irving, Isaac, Italy, Roman Conquest of,
J.
Jacob, Jacobins, James I, Jerusalem, Destruction of, Jews, ——, Conversion of the, ——, Division of the Scripture, ——, in Poland, Job, Book of, Johnson, Dr., ——, his Political Pamphlets, ——, the Whig, Jonson, Ben, Junius, Juries,
K.
Kant's Attempt, Kant's Races of Mankind, Kean, Keats, Keenness and Subtlety, Kemble, John, Kepler, Knowledge, Kotzebue,
L.
Lakes, Scotch and English, Lamb, C., Land and Money, Landholders, Duty of, Landor's (W. S.) Poetry, Laud, Laughter, Farce and Tragedy, Lavacrum Pallados, Legislation, Iniquitous, Leo X., Lewis's Jamaica Journal, Life, Constitutional and Functional, Liturgy, English, Logic, ——, Character of the Age for, Logic of Ideas and of Syllogisms. Logos, the. "Lord, the," in the English Version of the Psalms. Love. ——and Friendship opposed. Love's Labour Lost. Lucan. Luther. Lyell's Geology.
M.
Machinery. Mackintosh, Sir James. Madness. Magnetism. Malta. Man cannot be stationary. ——Fall of. ——'s Freedom. Mandeville's Fable of the Bees. Manners under Edward III., Richard II., and Henry VIII. Marriage. ——Parental Control in. ——of Cousins. Martin. Mason's Poetry. Massier. Materialism. Mathews. Measure for Measure. Medicine. Medicines, Specific. Men. Messenger of the Covenant. Messiah. Metre, Modern. Miguel, Dom, and Dom Pedro. Milesian Tales. Milton. ——and Sydney. ——'s disregard of Painting. ——'s Egotism. ——'s Latin Poems. Ministers and the Reform Bill. Monarchy or Democracy, Prospect of. Monro, Sir T. Mosaic Miracles. ——Prophecies. Motives and Impulses. Music. ——, Ear and Taste for, different. Musical Glasses, some Men like.
N.
Napier. National Colonial Character and Naval Discipline. ——Debt. Nations, Characteristic Temperament of. Negro Emancipation. Nervous Weakness. New Testament Canon. Newton. Nitrous Oxide. Nominalists and Realists. Northern and Southern States. Norwegians.
O.
Oath, Coronation. Oaths. Obstruction. Origen. Othello, Character of.
P.
Painting. Pantheism. ——and Idolatry. Papacy. ——, the, and the Reformation. ——and the Schoolmen. Paradise Lost. Park, Professor. Parliamentary Privilege. Party Spirit. Penal Code in Ireland. Penn, Granville, and the Deluge. Pentameter, Greek and Latin. Permanency and Progression of Nations. Persius. Persons and Things. Peter Simple, and Tom Cringle's Log. Phantom Portrait. Philanthropists. Philosopher's ordinary Language. Philosophy, Greek. ——, Moral. ——, Mr. Coleridge's System of. ——of young Men of the present Day. Pictures. Pilgrim's Progress. Pirates. Plants. Plato. ——and Xenophon. Plotinus. Poem, Epic. Poetic Promise. Poetical Filter. Poetry. ——, Persian and Arabic. Poison. Polarity, Moral Law of. Political Action, the two Modes of. Political Economy, Modern. Polonius. Poor Laws. Popedom. Prayer. Preaching extempore. Presbyterians, Independents, and Bishops. Principle, Greatest Happiness. Principles and Facts. ——and Maxims. Professions and Trades. Propertius. Property Tax. Prophecies of the Old Testament. Prophecy. Prose and Poetry. ——and Verse. Prudentius. Psalms, Translation of the. Puritans and Cavaliers. ——and Jacobins.
Q.
Quacks. Quakerism, Modern. Quakers. Quarantine.
R.
Rabelais. ——and Luther. Raffles, Sir S. Rainbow. Reason and Understanding. Reasoner, a. Redemption. Reform of the House of Commons. ——Bill. ——, Conduct of Ministers on the. Reformation. ——, English. Religion. Religion gentilizes. ——of the Greeks. ——-, Roman Catholic. ——-, Romish Representation, Popular. ——, Direct. Restoration. Review, Principles of a. Revolution. ——, Belgian. ——, French. ——, Intellectual. Rhenferd. Roman Conquest. ——Empire. Key to the Decline of the. ——Mind. ——Catholics. ——Catholic Emancipation. Rosetti on Dante.
S.
Sallust. Sandford, Bishop. Sanskrit. Sarpi, Paul. Scanderbeg. Scarlett, Sir J. Schemes, Spinozistic and Hebrew. Schiller. ——'s Robbers. ——'s Versification. Schmidt. Schools, Infant. ——, Public. Scotch and English. ——Kirk and Irving. ——Novels. Scott, Michael. ——and Coleridge. ——'s Novels. Sectarianism. Seneca. Shakspeare. ——, in Minimis. ——'s Intellectual Action. ——'s Sonnets. Sicily. Sidney, Sir P. Sin and Sins. Smith, Robert. Society, best State of. Socinianism. Socrates. Solomon. Sophocles. Southey. ——'s Life of Bunyan. Speech, Parts of. Spenser. Spinosa. Spurzheim. Spurzheim and Craniology. St. John. ——'s Gospel. ——, Chap. xix. Ver. 11. ——, Chap. iii. Ver. 4. St. Paul's Melita. State. ——, a. ——, Idea of a. Statesmen. Statius. Steinmetz. Stella. Sterne. Style. ——, Algernon Sydney's. ——, Modern. Sublime and Nonsense. Sublimity. Suffiction. Superstition of Maltese, Sicilians, and Italians. Swift. Sympathy of old Greek and Latin with English, 168.
T.
Talent and Genius. Talented. Taxation. Taylor, Jeremy. Tennyson's Poems. Tertullian. Thelwall. Theory. Theta. Things are finding their Level. Thomas a Becket. Thucydides. ——and Tacitus. Tibullus. Times of Charles I. Toleration. Tooke, Horne. Travels, Modern. Trinity, the. Truths and Maxims.
U.
Understanding, the. Undine. Unitarianism. Universal Suffrage. Universities.
V.
Valcknaer. Varro. Vico. Virgil. Virtue and Liberty. Von Humboldt, Baron. Vote, Right of Women to. Vowels and Consonants. Vox Populi, Vox Dei.
W.
Walkerite Creed. War. ——, Civil, of the Seventeenth Century. Wedded Love in Shakspeare and his contemporary Dramatists. Wellington, Duke of. Wetherell's (Sir Charles) Speech. Whigs, Conduct of the. Wicliffe. Wilkins, Peter, and Stothard. William III. Wilson. Wit and Madness. Witch of Endor. Women, Characterlessness of. ——, Old. ——and Men. Words and Names of Things. Wordsworth. Works, Chronological Arrangement of. Working to better one's condition. Worlds, Plurality of.
Z.
Zendavesta.
THE END. |
|