Coleridge and the Uses of Division

Front Cover
Clarendon Press, 1999 - 303 pages
Coleridge was a visionary drawn to the numinous, but he was also a spontaneous connoisseur of the sensory life. Such double-mindedness has often been criticized as a sort of incapacity; but the capability of entertaining equally necessary kinds of perception might be thought a kind of virtue. The study examines Coleridge's formative double-vision as it manifests itself in his profound self-analysis, his philosophy of mind, and his literary criticism.
 

Contents

COLERIDGE AND DIVISION
7
COLERIDGES VISIONS
35
THE MIND
102
THE ETHICS OF IMAGINING
155
MILTON
209
Resolution and Independence
274
The Incomprehensible Mariner
281
INDEX
293
Copyright

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About the author (1999)

Seamus Perry is a Lecturer in English Literature at University of Glasgow.

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