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Hartley Coleridge Quotations

Hartley Coleridge (September 19, 1796January 6, 1849) was an English writer. He was the eldest son of the poet Samuel Taylor Coleridge.

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Great poet, 'twas thy art To know thyself, and in thyself to be Whate'er Love, Hate, Ambition, Destiny, Or the firm, fatal purpose of the Heart Can make of Man. Yet thou wert still the same, Serene of thought, unhurt by thy own flame. Laughter oft is but an art To drown the outcry of the heart. One soul was ours, one mind, one heart devoted, That, wisely doating, ask'd not why it doated. And ours the unknown joy, which knowing kills.

Poems (1851)

Vol. I Vol. II

Prometheus

Fragments of an unfinished play, written c. 1820
Rising now, anon descending, Swift and bright as shooting stars, Thus we travel glad and free. Sweet were change, If but a change of tortures! But to grow A motionless rock, fast as my strong prison, Age after age, till circling suns outnumber The sands upon the tide-worn beach! I will live, That Jove may know there is a deathless soul Who ne'er will be his subject. The stedfast Fates confess my absolute will,— Their own co-equal. Hopes, fears, imaginations, purposes; With joy, and pain, and every pulse that beats In the great body of the universe, I give to the eternal sisterhood, To make my peace withal! So have I redeem'd My proper birthright, even the changeless mind, The imperishable essence uncontroll'd. We have winning wiles and witcheries, Such incantations as thy sterner wit Did never dream of. Swift generations, that forget each other, Shall still keep up the memory of my shame Till I am grown an unbelieved fable. Jove is not one half so merciless As thou art to thyself. But fare thee well; Our love is all as stubborn as thy pride, And swift as firm. What were Jove himself If pity had not been? Was not he once A hapless babe, condemn'd to die ere born? He grew, and grew, A star-bright sign of fated empery; And all conspiring omens led him on To lofty purpose and pre-eminence. The lightnings danced before him sportively, And shone innocuous as the pale cold moon In the clear blue of his celestial eye. The glad sons of the deliver'd earth Shall yearly raise their multitudinous voice, Hymning great Jove, the God of Liberty! Prepare a banquet meet to entertain The Lord of Thunder, that hath set you free From old oppression. Mortal! fear no more,— The reign is past of ancient violence; And Jove hath sworn that time shall not deface, Nor death destroy, nor mutability Perplex the truth of love.

External links

Wikipedia has an article about: Hartley Coleridge

 

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