. Letters of Samuel Taylor Coleridge. ing impressed all at once (or so rapidly consecutivelyas to appear all at once) by a variety of impressions. Ifthere are a dozen people at table I hear, and cannot helpgiving some attention to what each one says, even thotighthere should be three or four talking at once. The detailof the Good and the Bad, of the two different makes ofmind, would form a not uninteresting brace of essays ina Spectator or Guardian. You will of course repay Southey instantly all themoney you may have borrow^ed either for yourself or forMr. Jackson, and do not forget to remembe


. Letters of Samuel Taylor Coleridge. ing impressed all at once (or so rapidly consecutivelyas to appear all at once) by a variety of impressions. Ifthere are a dozen people at table I hear, and cannot helpgiving some attention to what each one says, even thotighthere should be three or four talking at once. The detailof the Good and the Bad, of the two different makes ofmind, would form a not uninteresting brace of essays ina Spectator or Guardian. You will of course repay Southey instantly all themoney you may have borrow^ed either for yourself or forMr. Jackson, and do not forget to remember that a share ^ John Toljin the (or ^ fhe mLsspelling^, which -was in- possibly his brother James), with tentional, was an intimation to Lamb whom Coleridije spi-nt the last weeks that the letter was not to be opened, of liis staj in London, before he ^ A retired carrier, the owner of left for Portsmouth on the 27th of Greta Hall, who occupied the March, on his way to Malta. smaller of the two houses inter- ATrs. Wilson H. •?T fJl r i # ^1/ / / *?*??v ^,^y^- :>^- ^


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Keywords: ., bookcentury1800, bookdecade1890, bookpublisherbosto, bookyear1895