The Complete Poetical Works of Samuel Taylor Coleridge
Chapter 354 : G.o.d's Image, Sister of the Cherubim!First published in 1893. Compare the last l

G.o.d's Image, Sister of the Cherubim!

First published in 1893. Compare the last line of _The Ode to the Departing Year_ (_ante_, p. 168).

43

And re-implace G.o.d's Image in the Soul.

First published in 1893.

44

And arrows steeled with wrath.

First published in 1893.

45

Lov'd the same Love, and hated the same hate, Breath'd in his soul! etc. etc.

First published in 1893.

46

O man! thou half-dead Angel!

First published in 1893.

47

Thy stern and sullen eye, and thy dark brow Chill me, like dew-damps of th' unwholesome Night.

My Love, a timorous and tender flower, Closes beneath thy Touch, unkindly man!

Breath'd on by gentle gales of Courtesy And cheer'd by suns.h.i.+ne of impa.s.sion'd look-- Then opes its petals of no vulgar hues.

First published in 1893. See _Remorse_, Act I, Sc. II, ll. 81-4 (_ante_, p. 826). Compare _Osorio_, Act. I, ll. 80-3 (_ante_, p. 522).

48

With skill that never Alchemist yet told, Made drossy Lead as ductile as pure Gold.

First published in 1893.

49

Grant me a Patron, gracious Heaven! whene'er My unwash'd follies call for Penance drear: But when more hideous guilt this heart infests Instead of fiery coals upon my Pate, O let a _t.i.tled_ Patron be my Fate;-- That fierce Compendium of aegyptian Pests!

Right reverend Dean, right honourable Squire, Lord, Marquis, Earl, Duke, Prince,--or if aught higher, However proudly nicknamed, he shall be Anathema Maranatha to me!

First published, _Lit. Rem._, i. 281.

FOOTNOTES:

[988:1] One of the earliest of Coleridge's Notebooks, which fell into the hands of his old schoolfellow, John Mathew Gutch, the printer and proprietor of _Felix Farley's Bristol Journal_, was purchased by the Trustees of the British Museum in 1868, and is now included in _Add.

MSS._ as No. 27901. The fragments of verse contained in the notebook are included in _P. W._ 1893, pp. 453-8. The notebook as a whole was published by Professor A. Brandl in 1896 (_S. T. Coleridge's Notizbuch aus den Jahren 1795-1798_). Nineteen entries are included by H. N.

Coleridge in _Poems and Poetical Fragments_ published in _Literary Remains_, 1836, i. 277-80.

[988:2] An incorrect version of the lines was published in _Lit. Rem._, ii. 280.

FRAGMENTS[996:1]

1

O'er the raised earth the gales of evening sigh; And, see, a daisy peeps upon its slope!

I wipe the dimming waters from mine eye; Even on the cold grave lights the Cherub Hope.[996:2]

? 1787. First published in _Poems_, 1852 (p. 379, Note 1). First collected 1893.

2

Sea-ward, white gleaming thro' the busy scud With arching Wings, the sea-mew o'er my head Posts on, as bent on speed, now pa.s.saging Edges the stiffer Breeze, now, yielding, drifts, Now floats upon the air, and sends from far A wildly-wailing Note.

Now first published from an MS. Compare Fragment No. 29 of Fragments from a Notebook.

3

OVER MY COTTAGE

The Pleasures sport beneath the thatch; But Prudence sits upon the watch; Nor Dun nor Doctor lifts the latch!

1799. First published from an MS. in 1893. Suggested by Lessing's _Sinngedicht_ No. 104.

4

In the lame and limping metre of a barbarous Latin poet--

Chapter 354 : G.o.d's Image, Sister of the Cherubim!First published in 1893. Compare the last l
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