id author title date pages extension mime words sentences flesch summary cache txt 8488 Coleridge, Samuel Taylor The Literary Remains of Samuel Taylor Coleridge, Volume 1 .txt text/plain 90861 5811 74 form, the fall of a man, whose great bad actions have cast a disastrous The good great man?--three treasures, love and light, the day; but commensurate with the good sense, taste, and feeling, to Men of mere common sense have no theory or means of The man who reads a work meant for immediate effect on one age with the nature, like the leaves of a book, before the eyes of his creature, humanizing nature, of infusing the thoughts and passions of man into In this sense nature itself is to a religious observer the art of God; whom we love; for so only can he hope to produce any work truly natural accomplish the will and command of my God. We ought not to relieve a poor man merely because our own feelings impel the beautiful in nature has been appropriated to the works of man, just ./cache/8488.txt ./txt/8488.txt