United States or Vietnam ? Vote for the TOP Country of the Week !


Miss Coleridge thus expresses the views of her father's family in respect to Mr. Cottle's publications: "I take this opportunity of expressing my sense of many kind acts and much friendly conduct of Mr. Cottle toward my father, by whom he was ever remembered with respect and affection.

Walter Locke & Co.'s premises, Esplanade, East Mackintosh Burn & Co. and Morrison and Cottle's premises, Esplanade, East Bristol Hotel, Chowringhee Corporation Street, showing Hindustan Buildings Proprietors, Hindustan Co-operative Insurance Society, Ld. Old site of the present Continental Hotel, Chowringhee Hotel Continental, Chowringhee The Old United Service Club

Allsop, and the scheme of Pantisocracy, and Mr. Coleridge Letters from Mr. Southey concerning "Early Recollections" Letter from Mr. Southey: his Western journey Letter from Mr. Southey. Melancholy foreboding Mr. Southey's mental malady Letter from Mr. Foster, relating to Mr. Southey Mr. Cottle's letter to Mr. Foster, respecting Mr. Southey Sixteen letters from Mr.

What Southey says of Cottle's shop is true of the little bookstore in a certain old town of New England, which I used to frequent years ago, and where I got my first peep into Chaucer, and Spenser, and Fuller, and Sir Thomas Browne, and other renowned old authors, from whom I now derive so much pleasure and solacement.

"A terrible crash. And now the firm's reorganized; it's Hunter, Hunter & Brauer. Thorny told me about it. And Miss Sherman's married, and Miss Cottle's got consumption and has to live in Arizona, or somewhere. However, " she returned to the original theme, "Peter seems to be still enjoying life!

Coleridge engages to Lecture in Bristol, 1814. Disappoints his Audience, by an excursion into North Wales Mr. Coleridge's lines for a transparency at the capture of Buonaparte Mr. Coleridge's approval of Infant Schools Mr. Cottle's letter of remonstrance respecting opium Mr. Coleridge's distressing letters in reply Mr. Coleridge wishes to be placed in an Asylum Mr. Southey's letters respecting Mr.

The loan of L300, which the poet's enthusiastic admirer insisted on Cottle's conveying to him as from an unknown "young man of fortune who admired his talents," should cover a multitude of De Quincey's subsequent sins. It was indeed only upon Cottle's urgent representation that he had consented to reduce the sum from L500 to L300.

Cottle's and met Mrs. They carry me to London and set me down at the Temple, where my mind changed and I home, and to writing and heare my boy play on the lute, and a turne with my wife pleasantly in the garden by moonshine, my heart being in great peace, and so home to supper and to bed.

Miss Cottle's gloves were always expensive, and always dirty, and her elaborate silk petticoats were of soiled pale pinks and blues. Miss Cottle's neighbor was Miss Sherman, a freckled, red-headed, pale little girl, always shabby and pinched-looking, eager, silent, and hard-working.

The sad truth is that, as seems to have been always the case with him when living alone, he was during these months of his residence in London more constantly and hopelessly under the dominion of opium than ever. Cottle's." Perhaps, however, no very great indiscretion on Mr. Cottle's part was needed to enable Coleridge to trace the loan to so ardent a young admirer and disciple.