Biographia Epistolaris, Volume 1. by Samuel Taylor Coleridge
page 109 of 376 (28%)
page 109 of 376 (28%)
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situated; an excellent room and bed are at your service. If you had any
scruple about putting me to additional expense, you should pay me seven shillings a week, and I should gain by you. Mrs. Coleridge is remarkably well, and sends her kind love. Pray, my dear, dear Poole, do not neglect to write to me every week. Your critique on "Joan of Arc" and the "Religious Musings" I expect. Your dear mother I long to see. Tell her I love her with filial respectfulness. Excellent woman! Farewell; God bless you and your grateful and affectionate S. T. COLERIDGE. Mr. C.'s first volume of poems was published by Mr. Cottle in the beginning of April, 1796, and his sense of the kind conduct of the latter to him throughout the whole affair was expressed in the following manner on a blank leaf in a copy of the work: LETTER 30. Dear Cottle, On the blank leaf of my Poems I can most appropriately write my acknowledgments to you for your too disinterested conduct in the purchase of them. Indeed, if ever they should acquire a name and character, it might be truly said the world owed them to you. Had it not been for you, none perhaps of them would have been published, and some |
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