[Coleridge’s Literary Remains, Volume 4. by Samuel Taylor Coleridge]@TWC D-Link book
Coleridge’s Literary Remains, Volume 4.

INTRODUCTION, p
7/14

If neither the demands of poetic taste, nor the peculiar character of oracles, were of avail, yet morality and piety might seem enough to convince any one that this vision of Micaiah, (2 'Chron'.

c.xviii.18, &c.) was the poetic form, the veil, of the Prophet's meaning.

And a most sublime meaning it was.

Mr.Oxlee should recollect that the forms and personages of visions are all and always symbolical.
Ib.pp.

39-40.
It will not avail us much, however, to have established their incorporeity or spirituality, if what R.Moses affirms be true * * *.
This impious paradox * *.


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