Samuel Taylor Coleridge Quotes About Feelings
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Every human feeling is greater and larger than its exciting cause-a proof, I think, that man is designed for a higher state of existence.
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To know, to esteem, to love,-and then to part, Makes up life's tale to many a feeling heart.
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I do not wish you to act from these truths; no, still and always act from your feelings; only meditate often on these truths that sometime or other they may become your feelings.
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To doubt has more of faith ... than that blank negation of all such thoughts and feelings which is the lot of the herd of church-and-meeting trotters.
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The first duty of a wise advocate is to convince his opponents that he understands their arguments, and sympathies with their just feelings.
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Deep thinking is attainable only by a man of deep feeling, and all truth is a species of revelation
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Genius is the power of carrying the feelings of childhood into the powers of manhood.
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How deep a wound to morals and social purity has that accursed article of the celibacy of the clergy been! Even the best and most enlightened men in Romanist countries attach a notion of impurity to the marriage of a clergyman. And can such a feeling be without its effect on the estimation of the wedded life in general? Impossible! and the morals of both sexes in Spain, Italy, France, and. prove it abundantly.
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A man's as old as he's feeling. A woman as old as she looks.
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To carry feelings of childhood into the powers of adulthood, to combine the child's sense of wonder and novelty with the appearances which every day for years has rendered familiar, this is the character and privilege of genius, and one of the marks which distinguish it from talent.
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