Samuel Taylor Coleridge [ Art and Literature ]
… If ye love not your earthly parent, how can ye love your father in heaven?’ (McFarland 126-127) Coleridge thus adopted a Burkean vision of the importance of domestic affections for the formation of society. Like Burke, Coleridge believed that familial affections set the foundations of man’s love to his nation, and to humanity at … feelings of dread, or nightmares in his notebooks so as to trace their origins to specific periods of his life: 8 . Edmund Burke, Reflections on the Revolution in France and on the Proceedings in Certain Societies in London Relative to …
Affection | Benevolence | Conversation | Family | Friendship | Imagination | Patriotism | Science | Sympathy
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