[414]. I.e., “The faculty which makes many into one”—the creative imagination. This form is much better than “esemplastic,” which Coleridge adopts in the Biographia, for there one stumbles over the second syllable, and supposes it to be the preposition ἐν.
[415]. P. 258.
[416]. Pp. 274, 275.
[417]. P. 293.
[418]. Ed. E. H. Coleridge, 2 vols., London, 1895.
[419]. i. 97, ed. cit.
[420]. Miss Mary Evans, Miss Sarah Fricker, and an uncertainly Christian-named Miss Brunton. More in excelsis Coleridgeano he, being engaged to No. 2 and desiring to marry No. 1, “hoped that he might be cured” by the “exquisite beauty and uncommon accomplishments” of No. 3. See a page or two (89) earlier.
[421]. P. 157.
[422]. P. 163.
[423]. P. 181.