He could be content if the species were continued like trees. Religio Medici, Part II.
[335]. Walks gowned. Lamb’s Sonnet, written at Cambridge, August 15, 1819.
As it has been said. Cf. the passage quoted later (p. 340) from Coleridge.
[339]. Mr. Coleridge. See Coleridge’s Literary Remains, vol. II. 1836. On p. 340, l. 4 the phrase, as written by Coleridge, should be ‘Sir-Thomas-Brownness.’
[341]. Stuff of the conscience. Othello, I. 2.
To give us pause. Hamlet, III. I.
Cloys with sameness. Cf. Shakespeare’s Venus and Adonis, XIX., ‘cloy thy lips with loathed satiety.’
Note. One of no mark. 1 Henry IV., III. 2.
Without form and void. Genesis, I. 2.
He saw nature in the elements of its chaos. Religio Medici, Part I.