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A poem by Samuel Taylor Coleridge |
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Adaption From W. L. Bowles: 'I Yet Remain' |
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Title: Adaption From W. L. Bowles: 'I Yet Remain' Author: Samuel Taylor Coleridge [More Titles by Coleridge] ----I yet remain O God! how sweet it were to think, that all 1793 ['These lines,' which 'were found in Mr. Coleridge's handwriting in one of the Prayer Books in the Chapel of Jesus College, Cambridge,' were first published in _Lit. Rem._, 1836, i. 34. They were first collected in _P. W._, 1885, i. 127. The first six lines are (see _P. W._, 1893, p. 474) taken from Bowles's elegy 'On the Death of Henry Headley'. J. D. Campbell surmised that the last six lines 'practically belonged to the same poem', but of this there is no evidence. The note of the elegy is a lament for the 'untimely sorrow' which had befallen an innocent sufferer, and the additional lines, which Coleridge composed or quoted, moralized the theme. _Note._ Bowles wrote, I, alas, remain (l. 1), and 'Ordain'd for virtue' (l. 5).] [The end] GO TO TOP OF SCREEN |