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7/15/2025, 11:39:06 PM
7/10/2025, 10:00:37 PM
>The clever man, so-called, the man of talent, shuts out his genius by setting up his conscious will as a positive entity.
>The true man of genius deliberately subordinates himself, reduces himself to a negative, and allows his genius to play through him as it will
>All our little great men, our one-poem poets, our one-picture painters, have merely failed to perfect themselves as instruments.
> The Genius who wrote The Ancient Mariner is no less sublime than he who wrote The Tempest; but Coleridge had some incapacity to catch and express the thoughts of his Genius-was ever such wooden stuff as his conscious work?
Mogged by Yeats both poetically and physically but had some insight.
>The true man of genius deliberately subordinates himself, reduces himself to a negative, and allows his genius to play through him as it will
>All our little great men, our one-poem poets, our one-picture painters, have merely failed to perfect themselves as instruments.
> The Genius who wrote The Ancient Mariner is no less sublime than he who wrote The Tempest; but Coleridge had some incapacity to catch and express the thoughts of his Genius-was ever such wooden stuff as his conscious work?
Mogged by Yeats both poetically and physically but had some insight.
6/18/2025, 4:19:37 AM
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