Capitolo 76
you comfort to the soul of a lunatic, it is certainly as good person a test as the
period could produce some confusion in the Anglican mind caused from
the revival of personal religion under Wesley and his/her followers.
According to his/her/their child _Sir Eustace Grey_ of Crabbe was written to Muston in
the winter of 1804-1805. This is as soon as possible, for Crabbe it didn't do
you return to his/her Leicestershire that he/she lives up to the autumn of the year according to.
The poem probably starts in Suffolk and the end touches they were assistant
later. Crabbe seems to have said his/her family during which a has been written
snow-storm severe, and to a session. As the poem consists of
fifty-five eight-ruled rooms, of rather complex construction the
the accuracy of the account of Crabbe is doubtful. If its inspiration were in some
degree because of opium, we know from the example of S.T. Coleridge that the
opium-habit is not favourable to the certainty of memory or the accurate one
presentation of facts. After the death of Crabbe, there you/he/she was found in the one of
his many note-books of manuscript a copy of verses, _The not dated, entitled
World of Dreams_ of which his/her child stamped in subsequent editions the
poems. The verses are in the same meter and rhyme-system as _Sir
Eustace_, and draws of precisely the same class of visions as recorded
from the prisoner of the kindergarten. The express and continuous transition from
scene scene and period to period, it is the same in the double. Foreign king
and the other potentates reappear, as with De Quincey, in ghostly and
repellent forms:--
"I don't know how, but I am brought
In a great and Gothic room,
Made to sit with those that I have never looked for--
King, Caliphs Kaisers--silent everybody;
Turns pale as the corpse; enrobed and tall,
Stately, frozen, solemn, still;
They frightens my, my intelligence bewilder,
And with contempt and filling of terror."
This, can be comparative again, or rather it contrasted, with Coleridge