Page 189, l. 3: substitute Beauties and Feelings, such as would have been.
l. 6: substitute Friends whom I never more may meet again.
191, l. 10: for wild r. wide; and the two following lines thus:
Less gross than bodily: and of such hues
As veil the Almighty Spirit.
192, l. 21: omit the before Light.
195, l. 10: for guard r. guage.
207. l. 2: punctuate thus, reading Sound for sounds;
And one low piping Sound more sweet than all—
211, l. 10: for fair day r. Fair-day.
l. 11: for sweet r. wild.
212, l. 2: for dead r. deep.
l. 3: for Fill'd r. Fill.
l. 5: for fills r. thrills.
213, l. 4: for traces r. Trances.
217, l. 12: r. psychological.
240, l. 15: r. Life, and Life's Effluence, Cloud at once and Shower.
242: in the Note for wind r. Storm-wind.
257, l. 8: for their r. thy.
l.14: read Ah! that once more I were a careless child!
269, l. 8: r. a mark of interrogation after self.
276. The metre of this ode, especially in the fifth line of
each stanza, is written with a foreknowledge of the Tune,
and must therefore be read as it would be sung.
282, for 8 and 9, substitute:
The substance from its shadow. Infinite Love,
Whose Latence is the plenitude of All,
Thou with retracted Beams, and Self-eclipse
Veiling revealest thy eternal Sun.
283, l. 20: for rebellions r. rebellious
287, l. 12: for mortal ministers r. human ministers.
298, l. 1: for blended with the clouds r. looming on the mist.
for 10 and 11 substitute:
The power of Justice, like a name all Light,
Shone from thy brow;
Page:Sibylline Leaves (Coleridge).djvu/22
Jump to navigation
Jump to search