Thomas De Quincey
Essayist and critic, 1785-1859
Cited as De Quincey. — 214 quotations
-ics
All parts of knowledge have their origin in metaphysics, and finally, perhaps, revolve into it.
Aberrate
Their own defective and aberrating vision.
Abeyance
Keeping the sympathies of love and admiration in a dormant state, or state of abeyance.
Aceldama
The system of warfare . . . which had already converted immense tracts into one universal aceldama.
Acephalous
A false or acephalous structure of sentence.
Acquiesce
They were compelled to acquiesce in a government which they did not regard as just.
Adduce
Enough could not be adduced to satisfy the purpose of illustration.
Adequate
Ireland had no adequate champion.
Adhesion
His adhesion to the Tories was bounded by his approbation of their foreign policy.
Agonistic
As a scholar, he [Dr. Parr] was brilliant, but he consumed his power in agonistic displays.
Almighty
Poor Aroar can not live, and can not die, -- so that he is in an almighty fix.
Ambidexterity
Ignorant I was of the human frame, and of its latent powers, as regarded speed, force, and ambidexterity.
Amend
An instant emergency, granting no possibility for revision, or opening for amended thought.
Anabasis
The anabasis of Napoleon.
Analogous
Analogous tendencies in arts and manners.
Anecdotage
All history, therefore, being built partly, and some of it altogether, upon anecdotage, must be a tissue of lies.
Antinomy
Different commentators have deduced from it the very opposite doctrines. In some instances this apparent antinomy is doubtful.
Aphoristic
The method of the book is aphoristic.
Apparitor
Before any of his apparitors could execute the sentence, he was himself summoned away by a sterner apparitor to the other world.
Archaism
A select vocabulary corresponding (in point of archaism and remoteness from ordinary use) to our Scriptural vocabulary.
Armigerous
They belonged to the armigerous part of the population, and were entitled to write themselves Esquire.
Assign
It is not easy to assign a period more eventful.
Atrocious
Revelations . . . so atrocious that nothing in history approaches them.
Bah
Twenty-five years ago the vile ejaculation, Bah! was utterly unknown to the English public.
Barbarize
The Roman empire was barbarizing rapidly from the time of Trajan.
Bias
Me it had not biased in the one direction, nor should it have biased any just critic in the counter direction.
Bouncer
The stone must be a bouncer.
Can
Yet he could not but acknowledge to himself that there was something calculated to impress awe, . . . in the sudden appearances and vanishings . . . of the masque
Canorous
A long, lound, and canorous peal of laughter.
Casuistry
Casuistry in the science of cases (i.e., oblique deflections from the general rule).
Cataphysical
Some artists . . . have given to Sir Walter Scott a pile of forehead which is unpleassing and cataphysical.
Category
There is in modern literature a whole class of writers standing within the same category.
Cite
Cited by finger of God.
Coalesce
Certain combinations of ideas that, once coalescing, could not be shaken loose.
Conscious
The man who breathes most healthilly is least conscious of his own breathing.
Contretemps
In this unhappy contretemps.
Counterpole
The German prose offers the counterpole to the French style.
Court
Guilt and misery . . . court privacy and solitude.
Crimson
Ancient towers . . . beginning to crimson with the radiant luster of a cloudless July morning.
Crotchet
He ruined himself and all that trusted in him by crotchets that he could never explain to any rational man.
Crude
Crude, undigested masses of suggestion, furnishing rather raw materials for composition.
Cumbrous
That cumbrousand unwieldy style which disfigures English composition so extensively.
Deep
A question deep almost as the mystery of life.
Defeatured
Features when defeatured in the . . . way I have described.
Dent
A blow that would have made a dent in a pound of butter.
Deplume
The exposure and depluming of the leading humbugs of the age.
Dereligionize
He would dereligionize men beyond all others.
Descant
Upon that simplest of themes how magnificent a descant!
Devolution
The devolution of the crown through a . . . channel known and conformable to old constitutional requisitions.
Diction
His diction blazes up into a sudden explosion of prophetic grandeur.
Discontinuous
A path that is zigzag, discontinuous, and intersected at every turn by human negligence.
do
He was not be done, at his time of life, by frivolous offers of a compromise that might have secured him seventy-five per cent.
Dole
The supercilious condescension with which even his reputed friends doled out their praises to him.
Dowle
No feather, or dowle of a feather.
Drakestone
Internal earthquakes, that, not content with one throe, run along spasmodically, like boys playing at what is called drakestone.
Drape
The whole people were draped professionally.
Durable
An interest which from its object and grounds must be so durable.
Eariness
The sense of eariness, as twilight came on.
Emanate
That subsisting from of government from which all special laws emanate.
Engross
Laws that may be engrossed on a finger nail.
Enormity
The enormity of his learned acquisitions.
Entertain
I am not here going to entertain so large a theme as the philosophy of Locke.
Entwine
With whose imperial laurels might entwine no cypress.
Epichorial
Epichorial superstitions from every district of Europe.
Epiphany
An epic poet, if ever such a difficult birth should make its epiphany in Paris.
Esoteric
Enough if every age produce two or three critics of this esoteric class, with here and there a reader to understand them.
Eudemonist
I am too much of a eudæmonist; I hanker too much after a state of happiness both for myself and others.
Evanesce
I believe him to have evanesced or evaporated.
Evoke
A regulating discipline of exercise, that whilst evoking the human energies, will not suffer them to be wasted.
Executant
Great executants on the organ.
Exoteric
The foppery of an exoteric and esoteric doctrine.
Factitious
He acquires a factitious propensity, he forms an incorrigible habit, of desultory reading.
Fade
His masculine taste gave him a sense of something fade and ludicrous.
Fancy
At a great book sale in London, which had congregated all the fancy.
Fash
Without further fash on my part.
Ferment
The intellect of the age was a fermenting intellect.
Fix
Is he not living, then? No. is he dead, then? No, nor dead either. Poor Aroar can not live, and can not die, -- so that he is in an almighty fix.
Flagrant
A young man yet flagrant from the lash of the executioner or the beadle.
Fluent
Fluent as the flight of a swallow is the sultan's letter.
Fluxion
Less to be counted than the fluxions of sun dials.
Focalize
Light is focalized in the eye, sound in the ear.
Foible
A disposition radically noble and generous, clouded and overshadowed by superficial foibles.
Foliation
The . . . foliation must be in relation to the stem.
Forge
And off she [a ship] forged without a shock.
Fulminate
They fulminated the most hostile of all decrees.
Garrulous
The most garrulous people on earth.
Gossamery
The greatest master of gossamery affectation.
Gymnotus
One fearful shock, fearful but momentary, like that from the electric blow of the gymnotus.
Gyration
The gyrations of an ascending balloon.
Harridan
Such a weak, watery, wicked old harridan, substituted for the pretty creature I had been used to see.
Histrionic
Tainted with false and histrionic feeling.
Horrent
Rough and horrent with figures in strong relief.
Illimitable
The wild, the irregular, the illimitable, and the luxuriant, have their appropriate force of beauty.
Impassive
Impassive as the marble in the quarry.
Indemnification
No reward with the name of an indemnification.
Inosculate
The several monthly divisions of the journal may inosculate, but not the several volumes.
Inscrutable
Waiving a question so inscrutable as this.
Insulated
The special and insulated situation of the Jews.
Intellectual
I kept her intellectuals in a state of exercise.
Interpolation
Bentley wrote a letter . . . . upon the scriptural glosses in our present copies of Hesychius, which he considered interpolations from a later hand.
Intervene
Self-sown woodlands of birch, alder, etc., intervening the different estates.
Irritation
The whole body of the arts and sciences composes one vast machinery for the irritation and development of the human intellect.
Lag
She lags us if we poach.
Latitudinarianism
Fierce sectarianism bred fierce latitudinarianism.
Lection
We ourselves are offended by the obtrusion of the new lections into the text.
Letch
Some people have a letch for unmasking impostors, or for avenging the wrongs of others.
Limitary
The poor, limitary creature calling himself a man of the world.
Literator
That class of subjects which are interesting to the regular literator or black-letter “ bibliomane,” simply because they have once been interesting.
Literatus
Now we are to consider that our bright ideal of a literatus may chance to be maimed.
Livery
From the periodical deliveries of these characteristic articles of servile costume (blue coats) came our word livery.
Lock
Albemarle Street closed by a lock of carriages.
Ludicrous
A chapter upon German rhetoric would be in the same ludicrous predicament as Van Troil's chapter on the snakes of Iceland, which delivers its business in one summary sentence, announcing, that snakes in Iceland -- there are none.
Masquerade
That masquerade of misrepresentation which invariably accompanied the political eloquence of Rome.
merge
Whig and Tory were merged and swallowed up in the transcendent duties of patriots.
Monology
It was not by an insolent usurpation that Coleridge persisted in monology through his whole life.
Mystification
The reply of Pope seems very much as though he had been playing off a mystification on his Grace.
Nexus
Man is doubtless one by some subtile nexus . . . extending from the new-born infant to the superannuated dotard.
Oblique
This mode of oblique research, when a more direct one is denied, we find to be the only one in our power.
Ology
He had a smattering of mechanics, of physiology, geology, mineralogy, and all other ologies whatsoever.
Opprobrium
Being both dramatic author and dramatic performer, he found himself heir to a twofold opprobrium.
Orbicular
Orbicular as the disk of a planet.
Organology
The science of style, as an organ of thought, of style in relation to the ideas and feelings, might be called the organology of style.
Ornithomancy
Ornithomancy grew into an elaborate science.
Oscillate
The amount of superior families oscillates rather than changes, that is, it fluctuates within fixed limits.
Overgloom
Overgloomed by memories of sorrow.
Paling
They moved within the paling of order and decorum.
Petrify
The poor, petrified journeyman, quite unconscious of what he was doing.
Picturesque
What is picturesque as placed in relation to the beautiful and the sublime? It is . . . the characteristic pushed into a sensible excess.
Pique
Wars had arisen . . . upon a personal pique.
Plausibility
To give any plausibility to a scheme.
Propagate
Motion propagated motion, and life threw off life.
Protagonist
Shakespeare, the protagonist on the great of modern poetry.
Pseudo-romantic
The false taste, the pseudo-romantic rage.
Puerile
The French have been notorious through generations for their puerile affectation of Roman forms, models, and historic precedents.
Quantification
The quantification of the predicate belongs in part to Sir William Hamilton; viz., in its extension to negative propositions.
Quarter
Every creature that met us would rely on us for quartering.
Quiddity
The quiddity or characteristic difference of poetry as distinguished from prose.
Rat
Coleridge . . . incurred the reproach of having ratted, solely by his inability to follow the friends of his early days.
Raw
Approved himself to the raw judgment of the multitude.
Like savage hackney coachmen, they know where there is a raw.
Recalcitrate
The more heartily did one disdain his disdain, and recalcitrate his tricks.
Recoil
The solemnity of her demeanor made it impossible . . . that we should recoil into our ordinary spirits.
Rectification
After the rectification of his views, he was incapable of compromise with profounder shapes of error.
Recusant
The last rebellious recusants among the European family of nations.
Remotion
The whitish gleam [of the stars] was the mask conferred by the enormity of their remotion.
Resonant
Through every hour of the golden morning, the streets were resonant with female parties of young and old.
Rid
In never ridded myself of an overmastering and brooding sense of some great calamity traveling toward me.
Rigmarole
Often one's dear friend talks something which one scruples to call rigmarole.
Rigorous
We do not connect the scattered phenomena into their rigorous unity.
Rime
The trees were now covered with rime.
Rubric
Nay, as a duty, it had no place or rubric in human conceptions before Christianity.
Runagate
Wretched runagates from the jail.
Sanatory
Sanatory ordinances for the protection of public health, such as quarantine, fever hospitals, draining, etc.
Sanction
Would have counseled, or even sanctioned, such perilous experiments.
Scene
Probably no lover of scenes would have had very long to wait for some explosions between parties, both equally ready to take offense, and careless of giving it.
Scenic
All these situations communicate a scenical animation to the wild romance, if treated dramatically.
Scrap
I have no materials -- not a scrap.
Sequacious
Milton was not an extensive or discursive thinker, as Shakespeare was; for the motions of his mind were slow, solemn, and sequacious, like those of the planets.
Severally
There must be an auditor to check and revise each severally by itself.
Shade
New shades and combinations of thought.
Shilly-shally
She lost not one of her forty-five minutes in picking and choosing, -- no shilly-shally in Kate.
Shipshape
Even then she expressed her scorn for the lubbery executioner's mode of tying a knot, and did it herself in a shipshape orthodox manner.
Significance
With this brain I must work, in order to give significancy and value to the few facts which I possess.
Sip
A sip is all that the public ever care to take from reservoirs of abstract philosophy.
Sluice
He dried his neck and face, which he had been sluicing with cold water.
Smug
The smug and scanty draperies of his style.
Snob
Those who work for lower wages during a strike are called snobs, the men who stand out being “nobs”
Somnolent
He had no eye for such phenomena, because he had a somnolent want of interest in them.
Special
To this special evil an improvement of style would apply a special redress.
Stamina
He succeeded to great captains who had sapped the whole stamina and resistance of the contest.
Substitute
Ladies [in Shakespeare's age] . . . wore masks as the sole substitute known to our ancestors for the modern parasol.
Subsultory
Flippancy opposed to solemnity, the subsultory to the continuous, -- these are the two frequent extremities to which the French manner betrays men.
Subsume
To subsume one proposition under another.
Subsumption
But whether you see cause to go against the rule, or the subsumption under the rule.
Summation
Of this series no summation is possible to a finite intellect.
Supreme
Each would be supreme within its own sphere, and those spheres could not but clash.
Sycophantic
Sycophantic servants to the King of Spain.
Sycophantish
Sycophantish satirists that forever humor the prevailing folly.
Sylvan
The traditional memory of a rural and a sylvan region . . . is usually exact as well as tenacious.
Synchronize
The path of this great empire, through its arch of progress, synchronized with that of Christianity.
Synonym
All languages tend to clear themselves of synonyms as intellectual culture advances, the superfluous words being taken up and appropriated by new shades and combinations of thought evolved in the progress of society.
Tantamount
The certainty that delay, under these circumstances, was tantamount to ruin.
Terminology
The barbarous effect produced by a German structure of sentence, and a terminology altogether new.
Tilth
The tilth and rank fertility of its golden youth.
Tooling
The fine tooling and delicate tracery of the cabinet artist is lost upon a building of colossal proportions.
Torpedinous
Fishy were his eyes; torpedinous was his manner.
Tranquil
A style clear, tranquil, easy to follow.
Transpire
The story of Paulina's and Maximilian's mutual attachment had transpired through many of the travelers.
Travesty
The second edition is not a recast, but absolutely a travesty of the first.
Trepan
Guards even of a dozen men were silently trepanned from their stations.
Trivial
As a scholar, meantime, he was trivial, and incapable of labor.
Tumefy
To swell, tumefy, stiffen, not the diction only, but the tenor of the thought.
Tumor
Better, however, to be a flippant, than, by a revolting form of tumor and perplexity, to lead men into habits of intellect such as result from the modern vice of English style.
Tumultuary
Sudden flight or tumultuary skirmish.
Tympany
A plethoric a tautologic tympany of sentence.
Unballasted
Unballasted by any sufficient weight of plan.
Unicity
Not unity, but what the schoolmen call unicity.
Unify
A comprehensive or unifying act of the judging faculty.
Unique
The phenix, the unique of birds.
Unreliable
Alcibiades . . . was too unsteady, and (according to Mr. Coleridge's coinage) “unreliable;” or perhaps, in more correct English, too “unrelyuponable.”
Upshot
We account it frailty that threescore years and ten make the upshot of man's pleasurable existence.
Venerable
He was a man of eternal self-sacrifice, and that is always venerable.
Vernile
The example . . . of vernile scurrility.
Vertiginous
Some vertiginous whirl of fortune.
Vice
The coachman's hand was viced between his upper and lower thigh.
Vicious
A charge against Bentley of vicious reasoning.
Virtual
To mask by slight differences in the manners a virtual identity in the substance.
Virtue
A man was driven to depend for his security against misunderstanding, upon the pure virtue of his syntax.
Voluminous
Over which dusky draperies are hanging, and voluminous curtains have long since fallen.
Voluptuous
Sink back into your voluptuous repose.
Wake
This effect followed immediately in the wake of his earliest exertions.
Wield
Her newborn power was wielded from the first by unprincipled and ambitions men.
Wrench
The injurious effect upon biographic literature of all such wrenches to the truth, is diffused everywhere.