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Creator (Definite): Samuel Taylor ColeridgeDate: 1817
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Quoted by
Henry Maudsley, The Physiology and Pathology of the Mind. 1867.
Description:note to 'By looking to the end which is desirable, an act naturally very distasteful, but which is necessary as means, may, by habituation, be rendered indifferent or even pleasing ; and many scoundrels are thus gradually fashioned, themselves unaware of the grievous issue in which many slight effects have imperceptibly culminated.' (142-143);
'Nemo repente fuit turpissimus is really the expression of the physical nature
of the growth of character."Custom ....
Constrains e'en stubborn Nature to obey;
Whom dispossessing oft he doith essay
To govern in her right; and with a pace
So soft and gentle does he win his way,
That she unawares is caught in his embrace,
And tho' deflowered and thralled nought feels her foul disgrace."Stanza of Gilbert West, quoted by Coleridge in his Biographia Literaria.' (143)