At individual point in his journal...
At individual point in his journals, Coleridge complains that he'll not be able to "los[e] [himself] in the rate of incurvations of [a Mulberry's tree's] Branches and interweaving of [the tree's] Roots" because the Mulberry is "Shakespeare's tree" To whit, Coleridge declares that the birch will be his "only Tree" the tree in which he will obtain lost. Coleridge decides to write around the point in dispute of inheritance. In concluded Travels, Martin Corless-Smith writes public of that inheritance (with what might best be called ancestor anxiety) and, to cite Charles Darwin, within
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