Page:Poems on Various Subjects - Coleridge (1796).djvu/11

Rh The communicativeness of our nature leads us to describe our own sorrows; in the endeavor to describe them intellectual activity is exerted; and by a benevolent law of our nature from intellectual activity a pleasure results which is gradually associated and mingles as a corrective with the painful subject of the description. True! it may be answered, but how are the interested in your sorrows or your description? We are for ever attributing a personal unity to imaginary aggregates. What is the but a term for a number of scattered individuals of whom as many will be interested in these sorrows as have experienced the same or similar? "Holy be the Lay, Which mourning soothes the mourner on his way!"