Confessions of an English Opium-Eater and Other Writings
New Edition
Thomas De Quincey
Edited by Robert Morrison
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Thomas De Quincey produced two versions of his most famous work, Confessions of an English Opium-Eater. He launched himself to fame with the first version, which appeared in two instalments in the London Magazine for September and October 1821, and which created such a sensation that the London's editors issued it again the following year in book form.
Posted on October 30, 2015
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By Robert Morrison According to Gerard Manley Hopkins, when Thomas De Quincey was living in Glasgow in the mid-1840s he 'would wake blue and trembling in the morning and languidly ask the servant 'Would you pour out some of that black mixture from the bottle there.' The servant would give it him, generally not knowing what it was. After this he would revive.' What 'it' was, of course, was opium, the drug that De Quincey became addicted to in 1813 -- two hundred years ago this year.
Posted on March 21, 2013
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By Robert Morrison In The Metaphysics of Morals (1797), Immanuel Kant gives the standard eighteenth-century line on opium. Its "dreamy euphoria," he declares, makes one "taciturn, withdrawn, and uncommunicative," and it is "therefore'¦permitted only as a medicine." Eighty-five years later, in The Gay Science (1882), Friedrich Nietzsche too discusses drugs, but he has a very different story to tell.
Posted on February 21, 2013
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