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Love Quote by Samuel Taylor Coleridge

"All thoughts, all passions, all delights Whatever stirs this mortal frame All are but ministers of Love And feed His sacred flame"

About this Quote

Coleridge turns the body into a chapel and our inner life into clergy. The line’s power is its audacity: it doesn’t argue that love is important, it demotes everything else. Thoughts, passions, delights - the whole busy parliament of the mind - are recast as “ministers,” not sovereigns. Even intellect is subordinated, drafted into service. That’s Romanticism at its most strategic: the era’s rebellion against cold rationalism doesn’t reject thinking so much as it insists that thinking is never cleanly separate from desire.

The phrasing “Whatever stirs this mortal frame” does two things at once. It admits the body’s messiness (stirring is visceral, involuntary) while also folding that mess into a single transcendent engine. “Mortal frame” keeps death on the page, so love’s “sacred flame” isn’t a Hallmark glow; it’s a fire lit against finitude. Calling it “His” flame gives love a quasi-divine masculinity that fits the period’s habit of spiritualizing emotion without fully leaving Christian cadence behind. It’s not accidental that the grammar echoes hymn and liturgy: Coleridge borrows religious authority to crown an experience that, in the Romantic imagination, can rival religion.

The subtext is control disguised as surrender. If every impulse ultimately “feeds” love, then love becomes the master narrative that justifies obsession, consolation, creativity, even anguish. Coleridge isn’t merely praising love; he’s building a cosmology where nothing gets to be meaningless, because everything, even pain, can be made fuel.

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All thoughts, all passions, all delights Whatever stirs this mortal frame All are but ministers of Love And feed His sac
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Samuel Taylor Coleridge

Samuel Taylor Coleridge (October 21, 1772 - July 25, 1834) was a Poet from England.

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