I wonder if his best known works (which apparently stand apart on their own and are not indicative of his general writing) were "inspired" beyond just drugs.
Why the odd imagery of a woman waiting for her "demon-lover"?
Reminds me of Santana and Supernatural, which he claims he wrote by way of automatic writing (I think with the assistance of Metatron in his case).
So, I talked to my mom earlier, brought up the Dumas stuff, and you know what she said to me?
"Did you know Samuel Taylor Coleridge was high as a kite when he wrote Kubla Khan?"
She couldn't even say what he was high on, either.
That's a pretty cool synchronicity, since we've not talked about Coleridge before. She is certainly well read though. :)
Yeah he never finished Kubla Khan. It’s considered classic lit and it’s unfinished.
I wonder if his best known works (which apparently stand apart on their own and are not indicative of his general writing) were "inspired" beyond just drugs.
Why the odd imagery of a woman waiting for her "demon-lover"?
Reminds me of Santana and Supernatural, which he claims he wrote by way of automatic writing (I think with the assistance of Metatron in his case).