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Definition of Pantisocracy
1. n. A Utopian community, in which all should rule equally, such as was devised by Coleridge, Lovell, and Southey, in their younger days.
Definition of Pantisocracy
1. Noun. A utopian social system in which every member participates equally in government ¹
¹ Source: wiktionary.com
Definition of Pantisocracy
1. [n -CIES]
Lexicographical Neighbors of Pantisocracy
Literary usage of Pantisocracy
Below you will find example usage of this term as found in modern and/or classical literature:
1. The Literary History of the American Revolution, 1763-1783 by Moses Coit Tyler (1897)
"... felicity both fascinated and misled many readers in Europe—His influence upon
the English poets, especially the inventors of " pantisocracy. ..."
2. Southey by Edward Dowden (1880)
"WESTMINSTER, OXFORD, pantisocracy, AND MARRIAGE. OF Southey during his four years
at Westminster we know little; his fragment of autobiography, ..."
3. The Early Life of Robert Southey, 1774-1803 by William Haller (1917)
"... pantisocracy I THE winter of 1794 passed,1 and what was to become of Robert
Southey remained undecided. Then a young man of twenty-one named Coleridge ..."
4. Library Notes by Addison Peale Russell (1875)
"You,' he wrote to his brother Tom, ' are unpleasantly situated, so is my mother,
so were we all till this grand scheme of pantisocracy flashed upon our ..."
5. Samuel Taylor Coleridge and the English Romantic School by Alois Brandl (1887)
"... French Terror—Godwin—Enlistment—Discharge—Letter to Brother—Return to
Cambridge—Southey —Plan of pantisocracy—Bristol—Lectures—The Fricker Family— The ..."
6. Acme Library of Standard Biography (1880)
"WESTMINSTER, OXFORD, pantisocracy, AND MARRIAGE. OF Southey during his four years
at Westminster we know little ; his fragment of autobiography, ..."