COLERIDGE, SAMUEL TAYLOR

1772–1834, English poet and man of letters, b. Ottery St. Mary, Devonshire; one of the most brilliant, versatile, and influential figures in the English romantic movement.

Early Life

The son of a clergyman, Coleridge was a precocious, dreamy child. He attended Christ's Hospital school in London and was already formidably erudite upon entering Cambridge in 1791. His erratic university career was interrupted by his impulsive enlistment in the dragoons, from which his brothers managed to extricate him. In 1794 he met the poet Robert Southey, who shared his political and social idealism, and together they planned to establish a small utopian community, which they called a pantisocracy, on the banks of the Susquehanna River in the United States. The plan failed to materialize for practical reasons. In 1795 Coleridge married Sarah Fricker, the sister of Southey's fiancée, with whom he was never happy. They settled in Nether Stowey in 1797, and shortly thereafter William Wordsworth and his sister Dorothy moved into a house nearby.

Works

Although Coleridge had been busy and productive, publishing both poetry and much topical prose, it was not until his friendship with Wordsworth that he wrote his best poems. In 1798 Coleridge and Wordsworth jointly published the volume Lyrical Ballads, whose poems and preface made it a seminal work and manifesto of the romantic movement in English literature.

Coleridge's main contribution to the volume was the haunting, dreamlike ballad "The Rime of the Ancient Mariner." This long poem, as well as "Kubla Khan" and "Christabel," written during the same period, are Coleridge's best-known works. All three make use of exotic images and supernatural themes. "Dejection: An Ode," published in 1802, was the last of Coleridge's great poems. It shows the influence of (or affinity to) some poetic ideas of Wordsworth, notably the meditation upon self, nature, and the relationships among emotion, sense experience, and understanding. His Confessions of an Enquiring Spirit (ed. by his nephew H. N. Coleridge) was published posthumously in 1840.

Later Life

While an undergraduate Coleridge had begun to take laudanum (an opium derivative then legal and widely used) for his ailments, and he was addicted by about 1800. That year, after having traveled with Wordsworth in Germany, Coleridge moved with his family to Keswick in the Lake District. He continued his studies and writings on philosophy, religion, contemporary affairs, and literature. In 1808 he separated from his wife permanently, and from 1816 until his death he lived in London at the home of Dr. James Gilman, who brought his opium habit under control.

Assessment

Coleridge worked for many years on his Biographia Literaria (1817), containing accounts of his literary life and critical essays on philosophical and literary subjects. It presents Coleridge's theories of the creative imagination, but its debt to other writers, notably the German idealist philosophers, is often so heavy that the line between legitimate borrowing and plagiarism becomes blurred. This borrowing tendency, evident also in some of his poetry, together with Coleridge's notorious inability to finish projects—and his proposal of impractical ones—made him a problematic figure.

Coleridge's lifelong friend Charles Lamb called him a "damaged archangel." Indeed, 20th-century editorial scholarship has unearthed additional evidence of plagiarism; thus, Coleridge is still a controversial figure. However, the originality and beauty of his best poetry and his enormous influence on the intellectual and aesthetic life of his time is unquestioned. He was reputedly a brilliant conversationalist, and his lectures on Shakespeare remain among the most important statements in literary criticism.

Bibliography

See his collected letters, ed. by E. L. Griggs (6 vol., 1956–71); Notebooks: 1794–1808, ed. by K. Coburn (4 vol., 1957–61); collected works, ed. by K. Coburn (5 vol., 1969–72); biographies by E. K. Chambers (1938), L. Hanson (1938, repr. 1962), W. J. Bate (1968), and R. Holmes (2 vol., 1989, 1999); studies by J. D. Campbell (1894), C. Woodring (1961), M. Suther (1965), and N. Fruman (1972); J. L. Lowes, The Road to Xanadu (rev. ed. 1964); R. L. Brett, ed., Coleridge (1973).

Sara Coleridge

Coleridge's daughter, Sara Coleridge, 1802–52, has literary standing in her own right. Her translation of An Account of the Abipones (1822) shows a great facility in both Latin and English. Her best work is Phantasmion (1837), a fairy tale.

Bibliography

See her Memoir and Letters (1873, repr. 1974); biography by E. L. Griggs (1941, repr. 1973).

____________________

The Columbia Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition Copyright© 2004, Columbia University Press. Licensed from Lernout & Hauspie Speech Products N.V. All rights reserved.

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...H., ed.: Letters of Samuel Taylor Coleridge , 2 vols., 1895 Letters...Letters Hitherto Uncollected by Samuel Taylor Coleridge , 1913 Letters to Elstlin...Unpublished Letters from Samuel Taylor Coleridge to the Rev. John Prior Estlin...
...Life Campbell, J. D.: Samuel Taylor Coleridge, a Narrative of the Events...The Poetical Works of Samuel Taylor Coleridge , 1893 Chambers, Life Chambers, E. K.: Samuel Taylor Coleridge: A Biographical Study...
...Life Campbell, J. D.: Samuel Taylor Coleridge, a Narrative of the Events...The Poetical Works of Samuel Taylor Coleridge , 1893 Chambers, Life Chambers, E. K.: Samuel Taylor Coleridge: A Biographical Study...
...Life Campbell, J. D.: Samuel Taylor Coleridge, a Nar rative of the Events...The Poetical Works of Samuel Taylor Coleridge , 1893 Chambers, Life Chambers, E. K.: Samuel Taylor Coleridge: A Biographical Study...
...257, 680 n., 761 n. Coleridge, Samuel Taylor , by James Dykes Campbell...n., 753 n., 772 n. Coleridge, Samuel Taylor, and the English Romantic...417, 456 n., 617 n. Coleridge, Mrs. Samuel Taylor Sarah Fricker, afterwards...
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...Edgar Allan Poe Reading Samuel Taylor Coleridge. by Alexander Schlutz THE...Edgar Allan Poes reading of Samuel Taylor Coleridge it seems advisable to begin...construe the relationship of Samuel Taylor Coleridge and Edgar Allan Poe within...
Samuel Coleridge-Taylor: the early years. by Jeffrey...standard reference books state that Samuel Coleridge-Taylor was born in London on August...was the father of the composer Samuel Coleridge-Taylor (Fyfe 1962, 407). The Taylors...
The marriage of Samuel Coleridge-Taylor and Jessie Walmisley. by...last Saturday of 1899, Samuel Coleridge-Taylor married Jessie Sarah Fleetwood...through the college was Samuel Coleridge-Taylor. Jessie first noticed him...
Samuel Taylor Coleridge and the Anglican Church Coleridge...Ryan Luke Savin Herrick Wright, Samuel Taylor Coleridge and the Anglican Church (University...in his religious thought. In Samuel Taylor Coleridge and the Anglican Church, Luke...
The Notebooks of Samuel Taylor Coleridge Volume 5: 1827-1834. by Seamus Perry The Notebooks of Samuel Taylor Coleridge Volume 5: 1827-1834...predecessors, The Notebooks of Samuel Taylor Coleridge, Volume 5, is in two separately...
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magazine articles on: Coleridge Samuel Taylor  - 128 results

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Violin Concertos by Samuel Coleridge-taylor (1875-1912) and Dvorak (1841-1904) by Edith Eisler Violin Concertos by Samuel Coleridge-Taylor (1875-1912) and Dvorak (1841-1904). Philippe...
Coleridge in the cavalry by Robert Woodall When...for the Craven Scholarship won by that Samuel Butler who was to become headmaster...clothing. But if, to anyone who knew Samuel Taylor Coleridge, even that minor display of practicality...
Gang: Coleridge, the Hutchinsons the Wordsworths in 1802. THE GANG: COLERIDGE, THE HUTCHINSONS THE WORDSWORTHS...brief period in the lives of what Samuel Taylor Coleridge called "the Gang"--Coleridge...
At Large and at Small. Coleridge the Runaway In 1779, when Samuel Taylor Coleridge was seven, he asked his mother to slice...of us knows anyone even remotely like Samuel Taylor Coleridge. But all of us know someone very much...
...WE all know now that Samuel Taylor Coleridges poem Kubla...Vision in a Dream, Mr Coleridge describes as the real...or the admission by a Samuel Beckett that he didnt...looks and derision. Coleridge was of his time. He...
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...this circle - particularly Samuel Taylor Coleridge, whose marriage was collapsing...children and her husband, Coleridge planning to go away on his...Wordsworth, and left a drawing of Samuel Taylor Coleridge. Above left, Wordsworths...
...Pleasure Dome; BUY A SLICE OF POETIC HISTORY AS SAMUEL TAYLOR COLERIDGES FAMILY SELLS UP AT THE CHANTERS HOUSE...the birthplace of the writer of Kubla Khan, poet Samuel Taylor Coleridge, in 1772. The Chanters House was bought by Samuels...
...addiction. Carlyle will play Samuel Taylor Coleridge, best known for The Rime of...role. The son of a vicar, Coleridge was born 1772 and endured an...poet sister, Dorothy. But Coleridge became addicted to drugs and...
Farewell to Xanadu for Coleridge? Byline: RICHARD KAY WHILE Samuel Taylor Coleridges Kubla Khan may...upkeep. The fifth Lord Coleridge, known to his pals as Bill...The house has been in the Coleridge family for four centuries...
POETIC JUSTICE I Did My Own Coleridge Walk ... Simon Heptinstall...have lived 200 years ago, but Samuel Taylor Coleridge was probably the worlds first...Ive always been interested in Coleridge for, like me, he was a Devon...
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encyclopedia articles on: Coleridge Samuel Taylor  - 12 results

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COLERIDGE, SAMUEL TAYLOR 1772 1834, English poet and man of...Early Life The son of a clergyman, Coleridge was a precocious, dreamy child...materialize for practical reasons. In 1795 Coleridge married Sarah Fricker, the sister...
COLERIDGE-TAYLOR, SAMUEL 1875 1912, English composer. He studied violin and composition...trilogy (1898 1900) and A Tale of Old Japan (1911). See J. F. Coleridge-Taylor, Genius and Musician (1943...
COLERIDGE, HARTLEY kol rij, ko l , 1796 1849, English author; eldest son of Samuel Taylor Coleridge. Reared in the household of the poet...estrangement of his parents, Hartley Coleridge went to Oxford and gained a fellowship...
...Lord Chesterfield . The novels of Samuel Richardson , including the influential...history was the one dominated by Samuel Johnson. It included Joshua Reynolds...history, William Wordsworth and Samuel Taylor Coleridge presented and illustrated a liberating...
...Jerome (the Bible), and later, Samuel Johnson and H. H. Furness...is called judicial criticism. Samuel Johnsons Lives of the Poets...works of William Wordsworth and Samuel Taylor Coleridge, who emphasized the importance...
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