Poems by Coleridge
The son of a vicar, Coleridge was the youngest of
a large family and had an unhappy childhood. He went to Jesus College, Cambridge
with the intention of studying to enter the Chruch, interupting his education he
enlisted in the 15th Dragoons in 1793 but it wasn't to his taste and his family
rescued him and he returned to Cambridge. In 1794 he met Robert Southey and they
susequently collaborated on an historical play, the Fall of Robesierre. He
moved to Somerset in 1797 where Coleridge met William Wordsworth and his sister
Dorothy. Unquestionably, Coleridge association with Wordsworth was a source of
inspiration and some of Coleridge finest works, in my view, The Ancient Mariner,
Kubla Khan, Christabel and Coleridge Conversation Poems, were written during
this period. Coleridge relationship with Wordsworth became strained in the early
nineteenth century and Coleridge really never again reached the early heights in
his poetics.Coleridge literary criticism articulated in Biographia Literaria
did, however, become a standard to which subsequent critical theory owes much
right up to the present day
. Coleridge was addicted to opium for much of his life,Coleridge
finally came to lodge with his Doctor in Hampstead where Coleridge spent the
rest of his life. Coleridge is probably best known for his long narrative
poems, The Rime of The Ancient Mariner and Christabel. Even those who have never
read the Rime have come under its influence: its words have given the English
language the metaphor of an albatross around one's neck, the (mis)quote of
"water, water everywhere, but not a drop to drink", and the pharase "a sadder
bit wiser man". Christabel is known for its musical rhythm and language and its
Gothic tale
Family connections
Coleridge was the
father of Hartley Coleridge, Sara Coleridge,
and Derwent Coleridge and
grandfather of Herbert Coleridge, Ernest Hartley Coleridge and Christabel Coleridge. He was the uncle of the first Baron Coleridge. The poet Mary Coleridge was a relation but not a
descendant. His nephew Henry Nelson
Coleridge, who was an editor of his work, married
Sara |