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  2. Samuel Taylor Coleridge’s most popular book is The Rime of the Ancient Mariner.

  3. This article lists the complete poetic bibliography of Samuel Taylor Coleridge (1772-1834), which includes fragments not published within his lifetime, epigrams, and titles such as The Rime of the Ancient Mariner and Kubla Khan. [1]

    Title
    Subtitle
    Index Of First Lines
    Composition Date
    Nil Pejus est Caelibe Vitâ.
    [In Christ's Hospital Book]
    "What pleasures shall he ever find?"
    1787
    Julia.
    [In Christ's Hospital Book]
    "Julia was blest with beauty, wit, and ...
    1789
    Quae Nocent Docent.
    O! mihi praeteritos referat si Jupiter ...
    "Oh! might my ill-past hours return ...
    1789
    Progress of Vice.
    [Nemo repente turpissimus]
    "Deep in the gulph of Vice and Woe"
    1790
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  5. The Complete Poetical Works of Samuel Taylor Coleridge, 2 volumes, edited by Ernest Hartley Coleridge (Oxford: Clarendon Press, 1912). The Philosophical Lectures of Samuel Taylor Coleridge, edited by Kathleen Coburn (London & New York: Pilot Press, 1949; New York: Philosophical Library, 1949).

    • Overview
    • Early life and works

    Samuel Taylor Coleridge (born October 21, 1772, Ottery St. Mary, Devonshire, England—died July 25, 1834, Highgate, near London) English lyrical poet, critic, and philosopher. His Lyrical Ballads, written with William Wordsworth, heralded the English Romantic movement, and his Biographia Literaria (1817) is the most significant work of general liter...

    Coleridge’s father was vicar of Ottery and headmaster of the local grammar school. As a child Coleridge was already a prodigious reader, and he immersed himself to the point of morbid fascination in romances and Eastern tales such as The Arabian Nights’ Entertainments. In 1781 his father died suddenly, and in the following year Coleridge entered Christ’s Hospital in London, where he completed his secondary education. In 1791 he entered Jesus College, Cambridge. At both school and university he continued to read voraciously, particularly in works of imagination and visionary philosophy, and he was remembered by his schoolmates for his eloquence and prodigious memory. In his third year at Cambridge, oppressed by financial difficulties, he went to London and enlisted as a dragoon under the assumed name of Silas Tomkyn Comberbache. Despite his unfitness for the life, he remained until discovered by his friends; he was then bought out by his brothers and restored to Cambridge.

    On his return, he was restless. The intellectual and political turmoil surrounding the French Revolution had set in motion intense and urgent discussion concerning the nature of society. Coleridge now conceived the design of circumventing the disastrous violence that had destroyed the idealism of the French Revolution by establishing a small society that should organize itself and educate its children according to better principles than those obtaining in the society around them. A chance meeting with the poet Robert Southey led the two men to plan such a “pantisocracy” and to set up a community by the Susquehanna River in Pennsylvania. To this end Coleridge left Cambridge for good and set up with Southey as a public lecturer in Bristol. In October 1795 he married Sara Fricker, daughter of a local schoolmistress, swayed partly by Southey’s suggestion that he was under an obligation to her since she had been refusing the advances of other men.

    Shortly afterward, Southey defected from the pantisocratic scheme, leaving Coleridge married to a woman whom he did not really love. In a sense his career never fully recovered from this blow: if there is a makeshift quality about many of its later events, one explanation can be found in his constant need to reconcile his intellectual aspirations with the financial needs of his family. During this period, however, Coleridge’s intellect flowered in an extraordinary manner, as he embarked on an investigation of the nature of the human mind, joined by William Wordsworth, with whom he had become acquainted in 1795. Together they entered upon one of the most influential creative periods of English literature. Coleridge’s intellectual ebullience and his belief in the existence of a powerful “life consciousness” in all individuals rescued Wordsworth from the depression into which recent events had cast him and made possible the new approach to nature that characterized his contributions to Lyrical Ballads (which was to be published in 1798).

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    Coleridge, meanwhile, was developing a new, informal mode of poetry in which he could use a conversational tone and rhythm to give unity to a poem. Of these poems, the most successful is “Frost at Midnight,” which begins with the description of a silent frosty night in Somerset and proceeds through a meditation on the relationship between the quiet work of frost and the quiet breathing of the sleeping baby at the poet’s side, to conclude in a resolve that his child shall be brought up as a “child of nature,” so that the sympathies that the poet has come to detect may be reinforced throughout the child’s education.

  6. Jan 22, 2018 · The reputation of Romantic poet, critic and philosopher Samuel Taylor Coleridge has long been overshadowed by William Wordsworth, his friend and Lyrical Ballads co-author. Oxford professor Seamus Perry talks us through the books that showcase Coleridge's idiosyncratic brilliance.

    • What books did Samuel Taylor Coleridge write?1
    • What books did Samuel Taylor Coleridge write?2
    • What books did Samuel Taylor Coleridge write?3
    • What books did Samuel Taylor Coleridge write?4
    • What books did Samuel Taylor Coleridge write?5
  7. The Rime of the Ancient Mariner (originally The Rime of the Ancyent Marinere) is the longest major poem by English poet Samuel Taylor Coleridge, written in 1797–98 and published in 1798 in the first edition of Lyrical Ballads.

  8. Nov 18, 2021 · Coleridge’s most famous works include The Rime Of The Ancient Mariner, Kubla Khan and Biographia Literaria. His critical work on William Shakespeare was very influential and he also helped introduce German idealist philosophy to English-speaking culture. Coleridge was a lifelong user of opium, and his health declined massively due to his addiction.

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