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  1. Samuel Taylor Coleridge (21 October 1772 – 25 July 1834) was an English poet, critic, and philosopher who consumed opium to address his health issues. His use of opium in his home country of England, as well as Sicily and Malta, is extensively documented. Coleridge's opium use led to severe consequences. Coupled with his health conditions, it ...

  2. Oct 21, 2023 · On this day in 1772 the poet Samuel Taylor Coleridge was born. A huge influence on later poets, he was a friend of Wordsworth, becoming a leading figure in the Romantic Movement. Coleridge was a notorious opium addict and his famous poems Kubla Khan and The Rime of the Ancient Mariner were largely written while under its influence. The ...

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  4. Jan 1, 2015 · This is a subject that has been grievously misunderstood, at least by nonspecialists. In her beautifully written and widely read biography, Samuel Taylor Coleridge: the Bondage of Opium (1974) the late Molly Lefebure suggested that all of Coleridge's statements about opium could be dismissed as the lies of a “junkie” (pp. 13–14). The ...

    • Neil Vickers
    • 2015
  5. By EARL LESLIE GRIGGS. II. UCH has been written concerning the use of opium by Samuel. LVI Taylor Coleridge. We know from his letters that he occasion-. ally took it for medicinal purposes during his schoolboy days at. Christ's Hospital. We know, too, that several times during the years. 1796-1798, the period in which his poetic genius burst ...

  6. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › Kubla_KhanKubla Khan - Wikipedia

    Kubla Khan at Wikisource. Kubla Khan: or A Vision in a Dream ( / ˌkʊblə ˈkɑːn /) is a poem written by Samuel Taylor Coleridge, completed in 1797 and published in 1816. It is sometimes given the subtitles "A Vision in a Dream" and "A Fragment." According to Coleridge's preface to Kubla Khan, the poem was composed one night after he ...

    • 54
    • 1816
  7. Powered by LitCharts content and AI. "Kubla Khan" is considered to be one of the greatest poems by the English Romantic poet Samuel Taylor Coleridge, who said he wrote the strange and hallucinatory poem shortly after waking up from an opium-influenced dream in 1797. In the first part of the poem, the speaker envisions the landscape surrounding ...

  8. Coleridge’s opium use was supported by doctors he sought who, through ignorance or neglect, chose to abandon existing common sense that may have prevented the addiction. According to Rosemary Ashton in her biography The Life Of Samuel Taylor Coleridge, one doctor, Thomas Beddoes, formed an opium clique, and Coleridge was tempted by the group’s

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