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Samuel Taylor Coleridge

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Samuel Taylor Coleridge 1.Biography 2. Introduction to his works * * Biography Born in rural Devonshire in 1772, Coleridge inherited his bookish tastes from his ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Samuel Taylor Coleridge


1
Samuel Taylor Coleridge
  • 1.Biography
  • 2. Introduction to his
    works

2
Biography
  • Born in rural Devonshire in 1772, Coleridge
    inherited his bookish tastes from his father, a
    learned (and eccentric) clergyman.
  • Coleridge as a boy lived almost entirely in a
    world of books and ideas.
  • After his father's death, he was sent, in 1782,
    to a famous charity school in London, known as
    Christ's Hospital. It was in this school that he
    met Charles Lamb .
  • Coleridge next won a scholarship to Cambridge
    University, where he studied at Jesus College .
  • Finding himself (through his own imprudence)
    desperately in debt, he rushed off to London and
    enlisted in the Army under the wonderful name of
    Silas Tomkin Comberbach.

3
Biography
  • He hated army life and was terrified of the
    cavalry horses so when his brothers contrived to
    have him released, he gladly returned to
    Cambridge.
  • Encouraged by the success of the American War of
    Independence andthe French Revolution, Coleridge
    and Southey worked on a harebrained scheme which
    they called Pantisocracy. As the name implies,
    this was to be a Utopian society in which the
    powers of government were to be shared by all.
    The Pantisocracy of Coleridge and Southey came
    to nothing. Throughout his life Coleridge was
    better at drawing up plans than at putting them
    into practice.

4
Introduction to his works
  • The Rime of the Ancient Mariner
  • Biographia Literaria
  • Kubla Khan

5
The Rime of the Ancient Mariner
  • The plot of the poem
  • The story tells of the unnecessary and
    wanton shooting of an albatross. The Ancient
    Mariner, a chillingly mysterious figure who
    almost forcibly detains a young man on his way to
    a wedding feast to listen to his narrative, tells
    of a storm that carried his ship to the seas of
    the Antarctic. Terrified by the snow and ice,
    utterly isolated from the world of living things,
    the crew is overjoyed when an albatross appears.
    The Ancient Mariner kills the albatross and first
    The Ancient Mariner's shipmates are angry at him
    because of his rash and meaningless act. When the
    fog and mist lift, however, they decide that the
    shooting of the bird has brought them luck and
    they applaud the crime of their companion, thus
    becoming, as it were, his accomplices.
  • Racing north toward the equator, the ship is
    becalmed in the sea. Suffering from unbearable
    heat and from thirst, the crew is terrified by
    the approach of a skeleton-ship, carrying Death
    and Life-in-Death. On the skeleton-ship a grisly
    dice game takes place, and Life-in-Death wins.
    The Mariner's shipmates all die, and he is left
    hopelessly alone with his physical agony and his
    consciousness of guilt.
  • There comes a moment, however, in his terrible
    loneliness when the glint of moonlight on the
    brightly colored creatures of the deep affects
    the Ancient Mariner. So he thanks God for all
    living things. After his pointless slaughter of
    the albatross, he is once more able to realize
    the sacredness of life.
  • Released from the awful punishment that his
    crime brought about, the Mariner returns to his
    native land. The consequences of his evil-doing,
    however, cannot be ignored. It is his fate to
    wander, presumably for all eternity, throughout
    the world, telling and retelling his frightening
    story.

6
The Rime of the Ancient Mariner
  • Comment on the poem
  • It is, perhaps, the finest literary
    ballad in English literature. A literary ballad,
    in contrast to a folk ballad, is one written by a
    known author in conscious imitation of the old
    traditional ballads whose authorship is not
    known. He deliberately uses this form to tell a
    simple story. But when reading it, we discover
    many subtle places, and the musical effect is
    wonderful. The albatross, a sea bird, is an omen
    of luck. A seaman for no reason at all kills it,
    and for this reason the whole ship is punished by
    God and the seaman is punished by his fellow
    seamen. The theme is about sin and its expiation.
    The language is irresistible. A guest is detained
    by the mariner to listen to his tale. The reader,
    like the reluctant guest, is enchanted by the
    tale. Here Coleridge's excellent skill at making
    supernatural things appear real and true to life
    is fully displayed.
  • It has been demonstrated that the poem
    reflects Coleridge's amazingly wide reading.
    Materials concerning the polar regions, the
    equatorial regions, guardian spirits, the
    Scriptural story of Cain, legends about the
    Wandering Jew, all came together in his
    imagination and shaped this hauntingly beautiful
    and profoundly moving poem.
  • It should be obvious that this is not
    a cautionary tale about being kind to animals. It
    is a psychologically profound study of guilt, of
    remorse, of the nature of evil.

7
The Rime of the Ancient Mariner
  • Style analysis
  • The story of the Ancient Mariner is told
    in the style and meter used in many traditional
    ballads. Most of the stanzas are of four lines,
    alternately of four stresses and three stresses.
    The rhymes also alternate, abab. Variety is
    obtained by introducing occasional six-line
    stanzas. One stanza is nine lines long.

8
Biographia Literaria
  • Most of Coleridge's ideas on literature are
    to be found in his Biographia Literaria. Many of
    the specific critical comments in this rambling,
    uneven, and frequently cloudy book are worth
    attention. For example, his remarks on Wordsworth
    show a perceptive understanding of that poet's
    greatness. At the same time he praises
    Wordsworth, and he takes issue with Wordsworth's
    oversimplified views on poetic diction and he
    even shows that Wordsworth does not always follow
    his own stated principles.
  • His view on imagination
  • He emphasized the relationship of the
    imagination to the entire process of artistic
    creation. He denied that the imagination was the
    mere reshaping of images originally produced by
    sense impressions and thus was able to make a
    more profound contribution to our understanding
    of artistic originality than was made by any
    neoclassical or pre-Romantic theorist.

9
Biographia Literaria
  • How to analyze a poem
  • Related to his ideas on the imagination
    is his healthy awareness that a poem is an
    organic whole. It is, in other words, like all
    living things, more than the sum of its parts.
    One can, of course, analyze parts of a poem, such
    as the diction, the meter, the rhymes, and the
    like. But true criticism must ultimately go
    beyond analysis and examine the poem in its
    totality.
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