Samuel Taylor Coleridge
October 21, 2012
On this date in 1772, the poet Samuel Taylor Coleridge
was born in Devonshire, England, the youngest son of a vicar. As a
youngster he was sent to a Christian boarding school in London after his
father's death. He attended Jesus College at the University of
Cambridge, which he left without a degree but after having become
sympathetic to Unitarianism. He dallied briefly with establishing a
utopian society with poet Robert Southy, to be called a "pantisocracy."
His book, Poems on Various Subjects, was published in 1796. Coleridge collaborated on a volume of poetry with poet William Wordsworth, Lyrical Ballads,
(1798), in which his most well-known poem, "The Rime of the Ancient
Mariner" ("water, water everywhere, but not a drop to drink"), first
appeared. In the late 1790s, Coleridge, afflicted with many medical
problems, apparently became addicted to opium, to which no social stigma
was then attached. His poem "Kubla Khan" and narrative poem
"Christabel," were composed during this period. Coleridge became
interested in Kant's transcendentalism, studied German and translated
humanist Friedrich Schiller.
He traveled to warmer climes in hopes of improving his health, taking a
civil service job on Malta for a time. Coleridge lectured periodically
in England for more than a decade, reviving the public's interest in
Shakespeare. He continued to write, including Biographia Literaria (1817), Aids to Reflection (1825) and Church and State
(1830). Despite his kind words for atheists (see quote below),
Coleridge was probably a mild form of Deistic Unitarian. "Whenever
philosophy has taken into its plan religion, it has ended in skepticism;
and whenever religion excludes philosophy, or the spirit of free
inquiry, it leads to willful blindness and superstition." (Cited in
Allsop's Letters, Conversations with Recollections of Samuel Taylor Coleridge, 1836). D. 1834.
“Not one man in ten thousand has goodness of heart or strength of mind to be an atheist.”
— Samuel Taylor Coleridge, letter to Thomas Allsop, c. 1820
Compiled by Annie Laurie Gaylor - www.ffrf.org
No comments:
Post a Comment