SAMUEL TAYLOR COLERIDGE

                                                   

BIOGRAPHY

COLERIDGE’S TIMES

THE PAINS OF SLEEP

ANALYSIS OF The Pains of Sleep

BIBLIOGRAPHY

 

 

BIOGRAPHY (1772-1834)

Samuel Taylor Coleridge was born in Devon on the 21 October 1772. He was the youngest of ten members family and a brilliant student. In October 1791, his studies were interrupted after continuous success because his first love, Mary Evans, rejected him. Two years later, he decided to join the army, the 15th Regiment of Light Dragons, when the revolution in France was imminent. Coleridge, after left the army, returned to the University of Cambridge but he abandoned his studies without obtaining a degree. He engaged Sara Fricker and started to write in a political journal The Watchman in 1795.

In 1797 Coleridge began his friendship with William Wordsworth and his sister Dorothy. The first collaboration between both poets was Lyrical Ballads (1798).

During this time he wrote Osorio, made several contributions to the newspaper The Morning Post, Limetree Bower My Prision, The Ancient Mariner, Kubla Khan, Frost at Midnight, France: an Ode, The Nightingale, Fears in Solitude and Christabel.

In 1798, Coleridge and Wordsworths travelled Germany to improved their German, and for Coleridge to study German philosophy and science.

Coleridge was in London working for The Morning Post and translating the German play The Death of Wallenstein.

In 1802, he met and fell in love of Wordsworth’s sister wife, Sara Hutchinson.

In the earliest 1800, he became frequently ill, he took laudanum (liquid opium) to pass the pain as much as his contemporaries, and became and addict which influenced his works.

From 1808 to 1810 he produced 27 numbers of his periodical The Friends.

In 1816 ,a doctor friend took care of him and took under control Coleridge addiction. The greater part of Coleridge’s philosophical and critical writings belongs to this period The Statesman’s Manual (1817), On Method (1818) and Aids to Reflection (1825).

He became a member of the Royal Society of Literature in 1824.

A revival of Coleridge and Wordsworth friendship took place in 1828, and he published his collected Poetical Works, and in 1830 his On the Constitution of Church and State.

Coleridge died on 25 July 1834, in Highgate, where he is buried.

 

 

COLERIDGE’S TIMES

The life of S.T. Coleridge contemplates a wide range of the history. In his 62 years of life, he saw and lived important historical events that influenced him such as the French Revolution, the execution of King Louis XVI and the radical leader Robespierre or the rising of the Romantic period.

He was born in 1772, two years after of his beloved friend Wordsworth. Britain declared the war against Holland and William Blake wrote Songs of Innocence in 1780. In 1789, the French Revolution took place when the Parisian crowds took the Bastille prison. Coleridge began his political life, as many of his contemporaries, by supporting the French Revolution. They were agree with the ideas of the Revolution, but not how it was taken place. They rejected events like the ‘September Massacres’ of the French nobility, or the executions of the King Louis XVI and Marie Anttoniete. Nevertheless when the war between England and France was declared in 1793, Coleridge and his friend Wordsworth were still in sympathy with France. But when France invaded Switzerland and Napoleon was crowned as Emperor he had changed his opinion about France. This change of mind can be observe in France: an Ode, 1798, where he offered a new conservative vision of France.

Blake wrote Songs of Experience one year later.

His lecture in Bristol, which was published in The Friend (Essay XVI), makes clear that he had not a revolutionary vision in 1795, although he was immersed in radical circles.

Fears in Solitude, written in 1798, with the French invasion as background, is more patriotically poem than revolutionary. From 1797 to 1798, while Napoleon invaded Egypt and France had suppressed the Swiss Cantons, he wrote many of his successful works: Frost at Midnight, Kubla Khan,Christabel (the first part of the poem), Mariner, and he and Wordsworth published Lyrical Ballads. Pains of  Sleep, was written in 1803.

During the next three decades England suffered the consequences of the Napoleonic Wars. The cities of the Industrial Revolution were overcrowded with peasant families that had run away from the countryside and the soldiers that had came back after the war had finished. All these factors helped radicals to ask for a parliamentary reform, but Coleridge disagreed with them because he thought that Reformation would have increased the power of commercial interests in Parliament, and he rejected the Reform Bill and the philosophy of the liberal reformers. His idea was that Parliament should have represented the ‘idea of state’. He explains his idea in The Constitution of Church and State. The State should have been permanent and progressive, it had to distinguish between the landers and manufactures-merchants interests, and the state had had other component: ‘the National Church’ and the ‘Clerisy’ which would have contributed with spiritual and education.

We are able to say that from all the historical events he saw and lived, the French Revolution and the Reform Bill were the two more important factors that influenced his life and writings.

Literary Background

The Romanticism covers a period of time between 1757, when Blacke was born, and 1850 when Wordsworth died. Coleridge is considered as one of the great Romantic poets. The aim of these Romantic was to project in their works the potential of human life, a vision of their ideal life and state (as Coleridge did in The Constitution of Church and State.). Their artistic interest was on nature, man and nature were the same thing without distinctions.

Coleridge says in his Theory of Life that the purpose of live is to produce “the highest and most comprehensive individuality”.

The poetry of his times is imaginative, symbolic and mythological and goes against all the philosophy of the moment.

 

 

 THE PAINS OF SLEEP

by: Samuel Taylor Coleridge (1772-1834)

RE on my bed my limbs I lay,

It hath not been my use to pray

With moving lips or bended knees;

But silently, by slow degrees,

My spirit I to Love compose,

In humble trust mine eye-lids close,

With reverential resignation

No wish conceived, no thought exprest,

Only a sense of supplication;

A sense o'er all my soul imprest

That I am weak, yet not unblest,

Since in me, round me, every where

Eternal strength and Wisdom are.

 

But yester-night I prayed aloud

In anguish and in agony,

Up-starting from the fiendish crowd

Of shapes and thoughts that tortured me:

A lurid light, a trampling throng,

Sense of intolerable wrong,

And whom I scorned, those only strong!

Thirst of revenge, the powerless will

Still baffled, and yet burning still!

Desire with loathing strangely mixed

On wild or hateful objects fixed.

Fantastic passions! maddening brawl!

And shame and terror over all!

Deeds to be hid which were not hid,

Which all confused I could not know

Whether I suffered, or I did:

For all seemed guilt, remorse or woe,

My own or others still the same

Life-stifling fear, soul-stifling shame.

 

So two nights passed: the night's dismay

Saddened and stunned the coming day.

Sleep, the wide blessing, seemed to me

Distemper's worst calamity.

The third night, when my own loud scream

Had waked me from the fiendish dream,

O'ercome with sufferings strange and wild,

I wept as I had been a child;

And having thus by tears subdued

My anguish to a milder mood,

Such punishments, I said, were due

To natures deepliest stained with sin,--

For aye entempesting anew

The unfathomable hell within,

The horror of their deeds to view,

To know and loathe, yet wish and do!

Such griefs with such men well agree,

But wherefore, wherefore fall on me?

To be loved is all I need,

And whom I love, I love indeed.

 

 

ANALYSIS

This poem can be considered as a very personal confession. It is included in what G.M. Harper first called “conversation poems”. The speaker is Coleridge himself and this type of poems are addressed to his beloved friends (Wordsworth, Dorothy Wordsworth…). The poem defines a Coleridge in a particular state of mind at a particular time. The Pains of Sleep was conceived in a trip along Scotland with his friends Wordsworth and Dorothy Wordsworth, in a time that Coleridge was trying to abandon his opium addiction. The poem shows the agony that he experienced in his particular struggle to overcome his addiction.

The poem is divided in three paragraphs, which represent three different nights, with its own atmosphere, so the reader almost visualised it. He used the tetrameter iambic to slow down the poem to increase the sense of pain and agony that he is suffering.

The first paragraph seems to explain how the poet is preparing himself to sleep, it shows an atmosphere of quietness and calmness. Instead of praying he prefers to ‘compose’ with love his spirit

              It hath not been my use to pray

With moving lips or bended knees;

But silently, by slow degrees,

My spirit I to Love compose,

The quietness is expressed through verses like

            

            But silently, by slow degrees,

My spirit I to Love compose,

In humble trust mine eye-lids close,

The use of the sibilants all over the first paragraph gives the auditor the image and the sound of a sleeper’s breathing

             ‘limbs’, ‘knees’, ‘lips’, ‘impressed’, ‘unblessed’, ‘wish’.

The second paragraph expresses other feelings and emotions because is other night. The ‘anguish’ and the ‘agony’ appear. The pain and the horror disturb the quietness.

              

             Of shapes and thoughts that tortured me:

A lurid light, a trampling throng,

Sense of intolerable wrong,

And whom I scorned, those only strong!

While in the first paragraph any thought disturbs his dreaming, now the thoughts torture him, thoughts of guilty, of being wrong and of revenge.

            

             Of shapes and thoughts that tortured me:

A lurid light, a trampling throng,

Sense of intolerable wrong,

And whom I scorned, those only strong!

Thirst of revenge, the powerless will

Still baffled, and yet burning still!

He has an existential fear

             Desire with loathing strangely mixed

This change of time and feelings is showed through the vocabulary. In the first paragraph Coleridge talks about ‘quietness’, ‘calmness’, ‘resignation’, ‘silently’, while in the second paragraph the vocabulary and semantic changes: ‘tortured’, ‘terror’, ‘woe’, ‘wrong’, ‘agony’.

He feels he is wronged, he has desires of revenge and feels he is guilty. All these thoughts that torture him are the result of his opium addiction and his efforts to leave it.

            

             Sense of intolerable wrong,

And whom I scorned, those only strong!

Thirst of revenge, the powerless will

Still baffled, and yet burning still!

Desire with loathing strangely mixed

On wild or hateful objects fixed.

                                       …..

             Life-stifling fear, soul-stifling shame.

The key words of this paragraph might be ‘shame’ and ‘agony’.

The third paragraph explains the terrible thing that implies for him the action of sleeping. The ‘wide blessing’ is for him ‘Distemper’s worst calamity’. He continuous the idea he had started in the second paragraph, the fear he has to sleep and its immediate consequence: dreaming (nightmares). He only finds relief when his

            

own loud scream

             Had wake me from the fiendish dream

                          …….

             I wept as I had been a child;

At the end of the poem he seems to recover the calm and peace he showed in the first paragraph and he lost in the second one, because he thinks that all this anguish and pain

……………………were due

To natures deepliest stained with sin.

And he does not believe that he deserves such pain.

The last four verses are written in a different tone. He does not identificate himself with this kind of men

             Such griefs with such men well agree,

So, why all these horrors, pains, tears and nightmares? When the only thing that Coleridge wants, needs and wishes is unconditional love.

             To be beloved is all I need,

             And Whom I love, I love indeed.

The weakness of the first and second stanza have disappeared. He thinks he is better than other men, those who need to pray.

The poem has a circular structure, it begins and ends with a sense of calm.

Inspired by opium use, this poem is a conversational and emotional piece, which deals with nightmares instead with the utopian and romantic fantasies. Coleridge thought that men had to understand themselves before to understand their relationship with nature, we think that this poem is a good example of this.

     

 

 

BIBLIOGRAPHY

www.bbc.co.uk/devon/discovering/famous/coleridge.shtml

http://incompetech.com/authors/coleridge/

www.starpulse.com/Notables/Coleridge,_Samuel_Taylor/

http://es.wikipedia.org/wiki/Samuel_Taylor_Coleridge

www.online-literature.com/coleridge

http://etext.virginia.edu/stc/Coleridge/poems/poems_links

www.poetry-archive.com/c/the_pains_of_sleep.html

www.essaycentre.co.uk/lib/essay/samuel-coleridge.html

http://www.britannica.com/eb/topic-65906/Biographia-Literaria

http://www.alexwilson.com/telltale/audiobooks/samuel_taylor_coleridge/kubla_khan_and_the_pains_of_sleep.php

http://teachers.henrico.k12.va.us/freeman/guengerich_a/BBL/writers/coleridge/coleridge.html

http://etext.lib.virginia.edu/stc/Coleridge/resources/time_line.html#1772

http://goliath.ecnext.com/coms2/gi_0199-6605730/Consolations-in-opium-the-expanding.html

http://www.britainunlimited.com/Biogs/Coleridge.htm

http://www.readprint.com/author-22/Samuel-Taylor-Coleridge

http://www.uv.es/~fores/

 

 

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Academic year 2007/2008
28. Noviembre 2007
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