ABSTRACT

First published in 1966. Despite the intense interest in Coleridge in the twentieth century, this book represents the first study of Coleridge’s poetry to be published in Britain. It is also the first to be based upon the conclusion that Coleridge’s greatness as a poet is a matter of achievement rather than aspiration and to argue that his literary career was nearly half a century long, consisting of more than just well-known texts like The Ancient Mariner and Kubla Khan. The author argues the formality of the romantic achievement and its success in creating whole and fully realised poems in the established literary kinds.

part |43 pages

Prolegomena

chapter Chapter One|14 pages

The Record of Genius

chapter Chapter Two|15 pages

The Imitative Art

chapter Chapter Three|11 pages

Coleridge on Imitation

part |98 pages

The Poems

chapter Chapter Four|13 pages

Youth and the Drama

chapter Chapter Five|24 pages

The Conversation Poems

chapter Chapter Six|20 pages

The Ancient Mariner

chapter Chapter Seven|11 pages

Christabel

chapter Chapter Eight|14 pages

Kubla Khan

chapter Chapter Nine|12 pages

The Last Poems