Coleridges Ancient Mariner and Select Poems | Page 2

Samuel Taylor Coleridge
chit-chat," of Cowper, whose "Task" appeared in the preceding year. But it
was in Coleridge himself and his close contemporaries and followers that the splendor of
the new poetry showed itself. He was two years younger than Wordsworth, a year
younger than Scott; he was sixteen at the birth of Byron, twenty at that of Shelley,
twenty-four at that of Keats; and he outlived all of them except Wordsworth. His genius
blossomed early. "The Ancient Mariner," his greatest poem, was published some years
before Wordsworth's "Ode on the Intimations of Immortality" was written, or Scott's
"Lay of the Last Minstrel." He was in the prime of life, or what should have been the
prime of life--forty years old--when Byron burst into sudden fame with the first two
cantos of "Childe Harold" in 1812; he was forty-six when Keats published "Endymion";
he was fifty-one when Shelley was drowned. And of all this gifted company Coleridge,

though not the strongest character or the most prolific poet, was the profoundest intellect
and the most originative poetic spirit.
There was little hint, however, of future greatness or of fellowship with great names in
his birth and early circumstances. His father was a country clergyman and schoolmaster
in the village of Ottery St. Mary, in Devonshire, a simple-hearted unworldly man, full of
curious learning and not very attentive to practical affairs. His mother managed the
household and brought up the children. Both his parents were of simple West-country
stock; but his father, having a natural turn for study and having done well in his early
manhood as a schoolmaster, went at the age of thirty-one as a sizar, or poor student, to
Sidney-Sussex College, Cambridge, took orders, and was afterwards given the living of
Ottery St. Mary. Here he continued his beloved work of teaching, in addition to his
pastoral duties, and by means of this combination won the humble livelihood which,
through his wife's careful economy, sufficed for rearing his large family. Coleridge tells
us that his father "had so little of parental ambition in him that he had destined his
children to be blacksmiths, etc." (though he had "resolved that I should be a parson"),
"and had accomplished his intention but for my mother's pride and spirit of aggrandizing
her family." Several of the children rewarded their mother's care by distinguishing
themselves in a modest way in the army or in the church, but the only one about whom
the world is curious now was the youngest of the ten, Samuel Taylor Coleridge, who was
born at Ottery St. Mary, October 21, 1772.
The essential traits of his later character appeared in his early childhood. Almost from
infancy he lived in his imagination rather than in the world of reality. "The schoolboys
drove me from play, and were always tormenting me, and hence I took no pleasure in
boyish sports, but read incessantly.... I became a dreamer, and acquired an indisposition
to all bodily activity; and I was fretful, and inordinately passionate." "Sensibility,
imagination, vanity, sloth," were "prominent and manifest" in his character before he was
eight years old. Such is his own account of his childhood, written to his friend Poole in
1797; and it is an accurate description, as far as it goes, of the grown man. But of the
religious temper, too, the love of freedom and of virtue, the hatred of injustice, cruelty,
and falsehood that guided his uneven steps through all the pitiful struggle of his middle
life, of the conscience that made his weakness hell to him--of these, too, we may be sure
that the beginnings were to be seen in the boy at Ottery St. Mary, as indeed they were
before his eyes in the person of his father, who, if not a first-rate genius, was, says his son,
"a first-rate Christian."
The good vicar died in 1781; and the next year, a "presentation" to Christ's Hospital
having been secured for him, little Samuel, not yet eleven years old, went up to London
to enter the famous old city school. Here,
"In the great city, pent 'mid cloisters dim,"
where he
"Saw nought lovely but the sky and stars,"

one of some seven hundred Blue-Coat boys, Coleridge lived for nine years.
Most of the boys at Christ's Hospital, then as now, were given a "commercial" education
(which none the less included a very thorough training in Latin); but a few of the most
promising students were each year selected by the masters for a classical training in
preparation for the universities, whence they were known as Grecians. Coleridge was
elected a Grecian in 1788. The famous Boyer--famous for his enthusiasm alike in
teaching the classics and in wielding the birch--laid the foundation of Coleridge's later
scholarship. Here, too, Coleridge did a great amount of reading not laid down
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