Thursday, May 30, 2019
The Hard Life of Samuel Coleridge :: Biography Biographies Essays
The Hard Life of Samuel Coleridge    Samuel Taylor Coleridge was born on October 21, 1772 in Ottery St. Mary,  Devonshire. He was the youngest of ten children and was often teased and bullied  by the others. When he was 7 years old, Coleridge ran away from home. He was  found unharmed the next morning. This event has recurred, in a literary sense,  in a large portion of his writings. Many of his poems, sketches, and note defends  contained pictures and descriptions of his night spent outdoors. Although it was  evident that Coleridge was a prodigy, he did not do well at a young age because  he lost himself in women, drugs, and alcohol. He turned to the army, but this  too fell through for him because his family was furious and his brother had him  released for reasons of insanity. He immediately brought him back to Cambridge.  It was here that he met William Wordsworth (Ashton 29).   In 1797, Coleridge published Poems which was well liked.  This excited him because he thought that thi   s would begin his road to success.  One year later, Wordsworth and Coleridge had their  celebrated Lyrical Ballads  published. Coleridges The Ancient Mariner, opens the book. Many people  believe that the work the two men did together greatly contributed to the  creation of the Romantic Period. It was chosen to open the book because of its  powerful descriptions about remorse. This, combined with the element of  psychological obsession, may have had a lot to do with his younger years. In  several ways, Coleridges life experiences  have the appearance _or_ semblance to have a lot to do with his  poem, Frost at Midnight.   However brilliant, Coleridge was not necessarily a happy  man. In 1802 he wrote to Southey All my poetic genius is gone, and I have been  fool enough to suffer deeply in my my mind, regretting the loss, which I  attribute to my long and exceedingly severe metaphysical investigations, and  these  partly to ill-health, and partly to private afflictions... (Watson  3).    He, like many, was going through a tough period in his life. His poem,  Frost at Midnight, is an excellent example of his attempts to find  foretaste in his  life. He wrote this poem for his son, Hartley.  
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