Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
Coleridge attended the school Christ's Hospital, and he was often at the sanatorium for illness while there.The poems "Pain", "A Few Lines" and "Genevieve" were written during his final year, but he experienced various illnesses during his stay that were the result of either chronic illness or illnesses resulting from his own actions, including swimming across the New River which resulted in ...
Christabel. Christabel is a long narrative ballad by Samuel Taylor Coleridge, in two parts.The first part was reputedly written in 1797, and the second in 1800. Coleridge planned three additional parts, but these were never completed.
"Yes, yes! that boon, life's richest treat" 1827 1828 To Mary Pridham [afterwards Mrs. Derwent Coleridge]. "Dear tho' unseen! tho' I have left behind" 1827 1827, October 16 Alice du Clos; or, The Forked Tongue. A Ballad. One word with two meanings is the traitor's shield and shaft: and a slit tongue be his blazon!'—Caucasian Proverb.
Kubla Khan was published with Christabel and "The Pains of Sleep" on 25 May 1816. [29] Coleridge included the subtitle "A Fragment" to defend against criticism of the poem's incomplete nature. [30] The original published version of the work was separated into 2 stanzas, with the first ending at line 30. [31] The poem was printed four times in ...
The sleep of this story is said by Coleridge to be a sleep of opium, and Kubla Khan may be read as an early poetic description of this drug experience. The fact that the poem is generally regarded as one of Coleridge's best is one reason for the continuing interest and debate about the opium's role in his creative output and in Romanticism in ...
Image credits: suburbanbeard While that 0.6% increase might not sound like a lot of money, any additional cash you can choose how you spend is valuable. Meanwhile, after-tax income, adjusted for ...
The "person on business from Porlock" was an unwelcome visitor to Samuel Taylor Coleridge during his composition of the poem "Kubla Khan" in 1797. Coleridge claimed to have perceived the entire course of the poem in a dream (possibly an opium -induced haze), but was interrupted by this visitor who came "on business from Porlock " while in the ...
Main page; Contents; Current events; Random article; About Wikipedia; Contact us; Donate