A Moral Idiocy, an Imbecility of the Will, a Haunting, an Emptiness, a Posthumous State, a Writing Block
Susan Eilenberg, 19 June 1997
The Life of Samuel Taylor Coleridge
by Rosemary Ashton.
Blackwell, 480 pp., £25, December 1996,0 631 18746 4 Show More
by Rosemary Ashton.
Blackwell, 480 pp., £25, December 1996,
Coleridge: Selected Poems
edited by Richard Holmes.
HarperCollins, 358 pp., £20, March 1996,0 00 255579 4 Show More
edited by Richard Holmes.
HarperCollins, 358 pp., £20, March 1996,
A Choice of Coleridge’s Verse
edited by Ted Hughes.
Faber, 232 pp., £7.99, March 1996,0 571 17604 6 Show More
edited by Ted Hughes.
Faber, 232 pp., £7.99, March 1996,
“... Sara had followed him into hypochondria and drug addiction. As Rosemary Ashton, Richard Holmes and Morton Paley remind us, Coleridge did survive the long years of estrangement, both from Wordsworth and from all he had ceded to Wordsworth; he did begin to return to himself. When the current of critical opinion reversed, he found himself the object of loud ... ”