Biographia Epistolaris, vol 1

Samuel Taylor Coleridge
Biographia Epistolaris, vol 1

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Title: Biographia Epistolaris, Volume 1.
Author: Coleridge, ed. Turnbull
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year ahead of schedule] [This file was first posted on July 2, 2003]
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BIOGRAPHIA EPISTOLARIS, VOLUME 1. ***

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Samuel Taylor Coleridge's

BIBLIOGRAPHIA EPISTOLARIS

comprising 33 letters
and being
the Biographical Supplement of Coleridge's BIOGRAPHIA
LITERARIA
with additional letters etc., edited by
A. TURNBULL

Vol. 1.
"On the whole this was surely the mightiest genius since Milton. In
poetry there is not his like, when he rose to his full power; he was a
philosopher, the immensity of whose mind cannot be gauged by
anything he has left behind; a critic, the subtlest and most profound of
his time. Yet these vast and varied powers flowed away in the shifting
sands of talk; and what remains is but what the few land-locked pools
are to the receding ocean which has left them casually behind without
sensible diminution of its waters."
Academy, 3d October, 1903.

PREFACE
The work known as the Biographical Supplement of the Biographia
Literaria of S. T. Coleridge, and published with the latter in 1847, was

begun by Henry Nelson Coleridge, and finished after his death by his
widow, Sara Coleridge. The first part, concluding with a letter dated
5th November 1796, is the more valuable portion of the Biographical
Supplement. What follows, written by Sara Coleridge, is more
controversial than biographical and does not continue, like the first part,
to make Coleridge tell his own life by inserting letters in the narrative.
Of 33 letters quoted in the whole work, 30 are contained in the section
written by Henry Nelson Coleridge. Of these 11 were drawn from
Cottle's Early Recollections, seven being letters to Josiah Wade, four to
Joseph Cottle, and the remainder are sixteen letters to Poole, one to
Benjamin Flower, one to Charles E Heath, and one to Henry Martin.
From this I think it is evident that Henry Nelson Coleridge intended
what was published as a Supplement to the Biographia Literaria to be a
Life of Coleridge, either supplementary to the Biographia Literaria or
as an independent narrative, in which most of the letters published by
Cottle in 1837 and unpublished letters to Poole and other
correspondents were to form the chief material. Sara Coleridge, in
finishing the fragment, did not attempt to carry out the original
intention of her husband. A few letters in Cottle were perhaps not
acceptable to her taste, and in rejecting them she perhaps resolved to
reject all remaining letters in Cottle. She thus finished the fragmentary
Life of Coleridge left by her husband in her own way.
But Henry Nelson Coleridge had begun to build on another plan. His
intention was simply to string all Coleridge's letters available on a slim
biographical thread and thus produce a work in which the poet would
have been made to tell his own life. His beginning with the five
Biographical Letters to Thomas Poole is a proof of this. He took these
as his starting point; and, as far as he went, his "Life of Coleridge" thus
constructed is the most reliable of all the early biographies of
Coleridge.
This edition of the Biographical Supplement is meant to carry out as far
as possible the original project of its author. The whole of his narrative
has been retained, and also what Sara Coleridge added to his writing;
and all the non-copyright letters of Coleridge available from other
sources have been inserted into the narrative, and additional
biographical matter, explanatory of the letters, has been given. [1] By
this retention of authentic sources I
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