Coleridge Criticism Flashcards
Ted Hughes on Coleridge’s strength
‘[Coleridge] acknowledged an “absence of strength” within himself and chose the Oak Tree as a symbol of strength’
Ted Hughes on Coleridge’s self belief
he had an ‘unleavened self’ but the ‘Christian self was the one he wanted to be’
Harry White on Coleridge’s belief about madness
‘Coleridge diagnosed the persistence of madness as resulting from a lack of willpower’
Lauren Delory on Geraldine’s corruption
‘the fact that she will hereafter dream of the naked Geraldine instead of her knight, signifies her corruption, sexual subversion, and entry into a more whore-like status’
Lauren Delory on Christabel’s sin
‘leaving the domicile signifies Christabel’s desire to seek out sin’
Harry White on Coleridge’s religious guilt
‘Coleridge was afflicted with religious melancholy…[trying to find] self-incriminating moral explanations for his otherwise unfathomable anguish’
Richard Holmes on what Coleridge explored
‘like all other Romantics, Coleridge was interested in exploring such extreme states of mind and feeling’
Richard Holmes on Coleridge and humans vs nature
‘Coleridge’s sense of human powerlessness and despair are subtly and deliberately undermined by the use of nature’
Richard Gravil on Christabel and society
‘Some have argued that Christabel consciously deconstructs the gender bias of Gothic and is centred on the cruel domination and marginalisation of women by the patriarchy’