AH, YET, WHEN ALL IS THOUGHT AND SAID, THE HEART STILL OVERRULES THE HEAD."-CLOUGH.
ALSO THE GREAT WORLD GOES ITS WAY,-(A. H. CLOUGH)
But, where the glen of its course approaches the vale of the
Met and blocked by a huge interposing mass of granite,
Scarce by a channel deep-cut, raging up, and raging onward, Forces its flood through a passage so narrow a lady would step it.
There, across the great rocky wharves, a wooden bridge goes, Carrying a path to the forest; below, three hundred yards, say, Lower in level some twenty-five feet, through flats of shingle, Stepping-stones and a cart-track cross in the open valley. But in the interval here the boiling pent-up water Frees itself by a final descent, attaining a basin
Ten feet wide and eighteen long, with whiteness and fury Occupied partly, but mostly pellucid, pure, a mirror; Beautiful there for the colour derived from green rocks under;
Beautiful, most of all, where beads of foam uprising
Mingle their clouds of white with the delicate hue of the still
Cliff over cliff for its sides, with rowan and pendent birch boughs,
Here it lies, unthought of above at the bridge and pathway, Still more enclosed from below by wood and rocky projection.
[From "The Bothie of Tober-na-Vuolich."]
S the light of day enters some populous city, Shaming away, ere it come, by the chilly day-streak signal,
High and low, the misusers of night, shaming out the gas- lamps-
AND TAKES ITS BIRTH FROM EACH NEW DAY."-CLOUGH.
"STILL WHAT WE HOPE WE MUST BELIEVE, AND WHAT IS GIVEN US RECEIVE."-A.
"THAT HUMBLE, SIMPLE DUTY OF THE DAY PERFORM-ASK NOT IF IT BE SMALL OR GREAT;-(ARTHUR H. CLOUGH)
"WHEN WE FEEL OUR FEET BENEATH US SINK,
All the great empty streets are flooded with broadening clear
Which, withal, by inscrutable simultaneous access
Permeates far and pierces to the very cellars lying in Narrow high back-lane, and court, and alley of alleys :— He that goes forth to his walks, while speeding to the suburb, Sees sights only peaceful and pure; as labourers settling Slowly to work, in their limbs the lingering sweetness of slumber;
Humble market-carts, coming in, bringing in, not only Flower, fruit, farm-store, but sounds and sights of the country Dwelling yet on the sense of the dreamy drivers; soon after Half-awake servant-maids unfastening drowsy shutters
Up at the windows, or down, letting in the air by the door- way;
School-boys, school-girls soon, with slate, portfolio, satchel, Hampered as they haste, those running, these others maidenly tripping;
Early clerk anon turning out to stroll, or it may be
Meet his sweetheart-waiting behind the garden gate there; Merchant on his grass-plot haply bareheaded; and now by this time
Little child bringing breakfast to "father" that sits on the timber
There by the scaffolding; see, she waits for the can beside
Meantime above purer air untarnished of new-lit fires :
So that the whole great wicked artificial civilized fabric— All its unfinished houses, lots for sale, and railway outworks- Seems re-accepted, resumed to Primal Nature and Beauty. [The foregoing extracts are from Clough's longest poem, "The Bothie of Tober-na-Vuolich," published in 1848-a semi-humorous, semi-pathetic pas- toral epic, written in rolling careless hexameters, which, though often rough, are usually not unmusical. It is an eminently original poem, and bears all the characteristics of Clough's manly and candid genius.]
THERE ARE WHO WALK BESIDE US."-A. H. CLOUGH.
SERVE IN THY POST; BE FAITHFUL, AND OBEY; WHO SERVES HER TRULY, SOMETIMES SERVES THE STATE."-CLOUGH.
"BUT TRUE IT IS, ABOVE ALL LAW AND FATE-(COLERIDGE)
[HARTLEY COLERIDGE, the son of Samuel Taylor Coleridge, was born in 1796 at Clevedon, near Bristol. His childhood was remarkable for its precocity, as was his manhood for its irregularity. The early promise of his genius was never fulfilled; hopes, aspirations, dreams, radiant visions, and high ambition-all terminated in a sad and clouded life, a premature old age, and an obscure grave. What he might have done is evident from what little he did do, which, with many faults of execution, everywhere displays the vivida vis of a high and powerful intellect. His "Poems" were republished, in two volumes, in 1851; his miscellaneous prose papers, under the title of "Essays and Marginalia," in 1851; and his "Lives of Northern Worthies" in 1852.]
"A FAIRY THING WITH RED ROUND CHEEKS, THAT ALWAYS FINDS, AND NEVER SEEKS,(COLERIDGE)
MAKES SUCH A VISION TO THE SIGHT AS FILLS A FATHER'S EYES WITH LIGHT."-HARTLEY COLERIDGE.
HE soul of man is larger than the sky, Deeper than ocean-or the abysmal dark
Of the unfathomed centre. Which in its sacred hold uplifted high, O'er the drowned hills, the human family, And stock reserved of every living kind;
So in the compass of a single mind,
The seeds and pregnant forms in essence lie, To make all worlds. Great Poet, 'twas thy art To know thyself, and in thyself to be Whate'er love, hate, ambition, destiny, Or the firm fatal purpose of the heart Can make of man.
Yet thou wert still the same, unhurt by thy own flame.
[From "Poems: by Hartley Coleridge," edit. 1851.]
IS FAITH, ABIDING THE APPOINTED DAY."-H. COLERIDGE.
"O SLEEP! IT IS A GENTLE THING, BELOVED FROM POLE TO POLE!"-S. T. COLERIDGE.
BUT STILL THE HEART DOTH NEED A LANGuage, still-(Coleridge)
HAT was't awakened first the untried ear
Of that sole man who was all humankind? Was it the gladsome welcome of the wind, Stirring the leaves that never yet were sere? The four mellifluous streams which flowed so near, Their lulling murmurs all in one combined? The note of bird unnamed? Or did the holy ground Bursting the brake-in wonder, not in fear Of her new lord? Or did the holy ground Send forth mysterious melody to greet The gracious presence of immaculate feet? Did viewless seraphs rustle all around, Making sweet music out of air as sweet? Or his own voice awake him with its sound? [From "Poems: by Hartley Coleridge," edit. 1851.]
'A NOISE LIKE OF A HIDDEN BROOK IN THE LEAFY MONTH OF JUNE."-s. T. COLERIDGE.
Samuel Taylor Coleridge.
[SAMUEL TAYlor Coleridge, the son of the Rev. John Coleridge and Anne Bowden, was born at the vicarage of Ottery St. Mary's, Devonshire, on the 21st of October 1772. At the age of nine he was sent to school at Christ's Hospital, London, where he was roughly treated by his masters and most of his schoolfellows; but made a firm friend in Charles Lamb, and acquired a prodigious knowledge of the classics, English literature, even of medicine, and of metaphysics. At sixteen his love of poetry and his poetical genius budded forth, and he began to give evidence of those extraordinary conversational powers, that marvellous gift of subtly-flowing eloquence, which in later life made him the centre of entranced, admiring, but often puzzled audiences. In 1791 he entered Jesus College, Cambridge, but gained there no distinction, his heart and his head being ever absorbed in poetical and philosophical studies.
He remained at the university about two years. He then repaired to London, where poverty, hunger, and despondency induced him to enlist in
DOTH THE OLD INSTINCT BRING BACK THE OLD NAMES."-COLERIDGE.
"HE PRAYETH BEST, WHO LOVETH BEST
ALL THINGS BOTH GREAT AND SMALL
AND IN OUR LIFE ALONE DOES NATURE LIVE."-S. T. COLeridge.
the 15th Light Dragoons. After four months' service his friends bought him off; he returned to Cambridge for a few months; and finally left it in June 1794. Having made the acquaintance of Southey, the two endeavoured to realize some wild visions they had formed of an earthly Utopia, but failing from want of money, fell in love with, and married, two sisters, Sarah and Edith Fricker; Coleridge marrying the former in October, and Southey the latter in November.
Coleridge lecturing, essay-writing, and starting a periodical which lived just ten weeks. In 1796 he published a volume of "Juvenile Poems." He varied his occu- pations by preaching in a Unitarian chapel. In 1797 he settled at the village of Nether Stowey, under the green Quantock hills, where he en- joyed for some time the congenial companionship of Wordsworth. This year witnessed the composition of "The Ancient Mariner," "Kubla Khan," Genevieve," the first part of "Christabel," and others of his best poems. In 1798 appeared "The Lyrical Ballads," after which Coleridge visited Germany, returning to England in November 1799, and translating in three weeks Schiller's tragedy of "Wallenstein." In the following year he visited the English Lakes, and began contributing to the Morning Post. In 1801 he settled at Greta Hall. The next fifteen years were years of despondency, suffering, and unfulfilled promise; the result, partly, of bodily disease, of a fatal habit of laudanum-drinking, and of a natural irresolution which the poet never attempted to conquer. In 1810 he re- turned to London, publishing in weekly numbers a collection of essays, moral, political, and religious, which he entitled The Friend. In April 1816 he found a home and an asylum in the family of Mr. Gilman, a physician, living at Highgate, who thenceforth regarded it as his proudest title that he was the poet's friend. Here he learned to abandon opium, just in time to save his endangered life and intellect; and here, too, he be-
now threw himself heart and soul into the profession of letters,
thoughtful and earnest believer in the great truths of Christianity.
In 1816 and 1817 he gave to the world his "Two Lay Sermons;" in 1817, "Biographia Literaria;" in 1825, the "Aids to Reflection." His life prolonged, despite his constitutional weakness, for many years; and
he died, in full contentment and the firm assurance of future happiness, on the 25th of July 1834.
as a poet it may be said that he possessed "an imagination richer and more penetrative than that of most poets of his time;" a strange mastery of the most musical and airy language; an exquisite delicacy and subtlety of thought; and a keen and ever active religious sentiment. the infirmity that marred his genius prevented him from bequeathing any
Poems to posterity. His works are unfinished torsos; very beautiful
-some of them surpassingly grand-but none artistically complete. In thinking of what he has done, our regrets arise that he did so little; that he whose powers were so great and so varied, made so little use of them for the delight and edification of the world. Of his two best works, how- ever, it has been justly remarked that "Time has stamped them as, after of any generation of England's poetry."] their kind, unsurpassed by any creation of his own generation, or perhaps
"OURS IS HER WEDDING-GARMENT, OURS HER SHROUD."-COLERIDGE.
FOR THE DEAR GOD WHO LOVETH US, HE MADE AND LOVETH ALL."-COLERIDGE.
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