Appendix: A Hitherto Unnoticed Account of Coleridge's 1811–1812 Lecture Series
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 27 April 2017
Summary
Although Foakes’ two-volume edition of the Lectures on Literature does a remarkable job in locating and collating the various scattered accounts and reports of Coleridge's lecturing, there are a few sources which he happened to miss. One such, a fairly lengthy account of lectures 4 and 7–9 of the 1811–12 series, is printed here, followed by some speculations as to its authorship. It appeared under the title: ‘Intelligence—Literary, Philosophical &c’ in The General Chronicle and Literary Magazine (4 (April 1812), 310–12, and 411–15). The first part of this is as follows:
Mr. COLERIDGE, a gentleman already well known for his own poetical writings, has lately delivered, in the metropolis, lectures upon the general body of English poetry, not refraining even from the invidious task of delivering public criticisms upon the productions of living writers. Polite criticism is the source of so many elegant enjoyments, that every effort in that department claims the attention of persons of taste, and the present subject is one which strictly belongs to our head of Literary Intelligence.
Mr. Coleridge was naturally led to dwell upon the writings of Shakespear, that well of poetry, the waters of which are continually presented to our lips, and of which we are yet never weary. He commenced his fourth lecture by adverting to the period when Shakespear wrote, and the discouragements of the poet, from the prejudices which prevailed against his sublime art. He conceived, with Mr. Malone, that Shakespear began his public career about 1591, when he was 27 years of age. From the rank his father sustained, he did not credit the stories of the humble situation of the poet, whose earliest productions he considered to be the Venus and Adonis, and Lucrece, and from these it was easy to predict his future greatness: poeta nascitur non fit. In these models we could discern that he possessed at least two indications of his genuine character—he was not merely endowed with a thirst for the end, but he enjoyed an ample capability of the means; and in the selection of his subject he distinguished one that was far removed from his private interests, feelings, and circumstances.
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- Coleridge: Lectures on Shakespeare (1811-1819) , pp. 180 - 187Publisher: Edinburgh University PressPrint publication year: 2016