Circassian Love Chant,
its charm of melody,
Coleridge, Samuel Taylor.
His biographers,
birth and family history,
his boyhood and school days,
early childhood,
death of his father,
goes to Christ's Hospital,
goes to Jesus College, Cambridge,
wins the Browne Gold Medal,
leaves Cambridge suddenly and enlists in the army,
his discharge,
returns to Cambridge,
his meeting with Southey and Sara Fricker (his future wife),
writes the Fall of Robespierre with Southey,
leaves Cambridge,
delivers the Bristol lectures,
marries Sara Fricker at Bristol,
writes the Aeolian Harp,
plunges into politics and journalism,
projects the Watchman and goes on a canvassing tour,
preaches Unitarian sermons by the way,
brings out the Watchman,
retires to a cottage in Somersetshire with Charles Lloyd,
his meeting with Wordsworth,
cooling of his revolutionary enthusiasm,
his intercourse with Wordsworth,
writes Osorio,
his rambles with Wordsworth among the Quantock Hills,
projects the Lyrical Ballads,
writes the Ancient Mariner,
Christabel,
Love,
Kubla Khan,
undertakes the duties of a Unitarian preacher at Shrewsbury,
accepts an annuity from the two Wedgwoods,
goes to Germany with the Wordsworths,
returns to England after a year's absence,
translates Schiller's Wallenstein,
devotes himself again to journalism,
goes to the Lake country,
takes opium as an anodyne,
writes the Ode to Dejection,
goes on a tour with Thomas Wedgwood,
visits the Wordsworths at Grasmere,
his illness there,
goes to Malta,
ill effects of his stay there,
becomes Secretary to the Governor of the island,
goes to Italy,
returns to England after two and a half years' absence,
his wretched condition of mind and body,
estrangement from his wife,
domestic unhappiness,
meeting with De Quincey,
pecuniary embarrassments,
his lectures at the Royal Institution,
lives with Wordsworth at Allan Bank,
founds and edits the Friend,
delivers lectures on Shakespeare,
returns to journalism,
his necessities,
loses his annuity,
neglect of his family,
successful production of his play Remorse,
lectures again at Bristol,
retires to Calne with Mr. Morgan,
more financial troubles,
lives with Dr. Gillman at Highgate,
undergoes medical treatment for the opium habit,
returning health and vigour,
renewed literary activity,
writes the Biographia Literaria,
lectures again in London,
more money troubles,
publishes Aids to Reflection,
accompanies Wordsworth on a tour up the Rhine,
his declining years,
contemplation of his approaching end,
his death,
Poet and Thinker.
His early bent towards poetry and metaphysics,
his prose style,
his early poems, their merits and defects,
his sonnets,
Coleridge at his best,
untimely decline of his poetic impulse,
Wordsworth's great influence on him,
Coleridge's mastery of the true ballad manner,
estimate of his poetic work,
comparison with Byron and Wordsworth,
his wonderful power of melody,
his great projects,
his critical powers,
his criticism of Shakespeare,
his philosophy,
his contemplated "Great Work,"
his materials for various poems,
his metaphysics and theology,
his discourses,
exaggerated notions of his position and influence,
his "unwritten books,"
Precocious boyhood,
descriptions of him at various times,
his voice,
his conduct as a husband,
religious nature,
revolutionary enthusiasm,
consciousness of his great powers,
generous admiration for the gifts of others,
his womanly softness,
his pride in his personal appearance,
his contempt for money,
his ill-health,
his opium-eating,
his restlessness,
best portrait of him,
his unbusinesslike nature,
sorrows of his life,
his laudanum excesses,
his talk,
his weaknesses,
Coleridge, Mrs.,
Coleridge, Rev. Derwent,
Coleridge, Rev. George,
Coleridge, Hartley,
Coleridge, Rev. John,
Coleridge, Luke,