In:Towards a Romantic Conception of Nature: Coleridge's Poetry up to 1803: A study in the history of ideas
H.R. Rookmaaker
[Utrecht Publications in General and Comparative Literature 20] 1984
► pp. ix–ix
Get fulltext
This article is available free of charge.
Published online: 1 January 1984
https://doi.org/10.1075/upal.20.toc
https://doi.org/10.1075/upal.20.toc
Table of contents
Acknowledgementsvi
Introduction1
1. The Eighteenth Century Tradition of Nature Poetry13
2. The Traditional Character of Coleridge’s Early Poetry25
3. The 1796 Poems and their Philosophical Background33
4. Coleridge and Wordsworth in 1797; Their Interest in Evil and Alienation55
5. Alienation Reconsidered: ‘The Ancient Mariner’65
6. ‘Frost at Midnight’: A Companion Piece to ‘The Ancient Mariner’95
7. A Brief Survey of Continental Ideas on Man and Nature103
8. A Movement Away From Empiricism, Towards the ‘one Life’ Idea: 1799–1803117
9. The ‘one Life’ and Alienation: ‘Dejection: an Ode’133
10. ‘Kubla Khan’ and its Ideational Resemblance to ‘Dejection: an Ode’147
11. Reality and Dream: Romantic Irony in ‘The Picture’153
Conclusion169
Notes173
Bibliography203
Index209
Index of Coleridge’s works213
