[Coleridge’s Ancient Mariner and Select Poems by Samuel Taylor Coleridge]@TWC D-Link book
Coleridge’s Ancient Mariner and Select Poems

INTRODUCTION
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In general, they ascribed all the evils of society to "institutions," and wanted them abolished.
Just how far Coleridge had gone in this direction by the autumn of 1793 we do not know; far enough at least to disturb his view of the future, to worry his elder brother George, a clergyman and school-teacher, who had in some measure filled a father's place to the young genius, and, most important of all, to alarm and distress a gentle girl in London.
For before he left Christ's Hospital for Cambridge he had become intimate at the house of a Mrs.Evans, and most of the letters preserved from his first two years at the University were addressed to her or to one of her two daughters, Anne and Mary.

With the latter Coleridge was in love; and that she had some regard for him is apparent from a letter she sent him in 1794.

Before that, however, Coleridge had taken a step that seemed likely to close at once his college career and his prospects of literary fame.

The reasons have not been recorded: probably pecuniary embarrassment, the yeasty state of his religious and political ideas, and impatience or despondency over his love-affair with Mary Evans, combined to precipitate his flight; what we know is that he ran away from Cambridge and in December, 1793, enlisted as a dragoon in the army.
Coleridge had hardly taken the step before he repented of it.

His letters to his brother George, who with other friends bestirred himself for Coleridge's release as soon as his whereabouts was discovered, are rather distressing in their self-abasement.


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