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

PART THE SECOND
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Ranulph, being Lord of all Gilsland, gave Gilmore's land to his younger son, named Roland....

And they were named Rolands successively, that were lords thereof, until the reign of Edward the Fourth." 44--*The Conclusion to Part the Second*.

Campbell thought it "highly improbable" that these lines were originally composed as a part of "Christabel." In a letter to Southey, May 6, 1801, Coleridge speaks of his eldest boy, Hartley, then in his fifth year: "Dear Hartley! we are at times alarmed by the state of his health, but at present he is well.
If I were to lose him, I am afraid it would exceedingly deaden my affection for any other children I may have." Then he writes the lines that we now have as the Conclusion to Part the Second; and adds: "A very metaphysical account of fathers calling their children rogues, rascals, and little varlets, etc." KUBLA KHAN Kubla Khan, grandson of Genghis Khan, was a Mongolian conqueror who stretched his empire from European Russia to the eastern shores of China in the thirteenth century.

His exploits, like those of his grandfather and those of the Mohammedan Timur in the next century, made a deep impression on the imagination of Western Europe.

Compilers of travellers's tales, like Hakluyt and Purchas, caught up eagerly whatever they could find, history or legend, concerning the extent of his domain, the methods of his government, or the splendors of his court.


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