The Collected Works of Samuel Taylor Coleridge, Vol. 16, Part 1: Poetical Works: Part 1. Poems (Reading Text) (Two volume set)
By (Author) Samuel Taylor Coleridge
Edited by J. C.C. Mays
Princeton University Press
Princeton University Press
14th January 2002
Two volume set
United States
Tertiary Education
Non Fiction
Literary studies: poetry and poets
Literary studies: c 1800 to c 1900
821.7
Commended for AAP/Professional and Scholarly Publishing Awards: Multivolume Reference/Humanities 2001
Hardback
1616
Width 140mm, Height 216mm
2126g
Poetry in its many guises is at the center of Coleridge's multifarious interests, and this new edition of his complete poetical works marks the pinnacle of the Bollingen Collected Coleridge. The three parts of Volume 16 confirm and expand the sense of the Coleridge who has emerged over the past half-century, with implications for English Romantic writing as a whole and will interest historians and editorial theorists, as well as readers and students of poetry. The first part presents the reading texts of 706 poems in chronological sequence. Its blend of newly discovered and newly collected poems, presented in light of all known evidence and where practicable in unrevised forms, offers an original Coleridge: less inhibited by Victorian ideas about what poetry should be, moving easily and productively between genres and levels of seriousness. In texts that remained fluid and exploratory to the end, Coleridge alternates between lyric and satire, prophecy and conversation, symbol and allegory. Each poem is accompanied by a headnote and commentary that together provide its historical-biographical context and offer key textual variants. The book opens with an introduction and chronologic
Honorable Mention for the 2001 Award for Best Professional/Scholarly Book in Multivolume Reference: Humanities, Association of American Publishers "A landmark in Anglo-American scholarship."--Jim McCue, The Times (London) "There is something to celebrate in the fact that J. C. C. Mays has added these final volumes ... to the monumental Princeton University Press Coleridge. Coleridge's verse can now be read in full, and in a form worthy of his best writing. The poems are beautifully presented... In general, this Collected Poems serves its editor's wish: we see a fuller Coleridge ... [with] his exceptional intelligence and sensibility and breadth of information, his exquisite eye and ear."--Barbara Everett, London Review of Books
J.C.C. Mays is Professor of Modern English and American Literature at University College Dublin. He has published on English Romantic and Irish Modernist writers and is currently editing Diarmuid and Grania for the Cornell Yeats.