Coleridge’s Poetry
Samuel
Taylor Coleridge
“Dejection: An Ode”
Summary
The speaker recalls a poem that
tells the tale of Sir Patrick Spence: In this poem, the moon takes on a certain
strange appearance that presages the coming of a storm. The speaker declares
that if the author of the poem possessed a sound understanding of weather, then
a storm will break on this night as well, for the moon looks now as it did in
the poem. The speaker wishes ardently for a storm to erupt, for the violence of
the squall might cure his numb feeling. He says that he feels only a ‘dull
pain,” “a grief without a pang”—a constant deadening of all his feelings.
Speaking to a woman whom he addresses as “O Lady,” he admits that he has been
gazing at the western sky all evening, able to see its beauty but unable fully
to feel it. He says that staring at the green sky will never raise his spirits,
for no “outward forms” can generate feelings: Emotions can only emerge from
within.
According to the speaker, “we
receive but what we give”: the soul itself must provide the light by which we
may hope to see nature’s true beauty—a beauty not given to the common crowd of
human beings (“the poor loveless ever-anxious crowd”). Calling the Lady “pure
of heart,” the speaker says that she already knows about the light and music of
the soul, which is Joy. Joy, he says, marries us to nature, thereby giving us
“a new Earth and new Heaven, / Undreamt of by the sensual and the proud.”
The speaker insists that there was a
time when he was full of hope, when every tribulation was simply the material
with which “fancy made me dreams of happiness.” But now his afflictions press
him to the earth; he does not mind the decline of his mirth, but he cannot bear
the corresponding degeneration of his imagination, which is the source of his
creativity and his understanding of the human condition, that which enables him
to construct “from my own nature all the natural man.” Hoping to escape the
“viper thoughts” that coil around his mind, the speaker turns his attention to
the howling wind that has begun to blow. He thinks of the world as an
instrument played by a musician, who spins out of the wind a “worse than wintry
song.” This melody first calls to mind the rush of an army on the field;
quieting, it then evokes a young girl, lost and alone.
It is midnight, but the speaker has
“small thoughts” of sleep. However, he hopes that his friend the Lady will be
visited by “gentle Sleep” and that she will wake with joyful thoughts and
“light heart.” Calling the Lady the “friend devoutest of my choice,” the
speaker wishes that she might “ever, evermore rejoice.”
Form
The long ode stanzas of “Dejection”
are metered in iambic lines ranging in length from trimeter to pentameter. The
rhymes alternate between bracketed rhymes (ABBA) and couplets (CC) with
occasional exceptions.
Commentary
In this poem, Coleridge continues
his sophisticated philosophical exploration of the relationship between man and
nature, positing as he did in “The Nightingale” that human feelings and the
forms of nature are essentially separate. Just as the speaker insisted in the
earlier poem that the nightingale’s song should not be called melancholy simply
because it sounded so to a melancholy poet, he insists here that the beauty of
the sky before the storm does not have the power to fill him with joy, for the
source of human feeling is within. Only when the individual has access to that
source, so that joy shines from him like a light, is he able to see the beauty
of nature and to respond to it. (As in “Frost in Midnight,” the city-raised
Coleridge insists on a sharper demarcation between the mind and nature than the
country-raised Wordsworth would ever have done.)
Coleridge blames his desolate
numbness for sapping his creative powers and leaving him without his habitual
method of understanding human nature. Despite his insistence on the separation
between the mind and the world, Coleridge nevertheless continues to find
metaphors for his own feelings in nature: His dejection is reflected in the
gloom of the night as it awaits the storm.
“Dejection” was written in 1802 but
was originally drafted in the form of a letter to Sara Hutchinson, the woman
Coleridge loved. The much longer original version of the poem contained many of
the same elements as “The Nightingale” and “Frost at Midnight,” including the
same meditation on his children and their natural education. This version also
referred explicitly to “Sara” (replaced in the later version by “Lady”) and “William”
(a clear reference to Wordsworth). Coleridge’s strict revision process
shortened and tightened the poem, depersonalizing it, but the earlier draft
hints at just how important the poem’s themes were to Coleridge personally and
indicates that the feelings expressed were the poet’s true beliefs about his
own place in the world.
A side note: The story of Sir
Patrick Spence, to which the poet alludes in the first stanza, is an ancient
Scottish ballad about a sailor who drowns with a boatload of Scottish noblemen,
sailing on orders from the king but against his own better judgment. It
contains lines that refer to the moon as a predictor of storms, which Coleridge
quotes as an epigraph for his ode: “Late, late yestreen I saw the new Moon /
With the old Moon in her arms; / And I fear, I fear, my Master dear! / We shall
have a deadly storm.”

No comments:
Post a Comment