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Gentleman's Magazine 1834 part 2 p.545
essay on English Poetry, intended for a society at Exeter,
but which piece is not inserted in their published volume.
We presume that it was at this period of his life that he
enlisted as a common soldier in the Dragoons. Upon this
singular fact, or what might be called in the
metaphysician's own language "psychological curiosity," the
following authentic account has been communicated to the
public by the Rev. W. L. Bowles, who is, perhaps, the only
person now living who could explain all the circumstances
from Mr. Coleridge's own mouth, with whom he became
acquainted after a sonnet addressed to him in his poems; and
who, moreover, was intimate with that very officer who alone
procured Coleridge his discharge:
"The regiment was the 15th, Elliott's Light Dragoons; the
officer was Nathaniel Ogle, eldest son of Dr. Newton Ogle,
Dean of Winchester, and brother of the late Mrs. Sheridan;
he was a scholar, and, leaving Merton College, he entered
his regiment a cornet. Some years afterwards - I believe he
was then a Captain of Coleridge's troop - going into the
stables, at Reading, he remarked written on the white wall,
under one of the saddles, in large pencil characters, the
following sentence, in Latin -
'Eheu! quam infortunii miserrimum est fuisse felicem!'
"Being struck with the circumstance, and himself a scholar,
Captain Ogle inquired of a soldier whether he knew to whom
the saddle belonged. 'Please your honour, to Comberback,'
answered the dragoon. 'Comberback!' said his captain; 'send
him to me.' Comberback presented himself, with the inside of
his hand in front of his cap. His officer mildly said,
'Comberback, did you write the Latin sentence which I have
just read, under your saddle?' 'Please, your honour,'
answered the soldier, 'I wrote it?' 'Then, my lad, you are
not what you are not what you appear to be. I shall speak to
the commanding officer, and you may depend on my speaking as
a friend.' The commanding officer, I think, was General
Churchill. Comberback* was examined, and it was found
out, that having left Jesus College, Cambridge, and being in
London without resources, he had enlisted in this regiment.
He was soon discharged, - not from his democrratic feelings;
for, whatever those feelings might be, as a soldier he was
remarkable orderly and obedient, though he could not rub
down his own horse. He was discharged from respect to his
friends and his station. His friends having been informed of
his situation, a chaise was soon at the door of the Bear
Inn, Reading, and the officers of the 15th cordially shaking
his hands, particularly the officer who had been the means
of his discharge, he drove off, not without a tear in his
eye, whilst his old companions of the tap room gave him
three hearty cheers as the wheels rapidly rolled away along
the road to London and Cambridge.
"It should be mentioned, that by far the most correct,
sublime, chaste, and beautiful of his poems, meo
judicio, his 'Religious Musings,' was written, non
inter sylvas academi, but in the tap room at Reading. A
fine subject for a painting by Wilkie."
In 1794, Coleridge ventured to publish a small volume of
juvenile Poems, which were very favourably spoken of by the
periodical critics, as the buds of hope, and promises of
better works to come: though the same reviewers concurred in
objecting to them, obscurity, a general turgidness of
diction, and a profusion of new-coined double epithets. The
same year he published "The Fall of Robespierre, an historic
drama," in which the Conventional speeches were happily
versified, and the sentiments expressed in language
classically correct, and uncommonly vigourous. The French
Revolution had at this time turned the heads of many
persons, and this was the case with Mr. Coleridge, who
became such a zealot in the cause of universal liberty as to
abandon the friendly cloisters of his college to embark in
the quixotic enterprise of reforming the world. he had, at
this time, formed a close intimacy with Mr. Southey and
Robert Lovell, on a visit to Oxford; and, their sentiments
being perfectly in unison, the triumvirate began to project
schemes for ameliorating the condition of human society.
They began their operations at Bristol in a course of
Lectures delivered by our young adventurer, with
considerable applause from certain classes in that renowned
trading city. Here, also, in 1795, Mr. Coleridge published
two political pamphlets, one entitled, "Conciones ad
Populum, or Address to the People;" and the other, "A
Protest against certain Bills then pending for Suppressing
Seditious Meetings."
In an inauspicious hour he was also persuaded to commence a
weekly paper, "The Watchman;" and as the object of
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