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Gentleman's Magazine 1834 part 2 p.546
it was to diffuse the new political doctrines, he set out
like Wildgoose in Mr. Grave's admirable novel, to make
proselytes, and above all, to procure subscribers. No
"Diffusion Society" had then prepared his way in the
manufacturing towns; the Watchman languished on the tenth
number, and then its warning voice was heard no more.
This woeful disappointment in his political expectations was
in some measure relieved by the favourable reception given
to a volume of Poems, the quick sale of which induced him to
a republication, with the addition of some communications
from his friends, Charles Lamb and Charles Lloyd.
Still the ardour of liberty, and the establishment of a
perfect order of things, continued to prevail, and Mr.
Coleridge, with his friends Southey and Lovell, were bent
upon trying their skill as political philosophers, not in
correcting the evils of a old state, but in the settlement
of a new one. This Utopia, which was to bear the
high-sounding name of PANTISOCRACY, they proposed to found
on the banks of the Susquehanna, where all property was to
be held in common, and every man in his turn to be a
legislator. But while preparations were making to carry out
this fine project into execution, the whole scheme blew up
by a spark of another description; for in the midst of their
dreams of immortality, these rivals of Solon, Lycurgus, and
Numa, became enamooured of three sisters of the name of
Fricker. Thus the business of Love thrust out the mighty
concern of what Jeremy Bentham was wont to call the science
of Codification, and in a short time our author and his two
associates, instead of seeking happiness in the wilds of
America, were content to sit down in the bosom of domestic
enjoyment, according to the laws and usages of their
fathers. In plain terms, all three married; and the scheme
of foreign colonization being given up, they began to think
about settling in their own country. Mr. Coleridge went to
reside at Nether Stowey, a small town near Bridgewater,
where he contracted an acquainance with Mr. Wordsworth.
At this period the circumstances of our author were far from
being comfortable, and his principal subsistence depended
upon literary labours, the remuneration for which, at such a
distance from the metropolis, could not be adequate for the
necessities of a growing family. In this perplexity he was
relieved by the generous and munificent patronage of Mr.
Josiah and Mr. Thomas Wedgwood, who enabled him to finish
his education in Germany, where he began to study the
language at Ratzeburg; after acquiring which he went through
Hanover to Goettingen. Here he diligently attended the
lectures of Blumenbach on physiology and natural history;
and those of Eichhorn on the New Testament: but his chief
application was to philosophy and polite literature. This
important event in the life of Mr. Coleridge occurred in
1798, and during his residence abroad he had the
satisfaction of meeting Mr. Wordsworth, then on a tour in
Germany with his sister. Soon after the return of our author
from Germany, he undertook the literary and political
department of the Morning Post, on entering into which
engagement, it was stipulated that the paper should be
conducted on certain fixed and announced principles, from
which the editor should neither be obliged nor requested to
deviate in favour of any party or circumstance. This
connexion continued during the Addington Administration,
after which, the paper being transferred to other
proprietors, Mr. Coleride relinquished the management. While
he was in this concern he published translations of two of
Schiller's Dramas, on the story of Wallenstein.
Mr. Coleridge now became Secretary to Sir Alexander Ball,
whom he accompanied to Malta, of which island that
distinguished officer was appointed Governor; but this
situation our author did not long retain, nor did it prove
any otherwise advantageous to him than by extending his
knowledge of the world, and giving him an opportunity of
treading the classic ground of Italy. During his wanderings,
his wife and family resided under the roof of Mr. Southey,
at Keswick, and thither our poet bent his course on his
return to England.
We next find him lecturing on poetry at the Royal
Institution, and an occasional writer in the Courier, his
political principles having now undergone a complete
transmutation. In 1812 he produced a series of miscellaneous
essays entituled "The Friend;" which, though they had but a
very limited circulation, he subsequently revised, enlarged,
and re-printed. The year following appeared "Remorse;" a
tragedy.
This was originally written some years before at the
suggestion of his friend Mr. Bowles, in consequence of a
wish expressed by Sheridan, but who, when he saw it, had
considered it unsuitable for performance.
In 1816 Mr. Coleridge published Christabel, &c.; and the
Statesman's Manual, a Lay Sermon; in 1817 his Bibliographia
Literaria, in two vols.; in 1818
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