Ode On The Departing Year
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''Ode on the Departing Year'' was composed by
Samuel Taylor Coleridge Samuel Taylor Coleridge (; 21 October 177225 July 1834) was an English poet, literary critic, philosopher, and theologian who, with his friend William Wordsworth, was a founder of the Romantic Movement in England and a member of the Lake ...
in 1796. The poem describes Coleridge's feelings on politics and religion, and it emphasises an idyllic lifestyle as an optimal way of living.


Background

While Coleridge lived in
Bristol Bristol () is a city, ceremonial county and unitary authority in England. Situated on the River Avon, it is bordered by the ceremonial counties of Gloucestershire to the north and Somerset to the south. Bristol is the most populous city in ...
during the end of 1796, he worked on trying to get his poetry published and submitted many of his pieces to various magazines. The ''Ode to the Departing Year'' was submitted to the ''
Cambridge Intelligencer The ''Cambridge Intelligencer'' was an English weekly newspaper, appearing from 1793 to 1803, and edited by Benjamin Flower. The historian J. E. Cookson called it "the most vigorous and outspoken liberal periodical of its day". Flower suffered ...
'' and published 31 December.Ashton 1997 p. 97 In a letter to Thomas Poole, on 26 December 1796, Coleridge explains,
Soon after the commencement of this month, the Editor of the Cambridge Intelligencer ..requested me, by Letter, to furnish him with some Lines for the last day of this Year. I promised him that I would make the attempt; but, almost immediately after, a rheumatic complaint seized on my head, and continued to prevent the possibility of poetic composition till within the last three days. So in the course of the last three days the following Ode was produced. In general, when an Author informs the Public that his production was struck off in a great hurry, he offers an insult, not an excuse. But I trust that the present case is an exception, and that the peculiar circumstances, which obliged me to write with such unusual rapidity, give a propriety to my professions of it ..For me to discuss the ''literary'' merits of this hasty composition, were idle and presumptuous ..I am more anxious, lest the ''moral'' spirit of the Ode should be mistaken. You, I am sure, will not fail to recollect, that among the Ancients, the Bard and the Prophet were one and the same character; and you ''know'', that although I prophesy curses, I pray fervently for blessings.Letter to Thomas Poole 11 December 1796
At the beginning of 1797 after the poem was published, Coleridge was attempting to complete his long poem titled '' The Destiny of Nations. A Vision'' for a 1797 edition of his poems. When Coleridge was no longer able to complete the poem, he replaced it with ''Ode to the Departing Year'' in the collection.


Poem

The poem begins with a prayer to Divine Providence:Radley 1966 p. 41 The poem then predicts the fall of Britain if the British government was to ally with tyrant forces against the French: The poem ends with a description of living a meek, agrarian life:Holmes 1989 p. 133


Themes

In terms of the political themes, Coleridge added a note to a later edition of the work which says, "Let it not be forgotten during the perusal of this Ode that it was written many years before the abolition of the Slave Trade by the British Legislature, likewise before the invasion of Switzerland by the French Republic, which occasioned the Ode that follows, a kind of Palinodia." The actual topic of the poem is the death of Catherine of Russia and a prophecy that Britain will fall if they fight against France. Within the poem she is described as a Hag, and the poem opposes Catherine because she opposed France. The use of prophesy is connected to what Coleridge does in his poem ''Religious Musings'' and the political themes are connected to ''The Destiny of Nations''. In particular, there is an emphasis on the suffering of mankind and how people need to think about the problems of society as a whole to fix the social ills. Along with the political message, ''Ode on the Departing Year'' and ''The Destiny of Nations'' relies on the image of a harp as a way to promote his message. Connections to the themes in Coleridge's poetry continued until the late poem, "Ne Plus Ultra", incorporates parallels to the ideas within the ''Ode''. Coleridge believed during 1796 that the best life is one of hard work farming with a modest lifestyle, which comes out in the end of ''Ode on the Departing Year''. In a Letter to Poole in December, Coleridge wrote: "I mean to work ''very hard'' — as Cook, Butler, Scullion, Shoe-cleaner, occasional Nurse, Gardener, Hind, Pig-protector, Chaplain, Secretary, Poet, Reviewer, and omni-botherum shilling-scavenger — in other words, I shall keep no Servant, and will cultivate my Land-acre and my wise-acres, as well as I can." After the poem was published on 31 December 1796, Coleridge set out from Bristol to be with his wife Sara and their child; his plans was to move to Stowey to become a farmer.


Critical response

In 1959, John Colmer wrote, "Two of these poems, the ''Ode on the departing Year'' and ''France: An Ode'', form landmarks in the development of Coleridge's political thought. The dominant note of the first is a deep disgust with his native land for associating herself with the armed ambition of the continental powers, particularly with Russia."Colmer 1959 pp. 51–52


Notes


References

* Ashton, Rosemary. ''The Life of Samuel Taylor Coleridge''. Oxford: Blackwell, 1997. * * Colmer, John. ''Coleridge: Critic of Society''. Oxford: Clarendon Press, 1959. * Doughty, Oswald. ''Perturbed Spirit''. London: Associated University Presses, 1981. * Holmes, Richard. ''Coleridge: Early Visions, 1772–1804''. New York: Pantheon, 1989. * Jasper, David. ''Coleridge as Poet & Religious Thinker''. Allison Park: Pickwick, 1985. * Mays, J. C. C. (editor). ''The Collected Works of Samuel Taylor Coleridge: Poetical Works'' I Vol I.I. Princeton: Princeton University Press, 2001. * Radley, Virginia. ''Samuel Taylor Coleridge''. New York: Twayne Publishers, 1966. {{Samuel Taylor Coleridge Poetry by Samuel Taylor Coleridge 1796 poems Christian poetry British poems Works originally published in British newspapers