ing upon the state of society from a cosmic perspective, "Religious Musings" presents the French Revolution as an apocalypse to be followed by the millennium of a just society and the descent of the throne of God. When he began this poem in December 1794, Coleridge had already written the greater part of "The Destiny of Nations" as a contribution to Southey's epic Joan of Arc (1796), projecting allegorical visions of the American and French Revolutions as proleptic of universal peace. In shorter poems Coleridge expressed his responses to events in Revolutionary France and in his own country. "To a Young Lady with a Poem on the French Revolution" presents the poet as imaginatively participating in the bloody defense of the Revolution but, significantly, closes with his turning to domestic life.
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The "Ode on the Departing Year" views the events of 1796 as a series of nightmare visions of war and empire, prophesizes the imminent destruction of Albion, and concludes with the isolated poet, "unpartaking of the evil thing," in religious contemplation. Sonnets lament the apostasy of Edmund Burke from the cause of Freedom, sympathize with Joseph Priestley as driven to America by the Birmingham mob, and praise libertarian figures like Erskine, Sheridan, Koskiusko, and LaFayette. Although there are also some poems of personal sentiment like the beautiful "Lines Written at Shurton Bars," the emphasis is on the public realm.
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Coleridge did not immediately abandon this subject matter after 1797, but as he self-critically put it, he "pruned" his style and "used my best efforts to tame the swell and glitter of both thought and diction." In "France: An Ode," originally published as "The Recantation," Coleridge reviewed his past Revolutionary sympathies from the perspective of 1798 and faced the collapse of his former millennial hopes. Now he declared that Liberty could be found only among clouds, sea, and woods, ''The guide of homeless winds, and playmate of the waves!" In "Fears in Solitude," that same year, he voiced his feelings of anxiety and isolation at the prospect of a French invasion, yet blamed his countrymen for having offended God by their cupidity and corruption. It would no doubt have been difficult to go on writing meditative political poetry without finding a center of value somewhere, but satire was still possible. In "Fire, Famine, and Slaughter," Coleridge excoriated William Pitt for the blood shed in the Vendée and in Ireland; and in "The Devil's Thoughts," written in collaboration with Southey, the institutions of British society are inspected by the Devil to provide a
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