tain him by primitive ritual but the Edenic origin that is a guarantee of his poetic truth: "For he on honey-dew hath fed / And drank the milk of Paradise."
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If "Kubla Khan" is a whole poem masquerading as a fragment, "Christabel," Coleridge's third major poem of the marvelous, is strongly directed toward a completion it never attained. Part I was written in Somerset in 1797, Part II, which reflects the topography of the Lake District, at Keswick in 1800. The two parts were to be published in the second edition of Lyrical Ballads , and Wordsworth's decision to exclude them may have contributed to a blockage that became insurmountable. By the time Coleridge published "Christabel" in 1816, he had to appeal in a preface to the reader's faith in his originality, for by then Scott's Bridal of Triermain and Byron's "Siege of Corinth," both influenced by Coleridge's poem, had appeared. Blaming his inability to finish on the "state of suspended imagination in which his poetic powers had been,'' Coleridge now thought he could go on with the work. Although this was not to be, he did confide in his friend James Gillman about his plan for the poem, while a shorter and different précis was given to his son, Derwent, and these summaries suggest that the completion of the poem had been plotted in detail.
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"Christabel" is a poem of surprising revelations, transmutations, and changes of situation having to do with the intimate connection between the Christlike heroine and her mysterious visitor, Geraldine. Geraldine, the poem suggests, is both lover and motheron the night that they couch together she "Seems to slumber still and mild, / As a mother with her child." That night only Christabel sees the deformity of Geraldine's bosom, and on the next day she alone perceives Geraldine's serpentine transformationbut in the "dizzying trance" she falls into, it is Christabel herself who appears reptile as she "shuddered aloud with a hissing sound." Consequently, she must watch in dreamlike passivity as her father leads Geraldine forth in her place. If Gillman's scenario is correct, the themes of sexual propinquity and exchanged natures would have continued with Geraldine's transformation into a semblance of Christabel's faraway lover. At the crucial moment of the marriage ceremony, the real lover would have entered, bearing the ring of their betrothal; and Geraldine, like her immediate descendant, Keats's Lamia, would have disappeared. It is sometimes said, on the basis of a statement by Coleridge himself linking "Christabel" to Crashaw's hymn to Saint Teresa, that Christabel experiences vicarious suffering to
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