22 pages • 44 minutes read
Samuel Taylor ColeridgeA modern alternative to SparkNotes and CliffsNotes, SuperSummary offers high-quality Study Guides with detailed chapter summaries and analysis of major themes, characters, and more.
Coleridge is considered one of the most important figures in the English Romantic Era of poetry. With Wordsworth, Coleridge created the Lyrical Ballads (1798), which outlined the qualities of Romantic poetry in its preface. Coleridge disagreed with Wordsworth about the value of using rustic diction (conversational speech), using more heightened or carefully crafted language in his poetry. Both men valued imagination, but in slightly different aesthetic modes. Coleridge, in his Biographia Literaria (1817), wrote that imagination “reveals itself in the balance or reconciliation of opposite or discordant qualities of sameness, with difference; of general, with the concrete; the idea, with the image; the individual, with the representative.”
Coleridge was also influenced by early English Romantic writer and artist William Blake. Both men shared an interest in different levels of the imagination—Coleridge called them primary and secondary. Blake saw imagination as a way to communicate with and share the divine power of creation; both men were interested in the Edenic—the contrast between innocence and experience—a duality that shows up in “Christabel.”
Finally, “Christabel” is part of a subgenre of the Romantic called Gothic Romantic poetry. Gothic texts usually include elements like young women in distress, grief over the death of a loved one, the supernatural, and an emphasis on time.
The poem draws on a variety of mythologies and folktales to portray the supernatural abilities of Geraldine. Her seductive and serpentine eyes, pale skin, and inability to cross thresholds under her own power support reading her as a vampire. Because “Christabel” long predates Irish author Sheridan Le Fanu’s 1872 Carmilla, a sapphic horror novel that inspired Bram Stoker’s Dracula (1897), her ambiguous occult nature is not a deviation from the specific set of constraints Stoker established.
Geraldine could also be a witch or ghost—otherworldly horrors that often shared vampiric traits like being repelled by prayer or stymied by thresholds. Early European mythology gave specific characteristics to different regional spirits, but the rise of the Grand Tour and the printing press hybridized and generalized much specific mythology. Both witches and ghosts were seen to have power over spirits, as Geraldine demonstrates by banishing the invisible ghost of Christabel’s mother. Read in this context, the knights who left Geraldine in the woods likely killed her, causing her to seek vengeance, or were a manifestation of Satan, who unbaptized her and gave her supernatural powers.
By Samuel Taylor Coleridge
Beauty
View Collection
British Literature
View Collection
Fantasy
View Collection
Horror, Thrillers, & Suspense
View Collection
LGBTQ Literature
View Collection
Loyalty & Betrayal
View Collection
Mothers
View Collection
Pride Month Reads
View Collection
Religion & Spirituality
View Collection
Romanticism / Romantic Period
View Collection
Romantic Poetry
View Collection
Safety & Danger
View Collection
Science Fiction & Dystopian Fiction
View Collection