The very best are never satisfied

I wish I could convey in particular to young people, whose mental appetites seem whetted so easily these days by the transitory and the trashy, the quiet depths, the delights, the leaping excitements of great poetry. Perhaps I should remind the young inclined to scoff, that Bob Marley became an ian on sundayicon at least partly because his best songs have the beauty and enduing significance of good poetry. And I hope lovers of popular music are aware that Frank Sinatra in his famous song ‘I Did It My Way’ only borrowed from the poet Walt Whitman who wrote it long ago: “Unstopp’d and unwrap’d by any influence outside the soul within me, I have had my say entirely my own way and put unerringly on record – the value thereof to be decided by time.”

Of all the poets I read when I was young Samuel Taylor Coleridge was the one I loved best. In the sixth form at school there were five of us who knew ‘Kubla Khan’ by heart and one of us only had to begin and the rest would join in the sacred chant that ended the poem:

And all shall say Beware! Beware!

His flashing eyes, his floating hair!

Weave a circle around him thrice,

And close your eyes with holy dread,

For he on honey dew hath fed

And drunk the milk of Paradise.

The lines, the whole poem, all Coleridge’s poetry still fill me with delight. And as I grew older I graduated to his prose works, letters, his diaries, his great Biographia Literaria. Dip into writings anywhere and there are treasures. About the lessons of history: “If men could learn from history, what lessons it might teach us! But passion and party blind our eyes and the light which experience gives is a lantern on the stern, which lies only on the waves behind us!” About writing poetry: “I hope our clever young poets will remember my homely definition of prose and poetry: that is, prose ‒ words in their best order, poetry – the best words in the best order.

The excursions Coleridge made within his own mind were as wondrous as any man has ever undertaken. He finds the meaning of civilization and his own salvation in the irrepressible life of language. His notebooks pour out a torrent of enchantments and interrogations. He questions whether life – or literature ‒ can have real meaning without some form of divine continuity or assurance within the structure of reality. Often he loses faith and expresses black despair, but even his despair is extraordinarily lit by one of the most creative and visionary imaginations which has ever worked with language.

This is why the report a while back that 300 poems written by Coleridge, but lost since he wrote them, had been re-discovered was a piece of news easily more important than most of the ephemeral or degrading rubbish highlighted in the media. A fair equivalent might be if in some dusty vault a treasury of lost Cezannes were found or old film of Nijinsky dancing or of George Headley making a century of which nobody had kept a record but in the imagination.

These Coleridge manuscripts were unearthed in a fanatical search over twenty years on five continents by professor Jim Mays, head of the English Department of University College, Dublin. We are forever in debt to such wonderful obsession. The works range from two-line fragments to poems ten pages long and include thousands of new versions of poems already known.

There are six versions of an elegy on the poet’s broken shaving pot. There is a vivid poem written in Greek and Hebrew about a friend who had trouble sustaining erections with his frisky young wife. One poem is written on pale seaweed.

Some are written in the medicine Coleridge took for his gout, some in blood drawn when he bit his thumb after running out of ink. “If you are stuck on a mountain, inspired by the falling night, and you want to write something, your own blood may be the only thing that’s handy,” Professor Mays comments.

In this magnificent and unexpected archive of lost work by one of the very greatest men of literature who ever lived, one extraordinary fact particularly struck me. It is that over 100 versions of ‘The Rime of the Ancient Mariner’ have been found by Professor Mays. Anyone who loves poetry, who loves the care and dedication and striving for unattainable perfection which must go into the best poetry, will be pleased to see that sign of a great poet at work. More than 100 versions of that one poem! And how many drafts of ‘The Ancient Mariner’ did Coleridge crumple up and destroy, eternally dissatisfied with the results of grappling with the endless potentialities of language? You can be sure that Coleridge was never satisfied with any poem he ever wrote. For the most sublime creators perfection is a mirage glimpsed in the imagination’s eye but never grasped.

When Brian Lara was interviewed after his second world record, the 501 scored for Warwickshire following his world Test record, he said he thought he still had a lot to learn. The reporters believed he was joking. I am sure that he wasn’t. I am sure he looked upon these remarkable innings as no more than superior drafts of work that certainly could be improved further. The greatest poets, the greatest artists, are never satisfied even with their best work. Martin Carter felt that no poem he ever wrote was completed.

It is those without the slightest talent who are most smugly proud of what the produce on the spur of the moment. They never care to revise before they try to pass off their work as the fruits of pure inspiration and soon-to-be-discovered genius. They see no need to improve what is already perfection in their own eyes.

Such petty versifiers could no more comprehend a Coleridge writing hundreds of drafts of a single poem than their equivalents in cricket will understand the fact that even after Lara had his world records he was certain as ever that it still remained for him to craft the best innings of them all.