Monday, September 2, 2019
Influence of George Berkeley :: This Lime-Tree Bower My Prison Philosopher Essays
The Influence of George Berkeley George Berkeley (1685-1753) was an Irish clergyman and philosopher who studied and taught at Trinity College in Ireland, where he completed some of his best known works on the immateriality of matter (believing that all matter was composed of ideas of perception and therefore did not exist if it was not being perceived). Coleridge himself acknowledge the influence of Berkeley on his work, in particular his poem ââ¬Å"This Lime-Tree Bower My Prisonâ⬠when he wrote a letter to Robert Southey in July 1797, in which the poem was included, with the following note, ââ¬Å"You remember, I am a Berkleian.â⬠We can see the influence of Berkeleyin ââ¬Å"This Lime-Tree Bower My Prisonâ⬠in three main ways: perceptions of light, the idea of a divine spirit in everything yet still separate and itself, and the idea that there are as many ââ¬Å"minima visibiliaâ⬠in an enclosed space as out in the wide-open spaces. According to Stephen Prickett, one of the main ideas that Berkeley had hoped to prove was that all reality is mental, but the idea that truly came through in his works is that each person does not perceive object, but instead qualities (like color, form, sent, and sound), and each person perceives these qualities differently. Prickett goes further to claim that the effect of this idea on Coleridge ââ¬Å"was to make him intensely conscious of lightâ⬠(12). We can see this obsession with light and they way it plays on different object throughout ââ¬Å"This Lime-Tree Bower My Prisonâ⬠: Pale beneath the blaze Hung the transparent foliage; and I watchââ¬â¢d Some broad and sunny leaf, and lovââ¬â¢d to see The shadow of the leaf and stem above Dappling its sunshine! And that walnut-tree Was richly tingââ¬â¢d, and a deep radiance lay Full on the ancient ivy, which usurps Those fronting elms, and now, with blackest mass Makes their dark branches gleam a lighter hue Through the late twilightâ⬠¦ Coleridgeââ¬â¢s preoccupation with light and the way in which it changes the perception of the object is what links this passage with the ideas of Berkeley. Even though Coleridge and many other Romantics (such as Wordsworth) used the came to different conclusions about perception than Berkeley, his theories about light ââ¬Å"pointed to the why in which such phenomena of light as the rainbow could be used as a scientific model for the imagination as a perceptual relationship between man and natureâ⬠(Prickett 13).
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