Mariner: Samuel Taylor Coleridge and the Voyage of Faith - Malcolm Guite

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  • čas přidán 12. 02. 2017
  • Malcolm Guite, poet, priest, theologian and song-writer, explores Coleridge’s life, faith and work, and what we might learn from him for our own lives of faith. Part of the Adult Learning programming at St Paul's Cathedral, London.

Komentáře • 46

  • @tomward5293
    @tomward5293 Před rokem +26

    Malcolm Guite is a national treasure

  • @thomassimmons1950
    @thomassimmons1950 Před 9 měsíci +8

    "The bland leading the bland."
    Bloody Brilliant !

  • @Shaolin9424
    @Shaolin9424 Před 10 měsíci +9

    Mr. Guite, I could hear the love in you especially as you ended. You shared Truth, Love, and Beauty. Thank you!

  • @AdianGess
    @AdianGess Před 5 měsíci +7

    This man is a teacher, thank you

  • @MichaelCantrall
    @MichaelCantrall Před 3 lety +14

    Had to put it on pause to say "Fantastic!" What a great find on CZcams. Major Thumbs Up.

    • @Tonywozere99
      @Tonywozere99 Před 2 lety +1

      @michaelcantrall Richard Holmes, C's busy biographer does a lecture too on Mariner at Bristol Ideas here on utube, v good also

  • @basantsingh353
    @basantsingh353 Před 5 měsíci +2

    The greatest poem of compassion and nonviolence ever written.

  • @ellen823ful
    @ellen823ful Před rokem +5

    Amazing. I have Mariner in my library 📚. I’m going to read it again with new eyes 👀not simply to marvel at the eloquent poetry of this young man but to experience what the logos has to say to me today.

  • @Myrdden71
    @Myrdden71 Před 4 měsíci +2

    When Malcolm talked about what Grace meant to Coleridge, "at that very point when you have given up on yourself, and condemned yourself, a voice comes, something is given, unexpectedly that rises within you..." I think that is what happens to Anodos in 'Phantastes' when he gives up on life and tries to drown himself and is not able to, but rises to the surface and finds a small boat that that takes him to the Faerie Palace. It is a type of baptism, buried in the water, but rising with new life.

  • @eimisavageofficial9196
    @eimisavageofficial9196 Před 5 měsíci +3

    Malcom is a national treasure
    ❤❤

  • @michaelstephens9940
    @michaelstephens9940 Před rokem +5

    Haven't read the poem in maybe 30 years, but listened recently. Realized more and more spiritual messages with each and every reading. Quite a goid job of translating one of Coleridges great works.

  • @matthewstokes1608
    @matthewstokes1608 Před 3 lety +10

    Absolutely beautifully put - and on the subject of a mind-blowingly wonderful poet - ... and the wonders of God. Thank you to
    all involved. This was just riveting. I shall have to cone back several times to all this.

  • @sarahnash8482
    @sarahnash8482 Před 4 měsíci +1

    I had heard there was much spiritual significance in this poem but Malcolm Guite does such a beautiful job of unveiling it for us!

  • @allisonwaterman7767
    @allisonwaterman7767 Před rokem +3

    This video is fantastic! Thank you so much!

  • @dekafer123
    @dekafer123 Před 4 lety +9

    Magnificent lecture.

  • @deforeestwright2469
    @deforeestwright2469 Před 3 měsíci +1

    I’m spending my time reading through the canon of “modern philosophy” these days on audiobook and I did the same with Biographia Literaria. Something I notice in what Malcolm Guite is saying here is the influence of Leibniz (who Kant drew on but critiqued heavily on Humean grounds) and Fichte, Kant’s immediate successor. Leibniz thought of reality (subjects and objects) as all being “soul-like” entities he called “monads” that don’t genuinely interact but develop according to an “internal principle” and whose growth is coordinated by an ever active God. Fichte followed up on Kant with a modification of Descartes’ assertion of existence as a mind. Fichte critiqued Descartes’ argument by saying basically that it was circular, and that it was more accurate to say that the mind, the “I” or the “ego”, to use his terms, exists and is known to exist by its own assertion. Basically there is an assertion “I am” and then the “I” has to figure out precisely what that means.
    In the Biographia, Coleridge mentions Fichte and Schelling (who was Fichte’s immediate successor). He seems to have preferred Schelling (who I haven’t read yet) but by all accounts Schelling drew from Fichte’s ideas about the “I” but tried to reconcile it with a Spinozian conception of “Nature”.
    Anyway, just some extra tidbits to throw out there.

  • @MELDtoys
    @MELDtoys Před rokem +6

    Ian McKellen's emotional Rime reading brought me here ... algorithmically, of course ...

  • @Myrdden71
    @Myrdden71 Před 4 měsíci

    Wonderful! I've read the poem several times, but this helps to fill in the surrounding air.

  • @andyjohnstone6867
    @andyjohnstone6867 Před 5 měsíci +1

    thankyou for great talk i had lot ask but and give me alot ask of my self it give warm filling that god there and we must think over the top of of the professional that indoctrinate us into a state of no god thank you andrew

  • @ianhannant7497
    @ianhannant7497 Před 2 lety +4

    Interesting lecture

  • @user-ze5wk6ew7m
    @user-ze5wk6ew7m Před měsícem

    Samuel Taylor Coleridge was the shiznit! And you can bet on that!

  • @deforeestwright2469
    @deforeestwright2469 Před 3 měsíci

    There is a bit of a philosophical inconsistency here. Around 1:19:00 he talks about “the sacred distinction between a person and a thing.” But previously, the sharp divide between subject and object that Kant made was criticized.

  • @LoneStarGemini
    @LoneStarGemini Před 3 lety +8

    • @Hastenforthedawm
      @Hastenforthedawm Před rokem +2

      Inevitably a lot of us discovered the poem through Iron Maiden, though Coleridge's other two major masterpieces also have great tributes.
      Rush has Xanadu and John Zorn has Christabel.
      They'll all (along with the Maiden one)amazing pieces of music, but Coleridge's original poems are still better.

  • @leenthelnah
    @leenthelnah Před 2 lety +2

    I was struck off by the name i see, which is Guite, which is an ethnic clan name in Southern Manipur, India.

  • @mynameis......23
    @mynameis......23 Před 24 dny +1

    2:41

  • @josephsonoftheuniverse5541

    Present.

  • @MrSinghSAmit
    @MrSinghSAmit Před 11 měsíci

  • @cyberkant8186
    @cyberkant8186 Před 10 dny

    5:00

  • @frogmorepipester7490
    @frogmorepipester7490 Před 2 lety

    Bloody Hell! Get on with it. Cool Dude!

  • @jeffschellet4279
    @jeffschellet4279 Před 3 lety

    Holley Cloud Bureats " it twas butiefull 'y done thanks

  • @As-fs6qd
    @As-fs6qd Před měsícem +1

    This was incredible Loved coleridge for years but was not aware of the depth of his philosophy...this is the closest i have heard anyone come to Ibn arabi, the seal of Islamic saints..

  • @bozorgmaneshrobertsohrabi2248

    Thank you for all of the natures selection that recombines our RNA to a hearing of DNA consitituencies to revitalize the spill of a mothers worthy worlds.

  • @allangilchrist5938
    @allangilchrist5938 Před 2 lety +1

    I'm convinced that under all the hair is Bill Oddie!

  • @theslownorris7277
    @theslownorris7277 Před 4 lety +3

    Father, very well put. For those so cynical as to make Ewok jokes? Less juvenile subjects (Star Wars) for you. If you cannot listen to this man, if you cannot READ Coleridge, perhaps you can listen to this...
    czcams.com/video/frP3Zu-8QDI/video.html.
    And if not? Shame.

  • @hagaiabeliovich4276
    @hagaiabeliovich4276 Před 8 měsíci

    Isn't this Neoplatonism?

  • @plumjam
    @plumjam Před 6 lety +9

    The ewoks want their grandad back.

  • @billschwan9863
    @billschwan9863 Před 6 lety +3

    The Ewok's British accent wasnt quite as pronounced.

  • @loriscunado3607
    @loriscunado3607 Před rokem +1

    Preposterous. Read Ted Hughes essay on Coleridge. Christianity was Coleridge's undoing. Guite is not a good poet or critic.

  • @robmiddleton01
    @robmiddleton01 Před 3 lety

    Get a damn shave!