The Destiny of Nations was composed by Samuel Taylor Coleridge as part of Robert Southey's Joan of Arc epic poem. The lines were later isolated from Southey's and expanded. The new poem includes Coleridge's feelings on politics, religion, and mankind's duty to helping each other.
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The idea for Destiny of the Nations originates during mid 1795 while Coleridge gave lectures and was working with Southey on Joan of Arc epic.[1] While working on the epic, he set many of the lines he wrote aside for his own poem. Charles Lamb's response to Coleridge's reuse of the lines was to say in a letter on 5 February 1797:[2]
You cannot surely mean to degrade the Joan of Arc into a pot girl. You are not going, I hope, to annex to that most splendid ornament of Southey's poem all this cock and a bull story of Joan the publican's daughter of Neufchatel, with the lamentable episode of a waggoner, his wife, and six children; the texture will be most lamentably disproportionate. The first forty or fifty lines of these addenda are, no doubt, in their way, admirable, too; but many would prefer the Joan of Southey.[3]
At the beginning of 1797, Coleridge attempted to complete the poem for a 1797 edition of his poems. However, he was unable to finish and was discouraged by Lamb's words. He soon replaced the poem with Ode to the Departing Year in the collection.[4] The Destiny of Nations was expanded and those lines were published in the 26 December 1797 Morning Post as The Visions of the Maid of Orleans: A Fragment. Coleridge continued trying to finish the poem in 1798, but he abandoned the poem at the end of 1799 until taking it back up again in mid 1814.[5] The poem was not published in full until 1817.[2]
The final version of the poem contains the 1797 lines, of which lines 1–120 correspond to lines 1–119 of Joan of Arc Book II. These lines are followed by the lines published in the Morning Post, which make up lines 121–271a. The poem is concluded with a series of fragments from Joan of Ark Book II that make up the rest of what he wrote for the epic.[6]
The poem begins with the narrator's searching for the divine through use of his senses:[7]
Then, the poem introduces the figure of the Greenland Wizard:[2]
The actual "maid of Orleans" is described in terms of her knowledge of humanity, her background, and her relationship with nature in the next section:[8]
The poem continues by explaining how she works to help humanity and society. Afterward, the narrator describes her condition within an imperfect world, how she is one of God's elect, and her destiny to lead people towards a better world:[8]
The topic of the poem deals with the "maid of Orleans", or Joan of Arc, and how she was able to conquer her enemies. The maid is educated by nature and is said to know more about society and humanity than the educated. Her destiny is to fix society and to lead mankind to a better life. However, she is a character that is also separated from mankind in a way similar to the characters found within many Romantic poems. Philosophically, the poem is rooted in the works of Plato and Plotinus along with St. Paul. There is a connection within the poem to the ideas of Berkley,[9] and the original lines of the poem were influenced by the philosophy of Godwin, Hartley, and Priestley.[6] Coleridge, at the end of his life, wrote: "Within 12 months after the writing of this poem my bold Optimism, and Necessitarianism, together with the Infra, sue plusquam-Socinianism, down to which, step by step, I had unbelieved, gave way to the day-break of a more genial and less shallow System. But I contemplate with pleasure these Phases of my Transition."[10]
One aspect of the poem is the search for the divine within nature. The poet's role is to use what is inside of him to add symbolic meaning to the world. Nature, in such a situation, serves as a sort of text from which to gain knowledge. This idea would be later expanded in his Opus Maximum project and was contained in other poems including "The Eolian Harp".[7] Other connections to his works include the Greenland Wizard, which serves as a legendary precursor to Coleridge's mythical Ancient Mariner.[2]
The poem provides insight into what works Coleridge was relying on and would rely on again when he wrote Rhyme of the Ancient Mariner. He makes these works clear in his footnotes, such as one from Crantz's History of Greenland Vol. I.[2] Other footnotes refer to Lemius's De Lapponibus and the Book of Revelation.[11] Other sources are the works of Godwin, Hartley, and Priestley along with Erasmus Darwin's Botanic Garden.[6] More general influences on individual lines include Richard Glover's Leonidas (1737), James Thomasons's Winter, and Bryan Edwards History, Civil and Commercial, of the British Colonies in the West Indies (1793–1794).[12]
Virginia Radley claims that the poem "contain faults similar to those manifest in the Chatterton monodies: an abundance of personification, forced diction, contrived rhymes, sentimentality, and lack of unity. within the greater context of the Romantic point of view, however, Coleridge's 'Maid' is important. Isolation, loneliness, a feeling of alienation—all characterize the Harolds, Manfreds, Lucys, Michaels, and Mariners of a later-day Romanticism."[13] Rosemary Ashton believes that "The chief, perhaps only, interest of the poem, or rather set of fragments strung together, is that it display Coleridge's reading at this time of books which yielded much finer fruits in The Ancient Mariner, begun later in the same year."[2]
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