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8 - A Lay Sermon Addressed to the Higher and Middle Classes on the Existing Distresses and Discontents, Samuel Taylor Coleridge, 1817

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  05 June 2012

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Summary

The Lay Sermon, as its title reveals, addresses the social turmoil of 1817. After an introduction, Coleridge embarks upon a consideration of those ‘who have hitherto prescribed for the case, and are still tampering with it’ (142) – that is to say, the radicals and ‘demagogues’. His targets are not mentioned by name, but there can be little doubt that they include Burdett, Hunt, and Cobbett. He attacks these men with an intolerance and scurrility reminiscent of the Anti-Jacobin newspaper of the war years; in ten pages he reveals a rich repertory of abuse and defamation. One of the milder passages will illustrate the style:

… when we hear persons, the tyranny of whose will is the only law in their families, denouncing all law as tyranny in public – persons, whose hatred of power in others is in exact proportion to their love of it for themselves; when we behold men of sunk and irretrievable characters, to whom no man would entrust his wife, his sister, or his purse, have the effrontery to propose that we should entrust to them our religion and our country; when we meet with Patriots, who aim at an enlargement of the rights and liberties of the people by inflaming the populace to acts of madness that necessitate fetters. … (149–50)

This sustained character assassination is larded with biblical references, taken especially from the prophetic books. This is a continuation of the argument of a lay sermon of the previous year, that the Bible is the best guide to political skill and foresight.

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Chapter
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Socialism, Radicalism, and Nostalgia
Social Criticism in Britain, 1775-1830
, pp. 164 - 180
Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Print publication year: 1987

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