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Poetic form and language in 'The Pains of Sleep' by Samuel Taylor Coleridge.
'The Pains of Sleep' is written in the first person present tense from the point of view of an un-named narrator; which may (or may not) be the author. However, the nightmares and sleep disruption described in the poem are symptomatic of withdrawal from opiate addiction, an affliction from which Coleridge was known to suffer, and it is prudent to assume that it is the poet who speaks in this poem. The use of a
Johnson, Hamish (Ed.), 1998, Romantic Writings: An Anthology, Open University, Milton Keynes. 2.<Tab/>Bygrave, Stephen. (ed.), 1996, Romantic Writings, Routledge (Open University), London. 3.<Tab/>Montgomery et al, 2000, Ways of Reading: 2nd Ed, Routledge, London. 4.<Tab/>Thorne. S., 1997, Mastering Advanced English Language, Macmillan, Hong Kong. 5.<Tab/>Cuddon, J. A. (Ed.), 1999, Dictionary of Literary Terms and Literary Theory (4th Edition), Penguin Reference, London.
