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Isaac Newell wrote poetry from a very early age.
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Newell's estate donated 161 works by and about Samuel Taylor Coleridge and his
circle.
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There are some 20 19th-century editions of Coleridge's
poetic and/or dramatic works.
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There is a most impressive set of early editions
of The Friend, Coleridge's first major prose work
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Anyone wishing to do research in Coleridge at Memorial will
have a marvellous research resource at their disposal.
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Newell Collection is a Coleridge Scholar's Dream
From the files of The Gazette Mar 23, 1995.
By Bert Riggs and Dr. Martin Howley
Isaac Newell was born in Cupids on Jan. 1, 1917, the son of
Lilly and Edward Newell. He graduated from the Church of
England School there and later obtained a teaching diploma
from Memorial University College. After two years teaching,
Newell became a co-operative field worker with the
International Grenfell Association at St. Anthony. He spent
most of the 1940s helping residents of the Great Northern
Peninsula in organizing co-operatives.
Newell saw firsthand the problems faced by those who
lived in northern Newfoundland and was committed to
assisting them improve their standard of living. This
appears to be a predominant factor in convincing him to
stand, successfully, for election to the National Convention
- established to determine Newfoundland's political future -
in 1946 for White Bay district. There he was seen as
open-minded in his deliberations, supporting the inclusion
of Confederation with Canada on the referendum ballot.
After Confederation, Premier Joseph R. Smallwood tried to
convince Newell to remain in politics, but he had applied to
Queen's University in Kingston, Ont., to complete a
bachelor's degree. Scholarship opportunities enabled him to
attend Duke University (master of arts), North Carolina, and
Oxford University (bachelor of literature), England. He
returned to Queen's University in 1957 where he taught
English literature until shortly before his death, May 26,
1977.
Newell wrote poetry from a very early age. In 1947, he
received first prize in the O'Leary Poetry Contest for his
poem Lines for an Anniversary (1497-1947) in honor of the
450th anniversary of John Cabot's voyage. Much of his
poetry, however, remains unpublished. In 1987, Newell's
widow, Jean Nast Newell, donated some of his early poetry
manuscripts and papers from his co-operative work to
Memorial University. In 1994 she donated his rare book
collection; it is described below.
**********
Students and faculty of Memorial University owe a special
debt of gratitude to Prof. Isaac Newell. It was through the
bequest of his personal library that the Queen Elizabeth II
Library acquired last year a particularly fine collection of
over 4,000 books. The core of the collection, consisting of
161 works by and about Samuel Taylor Coleridge and his
circle, was granted "outstanding national significance"
status under the provisions of the Canadian Cultural
Property Export Review Board and constitutes a major
resource for the study of Coleridge's developing oeuvre. The
fruit of Prof. Newell's abiding interest in Coleridge and
the Romantics, it is especially rich in 19th-century
editions, among them some highly collectible rarities. The
library is now processing the donation as rapidly as staff
time permits for such a large collection. The majority of
the rarer items, however, have already been catalogued and
can be consulted in the Centre for Newfoundland Studies.
There are some 20 19th-century editions of Coleridge's
poetic and/or dramatic works. The oldest is a scarce early
volume of his juvenilia entitled simply Poems 1803. There is
also the very rare first collected edition of his poems
which Coleridge put together during his recovery from a
period of severe addiction and suicidal depression and which
he published in 1817 with the title Sibylline Leaves. It is
a landmark publication because in it "The Ancient Mariner"
appeared for the first time under its author's name,
enhanced with an important series of marginal glosses.
Equally significant, it gave Coleridge occasion to write a
critical introduction which, in the process of composition,
became too bulky for inclusion. This oversized introduction
subsequently grew into Coleridge's critical masterpiece,
Biographia Literaria.
Several other collected editions of the poetry are included:
not the 1828 Poetical Works in three volumes published by
William Pickering, but the almost identical second edition
of 1829 as well as the third edition of 1834, the year of
Coleridge's death, for which most of the editorial work was
carried out by his nephew Henry Nelson Coleridge. H. N.
Coleridge's edition of Coleridge's Literary Remains (1836)
is also in the collection. Other posthumous editions
included are the important edition published by the poet's
son Derwent and daughter Sarah, containing hitherto
unpublished material, and the revised editions of it, which
they subsequently published in 1867 and 1870. R. H.
Shepherd's four-volume Poetical and Dramatic Works of 1877,
which made further additions to the canon, is also included.
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The young Isaac Newell, ca. 1940.
Courtesy of the Centre for Newfoundland Studies
Archives (Coll - 090), Memorial University of Newfoundland,
St. John's, Newfoundland.
(37 KB).
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The prose works are also well represented by early
editions. There is a most impressive set of early editions
of The Friend, Coleridge's first major prose work, including
an exceedingly rare and valuable first edition (1809-10).
Coleridge subtitled it A Literary, Moral and Political
Weekly Paper, and planned to issue it as a single
philosophical essay per number, each on a different topic,
with some literary "amusement," or poetry attached. This and
other editions which followed it are now recognized as key
documents for understanding Coleridge's intellectual
development.
The difficulties which he overcame to get it published
are some indication of the importance that he attached to
the project. After recruiting 398 subscribers, Coleridge
launched The Friend, which he wrote, edited, had printed and
distributed from the Lake District. The location, despite
its hallowed associations, was not an ideal one for such a
venture. The printer lived in Penrith and Coleridge
sometimes had to walk across 30 miles of rough fell country
to deliver copy. Other problems were less predictable: one
issue was partly eaten by rats. Against odds like these
Coleridge kept The Friend going almost continuously for
six-and-a-half months. When he finally discontinued
publication it was not for lack of enthusiasm but because
not all his subscribers were paying up.
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Samples from the Coleridge collection at the Centre for Newfoundland
Studies Archives.
Courtesy of the Centre for Newfoundland Studies
Archives (Coll - 090), Memorial University of Newfoundland,
St. John's, Newfoundland.
(33 KB).
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Coleridge, however, persevered and in 1818 reissued it in
a carefully revised and expanded three-volume edition.
Volume 3 was almost entirely new material and displays the
astonishing range of erudition which Coleridge could command
in his quest of the common and universal principle of
"self-organizing purpose." The Newell collection contains
two copies of the pivotal 1818 edition. There is also a
posthumous edition edited, again, by Henry Nelson Coleridge.
Other early prose works to be found in the collection
are: several editions of Coleridge's Table-Talk (including
the first edition of 1835); eight different editions of Aids
to Reflection (including the first, 1825), a collection of
writings on personal revelation in Christianity; the first
edition each of The Statesman's Manual (1816) and A Lay
Sermon Addressed to the Higher and Middle Classes on the
Existing Distresses and Discontents (1817), Coleridge's two
lay sermons (out of three that he planned) on political
justice and social responsibility; a number of early
editions of On the Constitution of the Church and State
including the first (1830), and three copies of the revision
published by Henry and Sarah Coleridge in 1839. The Newell
collection has no first edition of the Biographia Literaria
(Coleridge was never happy with the first edition but died
before he could bring a second edition to press) but
contains numerous later editions, including two copies of
the second edition (1847) prepared for publication by Henry
and Sarah Coleridge from an annotated copy (now lost) of the
first edition, which incorporated Coleridge's own notes and
corrections. This edition has a fine scholarly introduction
by Sarah and a valuable biographical supplement by Henry
Coleridge.
The foregoing has done no more than touch on some of the
riches of the Newell collection. It holds a wealth of other
Coleridge material as well as many other 17th-, 18th- and
19th-century imprints potentially of great interest to
students of literature. Thanks to Prof. Newell's legacy,
anyone wishing to do research in Coleridge at Memorial will
henceforth have a marvellous research resource at their
disposal - certainly the finest in Atlantic Canada and among
the best in the country.
To commemorate Prof. Newell's donation, Helen Houston,
graphic artist with the Division of University Relations,
has designed a special bookplate which will be used to
identify the books in the Newell collection. It bears the
following legend from a poem by Richard Wilbur, recalling
both Prof. Newell's life dedicated to the pursuit of
learning and his undying love for the ocean waters of his
native Newfoundland:
All that we do
Is touched with ocean, yet we remain
On the shore of what we know.
__________________________________________________
Dr. Martin Howley is the humanities librarian
for Memorial University's library system.
November, 2000.
Image of the young Issac Newell updated January, 2003.
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