STC's "Kubla Khan"
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Composed most likely 1797-98, though not published until 1816
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Preface includes reference to "The Pitcher," a poem composed in August
1802.
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A poem about the creative process?
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Kubla Khan as poet?
David Hogsette, "Eclipsed by the Pleasure Dome: Poetic
Failure in Coleridge's 'Kubla Khan'"
Thesis: "'Kubla Khan' offers its readers a series of
false poetic figures, ultimately demonstrating that the ideal (pro)creative
and redemptive imagination lies beyond the grasp of the mortal poet, remaining
an external and unobtainable other."
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Preface: Rhetorical device foregrounding the poem's performance
context.
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"Second section of the preface establishes the poem proper as an allegory
of imaginative failure."
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Xanadu: creative realm that "represents the creative cognition and phenomenal
mind."
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Biographia Literaria (1817) (see 631-34, esp. 634)
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Fancy: Khan (1st Stanza)
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"a non-creative faculty that is more empirical than the imagination.
It is a lower cognitive faculty related to an influenced by the will, but
not dependent upon the will for its operation."
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"For Coleridge, fancy is a distinct faculty, dependent for its materials
on the primary IMAGINATION and confined to manipulating, combining, and
arranging phenomenal materials but incapable of the creation of materials.
Fancy is , therefore, the lesser faculty by far" (H &H
198).
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"The romantic critics conceived the imagination as a blending and unifying
of the powers of the mind that enabled the POET to see inner relationships,
such as the identity of truth and beauty. . . . Leslie Stephen stated
the distinction briefly, 'FANCY deals with the superficial resemblances,
and imagination with the deeper truths that underlie them.' . . .
Imagination is usually viewed as a 'shaping' and ordering power, the function
of which is to give art its special authority" (H&H 250).
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Khan's kingdom--finite--symmetrical dome, rigid towers, confining walls--not
an imaginative, ideal realm in which the individual can unite with the
infinite.
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Khan is isolated, like the Ancient Mariner, Christabel "who is separated
from her dead mother and becomes estranged not only from her lover Geraldine
but also her father."
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Author "on brink of poetic genius, is interrupted by a messenger of
his surrounding community and ironically loses the imaginative process."
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"It is ironic that an agent from the poet's community--an agent who
attempts to conduct business and, thus, to include the poet in the (commercial)
workings of that community--effects disunity of the poet's consciousness,
resulting in further isolation from the community."
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"Pure Imagination": Primary + Secondary Imagination
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"They are separate only insofar as they serve vaguely different functions."
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Primary Imagination: Alph (2nd Stanza)
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Enacts "a repetition in the finite mind of the eternal act of creation
in the infinite I AM."
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Alph: The beginning [i.e. alpha], signifier of original and eternal
creativity.
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The River Alph is the source of the poet's prophetic powers that are
achievable only by the primary imagination which unites the finite poet
with the 'infinite I AM.'"
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Secondary Imagination: Fountain
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Echoes River as Seconday Imagination echoes Primary.
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"The secondary imagination is a reflection of the primary creative force,
a preliminary sensory processor that attempts to unify apparent perceptual
disunities into understandable perceptions before presenting them to the
primary imagination."
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"Objects in themselves are fixed, dead, indeterminate material, but
the powers of the imagination are life-giving in the sense that they transform
the indeterminacy of objects in themselves into discursive meanings."
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"The Khan is a failed poet of the fancy who attempts to contain the
primary and secondary imaginative faculties, as his walls attempt to enclose
the river, only to be left eternally isolated from his ancestral spirits
and human community and from the imagination that makes all such connections
possible."
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By focusing on the Khan and the dome, "The author clearly rejects the
faculties of the active primary and secondary imaginations in favor of
an unconscious, passive process that is antithetical to Coleridge's ideal
poetic process."
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Like Khan, the author becomes isolated, "a contained failed poet like
the Khan who is girdled with towers."
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Without the preface, it would be impossible not to identify Khan and
the poet/seer at the end of the poem as ideal agents of the imagination
. . . . [In fact,] Coleridge actually represents the poetic figures
as failed poets."
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"Becoming the poet of the imagination for Coleridge is a desire always
in process that cannot be obtained."
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"The goal of becoming the sublime imaginative poet for Coelridge was
a desire he could not fulfill. . . . Thus he focused his attentions
on proclaiming the imaginative authority of such poets as Milton, Shakespeare,
and Wordsworth and establishing his intellectual authority as literary
critic, metaphysician, and theologian."