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Coleridge's Theory of Poetry.
Coleridge's Theory of Poetry.
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COLERIDGE'S
THEORY OF POETRY
COLERIDGE'S
THEORY OF POETRY
By
P. S.
Professor & Head of the
SASTRI,
M.A., M.Litt., Ph.D.
University of
Nagpur
S.
CHAND &
S.
GRAND &
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CO.
(Pvt.)
LTD.
H.O.
Branches
:
DELHI-56
Fountain, Delhi
35,
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^i.
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Published by S. at Rajendra
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To
JAj\AKI
One Word
The critical theories of Coleridge have had a varied hisSome found illuminating passages here and there, while tory. others saw only a mist. A few zealots discovered plagiarism from Germans, and still others could find no consistent theory. The present century found him to be a seminal mind; and each critic from Mr. I. A. Richards to Mr. Epsom saw a peg
to his pet doctrines in the lines of Coleridge. Mr. Richards set the ball in motion by reading behaviour-
Mr. D. G. James in seeking to Tmmanuel Kant. Mr. Rene Wellek kantianised the whole show. Mr. G. P. Baker made much of the unconscious and of the depth psychology. Mr. Appleyard stops even before Coleridge started, and Mr. Walsh saw a different emphasis. Mr. Eliot, following Arnold and others, refused to see a valid distinction between fancy and imagination. .Only Mr. R. H. Fogle did some justice to
ist
moved
one important aspect of the theory, that of the organic form. Shawcross gave a good edition, but a laboured argument as his introduction. Mr. Read draws our attention to the valid
problem of organic form. But Mr. Watson could not place Coleridge in the naive formula of descriptive criticism.
this welter of confusion we lose sight of what Colehimself thought and said on the ridge problems of literary creation and composition. When a critic discovers that he has to do this, he comes to correct his earlier statements as
In
Mr. T. M. Raysor did in his introduction to the Every Man's Library edition of Shakespeare Criticism. It was long, long ago that George Saintsubry made the great observation that
the history of
European
(*)
names Aristotle, Longinus, and Coleridge. One may justifiably add Plato to this small group. These great critics have to be allowed to say what they said; and we have a right to expect that no one tries to mislead us here. The present work takes up the German problem in the
three great
second part.
before he
There
it is
theories of Coleridge
argued that some of the characteristic found a place in his poems written
came
Germans.
The
first
part
seeks to present the basic problems examined by Coleridge or referred to by him. This analysis reveals that Coleridge was
first who attempted to harmonise the Platonic with the Aristotelian one. approach A study like this cannot ignore the larger philosophical problems implicit in an aesthetic theory like that of Coleridge. It cannot be overemphasised that Coleridge was applying to
one of the
which he came
to
accept.
Any
aesthetic theory
can
frame-
work
of a philosophical theory.
The
Coleridge.
many
to
express.
critics
H?
on
Some
of the chapters
journals and he is obliged to the editors for permitting him to include them here. The author's feelings can be only inadeto Mr. Sham Lai quately expressed Gupta of Messrs. S. Chand & Co. (Pvt.) Ltd., New Delhi.
CONTENTS
CHAP KR
1
PAGE
PART
1.
I-THEORY OF POETRY
3
ol
2.
3.
'1.
Aesthetic
Imagination
18'
42
.
73
5.
Theoiy
Imagination
..
. .
95
131
6.
7.
8.
J.
<-
147
165
177
heory
ol
Art
10.
Wordsworth's Preface
204
PART
11.
1I-GERMAN THOUGHT
German Thinkeis
..
.
.
Coleridge and
Sleep,
237
12.
13.
248
264
281
..
11.
Poems
..
PART
THEORY OF POETRY
AESTHETIC APPROACH
Literature, philosophy, science, politics and other activities interested Coleridge because of their direct or indirect u To the cause of Religion 1 solemnconnection with religion.
ly
devote
all
my
best faculties-
and
I
if
ledge as a philosopher
I
and
as a poet,
may
now
feel,
my
greatest
reason for wishing the one and the other, is that I may be enabled by my knowledge to defend Religion ably, and b\
my
Rereputation to draw attention to the defence of it." ligion has been the great passion of Coleridge's life and thought.
Religion implies the idea of a
God and
Any
creative process
seemed to
offer a convenient
approach
to understand
this bias
and
With
worth
he talked of the nature arid value of poetry to Woidswho, with his eighteenth century prepossessions,
his
own way.
"My words and actions imaged on his (Wordsworth's) mind, distorted and snaky as the Boatsman's
reflected
Oar
in
the
Lake."
This
is
inevitable
since
of
they
re-
differed in their
ference.
respective starting-points
and frames
Coleridge told Byron that his purpose was "to reduce criticism to a system by the deduction of causes from prinHe was "to establish the ciples involved in our faculties.'"
1.
Letter to
John Prior
ed.,
Estlin,
I,
6th January,
1473.
1798.
2.
3.
Notebooks,
Coburn,
Coleridge's
Theory of Poetry
how
to pass
It is to be judgment on what has been written by others." an enquiry into the creative process; and this is to be conducted
poem
before
us.
To
understand
it
know
But the
critical studies
he was acquainted with never gave him any fixed standards of approach to this central problem. The real problem can
the poetic act.
be understood by a consideration of and a reflection upon Instead there were reviews where "the writers
determine without reference to fixed principles" and "they teach people rather to judge than to consider, to decide than 5 to reflect." Such passages misled even Raysor to argue that
Coleridge's
ideas
"are
inductive
generalizations based
upon
personal experience" and that these are not "a deduction of art from a metaphysical system." Coleridge never accepted the absolute opposition of deduction to induction. He was
interested in studying the of art.
human
"had a
logic of
its
own
and more
difficult,
causes."
criticism
it
is
is
of the soul
among
master-
which
8 holds that Coleridge is a good critic despite his philosophy. On the contrary, the aesthetic of Coleridge is based on the idea of unity and on his 'The great preroconcept of Reality:
4.
5.
B.L.
18th
chapter.
II,
Shakespeare Criticism,
Ibid.,
xlvii-xlviii.
I
57-58.
6. 7.
8. 9.
B.L.
4.
Allen and
Clark:
Literacy
Criticism,
Pope
to
Cioce, 221.
Colendge's Literary
Criticism,
viii-xviii.
Aesthetic Approach
is
now
God, and now to subdue and keep dormant some part of that lofty nature, and to descend even to the lowest character
to
become every
00
thing, in fact.'
within the grasp of many artists, and accordingly we have a This scale of values determining the various literary genres.
scale
is
of Reality
as well.
sis
determined by the awareness and by the embodiment on the part of the artist and on that of the reader
It is in
way
a return to the exposition and analyto, and the mind in its Poem as to a work of nature, when only generally and not per-
"When no
simplicity gives
criticism
itself
is
pretended
up
to a
experience takes him to a specific state which he cannot adequately explain or express. This is because, as Coleridge argues, the poet does not create
The poem grwvs, has an inner life. Thus he speaks of the "great and mighty being" of Shakespeare
but he becomes.
"changing himself into the Nurse or the blundering Constable"; 12 and then compares that being to Proteus. This is an approach which is biological, psychological and metaphysical at the same time, even though the major emphasis is on the
understand a poem by understanding psychological side. the nature of mind that produced it. But this is not the
We
whole truth.
He
would become/the driving over a pavement, etc. apply this 13 to sympathy and disclosure of feeling." The external and
the internal have to be studied together.
is
Coleridge gether arc said to take us to an understanding of the nature of sympathy and feeling. It is Coleridge's habit of studying
10.
inseparable from
his metaphysics.
Lecture 7 of 1811-12.
11.
12.
13.
Notebook*, Lecture 3.
Notebooks,
I,
383.
1,
1307.
Coleridge's
Theory of Poetry
makes
one and the same thing from different points of view, that his aesthetic a not too easy affair. Sound, for instance, has a physical aspect that can be cognised. But we are told
that the 'sense of outness'
is
mean-
ing,
futile
without a prior
to meditation;
14
is
'as
eyes'
'field
of
vision/
Obser-
vation, meditation
and
emform
bodiment
is
of
The source
standing/'
under-
"the science of
a tool
is the faculty employed by and it can be employed only u as phenomena" " or organ/' But this does not lead Coleridge to oppose
science to
two..
The
highest
poetry
is
man."
rational
It
includes the
activities.
He
each other, according to their relative worth and claimed universality for his system and at the dignity/' same time believed it to be traditional. "My system", he says,
faculties to
10
He
the only attempt I know ever made to Deduce all knowIt opposes no other system, but shows ledges into harmony.
"is
and how that which was true in the each of them became error, because it was only half the truth. I have endeavoured to unite the insulated of truth, and therewith to frame a fragments perfect mirror. I show to each system that I fully understand and rightly
in each;
particular, in
appreciate
system to
14.
what that system means; but then I lift up that a higher point of view,, from which I enable it to see
II,
B.L.
64.
68, 71-72.
15. 16.
10-12.
Aesthetic Approach
its
former position, where it was, indeed, but under another so that the fragment of light and with different relations;
not only acknowledged, but explained.' It is a system based on the concept of unity which gives him enough It is a scope to preserve particularity and individuality.
is
317
truth
flexible system advocating synthesis and yet recognising the nature and value of analysis. It is a metaphysic which deve-
lops into
thetic,
an
aesthetic.
It is
an
to
aesthetic advocating a
sympanot
in-
imaginative approach
works of
arts.
If
is
a value.
"Never to
lose
an opportunity
of reasoning against
the
head-dimming, heart-damping Principle of judging a work by its Defects, not its Beauties. Every work must have the for-
mer
and
we know
it
a priori
he, therefore,
who
discovers them,
you could not with certainty or even with probability have 18 There is a certain unique quality in every anticipated."
work and
by
its
this
may be
called
its
it
individuality.
is
It is
governed
own
laws,
and
yet
amenable to
classification.
The critic's first task is to fix the genre to which the given work belongs. Having determined the kind, he must then distinguish
the
it
from others
falling within
the
same
it
kind.
is
Thus
beautiful, but
to beauty
absurd to
common
not
less
absurd
"to pass
judgment on the works of a poet on the mere ground that they have been called by the same class-name with the works
of other poets of other times
and circumstances."
His quo-
"Poetry,
like
On
17.
Table Talk,
Notebooks,
1831.
18. 19.
1551.
I,
Shakespeare Criticism,
196.
tions,
may
5520
This
is
possible be-
cause such an attitude ignores the passion attendant upon the 55 words. Poetry "does always imply passion which has "its 55 characteristic modes of expression ; and "the very act of poetic
composition itself is, and is allowed to imply and to produce, an unusual state of excitement, which of course justifies and
difference of language.
55 *1
Feeling
an organized form of expression. Such a form a specific quality of feeling which alone makes the presupposes work unique. A work can be and is unique and it can also
offering
belong to a specific kind or genre. The apprehension of value must then be foundational to
the
aesthetic
approach.
And we
its
find
him
stating:
restoration from the was seen that an examination and appreciation of the end was necessarily antecedent to the formation of the rules, supplying at once the principle of the rules themselves, and of their
22
application to the given subject." mines the rules and principles that
Kfles cannot be
values.
framed
in total
When
55
,
which he holds
is
in general
the
investigation
and
5588
philosophical.
and defended. That is, an aesthetic without a metaHe observes: "Individuals may atphysic is an impossibility.
tain to exquisite discrimination, but a true critic cannot be
such without
placing himself on some central point, some 55 general rule founded in reason, or the faculties common to all.
His metapyhysical principles are the main critical principles making his insights into the nature of poetry valuable. "I
20.
Notebooks,
B.L.
II,
I,
35.
21.
22.
23.
55-56.
Aesthetic Approach
laboured", he says, "at a solid foundation, on which permanently to ground the human mind
my
opinions, in the
component
faculties of
itself,
and
their
to the
faculty
should the
critic
poetic spirit.
have a metaphysic and an aesthetic, but the "In the Essay on Criticism to examine whether
or not a great Critic must needs be himself a great poet or 25 The great critic must be a great poet too if he painter."
were to
tell
The
critic
and
also ana-
sympathetically. is revealed also in the literary Thus we read: "Taste of the student of literature. experience is the intermediate faculty which connects the active with the
it
and examine
it
passive
intellect
and
taste
its
latter,
to
elevate
The
poet's
by the principles of grammar, logic and psychology and these must be "rendered instinctive by habit." Then there will be "the representative and reward of our past conscious reasonings, insights and conclusions" and
is
this
"acquires the
name
of Taste."
in
poet "by the power of imagination proceeding upon the all each of human nature." It is an inclusive experience, and
in a
way
states:
7
it
can be said to be the apprehension of the conColeridge takes this to the logical next step "In good truth, my Taste and Stomach are very Taste comes, intuitively and tells him, "what inis
crete universal.
and
catholic."*
natural"
to
the different
B.L.
I,
14.
I,
Notebooks,
B.L.
II,
892.
227.
TO
Coleridge's
Theory of Poetry
also
tells
states of
emotion;
and
it
him
"in
what instances
ment after a poet has been disciplined by experience, and has added to genius that talent by which he knows what part
of his genius he
portion of
mankind
intelligible to the
Thus a
literary
determined by the human nature which is its ground, the time, place and circumstances of the composition, by by the mental activities involved, by its relation to reality, by
genre
is
the effect
it
evokes,
of the author.
All
op-
posites.
Then
taste
be another
name
for the
imaginative activity, and the critical and the creative activities are not opposed to one another. They are capable of
existing together.
"Great injury that has resulted from the supposed incompatibility of one talent with another/Judgment with Imagination,
and Taste
is
Good
for, the
is
Instead
there
is
an interaction
of nature
on the mind;
life
mind
of
its
fashions
own
experience.
The
life."'
outer
life
are
all
one
The mind
is
is
Such a mind
is
The mind
as
living plant.
Looking
the
an awe,
that of
as
if
my
eyes the
in
same power
the reason
fore,
same power
an
its
commences
28.
29.
B.L.
II,
63-65.
Notebooks, I, 1255. See letter to Wordsworth, 30th May, 1815, and to Sotheby 30. 10th September, 1802.
Aesthetic Approach
outward
ments, at
and enters into open communion with all eleonce assimilating them to itself and to each other. At the same time it strikes its roots and unfolds its leaves,
life
absorbs and respires, steams forth its cooling vapour and finer fragrance, and breathes a repairing spirit, at once the food and
tone of
the atmosphere, into the
it.
Lo!
at the
yet,
touch of
light
how
it
and
still
own
secret growth,
31
contracting to fix
human mind
As a
result
it produces. not only the creative process but the other aspects of mental activity. In this light has it been emphasised that the poet brings the whole
imparts something of
art
reveals
soul of
creative
man
into activity.
This
vitalistic
conception of the
the elaborate pre-
paration made by Milton. Distinguishing an Epic Poem from a Romance in metre, he writes: "Observe the march of Milton
-
application, his laborious polish, his deep metaphysical researches, his prayers to God before he began his
11
'
-his severe
great poem, all that could lift and swell his intellect, became his daily food." If this holds good of the poet, it is equally well true of the critic.
The
critic's
of the aes-
thetic value
and
work
of art,
and the
aesthe-
in these principles.
"Till the reviewers support their decisions by reference to fixed canons of criticism, previously established and deduced from
the nature of
man;
reflecting
minds
will
pronounce
it
arrog-
men
of letters,
admit that
31.
taste
is
55 " 1
It
32.
33.
early April
1797.
B.L.
I,
44.
12
Coleridge'*
Theory
of Poetry
mediate faculty which connects the active with the passive powers of our nature, the intellect with the senses; and its
appointed function
it
realises
images of the latter while This passage has to be the ideas of the former.""
is
to elevate the
read along with another which speaks of imagination as "that reconciling and mediatory power, which incorporating the
reason in images of the sense, and organizing (as it were) the flux of the senses by the permanence and self-circling energies of reason, gives
Taste
too
and
terms.
Taste
mediates between the active and the passive. It is metaphorically derived from the mixed sense that blends perception with
the sense of the object;*
and
7
it
object to
our
own
proper,
what
is
in a significant
by Coleridge appear notebook entry: ". ..peculiar, not far-fetched natural, but not obvious; delicate, not affected; dignified, not swelling; fiery, bitf not mad; rich in Imagery, but not
loaded with
it
Some
in
short,
union of harmony,
Drapery.""
The
poetic
yet
natural, delicate
posites again.
and
dignified.
We
sense,
iasm, are
vitality
needed.
achieve this the poet must charge his composition with emotion. The poem is a
all its
must breathe.
To
is
fitted to afford
34.
35.
B.L.
II,
227.
Works
I,
436.
248.
I,
Notebooks,
36.
Aesthetic Approach
as
much
pleasure, as
39
is
sum
in
the whole."
That which
this
whole
is
in
the ob-
and
taste.
And
"All
be an organized
an organized whole must be parts organic 40 The assimilated to the more important and essential parts."
whole.
of
total unity
is
organic and
is
it
intuited.
can only be inadequately analysed. It was "in the intuition and ex-
Hamlet
that he "first
41
made
his
.noticed."
This intuition
common both
for
the poet
and
an important phase of the imaginative agination. This identity of the poet with the ideal critic conactivity. stitutes the basic aesthetic approach of Coleridge, and it led
Intuition
him
are
made
to feel that
you
are a poet.
a similar strain
I feel
a poet, and
my-
a better Poet, in knowing how to honour him."** The critic is, in a specific manner, a better poet, for the spectator
"to judge in the same spirit in which the artist produced,
is
given
work
of
art
it
tends to
fine
arts, Defining Coleridge takes up-emotion and pleasure as the subjective coun-
and
"The common
essence of
all
44 The respose of pleasure through the medium of beauty." of the reader is aesthetic only because it conforms to ponse 45 a universal law. In this sense taste is absolute and one taste
39.
Shakespeare Criticism,
B.L.
II,
II,
67.
56.
I,
Shakespeare Criticism,
Cellected Letters, B.L. II, 222.
II,
18.
1034.
44. 45.
B.L. B.L.
II, II,
221. 223.
14
can
one
differ
is
in degree.
At the lowest
level
satisfied
"But surely
always to look at the superficies of Objects for the purpose in their Beauty, and sympathy with their of
taking Delight
real or
imagined
life, is
as deleterious to the
hood
of Intellect,
as always to
Contrivances
may
."'" The grandeur grandeur and unity of the Imagination. and unity of imagination implies the full acceptance and reali-
zation
of
and the
universal
taste.
beauty, the fulfilment of the intellectual activity, depth of the affections. The intuition of the
in
the
given particular
17
Hence
be "essentially ideal."
By
this
is
basic
to
That which
reconciles such
is This reconciliation is "that just proimagination. that union and interpenetration of the universal and portion, the particular" which "must ever pervade all works of decid-
48
The
tion
company of the work of art; and the truest appreciaor experience of the work makes him feel that he is alone, that he is at least not in the company of other human
in the sole
beings.
Emphasising
this solitariness
I
Coleridge records in a
half invested with
note: "Without
Language
one
should
greater
one's
unite
Poetry,
and
to
God
alone/
his
is
yea,
in
much
lies
below
own
God
how
individual
supreme
Noteuooks,
B.L.
B.L.
II,
II,
I,
47.
48.
34.
12.
I,
49.
Notebooks,
1554.
Aesthetic
Approach
15
Genius, of
whom we
And
fine arts.
"The
chief
of the fine
is, not merely to connect, but to combine and unite, a sense of immediate pleasure in our-
selves
50
The
re-
conciliation of subject
and object
is
is
implicitly recognised
in
It
taste that
enables us to have
an
Like imagination, it too is an intermediate activity connecting "the active with the passive powers of our nature, the intellect with the senses; and its
appointed function
it
is
to elevate the
images of the
1
latter,
while
reali/es
Imagination reconciles
this leads
and
Coleridge to
equate the greatness of the poet with the greatness of the man; and in the aesthetic experience one feels his oneness with the
poet.
With
tional
arts.
all this
approach
to the
fine
The
classicist
and judgment. Coleridge's organicist criticism has to employ the tools called analysis, discrimination and judgment. If this were denied, then the theory would be of
terpretation
a purely speculative interest divorced from And in practice. his study of and Wordsworth, he does not give Shakespeare up his basic theory. This theory compels the assumption of
the ideal poet or the idea of the poet.
This idea
is
not an
abstraction but
The
critic's
the study of an actual poet. subjective preferences are reconciled with the obIJ,
derived from
50.
B,L.
248.
51. 52.
B.L.
B.L.
II, II,
227.
12.
16
Coleridge's
Theory
of Poetry
jective
poems
The
The ideal criticism reconciles arrived at has a universality. the intuitive apprehension of the poems with the critical principles.
It
may
always remain
an
other times.
poet.
ideal
is ideal at times and actual at Thus Coleridge takes Shakespeare as the ideal Wordsworth has moments when he exhibits not the but the actual. Where the ideal and the actual are
identical, the
duty of the
critic
is
to
a critical analysis.
The
literary
has
to
undertake a
vours to establish the principles, which he holds for the foundation of poetry in general, with specification of these in their
The principles application to the different classes of poetry." must have a universal application, and so the critic has to
single out the significant passages.
''Then
if
his principles
be
and
and
may adopt
judgment
in the light of
judgment and
in the independence
of free agency." The critical principles thus turn out to be the principles of interpretation, appreciation, and composition
of
poetry.
Consequently
"the ultimate
end of criticism
is
much more
nish rules
than to fur-
how
if
1
to pass
it
by others;
separated."*
indeed
judgment on what has been written were possible that the two could be
vital must be capable of At the same time this proand discrimination, as Cole-
The
principle being
critique
of
the
schoolmaster taught
est
"Immortality Ode" reveals. His old him that "Poetry, even that of the loftiits
own,
and more
difficult,
because
53. 54.
63.
85.
II,
Aesthetic Approach
17
more
is
subtle,
fugitive causes.
more complex, and dependent on more, and more In the truly great poets, he would say, there
a reason assignable, not only for every word, but for the 85 This is not the normal logic of the position of every word." but a logic of the organic unity. senses,
55.
B.L.
I,
4.
2.
The
a
eighteenth
of
century
imagination
to
be
form
distinction
visualisation. Basing his argument on Kant's between the conceivable and picturable, Coleridge
value of this 'despotism of the eye.' He the 'delusive notion that what is not imageable is disparaged 1 This does not, however, mean that likewise not conceivable/
rejected
the
in
theory
it
involves
no visual
factor.
On
the contrary,
and the reason were the first (^fancy) would become delirium, and withdrawn, 2 the last (= imagination) mania." Both these faculties need
he observed
"If the check of the senses
and
1,
of reason.
He
is
more
explicit
May
"genius of the highest kind implies an unusual intensity of the modifying power, which detached from the discriminative
power, might conjure a platted straw into a royal diadem." At the same time, he stated: "the activity of thought and vivacity of the accumulative memory are no less essential constituents of great wits."
What the eighteenth century undernow designated fancy; and then these
letter to Southey of December, 1794 Coleridge advocated the corporeality of thought. By 1800. we hear of his 'serious occupation' in investing the laws by which our
1.
In a
B.L.
2.
126.
Two Forms
of Imagination
19
are
and
to words.
Thought
we
to
find
the five
state
The emphasis falls on the mind. On March 16, 1801 him telling Poole that he is on the way "to evolve all senses, that is, to deduce them from one sense, and
their
their
difference."
we may,
all
mind.
All
comIn
mon
a
origin.
How
letter to
of the
"Imagination or the modifying power, in that highest sense word, in which I have ventured to oppose it to Fancy, or the Aggregating power in that sense in which it is a dim
all
that
we can
it
believe,
is
but
all
that
we can conceive
the material on
It
of creation."
Imagination
an
activity simi-
modifies or transforms
is
which
it
operates.
its
cannot modify the material since it can only comopposite. bine or group together mechanically,. In this light it is observed that the ancient music "consists of melody arising from a succession only of pleasing sounds," while "the modern em-
braces
harmony
3
effect
of a whole."
in time
and
it
/Fancy depends upon the succession of events combines these events associately in such a way
its
Imagination on the other is a principle introducing harmony, into the manifold, and by virtue of this it transforms the given into a whole^ A distinction has long been known to exist among
original character.
more important and frequent mental activities. Tetens Versuche Uber die menschliche Nature (1777) distinguishes 'bildende Dichtkraft' which is artistic or Kant has reproductive, productive, poetic from Thantasie.'*
the
in his Philosophischc
3.
4.
20
and
asie'
Schelling
has 'Phant-
Schlegel considered Einbildung'Einbildungskraft.' a mere form of memory, and treated Phantasie skraft to be
as higher.
and
tiated brightly-coloured
Jean Paul Richter took the former to be a 'potenmemory', and held that Phantasie is
whole/
8
the
The prevailing confusion regarding the precise meaning of these and other allied terms led Coleridge "to investigate the seminal principle
power
of 'making all parts into a
to
As a
result
of these investigations he
came
In this endeavour he was, no doubt, helped, at least to some extent, by Kant's Critique of Judgment. Kant's reproductive imagination has some similarity to fancy. His proSince these are ductive imagination is nearer to the primary.
said to be forms of imagination
it
is
and
imagination
may
co-exist
in
one
and
the
same
activity.
Speaking of Wordsworth's account, he observes: "I am disposed to conjecture, that he has mistaken the co-presence of
A man may
each has
is
fancy and imagination for the operation of the latter singly. work with two different tools at the same moment;
share in the work, but the work effected by each 8 different/' When these two powers co-exist in the
its
it is
very
But he states easy to distinguish them. that in order to achieve 'the highest excellencies' in language, passion and character, the poet needs 'good sense, talent, sensibility, and imagination' ; and to the perfection of the work he
activity,
same
needs the two lesser faculties of 'fancy and a quick sense of These lesser ones are 'necessary for the ornaments beauty.'
and
foliage of the
roof."
Yet
it
is
certain
that "Imagination
5.
Werke,
B.L.
B.L.
I,
357;
1817.
6. 7.
8.
Aesthetik,
I,
I,
64.
194.
9.
Two Forms
of Imagination
21
of the lower."
powers can only act through a corresponding, energy 10 Fancy regulates the mental activity, but im11
Fancy then appears agination is constitutive of this activity. to be the power regulating the figures and other external ornaments, the form as it were of the creative art. It is a
power
tral
thought or feeling.
This fancy was for a long time treated as
if
were the
same as imagination. The first clear statement of this view was given by Hobbes who influenced many writers. In his Leviathan Hobbes remarked: "After the object is removed, or
the eye shut,
we
. .
still
retain
an image
And
made
this
it
is,
in seeing.
the Latins call imagination, from the image But the Greeks call it fancy, which signifies
.
appearance."
are erroneously 'presented as the true and proper moulds of 11 objective truth'; and in such an act there is no method,
for these "fancies arc motions within us, reliques of those
in the sense" regulated
made
by mere
12
succession.
The
revolt against
at a very early date. 1795 Coleridge borrowed from the Bristol Library Bishop Burnet's History of my own Times. In this work Burnet gave in detail the struggle launched by the Cambridge Platonists
Hobbes began
In
One
of these
is
Cudworth
whose True Intellectual System Coleridge borrowed from the same library in May, 1795 and in November, 1796. According to Cudworth, the mind has a creative function even in the knowledge-situation, for it has the power of forming conThe creative activity is said to be necessary for an cepts.
apprehension of the ideas. And this Platonism came to Coleridge as a great relief at a time when Hartley was failing to This gave a new direction to his interpretation satisfy him.
of the terms,
10.
T.T. August
Cf. essays
20,
1833.
in Friend.
11. 12.
on Method
I,
Leviathan,
3.
22
Coleridge's
Theory of Poetry
While imagination
the
'fixities
is
an
activity,
a growing activity, in
These are
which are grouped together through "The Fancy is indeed no other than a mode of Memory emancipated from the order of time and space; while it is blended with, and modified by that empirical phenomenon of the will, which we express by the word chance. But equally with the ordinary memory the Fancy must receive all its materials ready made from the law of association.
and
defmites'
associative links.
5 ' 1'
materials of fancy are supplied by the law of association. Such materials do not arise in the order in which they took Each item recalled thus is fixed, it replace in actual life.
tains
its
The
original character.
perience. or objects.
An unconscious operation of the a few events or facts from the original exThen results a sort of random grouping of incidents
The grouping
is
more or
greater degree on the recurrence of resembling states of feeling than on trains of ideas .... Ideas never recall ideas any-
that runs through them it is the soul, the It is thus that fancy consists of an associastate of feeling." tion of feelings with one another. Each feeling branches off
The
breeze
it
into another;
lection
of
is
and corresponding
to
be a
recol-
feelings.
No
attempt
tion.
made
harmonise these
It is
by
virtue
In the Sophist Plato speaks of "two kinds of image-making: the art of making likenesses, and fantastic or the art of
making appearances."
the beautiful",
it
'is
The
latter presents a
like.'
"resemblance of
not really
13. 14.
B.L.
I,
202.
7,
To
Southey, August
1803.
Two Forms
and
of Imagination
23
tive'
imagination.
The
out of several
that
images.'
He even went
to the
extent of stating
1*
5
"the
soul never thinks without an image." Following this tradition Horace distinguishes between 'creation and 'invention/
But the main problem underlying all this is to find out that principle which enables the human mind to apprehend the The spatial and temporal charactrue character of things.
teristics
their
16, 1801, "I have not only completely extricated the Coleridge wrote: notions of time and space, but have overthrown the doctrine
real
nature.
to Poole, dated
March
of
association,
as
taught
by Hartley."
Associationism
is
governing principle of fancy. And fancy accordingly will be the principle that retains at least a new set of temthe
poral and spatial characteristics of the objects apprehended or understood. It refers to the impressions and sensations which
arc held to give rise to all possible knowledge, by Locke
his
and
speculation Coleon to say that "I shall be able to evolve all the five ridge goes senses, that is, to deduce them from one sense, and to state
satisfied
this
followers.
But not
with
their
their difference,
life
and
in
this
17
and consciousness." Instead of making the contents of the mind agree with the sense-impressions of the external, he would try with Kant to make the world of things and objects .igrec with the mind.
nation
In his Meditations Descartes associated the 'act of imagiwith intuition, and held that the former needs a
5
that we have here an apprehension by 'power and inward vision of the mind. This intuition is Coleridge's 'forma formans which contains in itself
'particular effort of
5
the
law
15. 16.
17. 18.
of
its
own
conception.'
Coleridge
held
that
'no
De Anima,
Ibid., 43 la.
433b.-434a.
Cf.
his
letter
6.
to
Wordsworth, May
30,
1815.
Meditations,
24
thought of any thing comprises the whole of that thing , and thought viewed as the Platonic Idea is 'more real than what
These Ideas
are
more
19
intensely actual.'
Fancy and imagination are 'two distinct and widely different faculties.' They are not two words with the same Nor is one the lower and the other the higher degree meaning.
of the
same power.*
itself
with the
It
feeling.
too much dependent on the given, just like the understanding. Imagination on the other is concerned with the ideas. "That
faculty of the Soul which apprehends and retains the mere with the anticipation of meeting the notices of Experience,
.
same under the same circumstances, in other words, all the mere phenomena of our nature, we may call the understanding. But all such notices, as are characterised by Universality and Necessity .... and which are evidently not the effect of any
experience, but the condition of all Experience
that indeed
without which Experience itself would be inconceivable, we may call Reason. .Reason is, therefore, most eminently the revela. .
tion of
an immortal
soul,
and
itself
its
best
synonym
it is
the forma
Nay,
it
. . .
is
Form
tinct
the law of its own conceptions. that the contemplation of essential highly probable first gave to the mind the ideas."* Reason, as disintuits
from understanding,
of intuiting
is
truths
or ideas;
and
this
a necessary element of the imaginative power process for the simple reason that this process is directly concerned with ideas. Consequently the imaginative activity involves the activity of that aspect of garded as spiritual.
human
life
which
is
re-
the other hand, the mechanistic philosophy based on associationism "mistakes clear images for distinct conceptions",
19.
On
20.
Letter to Clarkson, October 13, 1806. B.L. I, 60-61. For a faulty view see Richards: Letter to Clarkson, Oct. 13, 1806.
on Imagination.
*
Coleridge
"^
Two Forms
of Imagination
25
and
The contemplaor adequate tion that this act of thinking gives rise to is directed to "external causality in which the train of thought may be considered as the result of outward impressions, of accidental comto the majesty of the Truth."
memory."
It is
of thought
is
on the mind
Conse-
quently we can regard thought "as passive or active and the same faculties may in a popular sense be expressed as perception or observation, fancy or imagination,
2
memory
relative
or recollecto
tion."*
one an-
other.
Fancy
is
imagination,
it is
not totally passive; but compared with the It is a passivity with which we are passive.
familiar in dreams, in day-dreaming. In these states our resto the external world are not quite normal. ponses Judgment
to 'affirm or deny the existence of a our thoughts and images. But our reality "images and thoughts possess a power in, and of, themselves." This power is similar to that felt by the mind in dreams.
5
neither believe nor disbelieve the actuality of the dreams while we arc dreaming, because in this state the power of
will is suspended. And the strong that at times are connected with these forms and feelings thoughts are "bodily sensations which are causes or occasions
We
83
we have a mental
fancy in
so
as to
and feelings. In dreaming which is only "an exertion of 'the activity the combination and recombination of familiar objects
34
This produce novel and wonderful imagery." arises from the combination, not from the mutual innovelty
21.
22. 23. 24.
To
Wordsworth,
Stuart,
May
13,
30,
1815.
To
May
1816.
26
teraction.
Coleridge's
Theory
is
of Poetry
What
it
combines
with
which has no inherent dynamism of its own. It operates only The law of understanding and "fixities and definites."
the changes fancy, he argues, impels the individual "to abstract and outward relations of matter"; and these he arranges under
the causal form
positive
into
the
'idols of
the
his
sense.'
Then
held by these
own
abstracting intellect,
he
sensualized.
normally belong.
ality the
and objects from the context to which tEey These abstracted entities, which are in re-
products of the feelings recollected, are arranged in such a way that they seem to have a causal relation to one
another.
The
feelings succeeding
relation.
interpreted because a mere temporal succession is Thus instead of a single unified feeling
no causal
we
get a
The
feelings
from various bodily sensations. in fancy sensualise the experience and the aggre-
gate of feelings evokes a series of fixed or lifeless images. Yet these feelings in fancy are regulated by the principles
of
similarity,
difference
of the
and
contiguity.
In
1804 Coleridge
fruitful
stated:
"One
is
facts in
psychology
of form.
same
feeling
by difference
The heaven
it.
seems to widen
We
we
up my soul, the sight of the ocean feel the same force at work, but the
Fancy.
feel in
feel-
would accompany that motion, less distinguished, more blended, more rapid, more confused, and, thereby, coadunated?"*
The
in
difference between
two forms
of the
same
feeling
is
felt
an
The
25.
26.
Essay on
Method
in Friend.
Anima
Poetae, 101.
Two
can
27
That
the
is,
feeling
o^rat^on
objects
what
were
is
given by
imagination.
To
"At
best,
Greeks
'all
natural
dead,
mere
hollow statues.'
it
is
They included
in each
God
or a Goddess.
Faculty."
The
these
two
faculties
is
res-
the various ponsible for the absence of the distinction between The feeling of a distinction is in the Greek outlook. objects
only the imagining of a motion and everything else is unified with reference of this imagining. But "when the pleasure is
produced not only by surprise, but also by an image which remains with us and gratifies for its own sake, then I call it
528
fancy/
ent of the
lations
ciples
Fancy then
rest.
between the
that
govern
combining
is
The
from the
Even
associate
we
need imagination.
"the
charm of novelty to things of every day", imgination "awakens the mind's attention to the lethargy of custom, and directs it to the loveliness and the wonders of the world before us."*
Though imagination
world,
it
is
not
confined
to
the
spatio-temporal
can yet p'rescnt the world as beautiful and strange. Imagination can transform the given into the beautiful by virtue of the feelings on which fancy also plays, and by virtue of the intuitions with which it works. In other words, fancy
to be the faculties that are together Each in isonecessary for the successful creative composition.
emphasise some one factor only. Yet imaginathe higher faculty because it transforms the materials and modifies the given manifold into a unity or whole.
This
27.
28.
imagination
is
To
29.
B.L.
6.
28
which, in consequence of the film of familiarity and selfish solicitude, we have eyes, yet see not, ears that hear not, and
hearts that neither feel nor understand.
tible
80
!
It
is
an inexhaus-
source of everything including the fancy. Fancy and understanding are always preoccupied with the familiar world
of objects, sensations, feelings,
and images.
They
are related to
the individual personality and, thereby, to the exclusively selfish activities. Consequently they interfere with the free
activity of
the
[The range of fancy is strictly limited to the appearances which As against this, Imagialone are useful and familiar to us.
not
nation does not refer to any utility, but to value; and One could satisfied with the forms of things.
it
is
say
two
feelings
is
appre-
hended by fancy, while the qualitative difference depending on the intensity or depth is felt by the imagination. The number of feelings or images
is
always limited by
memory
in fancy.
;
own, thereby transcending memory. Necessity of Ideas to Scientific Method, He observes that Coleridge distinguished the two activities. it is not the nature of genius "to assist in storing the passive
its
The
mind with
if
the
human
the various sorts of knowledge most in request, as soul were a mere repository or banqueting-room."
it
On
in such relations
that craves
what
it
power no knowledge but what it can take up into itself, can appropriate, and reproduce in fruits of its own.'"
1
New
ideas
only with the fixed relations of similarity, difference and conThe latter guity, imagination works with internal relations.
thus coadunates, realises specific unities, transforms even the
And
since
the external
relations
Ibid.
Essays
on Method in Friend.
Two Forms
of Imagination
29
present in the case of fancy are all derived ultimately from the internal relations, one can say that fancy too is a product of imagination, a form of motion imagined. That is, succes-l
sion characterises fancy while simultaneity
tion.
is
basic to imagina-
1810: "Coleridge
Crabb Robinson noted in his Diary for November 15, made an elaborate distinction between fancy
and imagination.
tion mania.
The
that
lie
excess of fancy is delirium, of imaginathe arbitrary bringing together of things forming them into a unity. The ma-
ready for the fancy, which acts by a sort of juxtaOn the other hand, the imagination under exciteposition. ment generates and produces a form of its own." Fancy then
terials lie
and
to that extent
82
it
is
Thus
peare "possessed fancy, considered as the faculty of bringing together images dissimilar in the main by some one point or more of likeness"; and imagination, on the other, is "the j>ower
by which one image or feeling is made to modify many others, and by a sort of fusion to force many into one." In one feeling is foundational and it is imagination only pjesent
the guiding purposive principle throughout the activity. else is assimilated into this one This one Everything feeling.
feeling
is
as
more or
less
an all-inclusive whole.
makes
possible the
most
to which the deepest When the creative springs of human consciousness respond. act is relaxed the mind becomes indifferent to
reality;
a world
and
is
in
this
indifference
fancy
is
at
work.
This
fancy
'
"the faculty of bringing together images,, dissimilar in the 8 main by some one point or more of likeness distinguished." These are like the floating images which retain their character
32. 33. 34.
B.L.
I,
73.
Shakespeare Criticism,
I,
212.
30
even when they are brought together. They are "fixities and 85 definites." They "have no connexion natural or moral, but
are yoked together by the poet by means of some accidental 88 coincidence." They are put together by choice. This choice
is
of the will";
it
is
that constitutes the real being of the mind, for the objects chosen are not shaped or modified by the mind, but only chosen out of those supplied. That is, fancy involves the mental
activity of selection, while imagination
is
a transmuting
acti-
vity that recognises the validity of no time-series and no spatial The ideas and images appearing in the latter are locations.
together present at one and the same to remain free from the control of time
between fancy and imagination depends, criterion of value. therefore, on the Fancy is a term signifyIt involves images or ing what is other than imagination.
distinction
The
These inimpressions while imaginations refer to intuitions. tuitions are evoked objectively by the truth of things, and subjectively they conform to the nature of human reason,
in Coleridge's theory a
close kinship
of reason.
Fancy
is
ope-
no
universality.
is
The
little
universality that
It
may
is
be present here
experiences in
only contingent,
not necessary.
In
all this,
the
compound images. It arranges the past new way by associating one with the other. mind is passive, it is "a lazy looker-on on an extera
on the passiveness
of the
mind
and
must be
<i
false, as a system."
37
Even
35.
36. 37.
B.L.
I,
202.
23,
T.T. June
1834.
23,
To
Poole,
March
1801.
Two Forms
of Imagination
31
endeavouring to break forth; and as it breaks forth, the phenomena" become spiritual and one with our consciousness. It i^the^saTme "principle that "exists in man as intelligence and i *
*-*
This imagination too is active and passa It is 'joined to a superior voluntary control over it.' sive. The volitional energy is absent in "the streamy nature of the
self-consciousness."'
18
associative faculty."*
But
in
the basic faculty on which the other is founded. ser is said to have 'fancy under conditions of
Thus Spen-
He
imagination. 41 has an imaginative fancy, but he has not imagination.' Fancy here is a principle governing mere rhetorical figures or
'Milton had a highly imaginative, Cowley metaphysical wit. 14* a very fanciful mind. Fancy here appears to imply a loose connection of the poet's heart and intellect with 'the great
appearances of Nature... in
the
shape
of
formal
41
similes.'
feeling present in the expressions of fancy with the steady fervour of a mind possessed 'incompatible 4 and filled with the grandeur of its subject."*
The distinction between the primary and the secondforms of imagination involves a differentiation of the unary conscious from the conscious activity. The truly artistic imagination, Coleridge avers,
it
differs
45
from
it is
is an echo of the primary, and yet because this one 'co-exists with the conscious
will/
its
Still it
mode
of
its
operation."
38. 39.
B.L.
I,
I,
176.
86.
B.L.
40.
41.
A.P. 64.
Misc.
Grit.,
38.
42. 43.
44. 45. 46.
B.L.
I,
62.
To
Southey, July 29, 1802; to Sotheby, September 10, 1802. B.L. II, 68.
I,
Ibid.,
202.
Ibid.
32
critics
who
quainted.
When
Schelling observes:
"Es
1st
das Dichtungs-
vermogen, was in der ersten Potenz die ursprungliche Anschauung ist, und ungekehrt, es ist nur die in der hochsten Potenz sie wie werholende produktive Anschauung, was wir Dichtungsvermogen nennen. Es ist ein und dasselbe, was in beiden tatig ist, das Einzige wodurch wir fahing sind, auch das Widerspre-
he seems to have suggested the idea of the primary 48 Schelling distinimagination also. In an earlier passage,
kraft"
guishes conscious
imagination from unconscious perception. Coleridge appears to accept the source of imagination as the As he remarked, "there is in genius itself an unconscious.
is
man
of
genius."
But
this doctrine
appears to
go back
to
Mesmer
in
by Coleridge
their setting or with their precise significance. He sought to evolve an altogether new theory, a theory not found in any of the critics who are said to have influenced his doctrine.
in J.
G. E. Maass's work,
Versuch uber die Einbildungskraft (1797), which Coleridge borrowed and annotated. Schelling's Lectures on the
method
of
also
has
it.
But
in
the hands of Coleridge it is not a simple shaping into one. It is too complex an activity and to express it precisely he had to invent a new term, esemplastic.
Coleridge held the primary imagination to be "the living power and prime agent of all human perception, and as a
repetition in the finite
mind
47. 48.
Werke,
Misc.
III,
626.
Ibid., 271.
Crit.,
49.
210.
Two Form*
of Imagination
61
33
Sarah Coleridge stated that in his copy the infinitcj^AM." of the book her father 'stroked out' the sentence. Possibly
he
to
felt like
giving a
it.
new name
reword
He
He
once observed:
the substance
"That which we
find in ourselves
is
gradu
^With-
mutato
and the
life
'I
of all
our knowledge.
all
AM'
modes
of existence
world would
flit
The
ness.
'I
53
the
same
self-conscious-
"reflexion
first
approach
to,
and shadow
of,
the
divine permanency; the first effect of divine working in us to find the Past and Future with the Present, and thereby to
let in
upon us some
faint
AM."
field.
The secondary imagination functions within a limited The Universals that are beyond this power come under
the operation of the primary imagination. Even though the has to 'idealise and unify', it cannot secondary imagination Hence its field is restricted to unify at least the universals.
those objects
It is
which "as objects are essentially fixed and dead." the ever active, creative power directed to the physical
essentially
essen-
perception of objects.
in this context to
of,
mean
He
is
concepts understanding are impossible if this understanding not aided by imagination; nor can imagination apprehend the true character of the particulars of sense in the absence
50. 51.
52. 53.
B.L. B.L.
First,
I,
202.
I,
(1847),
183.
297.
B.
B.L.
34
of
any aid from the conceptual activity of the understanding. As such even in the most elementary acts of perception, there
is
the pimary imagination present in the. That form of the creative power perceptions of ^daily -life. which gives an individuality to the rational insight of the uniSince it offers an indiviversal is the primary imagination.
imagination.
This
is
duality In this
a.
it
is
"repetition
of the
etemaT~acT""of
creation."
repetition the concrete individual comes to embody It is creative in the sense that it makeSi ..possible an value*
self.
Here we
exercise our
is
power unconsciously.
Without
it
no perception
possible.
Hence
it is
the living
primary or foundational
finite
AM.
The
secondary imagination I consider as an echo of the former, co-existing with the conscious will, yet still as identical with
the primary in the kind of
its its
degree and
in the
mode
of
agination is the basic condition which seeks to explain why we have a world of experience. Through a "confluence of our
recollections
establish a centre, as it were, a sort of nucleus M in the reservoir of the soul." The idea of the nexus effectivus
we
originates in the
mind
as a
This nexus
is
the I
AM,
jthe
or self-consciousness.
It
tion.
'on the
tors
Consequently he speaks of the dependence of perception 556 memory and imagination. Memory is one of the facall
ex-
perience.
54. 55.
Biogrnphia Epiitolaris,
2,
182.
On Method
Friend,
I,
in Friend.
56.
248.
Two Forms
in
of Imagination
35
Thejmagination present
tive
artist
is
world presented by secondary. the primary is raised here to one of value. The world is The same imcreated anew as an object of contemplation.
utilitarian
The
aginative activity
will.
It
is
is
it
is
directed by the
voluntary and is therefore free. This secondary imagination is the basic condition which seeks to explain. how the world of experience is to be grasped in a fuller unity so
that
we can have
It .grasps
the whole in
which
functions purposively.
is
The
teleology
immanent
lity of
"analogous
to the
Causa-
the
human
end
3 '
67
will.
It is
ness of the
agination.
The
which
will
is
also
operative
in
the
primary imagination
/This
original perception into its sense-data and constructs, ji new concrete picture. "It dissolves, diffuses, dissipates, in order to or where this process is rendered recreate; impossible, yet still
at all events,
tially vital,
it
struggles to idealise
all
and
to unify.
It is essen-
even as
and
dead."''*
tructive,
but
is
also destructive.
The
is
struggle to unify characterising the secondary imagination the absorption of experiences Into a coherent whole. The
feels the
poet
need to create a coherent system of reality; and he embodies the experience in a wider and all-inclusive imaginative
pattern.
This
is
felt
imaginative
whole significance of life. In realising this it has to destroy the atomic isolation in which the objects are perceived. This creative activity then forth a
the
apprehension of
brings
57. 58.
On Method
B.L.
I,
in Friend.
202.
36
Coleridge's
Theory
of Poetry
'charm of novelty.'
Such a picture
'in
is
consequence mary imagination and selfish solicitude.' The familiar in normal life be useful the moment it loses its apparent character.
fish solicitude is
The
sel-
always intent
on maintaining the
distinction
between persons and things since it is a separating or dividThis is contrary to social ends and to the sociability ing force.
of the species.
The
is
human
for all
its
"to express intellectual purposes, thoughts, conceptions, and sentiments which have their origin " This function is realised by the imagiin the human mind."
the nature of the fine arts
native activity.
Imagination is essentially vital in the sense that it The objects are ob'informs and animates other existences.' jects only for the imagination, because it is the primary imagination that creates for us the world of objects. Then if the objects are said to be 'fixed and dead', Coleridge might be referring to the things prior to their becoming the objects, to
the things-in-themselves that
and dead/
many
counters.
But
when
the conscious imagination is focussed on them they appear as ends in themselves; and they are vitalised because they are
integrated to that consciousness in which the artist participates. Imagination is the process whereby the objects are charged
with consciousness.
At the
level of the
primary imagination
are not aware of this because of the ulterior ends governing our experience; and, the world at this level may appear
vital,
we
in-
59.
60.
Two Forms
of Imagination
37
herent in the world of objects. This living principle for its own sake is apprehended at the level of the secondary imagination.
This vitality may be a case of self-projection at but at this level it is vitality that is felt to
be
real.
more
significant.
The
the
cpistcmological situation; and at that of the secondary they This status are apprehended as having an ontological status.
is
intuited;
and
in intuiting
we
ence or that value which they embody. The creative act in one of its essential forms is present in such a situation if only because the intuited value renders the object vital to us. In
itself
the object
it
is
fixed
and
life
definite.
is
But
in relation to the
percipient
its
reveals a
that
specific characteristic.
It is
When
Coleridge
spoke
of
imaginative
act
as the
'dim analogue of the creation', he had in his mind Berkeley's remark: "Certainly we ourselves create in some wise whenever
we imagine .'""
said in his
More
or
less in
give,
And
giving
rise to
in
our
life
ducing or 'The 'ideas formed by the imagination' have an entire depend" ence on the will." Coleridge spoke of choice being
5
necessary for the ideas of the imagination. The spirit 'pro62 otherwise operating about' ideas is called will.
^present
in 'the
primary imagination, and of will iri_the_ other. As an The activity, imagination too must "arise from the volition.
volitional
can
have
conscious
or
unconscious
purpose.
61.
Commonplace Book,
Principles,
27.
101.
62.
63.
Third Dialogue.
38
Coleridge's
is
Theory of Poetry
The former
real
character,
its
In his
letter of
"If the mind be not passive, if it be indeed made not passive. in God's Image, and that, too, in the sublimest sense, the
Image
system built
as a system.
to
5 '
is ground for suspicion that any on the passiveness of the mind must be false,
It is
the
dynamism
live,
of the
mind
that
is
basic
any
the world in
feels the
which we
struggle
and
realise.
Here he
The mind
is
brings together the varied data of sense. This activity is called the primary imagination which gives a form or shape to the varied impressions. Even then the
active
shape given is purely intellectual or ideational; and or may not agree with that of the given manifold. It
it
may
here
is
that the secondary imagination operates by revealing the agreement of the external with the internal, by revealing the or-
ganic unity of the world with the consciousness of the individual, and by revealing the oneness of the creativity of Nature with that of the human mind.
Imagination secondary thus seeks to reveal the animating principle operating in alone can explain Reality.
the
Universe,,
letter to
In a
and
things, elevating, as
it
things too."
thesis, the old
were, words into things and living destroys the old antiIt elevates the
word
into
pletes this
But the secondary imagination comIn this process by elevating it into a living. thing.
works^as., passion..
process
it
Two Forms
of Imagination
39
be by dates that posterity will judge of the originality of a poem; but by the original spirit itself. This is to be found
neither in a tale however interesting,
which
is
which arc but forms no, nor yet in the Fancy or the imagery and colours it is a subtle spirit, all in each part, reconciling and unifying all. Passion and imagination are its most appropriate names; but even these say little for it must be not merely passion but poetic passion, poetic imagination."
the nature of passion is to make the individual forget himself, forget the proper distinctions governing the familiar
Now
world of
one.
It
selfish solicitude.
Poetic passion
It
is
is
a more refined
reconciles
its
and
unifies all.
all-inclusive.
is
At
poetic
moment of intensity the imagination secondary The poetic passion impregnates the data passion.
of
94
experience and contemplation 'with an interest not their own.' The aesthetic pleasure thus arises not from the thing presented
prior to the creative act, but from what is represented by the 15 artist.' Prior to the act the data are not unified, not significant enough.
own
character.
to
it
Imagination
ing them
has
tendency
use
words by
elevat-
into things.
In other words,
seeks to
employ words
metaphorically.
images.
in
Metaphors are apprehended primarily as These images exist at the two levels of imagination
two different ways. At the lo\ver level, the image does not absorb our attention into itself; it claims no independent or significant character. It functions almost like a counter.
"Imagery, affecting incident, just thoughts, interesting personal or domestic feelings", and expression of these in the form of a poem "may all by incessant effort be acquired as a trade."
But there
is
inborn.
It
is
"the .sense of
gift of
imagination."
This
gift
64. 65.
40
into unity of "together with the power of reducing multitude and modifying a series of thoughts by some one preeffect,
dominant thought or feeling, may be cultivated and improved, but can never be learned. It is in these that poeta nascitur 5500 The image resulting from poetic passion is a pronon fit.
duct of the secondary imagination. As emerging from this source, it carries with it the character of passion and moves
in the
same rhythm.
beings.
is
Yet
it
is
something not
is
common
to all
all,
human
present in
who
Consequently what
is
distinguishes
an
artist
the pre-
sence in
If
him
tive activity,
the images themselves are not modified by the imagina"poetry becomes flattened into mere didactics of
or evaporated into a hazy, unthoughtful day-dreamThis modifying process secures the 'deftniteness and ing." articulation of imagery', and also the 'framework of objectivity/
practice,
87
And
two
the
two forms
in
different activities.
are unrelated,
and they have no necessary origination from They are merely the images existing
primary imagination.
tions.
images offer the clues to an apprehension of the poetic intuiIn other words, they offer the clues to an understand-
ing of the existence or being of the world, an understanding with which we are not familiar in normal life because of the
selfish solicitude
of familiarity.
That which
distinguishes
the genius is the latter's "intuition of absolute existence." This intuition makes him realise within himself "a something
66. 67.
B.L.
II,
14.
11.
Two Form*
of Imagination
41
own
individual nature."
How
does
Our
1 '
The senses "supply only surfaces, unThe instruments of sensation "furnish dulations, phantoms. only the chaos, the shapeless elements of sense." The "moulds
and the understanding.
and mechanism
8
of the
lization, in outlines
tion."*
and differencings by quantity and relaImagination, on the other hand, is concerned with and
in the
existence;
with quality.
chaos; and
it is
preoccupied
resolves
it
the
Such a creative principle, Coleridge says, not only analogous to the creativity of nature, but basic to
the entire
human
life
as
such.
It
is
and dreams.
It intuits the
Platonic Ideas.
is
with appearances. The secondary is acconcerning concerned with reality, expressing no utilities, but values. tively The former preserves the dualism of normal life, while the
latter seeks
to transcend
verse.
It is this
secondary
imagination
that
contains
"the
improvement." This "imagination is the distinguishing characteristic of man as a pro69 gressive being", for the simple reason that it "combines many
scientific
and
moment
of consciousness",
human
feeling, unity."
human mind.
68. 69.
70.
On Method
Ibid.,
39.
in
Fnend.
3.
NATURE OF IMAGINATION
*
if
In every rational being there is present 'potentially, not actually, a somewhat, call what you will, the pure
the like."
takes us to
lumen siccum, nous, intellectual intuition, or It is an examination of these various terms that that activity which is said to be involved in all
is
artistic creation.
'discursive', analytical, and it turns to But reason, Coleridge argues, is "the immediate and inward beholding of the spiritual as sense is
Understanding
the
external
world.
of the material."
The
categories
and
rules supplied
by under-
standing enable us to apprehend the objects conceptually as they are in themselves and as they are related to one another. This is the classifying and generalizing activity of the understanding which
ties,
is
preoccupied
of
is
with
in
"the
quantities"
quali-
and
relations
particulars
time
of
and
space.
The
func-
understanding,
jf their
therefore,
the
science
phenomena, and
sorts.
Its
subsumption under
distinct kinds
and
is
ence.
.The reason,
1
possibility of experi-
Universal."
The only
but
it
understanding
2
"the
It
may
in
have
clarity,
has no depth;
materials are
for,
"it
entangles
itself
Its
all
verse.
It
It
may
1.
operates on the given in sensations or impressions. be viewed as "the power which adopts means to pro399.
Lay Sermon,
Ibid.,
3.
2.
342.
Ibid., 343.
Nature of Imagination
43
ximate ends according to varying circumstances." "In reason there are no means nor ends, reason itself being one with the
ultimate end, of which
it is
it
has "no
4
The concern with things, but with permanent Relations." ideas of reason cannot then be conveyed in any adequate man5 However much we ner save through the forms of symbols.
reason to the external world, "from the understanding to the reason^ there is no continuous ascent And yet we are not aware of any gulf separating possible."
may
try
to
relate
the
two
in actual experience.
But purely from a theoretical point of view, we do find In spite of that these two function in two divergent ways.
the universals revealed by reason, the gross particularity of an object is not lost in any perceptual activity, while this
particularity
is
lost in
Imagination enables us to apprehend the particulars in the That is, light of the basic concepts of the understanding. reason appears to be nearer to ordinary experience, and the
to aid imagination.
is
This imagi-
is
shown
earlier,
It
is more or less the point on which conthe other activities like those of reason and understandverge
ing.
Let
reason.
us
first
consider
offers
the
relation
of
imagination
to
an insight into truth. It renImagination ders this insight into symbols that are capable of affecting the
human
feelings
and emotions.
The symbol
is
'con-substantial'
by the permanent and self-circling energies of the reason", imagination "gives birth to a system of symbols,
in themselves and consubstantial with the truths which they arc the conductors. These are the wheels which
harmonious
of
4.
5.
To
Tulk, Feburary
I,
12,
1821.
B.L.
100.
44
Ezekiel beheld,
when
the
hand
of
the
was
For the
'
of the living
also.'
The symbol
and
the
is it
is
derived from
Then
is
activity
that
expresses
thought symbolically.
idea underlying
its
Any symbol
and yet
suggestive of the
Imagination is thus an activity that translates an idea into the form of a symbol charged with
emergence.
its
At the same time the symbol has the powers of suggestion. This might mean that also in the flux of the senses. basis
and the
But
in reality
is it is
The symbol
like
the wheel.
communicates
It presents the specific particular retruth to the feelings. vealed to the senses, the general understood by the understandIt is ing, and the universal cognised or intuited by reason.
characterised "by the translucence of the eternal through and 7 in the temporal." set of such symbols forming the expres-
sion proper
of imagination. Such symbols are with the original character of the charged by imagination
is
the
work
ideas.
There
is
of the objects
a law operating in the objects. The 'essence is called the idea. But whereas a law cannot This idea
through symbols. Coleridge opposes symbol to allegory, in the way in which he opposes imagination to fancy, or the organic to the mechanical form. The symbol is more
presented
real,
in
more true. The germinal causes in nature' are repeated and through the symbols. The symbol is not a copy, but
'form breathing life.' "It always partakes of the reality which it renders intelligible; and while it enunicates the whole,
6.
7.
230.
Nature of Imagination
abides
itself
45
which
it
is
the
representative.
phorical.'
It
literal
The
Symbol
idea
is
to one another.
the individual, or of the general in the special, or of the Universal in the general."
bolised.
It is 'a 'a
It
represents',
10
and
It is
representative.' part of the whole of which it a point of union realising the universal and the particular
so
In this Union, the formative idea attains reality and That is, the symbol therefore reveals or embodies a value.
as one.
views the particular in its proper context and renders it more In this process the particular embodies the uni'determinate.
versal.
On
is
which
11
nothing but
to fancy while symbol is rause allegory is disjoined from the idea, while a symbol 'pre-
sumes no disjunction
tion
is
"1
of faculties/
The
principle of unifica-
And when
Coleridge emit
as the
In other words, the symbol can symbol be a word, a figure; or even an image. It has a wide range of forms under which it can appear. However, it is imagery a true symbol of the original conception, for in a sensuous form that which is non-sensuous. It
that
is
it
is
presents
imagery
that points out clearly man's identity with nature. This unification appears as the symbol. Thus on the side of expres-
8.
Ibid
Ibid.
9.
10.
Crit., 99.
U.
12.
46
sion the
first
of symbols.
These symbols
may
culars or particularised universals. The universal appearing or emerging as the particular, be-
comes significant of reality. Then it acquires a form and embodies a value. Reality then is a mediating principle between concreteness and value. When the concrete reveals an
ideal,
real.
That
is,
the
and through value. "Plato which the mind has its living laws, whole true being and permanence; or Bacon, vice versa, names 13 the laws of nature ideas." There is inherent in human nature
ideal
and
the real
become one
<
in
in
a mysterious predisposition to "identify our being with that of the world without us" and yet to "place ourselves in contradistinction to that world." It is out of this predisposition
that
we
with the intelligence. It is in mediating between nature that the creative art appears. Imagination 15 full power, 'essentially vital', because it reconciles
nature by humanising the
passions of
man and
is,
at
its
man and
and
man
into everything
It
which
is
templation."
and sound,
This
the
basic
doctrine
An
human
is
inherent
soul.
relation
is
exists
between
nature
and the
This
the
activity;
and
this relationship
intellectual.
heart and intellect should be intimately combined and unified with the great appearances of Nature, and not held in solu-
13.
On Method
B.L.
I,
in Friend.
14. 15.
16.
Friend, 511-512.
202.
Lecture*
and Notes,
311.
Nature of Imagination
tion
47
with them, in the shape of formal This appears as an inner urge towards identity in similes. In A Hymn Before Sunrise he describes himself Coleridge. the influence of a strong devotional feelings gazing on "under the Mountain till as if it had been a shape emanating from
and
loose mixture
5 ' 17
and sensibly representing her own essence my soul had become diffused through 'the mighty vision' and there 'as in her
natural from, swelled vast to Heaven'."
18
Just like this identity between the human soul and nature the natural symbol and the interpreting mind have the same
spiritual being.
As he
"The great
artist
were abstracted."
The "mind
great,
feels as
And
or
it
is
mountains
majesty!
inter-
caverns,
me
the
sense
sublimity
10
or
But
The
the symbol partake of the character of imagination from which they are derived; and each counterfeits
infinity
tion.
by carrying within it the immense powers of suggesThe infinity which they counterfeit is the imagination
which
human
Nature
for Coleridge
is
the
creative
aspect
is
nature.
The Cambridge
'plastic
Platonists taught
him
that there
an organic
called
which Cudworth
nature/
In
As
its
new forms
is is
of
life
are evolved.
highest
power Nature
20
no other than
the natura
This essence
naturans "which presupposes a bond between nature in the 1 The creative activity of higher sense and the soul of man."*
To Southey, July 29, 1802; to Sotheby, September 10, 1802. Letter of 1820. To
B.L.
Thelwall, October
I,
14,
1797.
20. 21.
187.
48
Coleridge's
Theory of Poetry
It evolves in time and space specific ideological. Each form is symbolic for specific ends. forms of existence of the creative endeavour that has made its emergence possible.
nature
is
is
in nature, as nature,
is
essen-
one with the intellignece which is in the human mind 28 Since mind and nature are not different from above nature.
one another, when art is said to imitate nature, it can only mean that art is a kind of self -revelation. In this sense he
could observe that "Shakespeare worked in the spirit of nature, by evolving the germ within by the imaginative power accord-
Nature too, he said, "works from within ing to an idea."* 84 by evolution and assimilation according to a law."
imitation of Nature, he argues, is the imitation of The beautiful is "the unity of the manifold, the coalescence of the diverse, .... the union of the
the beautiful in Nature.
The
The creative artist in expressing his shapely with the vital.' In representexperience can then be said to imitate Nature.
*
20
ing the spirit of nature, the poet works through ideas and
symbols, and his art becomes a mediator 'between a thought and a thing.' He presents "the union and reconciliation of
that
which
is
is
exclusively human."**
In attempting the mediation, art presents the ideas of reason in and through the imaginative activity. An idea "never passes into an abstraction and therefore never becomes
the equivalent of an image."
27
It is
not a concept;
it
cannot
it
can at the most be contemplated. comes an existent. But since it is beyond form,
It
2*
be seen.
Then
it
be-
is
rendered
concrete or visible by symbols. The idea thus becomes an act rendering the universal concrete. Hence he treats ideas
22.
23.
Friend, 328.
Misc. Grit., 43.
Ibid., 42.
24.
25.
26.
27. 28.
Marginalia.
On
Nature of Imagination
as
'real', 'living',
is
49
the idea
As a formative principle 'seminal' principles. immanent in the concrete. But "an idea in the highest sense of the word cannot be conveyed but by a sym88 Hence when an artist is said to imitate nature, it is bol." an imitation in which likeness and unlikeness, or sameness and
difference, coexist.
"And
must be a union
be a
lifeless
of these disparates.
mere
likeness will
It is the union of the similar with deception. And the dissimilar that gives reality and life to the imitation. it a value in transmuting the dissimilar into an embodies
The work
is
of art
in
is
It
an imitation
his
it
the sense that the spectator or reader redissimilar, or in the sense that he
the
in
external
objects.
presents symbol that art reveals is one where the opposites are reconciled to evolve the significant. The composition of a poem is among
world
sense.
is
radically
different,
31
The
unification
-of
and
with a value.
Because of
this imita-
Coleridge could say that "the essence of poetry is universality.^ And in a letter he observes: "whatever is not representative, generic, may be
indeed most poetically expressed, but it is not poetry.'' This is not an abstraction for he is talking of the "involution of
the universal in the individual."
29. 30.
B.L.
I,
100.
31.
32.
56.
11,
Shakespeare Criticism,
9.
50
Coleridge's
Theory of Poetry
is
The
"class-characteristics
which constitute the instructiveness of a character are so modified and particularised in each person, tfcat life itself
.
does
distinctly
33
that
sense
of individuality
which belongs to real existence." Art become more real than The life; the semblance is more valuabe than the actual.
artist imitates
"that which
is
active through
form and
figure,
and
discourses to us
by symbols."
The
suggestive
power
of
the symbol takes us to the reality it visions. The ultimate or real universals of nature are, therefore, said to be revealed in
These are apprehended by a faculty of the mind more valuable than the discursive intellect. This faculty is
poetry.
universals
are
essentially conceptual.
tells
Yet the
same
versals
conceptual
in the
manent
nature.
us
The
uni-
are
the
The
principles guiding process of are the media; they are like "the particulars
the
lungs in relation to the atmosphere, the eye to light, crystal 84 The universal, on the other hand, has no character; and to make the of the unito fluid, figure to space."
Aristotelian
holds with Plato that they are gulative. constitutive, that have independent existence, that they they can and do be-
He
come
88
real.
The
is
universal
is
a process.
Reality apprehended at that moment in the process wherein the universal and the particular reveal each other.
It is the
moment when
real,
and the
a reality
33.
34. 35. 36.
when the ideal become one. The human mind can apprehend such and through that power or it is
capacity
capable
B.L.
II,
33
Nature of Imagination
of harmonising or coalescing the data revealed
51
human
faculties.
This
is
mind
and
it
is
human
percep-
tion."
real,
Consequently the ideas that are creative are "more 38 And as artistic immore substantial than the things."
it
agination,
it
and embodies
.counterpart in the form of the human senses and understanding; and the universal processes have
its
their counterpart in
human
reason.
The dynamic
creativity
of
nature
is
in
the direction
and
the particular. Because of this process reality comes to mediate between concreteness and value. Now imagination attempts
and conceptions derived from the concrete external world with the insights offered by reason; and in this process imagination mediates between the various
to synthesise the impression
faculties
and
activities of the
It is after all
and temper each other." tion into harmony by virtue originated from itself prior
sensations.
39
This
opposi-
have
and
Hence
it is
the "reconcil-
and mediating power, which incorporating the reason in images of the sense, and organising the flux of the senses by the permanent and self-circulating energies of the reason, gives
ing
birth to a system of symbols, harmonious in themselves and consubstantial with the truths of which they are the conduc4
'
tors."
specific
feature
of im-
37.
38. 39.
B.L.
I,
202.
On
Method.
Lecture*
40.
52
Reason cannot be other than imagination, because the latter alone makes possible the being of every is said, "the completing power which other mental faculty.
agination.
^It
unites clearness with depth, the plentitude of the sense with the comprehensibility of the understanding, is the imagination,
impregnated with which the understanding itself becomes intui1 Kant considered imagination to tive and a living power."*
be merely a unifying principle between reason and underBut the Platonic Coleridge takes it as a constitustanding.
tive principle.
In unifying
it
unity.
It is
evolves
itself
as having a form.
Schelling
who
not the same theory as that of considered imagination to be the same as the
This
is
creativity of nature. Coleridge takes it to be a dim analogue of the creative process, "a principle within, not originating in
and out of this principle even nature is anything without" evolved. The forms of nature owe their being and their origin
;
43
Hence, "Form is factitious thinking, and the process; imagination the laboratory in which thinking 13 the thought elaborates essence into existence." Even thinkto
this
activity.
is
is grounded in imagination; and when imagination functions as the immanent driving force, thinking evolves and enables the essence to appear as existence.
is
This essence
the imagination
which
is
present in
all
existence
and which
therefore not merely unifies the manifold but gives a determinate shape to them. It is the the cscmplastjc power,
shaping power.
The
insights
activities of the
and impressions derived from two divergent mind are brought together by the imaginativebecome
ideas.
conceptions of reason
41.
42.
Ibid.,
266.
43.
Anima
Poetae, 186.
Nature of Imagination
53
world of the
senses.'
Even the
these ideas
And when
have no corresponding objects, we have to consider imagination as a super-sensuous power which yet inspirits the world Then the potential idea acquires a concreteness of sense.
under the impact of the sense impression, and these impressions The get into a -proper mould as the idea works on them.
two processes are brought together to form one process by the imagination which thus appears to be "the laboratory in
which thought elaborates essence into existence."* The renof this process in an appropriate medium is called art. dering
It is this
5
'the
But Coleridge's critical and creative mind is not satisfied by discovering the fundamental principle. He sought to give
it
a specific name because the word imagination does not So he coined the word actually denote this specific function.
esemplastic.
He
felt
that the
German
word more
easily.
"How
excellently
Einbildungskraft expresses the prime and loftiest the power of co-adunation, the faculty that forms the faculty, many into one in-eins-bildung Eisenoplasy, or esenoplastic
!
German
power
is
repeating simply, or by transposition and, again, involuntary as in dreams, or by an act of 46 the will." Passive reception of images, combining the images
of sense-impressions
by an act
of the will or
by an involuntary an
activity out of
choice as in dreams
This
is
which
we
derive
images,
sense-impressions
and
the
like.
of the
mind
Anima
Ibid.,
Poetae, 158.
199.
46.
54
Coleridge's
Theory of Poetry
participation
One by
and imparting
47
*
other things
what
itself
It is
This esemplastic power is not merely a shaping power. a power which is "the true inward creatrix, instantly out
memory,
power by opposite forces." To give a shape it ought to synthesize. That is, imagination is dialectical because it is both transcendental and immanent. It is both constitutive and regulative of the mental process.
It is
puts together some from to fit it." polarity, or the manifestation of one
48
This
is
all
It is embodied as a striving the true character of identity. ing towards the reconciliation of the universal with the parti-
existence,
natura
is
naturata.
The imaginative
in these pairs.
the coalescence of
From
the stand-
reveal themselves in
new new
light;
it
is
. .
As such
a
light.
they seem to manifest new forms of existence. said that "the man of genius places things in .The poet not only displays what, though often
5 '
seen in its unfolded mass, had never been opened out, but he likewise adds something, namely, light and relations. Good poems may be composed if one has a poetic taste, dexterity in composition,
this
is
560
10
and power
is
of ingenious imitation.
But
new.
power doing something Genius implies 'great sensibility and men of genius 51 also have 'great confidence in their powers.' They bring
5
'the
of
47. 48.
Sim, 356.
Anima
Poetae, 206.
1830.
10,
49.
50.
51.
Ibid., 233.
T.T. April,
18,
To
Sotheby, September
1802.
Nature of Imagination
to
Imagination synthesizes the data of sense into tlieJ world of objects, and the poem, as the product of the imaginative activity, has to express an imaginative idea or object.
This
things and yet "to make the remain the same." For the true imagination w changeful god be felt in the river, the lion and the flamc."
is
possible
all
is
To
artist
must become
with impersonal, lose himself in his experience and be one "It is easy to cloathe or person he contemplates. every thing
imaginary beings with our own thoughts and feelings; but to send ourselves out of ourselves, to think ourselves into the
thoughts and feelings of beings in circumstances wholly and hoc labour, hoc opus and strangely different from our own
who
53
has achieved
it?
In other
words, unlike
not personal.
with
ideas.
It
has
54
power whereby
with
the
It at
it
im-
presses
the
natural
of
or
lifeless
objects
stamp of
'see
humanity and
human
feelings.
This impersonality of the imaginative process, though Coleridge could not adequately foresee its implications, is vital
to art, religion, morality,
and
all
other form
as
of
human
and
endeain
vour.
estoeric
Psychologically
it
appears
to
sympathy;
an
view
it
appears as inspiration.
it
From a
religio-philo-
sophic standpoint
points
the
distinction
between the
Absolute and God, by treating the latter as an appearance of the former. In other words, it seeks to show the untenability
of
56
this
Coleridge's
Theory of Poetry
its
when he
.
. .
observed:
"In
tranquil
out of many operation, imagination acts chiefly by creating detailed in unimpassioned succession, a oneness, even things
as nature, the greatest of poets, acts
5
upon
us.
"*
In realising this oneness, imagination does away with It reduces all succession into simultanetiy, because succession. a power that makes even time and space" possible. But such a power cannot be adequately expressed in any medium:
it
is
and
it
this
makes him
appears are only shadows of imagination. Yet these shadows have an inherent power to take us beyond themselves.
exhibit
They
what
is
forms, for the simple reason that the power inspiriting them drives them on forward. Quoting the lines:
Look! how a bright star shooteth from the sky! So glides he in the night from Venus' eye!
images and feelings are here brought together without effort and without discord the beauty
Coleridge adds:
of Adonis, the rapidity of his flight, the yearning yet hopeless-
"How many
shadowy ideal character is thrown over the whole!" As we follow the image it appears to be naturally related to a number of other relevant details. It belongs to a relational context where alone it acquires a It is a vital element in an organic unity. Such significance. a character is denied to an image springing from fancy. This is what he means when he speaks of "the power by which one or feeling is made to modify many others and by a image
ness of the
06
enamoured
gazer, while a
many
into one."
from imagina-
such a
mood one
capable of raising the reader to a higher plane. In "feels Shakespeare to be a poet, in as much
Our
awareness of Adonis
55. 56.
Ibid.
Shakespeare Criticism,
I,
213.
Nature of Imagination
57
earlier
clear.
is
made
to exist
now
in
our imagination.
This being
achieved by a fusion of varied relevant elements. Here is a gift of spreading the atmosphere, "the depth and height of the ideal world" around the forms and situations of normal
"of which custom
is
life,
had bedimmed
57
all
it
the lustre."
Imagiof
nation then
we
know because
our preoccupation with a purely utilitarian world of matter. It reveals the Reality that is hidden by the appearances of the mechanistic physical universe. It offers a revelation;
and
it is
When
ness.
is
power
is
world and also to the world of consciousour experiences of the external world our own mental life. That is, in
failure to unify
becoming self-conscious we are aware of the unity of the self. The disordered and obscure self-perceptions are dissolved; and
with
dissolution the secondary imagination also becomes constructive. It is constructive because it gives itself an objectithis
vity
and As
unifies
it
and
idealises,
it
becomes
objective.
In
emphasises no simgle aspect or activity to the exclusion of the rest. It transcends passions and the like
this objectivity
integrating
Consequently the creative act where we have mere emotions and feelings, or simple ideas; but it is a unified whole. The emotional and conativc reactions of the individual thus
distanced in this objectivity. The unique character of the work of art will then depend not on the
aesthetically
become
strength and vividness of the emotions, but on the unity or wholeness created by the imagination. This unity enabled Coleridge to speak of the logic of this logic he meant that poetry. By every part or element
57.
B.L.
I,
59.
58
of a
its
own
specific station
have
my opinion, every metaphor, every personification, should justifying clause in some passion either of the poet's
of the characters described
set in
mind or
by the poet."
58
The
is
dominant passion
prethe prin-
ciple that shapes the varied materials into a coherent unity. This passion determines the place and function of each part or detail that enters into the composition. Then alone can
the
ideal
The concept
unity which is also called the orof unity has a reference primarily
there
more
a logic of poetr) In great poetry precisely a logic of expression in poetry. 'there is a reason assignable' for every word and for the position
69
a corollary: "Whatever lines can be translated into other words of the same language, without
this follows
of every word.
From
and value
of
form
in fine
arts.
Form
can be dispensed with only when we are prepared to give up the imaginative activity; and then the work ceases to be a
work
of art.
The
unity
arising
from
the
imaginative
activity
ap-
At the same time this unity also refers pears as organic form. to what is loosely called the content of the work of art; for
the
"ultimate end of
5561
human
thought and
62
human
feeling
is
unity.
Out
of this arises
a form
58. 59.
To
B.L.
Sotheby, July
I,
13,
1802.
4.
60.
Ibid., Ibid.,
I,
I,
14.
61. 62.
187.
I,
Shakespeare Criticism,
205.
Nature
of Imagination
59
that presents the resolution or reconciliation of all opposites. As he observed in a letter, "All opposites tend to unity; unity 68 can manifest or reveal itself only by opposite poles." The
opposite forces.
words
e'is
'en
plattein
meaning
is
'to
word conveying
this reconciliation.
That which brings about this unity two poles on which it operates.
The
taneity.
other aspect of unity is the realisation of simulIn a letter he remarks: "the common end of all nar-
poems,
is
to
in
make
those events,
which
a straight line, assume to our understanding a circular motion." This provides what is called the 'unity of interest.**
Succession involves the temporal series. Imagination transcends these distinctions of time by transforming the past and the future into the present. The sense of the is
presentness
of experience.
This immedi-
acy secures the unity of interest in which each part or as"What is pect is a means and also an end in itself.
tion
organiza-
but the connection of parts in and for a whole, so that each part is at once end and means?" 67 This Unity rejects the distinction between means and end; then the idea of succession gives place to that of simultaneity.
Ac-
cordingly the criterion of unity takes us to that of the whole. Unification implies the existence of the The parts parts. arc unified in the light of the While unity spirit of the whole. is a relational concept, the idea of the whole refers to value.
63.
To
Williams, December
12,
1817,
61.
65.
66. 67.
60
The unity of a work of art depends on its being a whole. The character of the work of art is determined by the evolution of the organic
rally
it
we
is
sion
the determining principle underlying the whole, while imagination evolves the unity. That is, imagination is the
"modifying faculty which compresses several units into one 68 whole" because of the passion on which it operates continually.
The work of art as an organic unity is subordinated to work as an organic whole. Within the framework of the whole we have passion and imagination. But passion is only
the
a certain heightened state of imagination. It is more deterWe can then say that the whole presents the reconminate. It is a kind of organism. ciliation of opposites. But it is
the
'toil
8*
of thinking
It is
70
whole.'
which
current of feeling.
From
this
standpoint
it is
by imagination.
by a predomiImagery becomes
"depth and
intellectual
effective only
when
it
coexists with
energy of thought."
The
creative
energy are brought together in the form of imagery which seeks to realise the unity, or to contribute to the whole. Apart
relation, nothing
can be admitted to
work
of art.
The
of
structure of the
work
of art
organism, continuity, conceptions Coleridge seeks to derive dialectically the various forms of the beautiful. Thus he observes: "When the whole
68. 69. 70.
71.
unity and
T.T. January
I,
1834.
31,
To
B.L.
Thelwall, December
I,
1796.
15.
72.
Nature of Imagination
61
parts are seen at once, as mutually producing and explaining each other as unity in multeity, there results shapeWhere the perfection of form is comliness, forma formosa.
and the
bined with pleasurableness in the sensations excited by the matters or substances so formed, there results the beautiful
. . .
when
there
is
whole, and of number in the plurality of the parts, there arises the formal. When the parts are numerous and impressive,
so as to prevent or greatly lessen the attention to the whole, there results the grand. Where the impression of the whole, that is, the sense of unity, predominates so as to abstract the mind from the parts,
Where
harmony
produce an effect of a whole, but where there is no seen form of a whole producing or explaining the parts of it, where the are seen and distinguished, but the whole is felt, parts only
there arises the picturesque. Where neither whole nor parts but as boundless or endless allness, there arises the sublime." 71 unity
these forms we have the same shaping spirit functioning with varying degrees of intensity and These varyperfection. ing degrees are reflected in the degree of wholeness realised
In
all
It is the
of wholeness;
and yet
it
to be aesthetic,
imagination,
Though
he
does retain the character of unity. was deeply attached to the principle
And
made
As a relational continuum concepts of unity and whole. the work of art will be something like the concrete universal
But Coleridge was equally primacy of will in relaknowledge; and he makes
exhibiting the relation of coherence. well faced with the problem of the
tion to the possibility of intuitive the conscious will a power co-existing with the activity of the
73.
Allsop,
I,
197-199.
62
This co-existence reveals the insights and intuitions of the artist; and these intuitions transcend the But when he speaks of the "union entire net-work of relations.
secondary imagination.
and interpenet ration of universal and particular" in Shakeswhen he refers to Shakespeare's dramapeare's characters, and
as a substance presentation of "the homo generalis 75 he is actually outlining capable of endless modifications,"
tic
. .
.
74
the
The
universal independent of Hegel. belief in such a universal was so deep that he observes that
theory
of
the concrete
is
"to be betrayed
76
Coleridge's theory of imagination thus contains two divergent lines: one is the relational view, and the other the non6.7.1799 he relational. The latter was nearer his heart.
On
told
Greenough
that he
"was afraid
of too
much
truth, that
poisoner of imagination."
As he came
lysis of the imaginative activity, he could not get rid of the shackles imposed on him by his metaphysical studies. But by 1817 he appears to have decided in favour of one of these
only.
Thus he
"the
are
observes that the two cardinal points of poetry power of exciting the sympathy of the reader by
by the modifying colours of These two can be combined in the poetry of imagination." nature. Here he makes sympathy and novelty basic to all
77
poetic activity.
By sympathy he means
human
which
from im-
The interest agination; for, imagination humanises nature. of novelty springs from the same which transforms imagination
succession into simultaneity by transcending the temporal and For such a theory the basic principle is that spatial relations.
74. 75.
Friend,
III,
116.
76.
77.
Anima
B.L.
II,
Poetae, 184.
5.
Nature of Imagination
of identity, not unity, not
63
And
with
yet Coleridge
freely uses
concepts along
of
work.
unity within
Imagination
strives to
an apprehension
and beyond the discrete and discursive objects of sense and understanding. In going beyond it apprehends a reality which it feebly tries to represent through symbols and myths. In this endeavour to find appropriate symbols for the transcendental reality, it is aided by reason; and in trying to
reveal the
feeling,
oneness of
life
it
activates
sensibility,
and
this reason without being either the sense, the vital understanding, or the imagination, contains all three within itself, even as the mind contains its thoughts and is present 7* in and through them all." Here is a reason working as direct
. .
.
awareness, as an intuition.
almost identical
logic,
Such a conception makes reason with imagination; and then we can have a
as
Reason considered
one
Then this ing and reconciling activity of imagination. reason is a creative power. He observes: "Supreme Reason,
whose
knowledge
is is
creative,
and antecedent
to
the
things
known,
mind
of
it
distinguished from the understanding, or creaturely the individual the acts of which are posterior to the
9
Such a reason
;
is
capable
and
this
is
a going against
Kant.
to be
we have
is
reason
attainspecies
man
of
deep
feeling,
78.
79.
22-23.
64
80
Coleridge's
Theory of Poetry
is
of revelation."
Hence
it
is
that which
our reason", brings "into the fullest play our imagination and which "creates the greatest excitement and produces the com81
pletest
harmony."
Here Coleridge
reason equivocally; .for imply the a priori Ideas that are universal and necessary, Ideas Such a reason as that are constitutive of every phenomenon.
distinguished from the understanding, and as related to deep feeling, focusses our attention on the very nature of imaginais the very process in which reason Hence when it is said are the basic constituents. feeling that "It is not poetry, if it makes no appeal to our passions
tion.
This imagination
and
or imagination.
sion.
82
Coleridge is emphasising the integral unity of a lofty conception or idea and a strong and impetuous pasIt is this unity straining to become one, that humanises the external universe; and in this light imagination is said
to idealise
and
unify.
effect
"^The
primary
is
of
imagination
'a
it
is
therefore re-
vealed as unity.
harmonised chaos.'
Harmony
possible only
when
The
poetic genius apprehends the counteraction of the forces whose powers are indestructible. The product emerging from this
counteraction "must be a tertium aliquid or finite generation" and this "can be no other than an interpenetration of the
;
The finite or counteracting forces, partaking of both/' sensuous embodiment is generated by this activity. Without this activity we will have only discontinuous moments.
This "principle
is
83
common
and
it
is
the
"ever-varying balance, or balancing of images, notions, or feelin short, the ings, conceived as in opposition to each other;
perception
80. 81.
of
identity
and contrariety."
23,
8*
This
perception
To
Poole,
March
1801.
82. 83.
84.
B.L.
I,
198.
Lectures
and Notes,
32-33.
Nature
of
Imagination
65
In other words,
creative insight into truth an<i it is also capable of transforming that insight into beauty. As he observed, it
is ,.the
and
it is
feeling.'
Feeling
an intangible something.
the lowest level
In
itself it is
a blank
emptiness.
At
as, sensation.
concentration or contemplation it appears as passion. Basically it is a form of consciousness; and it gathers substance from
outside,
from
ideas.
Whether
it
it is
a character or substance,
an image or an
is
idea,
aginative activity offers intuitions of great value. insight is possible in the absence of such a feeling.
feelings
No
genuine
to
But simple
are only
birth"
such.
Mere imagination is only a shaping power. But the whole or the unity created can be significant only when it embodies a value. Though imagination is in itself valuable,
it
acquires a
human
value
it
is
when
feelings.
Sometimes
the
agination.
In either case the feeling is charged with an idea, with an insight into truth. Hence it is said, "Our notions resemble the index and hand of the dial; our feelings are the hidden springs which impel the machine with this difference, that notions
cally.""
and
feelings
react
Thought and
separable.
is
feeling interact because they are inThis interaction being the work of imagination, it
it
and sustains
it.
In this frame-
work
feeling develops
dynamic.
Feeling depends on
85.
86.
what
"receives
from without."
It
Anima
Poetae, 143.
II,
Shakespeare Criticism,
12.
66
strives to
Coleridge's
Theory of Poetry
become sympathy through the activity of imaginationIt is like the body 'striving to become mind.' Starting as. it tends to transform itself into an impersopurely personal,
nal
one.
As
Coleridge
noted
on 28th
January,
87
1802,.
When "strength of feeling connected with vividness of idea." idea gets clarified, it takes possession of the feeling; and the
such a feeling actuated by the imaginated activity is released from its inwardness. In this situation it seeks a medium of
The medium and the expression are considerably modified by the nature of feeling. At the same time, because of the straining, the feeling too gets modified as the form
expression.
varies.
That
it
is,
developing
its
to thinking,
seeks
an
outlet
which modifies
considerably.
is
But
this modification
already charged with that state of mind known as sympathy; and because of the sympathy, feeling embodies or acquires a
value.
It is this
value
of the
poem
as
of their
an organism. Feeling invests the words with a life own; and in realising this, feeling becomes one with
in this light that Coleridge observed that his task
imagination.
It
was
and that imagination objects apprehended by imagination are no longer dead fixities and definites; and the images arisOn March ing from the predominant passions are animated.
was
is
essentially vital.
The
10,
1798 he told
his brother
"in poetry to elevate the imagination and set the affections in right tune by the beauty of the inanimate impregnated, as
life."
content of any good work of art is no other than feeling. of imagination is "the threefold form of sympathy with the interesting in morals, the impressive in form,.
The complement
and
88
I,
230.
Nature of Imagination
67
aftist is not merely one has only a more than usual organic sensibility. He is not a mere emotionalist. The fundamental nature of the poet
who
by the nature of good or great poetry. Accordingly we are told that by combining "a more than ordinary sympathy with the objects, or a more than common sensibility, with a more than ordinary activity of the imaginais
best apprehended
its
aim,
viz.,
reflection of
and
of the
human
constant activity modifying and correcting these truths."* In this activity it resolves the distinctions and differences brought
Imagination is independent of time and space like It can then transform the potential or the possible
the
91
actual or real, essence into existence. He speaks of the "true imaginative absence of all particular space or
90
time."
When
92
the 'bodily
frame'
is
is
touched
by
imagina9*
hour which
it
ing watch',
and
it is
even though
94
fosters
'the
Such an imaginative
It is
like the
Absolute of
present everywhere as the governing prinappearances. It is present in all the mental faculalso
It
standing.
gives rise to
consciousness. The appearances of such a power are therefore said to be revealed in and through
an intense
observes:
symbols.
He
unites
clearness with depth, the plenitude of the sense with the comprehensibility of the understanding, is the imagination, impre89.
ibid.,
1,
I,
164. 167.
90.
91.
B.L.
68
Coleridge's
Theory of Poetry
gnated with which the understanding itself becomes intuitive, 88 and a living power." This is a theory bordering on mysticism. It is designed to It has its applithe relation of the one to the many.
explain cation not only in the case of the problems implied by the
fine arts.
is
concerned,
it is
"a multiform
power which acting with its permeating, modifying, unifying might on the thoughts and images specificates the poet"; and 98 Acit is the power giving rise to 'moral intuition' as well.
cordingly, this power lays of a work of art. Apart
itself.
its
emphasis on the
medium
it
or form
cannot express
And
in
each
medium we have a
specific
form
in
which
imagination seeks to find a proper finite embodiment. This After disdoctrinal development has to be worked out by us.
tinguishing imagination from fancy, and after separating the artistic imagination from the primary, Coleridge stated that
anything
else
imagination"
its
concerning "the powers and privileges of the "will be found in the critical essays on the uses
and
This essay will be "prefixed to the poem of 97 But this essay was not written unThe Ancient Mariner."
introduction."
fortunately.
statement points out that for Coleridge the imaginative power is truly supernatural; and elsewhere he defined the supernatural as the spiritual. Then Coleridge
this
Yet
is
everywhere. The Creative artists are more deeply self-conscious and are therefore in tune with it. Accordingly it may be said that the
spirit
power. This
It is the Reality.
or
reality
is
present
poet has this specific power which he shares only with other This is the power of unifying the manifold, of .creators. being
95.
96.
Lay Sermon,
B.L.
I,
343.
97. 98.
Rene Wellek
ignores this
and other
facts to
make
the theory
jjook fantastic.
Nature of Imagination
everything.
It is called
69
all
imagination.
"To become
things
881
and yet remain the same, to make the changeful God be felt this is true Imagination." in the river, the lion and the flame
It
admits of no personality.
As
all-pervasive,
it
strives
towards
an identity^with the entire universe. Out of the realisation of this identity does the creative artist have an insight into
the ultimate goal or
careering.
It act duplicates the natural process. combines the insights of reason with the sense-impressions and understanding. This is presented as agreeing "with that
end
to
which
this
power
is
constantly
The imaginative
which
tion,
is
exclusively
human."
imagination enables feeling to acquire a specific formArt then assimilates man to nature through this formative
aspect.
In
this sense
"to
know
is
is
to resemble."
The
artist
within the thing, that which is active through form and figure"; and this is the spirit or essence of nature. It is this imitation that makes the work
"truly natural in the object
and
truly
human
in the effect."
100
This humanising of the universe is essential to the activity of imagination; and one of the highest and most significant em-
bodiments of
this humanising process is found in the fine arts. Ideas "are of themselves adverse to lofty emotion, and
they require the influence of a light and warmth, not their own, 101 to make them crystallize into a semblance of growth." While Kant held that the ideas of reason should be apprehend-
ed impersonally without any feeling, Coleridge argues that they are apprehended with warmth. Hence he observed: "Nothing great
is
was ever achieved without enthusiasm. For what enthusiasm but the oblivion and swallowing-up of self in an dearer than self, or in an idea more vivid?... In the object genuine enthusiasm of morals, religion, and this
patriotism,
99.
100.
101.
259.
Lay Sermon,
318.
70
Coleridge's
Theory of Poetry
-enlargement and elevation of the soul above its mere self attest the presence, and accompany the intuition of ultimate
principles alone.
human
interest the undegraded and enduringly, because these alone bespirit deeply 108 long to its essence, and will remain with it permanently."
The impersonal
content.
human
is
On
the
the other
hand the
richest
human
content
of imagination.
Biographia, Coleridge observed that his activity was directed "to transfer from our inward nature a human interest and a semblance of truth sufficient to procure for
these shadows of imgination that willing suspension of disbelief for the
moment, which
100
The
shadows.
They
are appear-
and imperfectly expressed through symbols. Yet these symbols are charged by the feeling of the artist to sych an extent that they acquire life or vitality; and as such they are suggestive of the original experience.
human
moments of the human experience. Such moments carry with them a certain truth, a certain convicAs unrelated to feeling even the tion, arising from feeling.
images are of no
avail.
the poetic character or genius. "They become proof of original genius only as far as they are modified by a predominant
passion; or by associated thoughts or images awakened by that passion; or when they have the effect of reducing multi-
lastly,
when a
the
human and
intellectual life
104
is
transferred
to
them from
true character of the act of poet's spirit." imagination is discernible in the strong passion, or in the thought inherent
102. 103.
The
Ibid.
B.L.
II,
6.
104.
Ibid., II,
16
Nature of Imagination
71
in that passion.
It is also
It
many
and
ly,
in the one.
appears
when we transcend
spatial distinctions
is
at
immanent
up
the
work
of art.
Because of
works.
to the reality or
do not
arise in the
dualism.
There can be an
intellectual
disbelief
when
the reader
disagrees with the ideas expressed by the poet, or when the poet himself does not believe in what he says. The latter
convicts the poet of insincerity, and the former fails in creating a truly universal human interest. The disbelief based on insincerity
belief
cannot be suspended because any suspension of discan be voluntary only when the reader is convinced
felt
what
is
can be resolved by imagination, but only for a brief duration. There is also an emotional disbelief arising either from the
insincerity of the poet, or
that presented
work
of art.
is
The
former again cannot be suspended. The latter because the emotion or feeling presented in art
sonal one in the sense that
it
is
suspended
is
an imper-
sufficiently universalised or
humanised.
In other words,
we have
own.
Here too the emotional disbelief can be suspended for a brief But the aesthetic emotion is such that it impresses us period.
as more valuable and more
real.
The
when
there
is
neither
an
intellectual disbelief
it
is
nor an emotional
disbelief.
In other
%vords,
72
and the emotion. Deep thinking and deep feelIn this unity we are therefore said to function together. ing
the intellect
Experience the essential nature of the soul. And in such an experience we do not raise the question of its truth or reality.
It is
real
finite experience.
4.
much
interested
in the
emotionaf
aspect of poetry, as in the voluntary aspects of poetic creaconscious direction of the will is present in all great tion.
literature.
Such a
will introduces a
method or system
as the
animating principle. This method may be another name for imagination which calls time "into life and moral being,"
which
is conducive to the "homogeneity of character," and which spreads "the tone, the atmosphere, of the ideal world around situations, of which, for the common view, custom had
bedimmed
ments
all
lustre."
It
communicates to the
fleeting
1
mo-
By method he means
which
It is "that
unites, and makes many things one in the mind of man." He observes that poetry "owes its whole charm, and all its beauty, and all its power, to the philosophical principles of 2 It is a principle of unity which realises greater the Method."
progresses with the materials like feelings, emotions, thoughts, ideas and words. Method becomes natural "to the mind which has become
as
it
accustomed to contemplate not things only, or for their own sake alone, but likewise and chiefly the relations of things, eithei
each other, or to the observer or to the state and apprehension of the hearers. To enumerate and analyst
their relations to
the)
are discoverable
is
Method
1.
Friend,
Treatise
II,
4.
2.
3.
on Method,
36.
Friend, 491-92.
74
Coleridge's
Theory of Poetry
then implies a union of many facts or factors directed by It is the principle seeking to realise .and to a common end.
and their unity with the conscious self. In this endeavour the progression is towards an identity, towards the elevation of things to that of living words. As a
the unity of the things,
consequence
it
In
this process the principle of Method implies a proper balance "between our passive impressions and the mind's own reac-
tions
on the same."
That
is,
it
"tenser
moment
of self-consciousness, a
It is
strikes
ms
"the unpremeditated and evidently habitual arrangement of (the poet's) words, grounded on the habit of foreseeing, in each integral part, or in every sentence, the
as inspired.
4
-whole that (the poet) intends to communicate." Thus the of the method is that activity of self-consciousness -operation
This
And
then
it
agrees with
immanent teleology of the universe which is what Coleridge meant by the creativity of nature. The expression assumed by method depends upon the nature and progression of the emotions. The emotion strives
the
to express
. .
itself
in
specific
form.
The "exuberance
of
.interferes
.
sterility of
mind mind
wanting the spring and impulse to mental action, is wholly 5 destructive of the method." It is the habit of method that
. .
-can give
sequence. The fusion of passion, as in the case of Mrs. Quickly, replaces these. The want of method submits the understanding to mere events and
connections and
classified
aware of, are those of time and psychological relations are overplace. looked. Then too the form may be maintained or preserved
and
All logical
4.
5.
Friend, 489-90.
Ibid., 494.
Poetic
75
but
it
will
the same
"The terms system, method, science, null-point. are mere improprieties of courtesy, when applied to a mass -enlarging by endless appositions, but without a nerve that oscilor a pulse that throbs, in sign of growth or inward sym556 The normal being calls only his memory into action pathy.
lates,
and he
at
tries to
in which they
relating
is
first
reproduce the objects and events in the order occurred to him. He makes no attempt
This
them to one another round any specific centre. what he calls "a staple, or starting-post, in the narrar
tor himself."
Once
there
is
in time, place,
stance, are brought into mental contiguity and succession, the 7 more striking as the less expected." It is the educated and
systematising
its
mind
It is
moments.
that gives a character and individuality to This specific character comes from the germithe
nal power.
fancy or associationism. The absence of the leading thought,' of the initiative, results in mental confusion. True method involves a proc
which always presupposes a prior concepConsequently the expression of such a mind is characterised by compression and rapidity, by the omission of the superfluous, and by the attention to what is necessary. The tendency to omission secures unity. But the absence of
gressive transition"
tion of the end.
ment.
58
The
gory
as
is
improgressive arrangement falls in the same catethe 'mere mode or set fashion of doing a thing."
is
What
an awareness of purpose
6.
7.
S. 9.
Ibid., 499.
'6
prior to the
to the
embodiment
in
a form.
The
precognition refers
apprehension of the whole; and "the whole is of neces10 The intuition of the entire work of sity prior to its parts."
art
is
necessary before
it is
actually executed.
all his
various^
we
still feel
is
ourselves
nature,
which
and
fruits, their
shapes, tastes,
and odours."
It is
here that
we
and interpenetration, of the universal and particular, which must ever pervade all works of decided For method implies a progressivegenius and true science. and it is the meaning of the word in the original transition,
proportion, that union
Continuous transition is necessary to the method; language." knd neither continuity nor transition would be possible if there is no pre-conception or prccogitation. In is the 'progressive
transition
11
with progression.' Neither a generalisation, nor a theory, nor a hypothesis can be the ground of the method. One can at best say that method implies or involves some sort of a relation. The relation of
is
law
based on
the Kantian relation of the This category. second relation is the causal one. identity.
is
Having
its
roots in experience
and
by the
of the artist.
any
detail.
There
will
be a nucleus acting
This can be the guiding thought or the predominance of some mighty passion. In other words, method reveals itself as thought
10.
Friend, 511.
Ibid., 497.
11.
12.
Ibid., 500.
Poetic
77
or
latter it is co-adunative.
related
specific relation of
The
idea
particulars. Imagination too does not regulate the poetic act, it is constitutive of the creative act. As constitutive it transbut
Hence
It
in the
contem-
initiative,
is
the correlative."
governing principle in the sense that it embodies the spirit of the whole. It is that which gives a specific character to the and the whole than resembles a living organism. whole;
transforming the materials into an a form expressive of good sense. "The ganic unity gives
in
total of all intellectual excellence
is
Method
or-
sum
these have passed into the instinctive readiness of habit, \vhen the wheel revolves so rapidly that we cannot see it revolves
When
at
all,
then
we
call the
combination Genius.
But
in all
modes
alike, professions, the two sole component parts even of Genius are Good Sense and Method." 13 It is good
and
in all
sense that enables the genius to distinguish the various parts of a whole in terms of means; and they derive their position and characteristics "from the antecedent method, or self16
organising purpose."
Good
sense
principle operating in Good sense is revealed more in the formal every creative act. elements known to the classicists as proportion, symmetry and balance. From this point of view it can be said that in Gray's
of the
same
Sonnet the
is
it
line
a bad
line
"because
lifts
his
13. 14.
Ibid., 496.
Ibid.,
512.
15.
16.
To Lady
Beaumont, 1814.
Friend, 513.
78
Coleridge's
Theory of Poetry
short,
personified
differs
because
it
from the language of Good Sense." Good sense reveals the reconciliation of opposite and discordant qualities,
The image gets, image. with the intellectual life from the poet's own spirit. charged The intellect and the passion are thereby fused into a unity
and
'it
blends
the
idea with
the
that the resulting product is neither mostly nor plainly emotional. Good sense is a mediaintellectual tor here tempering both in the interest of securing that sanity
in such a
way
and
tranquillity of
mind which
Coleridge once presented this position in a paradoxical way. "Good sense is the body of the poetic genius, fancy its
its life, and imagination the soul that is everywhere, and in each, and forms all into a graceful and intel18 This might appear to be a meaningless forligent whole." mulation in the eighteenth century fashion. But it embodies
drapery, motion
the principle Coleridge was endeavouring to express, in a conGood sense here is the equivalent of the form cise manner.
while imagination
living
is
an immanent
principle.
"All true
and
knowledge" must
19
Such an imagination presents the mental anteimpressed." cedent presupposed in the operation of method. This antecedent may be an image or idea received through the senses; it
originates
from without.
The
alone
is
'the
immediate and
This inspiring passion developing itself into a specific medium The principle of the method thus imgives rise to a form.
plies the principle of
form.
Form
method,
17. 18.
is
this
the unique medium of expression. Like form exhibits two possible extremes of its being.
58.
B.L.
II,
passage.
19.
at
this
Friend, 514.
Ibid., 519.
20.
Poetic
79
Coleridge
distinguishes
proceeding'
from
'shape
as superinduced.'
The
is its
"self-witnessing
and
self-effected
is
sphere
The
'shape as superinduced'
the mechanical
form existing independently as an unalterable pattern. Such a pattern has no necessary relation to what is expressed; and
consequently it imposes a control or check from outside. This external control interferes with the free natural move-
ment
of the
expressed.
As against
form.
this,
there
is
is
'form
as
proceeding.'
This
is
organic
It
it is
not
a form or*
The
It is
organic form
is
fullness of nature
a constantly growing or developing entity. While "the is without character," it is "the object of
its
hath
chaos
ideal,
whole ad hominem; hence each step of nature and hence the possibility of a climax up to
28
the perfect
is
It
is
when the
harmonised there emerges the perfect form. But the harmonising exists under various degrees of perfection, and these can be arranged in an ascending series. The climax
reached with the perfect form which is the ideal pursued by the method. Each case of the organic form is an essay or in the struggle towards perfection. experiment
of this process
is
is
revealed in
Hence the essential character and value 28 what it subordinates and conquers. Here it
that
it
is
On
the contrary,
subordinating it times a part claims to be very important and then it sounds a jarring note. The character of the organic form appears in
21.
presents. the proper context for each part, to the spirit or character of the whole. At
it
fixes
22.
23.
$$
conquering
nation
is
it,
Coleridge's Theoiy
.of
Poetry
in controlling
it.
form
is
Method and
regulative of the actual composition or expression. the organic form are the two essential as-
sed
only in and through symbols, organic form presents a highly suggestive expression. It is an expression capable of The artist has to imitate giving us an intimation of reality.
"that which is within the thing, that which is active through 24 form and figure, and discourses to us by symbols." The organic form can then reach a perfection limited by
At the same time the idea that transthe world of symbols. cends the symbol and gives rise to it is also the originating source of the organic form. That is, the idea has a two-fold
manifestation: one
is
as a symbol
as
an organic
it
form.
is
The
"its essence,
itself,
viduality
25
of the indwelling
power."
The
which
as
is
'the indwelling
the
creative
power' and which is also known imagination. This same imagination also
that
creates the
ly
content,
which
of
is
expressed.
itself
Consequent-
we can
and
tent
work of art; and the two then become one. Thus "Each thing that lives has its moment of self-exposition, and so has each period of each
the
form
the
thing,
this
if
we remove
the
is
To do
self-exposition
imagination evolves itself as organic form; it develops a finite form, a specific character. Such a form is not something
external.
It is
power.
24. 25. 26.
Ibid.
Poetic
81
we do not have
the w>-
and content, but their identity. called unity of Form is mechanic, "when on any given material we imform
out of press a predetermined form, not necessarily arising 27 It is the outward or circumthe properties of the material."
stantial form.
It is at its lowest
metrical
pattern
revealed
is
by
of present, we have only an association the content with the form; and the resulting composition will
formed
and
The
the organic form, the first expression of the imaginative activity. perfection of the organic form represents the stage where
The problem
form
is
of
form
is
and symbol.
The
true
it
of the material."
medium
unity.
5
The form
this
from
and
it
intrinsically
within
organic
of
form
the
its
shapes
its
Then
of
the exterior
the being
within,,
As
This
imagination truly beyond time and space; and when with a determinate character, its form is organic appears to what is revealed. In other words, like method, organic form too
poetic
is
an
essential
imagination
does
not
The
the
refers to the
27. 28.
Ibid., 46.
Ibid., 47.
82
entire
work
of its
of art.
form
own."
Imagination "generates and produces a This is the form developing from within.
is
intuited
by the
artist at the
same
This
actually
imposed on the
existence, while
is
The shape
The form
given a relatively stable being while the essence is always dynamic and progressing. In other words, form can never
finality
claim
or
perfection.
it
is
Since
form
is
a symbol or
consciousness.
related to
human
With
human
troduce harmony into the chaos of existence "presented to perThen appears the harmonised chaos where the ception.
atomic particulars cease to be exclusive existents unified and idealised. Yet even the organic form
stable.
for,
is
"The organic form is innate; it shapes; as it develops, itself from within, and the fullness of its development is one and the same with the perfection of its outward form. Such
as the
life
is,
such
is
is
the form."
29
mean
that there
ment between the content expressed and the organic form. On the other hand, what Coleridge means is that the same creative work appears as content and also as form when it is viewed from two different points of view. The two are not
simply inseparable. They are two aspects of the same whole; they are one and the same.
It is in this light that we find Coleridge stating that "All the fine arts are different species of poetry. The same spirit speaks to the mind through different senses by manifestations
of
itself,
appropriate to each
The common
essence of
all
medium
of
30
beauty."
Poetry
B.L.
II,
220-21.
Poetic
85
while imagi-
then
is
all
nation
constitutive.
Wherever there
bodying a content, there we since this can be, and is, present in good prose, we cannot treat prose as unpoetic.
is
is
That
is
82
"Poetry
not the proper antithesis to prose, but to science." Poetry opposed to science for the simple reason that the latter is
is
devoid of
The
or
less
This
because of the different forms they separately "A poem cononly a difference of degree.
as a prose composition; the difference,
consist in a different
combination of them, in
33
It is the consequence of a different object being proposed." nature of the intended aim or end that will determine the kind
of combination; and this takes us to the operation of method. The method, involving the preconception of the end
and continuous
lop two
progression,
enables
the
materials
to
deve-
harmony or relative perfection. Prose has one end in view, while poetry has another. The
different
degrees to
identical.
Employing
of the
is
this "standpoint
Coleridge offers
a definition
poem.
to
"A poem
is
which
works of science, by proposing for its immediate opposed object pleasure, not truth; and from all other species (having
by propossuch delight from the whole, as is compatible with 34 a distinct gratification from each component part." The
it)
this object in
itself
common with
it
is
discriminated
ing to
32.
33.
9.
34.
10.
*4
of the highest kind may exist without metre." But tbtee are not poems because their immediate bbject is truth.* Th6 delight arising front the
it is
whole
their
is
Organic form appears yet totality. to be a whole having parts that are vitally related to one another. The parts must 'mutually support and explain each
other than
6ther'*;
and
this they
the spirit of the whole. The spirit determines the nature of the expressed and that of the organic form. The poet has 'to regulate his own style' "by the principles In one word by such a of grammar, logic, and psychology.
knowledge of the
facts,
it have been governed and applied and rendered instinctive by habit, becomes the by good-sense, representative and reward of our past conscious reasonings,
insights,
of Taste.
5 ' 37
or
sanity that springs from "the vivacity of the accumulative memory"; and it has a great similarity with the principles of
grammar,
and psychology. These principles are the products of reason and understanding. Reason is concerned will Ideas which are the "truths, the knowledge or acknowledgment of which require the whole man, the free will, no less than the intellect, and which are not therefore merely speculalogic
tive,
38
We
come by
these
rules through the activity of imagination which "proceeds 38 upon the all in each of human nature and not through the
"Reason
is all
all
It
B.L.
B.L. B.L.
II, JI,
II,
64.
Treatise
on Method,
64.
100.
.39.
B.L.
II,
40.
Treatise
on Method,
110.
Poetic
85
perience', the 'clearer intuition' that enables the poet to apprehend the truth or beauty and to express it in the proper
form.
In
the
absence
of
method and
organic
form
noth-
The under-
standing as providing the rules does not play a significant role "Could a rule be in the formation of the poetic nucleus. given form without, poetry would cease to be poetry, and sink
into a mechanical art.
. .
The
rules of the
imagination are
themselves the very powers of growth and production. The to which they are reducible present only the outlines 41 and external appearance of the fruit." As Whistler said, the
words
is it
is
The artistic creation is no fashioning beause it reveals the imaginative activity emerging as method and as organic
form.
When words
when
we have
prose;
is
and
poetry .*
Elsewhere Coleridge seems to render the word 'best* by 'pro48 per/ Propriety demands an agreement between the sounds
and the intended meaning. It implies some form of selection. "The sole difference in style is that poetry demands a
severer keeping it admits nothing that prose may not oftener 44 admit, but it oftener rejects." Referring to one of his
"A
little
make
but
a beautiful poem." It is not a selection of the words, an accurate appropriateness of the words for comit
munication.
In this light he says, Prose in an argumentative work "differs from the language of conversation, even as reading "ought to differ from talking,"
41.
45
differ in
B.L.
II,
65.
12, 13,
42. 43.
44.
1827.
1833.
Anima
B.L.
Poetae, 229.
45.
45.
II,
86
Coleridge's
Theory of Poetry
between prose and This difference, however, does not depend on the poetry. so-called poetic diction since such a diction can appear in
But we do make a
distinction
prose as well and since the words belonging to such a diction are very few. Even this small number is only "accidentally
appropriated to poetry." We have to seek for the difference "In my opinion, poetry In a letter he remarks: elsewhere.
justifies as poetry,
independent of any other passion, some new combinations of language and commands the omission of many
46
any
essential difference
Essence
is
'the principle of
from
its
acci-
denal characteristics.
It
is
Plato,
Out
can
two divergent
series.
The forms
not in their materials, but in the forms developed by the materials. It is possible that Wordsworth denied the importance or value of the difference in these forms. Wordsworth ob-
served "that not only the language of a large portion of every good poem, even of the most elevated character, must necessarily, except
from that
of
with reference to the metre, in no respect differ good prose, but likewise some of the most interest-
poem
is
will
be found to be
strictly the
langu-
age of prose,
when
prose
well written."
Thomas
exists,
Poole on 5.5.1796:
"Good
produced more
effectually
The
by rapidly glancing through language as it already than by an hasty recourse to the mint of invention." "aloofness from the language of real life", he considered
47
"deadly to poetry."
46.
47.
1802.
October
20,
1802.
Poetic
87
worth's contention
is
not incorrect.
is
one where he was talking about the The language employed in prose is not
other than that of the metrical composition, he argued. But if poetry is concerned with the expression of the spontaneous
feelings, the
ings.
language of poetry will be one charged with feel"What Coleridge on May 19, 1799 informed Poole:
fine descriptions, produce their effects almost a charm of words, with which and with whose purely by combinations we associate feelings indeed, but no distinct
are
deemed
images."
language of poetry does not essentially differ from that of metrical composition, can we translate a good poem
If the
good prose without losing any thing? In prose we can have an order of words which can occur in a good poem; and a poem can have lines which will be quite proper in a
into
prose
composition.
is
worth
different.
truction and order of sentences, which are in their fit and natural place in a serious prose composition"; and these can
be 'disproportionate and heterogeneous' in a metrical composition. Similarly in a serious poem there may be "an arrangement both of words and sentences and a use and selection of figures of speech. .which on a subject of equal weight would be 48 vicious and alien in correct and In other manly prose." has a specific combination of words and senwords, poetry
.
*
These two forms of arrangement exclude one another in the sense that form is the characteristic medium of what is The organic form of expressed. poetry is not the same as the form of prose. When prose is well written, when it exhibits an organic form of its own, prose does participate in the character of
poetry.
"Poetry
B.L.
is
48.
49.
II,
49.
9.
88
In
metre. appears to be distinguished from prose by ganic form of prose has rhythm, while poetry
The
or*
exhibits
both
cal
rhythm and metre. In the absence of the metripattern, the form of prose reveals only a loosely organised
rhythm.
Any such
the
ment
form.
The
whence
to the
it is
Does
superadded
more organic? If it is an adventitious character, it is bound to interfere with the unity, with the spirit of the whole; and then we have to discover the clue to a possible perfection of the organic form But metre is outside the addition of the metrical pattern.
form
an
There is a 'spontaneous effort' of the mind striving 'to hold in check the workings of passion.' The balance in the mind resulting from this strenuous activity is the source of
metre.
It is the
is
"organised
50
consciously
feelings
and
The
one another.
tion
is
And
mind
in that situa-
detrimental to the development of the form and also to the end. On the other hand any expression or form is only a limit imposed on the content from within. Such an imposition
is
an act of
volition.
And
is
an
and directed
will that
by
the will.
It is the struggle
constitutes the essence of the imaginative activity. Out of this metre emerges as one aspect of form. Metre originates struggle
from
'a state of
increased excitement/
and
it is
therefore
accom-
50.
B.L.
II,
50.
Poetic
89
The struggle panied by 'the natural language of excitement.' will fuses the two into one and consebetween passion and
of the quently the metrical form, which is only an aspect is surcharged with the inward struggle; and organic form,
then
it
It
"produces a more
52
frequent employment of picturesque and vivifying language." This is what Coleridge meant by elevating things into living
words.
images, metaphors and figures, and the metrical thus indispensable factors that make up the. organic form, which in its turn is indistinguishable from what is expressed. In a simpler but a misleading manner, it can
The
pattern are
all
is
and
53
faculties.
it
And
its
proof
likewise
have
characteristic
modes
The
teristic
specific
of poetry
arrangement of words and sentences characis thus one from which metre cannot be
its
excluded.
And
metre in
It
turn
is
superadded
tain
factor.
of the imagination.
grows out of the basic creative activity "Our language gives to expression a cerour reading of a poem involves the
measure."
And
assumption that the poet "is in a continuous state of excitement." Because of this excitement there "arises a language
in prose unnatural, but in poetry natural."
54
Metre is necessary to a poem, though no one but the poet can discover the pattern he should employ for giving "Metre therefore having been expression to his experiences. connected with poetry most often and by a peculiar fitness,,
whatever
itself
combined with metre must, though it be not essentially poetic, have nevertheless some property in common with poetry, as an intermedium of affinity, a sort
else is
51.
Ibid.
Ibid.
52.
53.
B.L.
II, 56.
54.
Lectures
and Notes,
999.
DO
of
Coleridge's
Theory of Poetry
86
This morduant between it and the superadded metre." mind or of property is passion which may be of the poet's
c
by the
56
poet.'
rela-
Then anything
related
to
Here we is ultimately related to the spirit of poetry. the syllabic arrangement and other factors. These are get related not directly but through that which operates in the
metre
metrical 'pattern; and this is passion. In other words the pattern is enlivened by passion which functions as the morduPassion then is not some elusive thing referring to a ant.
feeling or to
an idea alone;
is
it
refers to
the form as
of
well.
a poet
and
As every
is
it
likewise
this ex-
have
its
characteristic
modes
of expression."
When
citement
much
a
evoked by a poem.
form enlivened by
metrical pattern but one which is inseparable from rhythm. The form becomes complex and it presents a harmonised chaos. About the form Coleridge told Godwin in 1800: "are not And what -words, etc., parts and germinations of the plant?
the law of their growth? In something of this sort I endeavour to destroy the old antithesis of words and
is
would
things,
-elevating, as
The
and
were, words into things and living things too." The fusion of will and passion is expressed as the poem. poem embodies passion in its content and in its rhythm,
it
presents the volitional activity in its metre. feelings, emotions and the like are deliberately
it
The
ideas,
arranged and
combined by an act
delight
55.
of the will 'for the purpose of blending with emotion.' Consequently "the traces of present
B.L.
II,
55.
56. 57.
Sotheby, July 13, 1802. Lectures and Notes, 399. See Shakespeare Criticism,
To
II,
68.
Poetic
91
volition should throughout the metrical language be propor58 These discernible traces form the metionately discernible."
trical
tion.
form which
is
relatively stable
It is
Passion and will are united in the metrical composition. the "interpenetration of spontaneous impulse and of volunitself
60
and
figures
of
speech."
bodying
the
00
movement
of
the
meaning.
"The
particular
pleasure found
sounds and
quantities" is common to many metrical expressions; and this is one feature of the poem. That is, the pleasure of the metre depends on the manner and on the kind of the thoughts,
feelings
and
expressions.
such
part,
and
The manner
or form of
expression draws our attention to each aspect, to each part, of the whole. The metrical pattern as an indispensable factor of the organic form, therefore, secures to each component
part or aspect
its
specific character
time
it
also reveals
whole.
which
of
sets the
passion as
it
opposing forces of
is said that Poetry harmonises the two 03 metre and rhythm. Rhythm and rhyme create a pattern rousing our minds to expectancy and sur-
art.
Hence
prise.
Our
we
are
induced into a
58.
a state of excitement.
"Verse
B.L.
Ibid.
II,
59.
60. 61.
62.
B.L. B.L.
II,
9.
II,
10.
92
is
Coleridge's
Theory of Poetry
and passion
pressions."*
The
necessity of metre
it
We find that the metriproduces. cal pattern "tends to increase the vivacity and susceptibility both of the general feelings and of the attention. This effect
standpoint of the effects
it
surprise,
and'
1
by
still
gratified
and
still
the reciprocations though individually they are powerless to affect us, in their totality they contribute to the ultimate impression produced by the poem. The pattern provides the framework which is relatively stable.
re-excited."
formal expression of unity. The variations from the basic pattern evoke surprise, and yet they telf
It is the
us that the unity created is not static but dynamic. It is an evergrowing unity. This dynamism evokes and sustains
our attention; and consequently metre is 'a stimulant of the 05 This attention in order to be preserved must have a progression.
attention,'
not a mere mechanical curiosity concerning the metrical pattern, or a restlessness to know the end that should guide this movement. What is needed as the cause of this carrying forward is "the
It
is
carry us forward.
pleasurable activity of
98
journey
itself."
mind excited by the attractions of the The journey here is one that compels us to
and then
to swing ahead.
along.'
pause, to recede a
said,
'the
little
As Petronius
Evidently
free spirit
must be hurried
we
have here a reference to rhythm or measure also. Rhythm has a natural magic baffling all analysis. It is the inner life of
the metrical pattern. This is the reason why no one can give us the real compelling reason for adopting metre. As Coleridge put it, "I write in metre, because I am about to use
63.
15,
1810.
64. 65.
66.
51.
53.
11.
Ibid., II,
Poetic
93
a language differing from that <rf prose/'" The metrical movement had a relation to the feelings and emotions and afeo to
metre provides the form of poetry 8 arid poetry becomes 'imperfect and defective without metre." because an organised rhythm is the natural medium in and
the purpose intended.
And
through which the creative activity finds its proper expression. The rhythm provides the musical medium or fo;rm. He
refers to "the perfect sweetness of the versification; its adaptation to the subject; and the power displayed in varying the
march
served.
of the words."
The thoughts and the rhythm are to agree way that the sense of melody is preand sweetness
of
"The
delight in richness
sound"
This "sense of musical springs from the 'music in his soul.' delight, with the power of producing it, is a gift of imagina70 In his famous Ode he derived the music and joy from tion."
the same source which
the soul, and in his theory metre is said to originate from is the imagination, the everactive shapspirit.
ing
The
dent
in
dissociation
of
metre
stanza
It
is
from
on the
imagination
hat.
it
is
evi-
Dr.
it
is
Johnson's
unpoetic.
71
It is
is
bad not
because
bad because
wanting in
good
sense
and
feeling.
It lacks its
moorings
in that activity
of the soul
In earlier
which presents the feelings through imagination. times metre was chiefly employed as having the
power
and thereby to preserve the truths or incidents communicated. But with regard to The
to assist the recollection
Children in the
Wood
this
poem has
little
to do with its metrical form. It appeals to us because it enables us to place ourselves willingly into the feelings of our 72 childhood. Where the thoughts and feelings can be ab67.
68.
Ibid., II,
53.
69.
70.
Ibid., II,
14.
Ibid.
Ibid., II, 60.
71.
72.
B.L.
II,
52.
94
stracted from the
impression, there the metre is the metrical compositions like the ballad of
The Children in
the
Wood and
results
poetry metre
which
on the hat. In other words, in good an indispensable aspect of the organic form from method and good sense.
the stanza
is
Metre
pression,
as providing a suitable
form
to
exhibits the
which "impels us
by harmonious adjustment and thus establishes the principle that all the parts of an organised whole must be assimilated to the more important and essential
to seek unity
374
parts.'
tic creation.
This assimilation constitutes the unity of the artisIt is a unity that reveals the harmonious fusion
manner that
It
is
the differents
their
is
individual
characters.
in
poem
same through-
78.
B.L.
II,
54.
74.
75.
Ibid.,
56.
Ibid.
5.
THEORY OF IMAGINATION
The
art of
Sophist speaks of "two kinds of image-making: the making likenesses, and fantastic or the art of making
appearances." The latter is "an appearance since it appears only and is not really like." These activities have little in
common with
the arts
is
What
is
needed in
thing that is essentially vital. But the early speculations after the nature of the creative process were based more on the
image-making
empirical school of Locke believed that there is nothing in mind which was not before in the senses; but Leibnitz retorted, "except the mind itself."
faculties.
The
The mind
1
is
active;
Leibnitz.
Aristotle speaks of the sensitive
liberative
and
calculative
or de-
image-making
activities.
2
This kind of imagination "may unity of several images." 3 4 be false." But "the soul never thinks without an image."
This was exploded by the Kantian distinction between the
conceivable and
the
picturable
which
Coleridge
is
accepted.
for
"Let whatever
imagined
the
sake
5
of
entertainment,
possible."
Horace
1.
Cf. B. L.
I,
2.
3.
De Anima,
Ibid., 428a.
427b-429a.
4.
5.
Ibid., 431a.
Horace,
I,
338.
D6
Aristotle
of the creative
imagination.
He
in
light
The
of genius places things in a new not only displays what, though often seen poet
man
its unfolded mass, had never been opened out, but he likewise adds something, namely, light and relations."* The im-
and
also creates
some-
thing new. This is a vague anticipation of the future development of the concept. Descartes associated with intuition the act of imagination
which involves "a particular effort of the mind" because it is the mind's apprehension by "power and inward vision." It thus turns out to be a unique kind of intuition, which is only one aspect. That which is intuited in this way coheres
7
we
have.
Such a
co-
herence has been explained differently by different thinkers. Hobbes held that "the cause of the coherence or consequence
of one conception to another, is their first coherence or conse8 It quence at that time when they are produced by sense." is rendered more explicitly by Hartley: "Sensations may be said
to be
associated together,
precisely at the
instants."
when
their impressions
are either
made
tionist
successive
instant of time, or in contiguous This takes us straight into the associaapproach which comes out more clearly in the Leviathan:
same
"after the
object
is
we
.
.
still
re-
tain
Icall
an image
it
.And
this it
is,
the Latins
made
in seeing.
.But the
it
is
/Greeks call
And
elaborated by Coleridge in a manuscript note in Tenneman's Geschichte der Philosophic where he tells us that dreaming
6.
7. 8.
De Anima,
Treatise
233.
6.
Meditations,
on
Human
Man,
9.
Observation of
10.
Theory of Imagination
is
97
in which the streaming continuum of passive association is broken into zig-zag by sensations from within or from with-
out."
This
is
for "Nature excludes and choice are bound up Fancy, understanding nothing." with talent and they give us works like those of Beaumont and Fletcher, Ben Jonson, and Pope. Here we get a mere
of
view"
10
aggregate with no unity. It is "the streamy nature of associa1" To this is opposed tion which thinking curbs and rudders." which is bound up with reason and will, giving imagination
The work
of a genius gives us
"a
But vitality which grows and evolves itself from within." 13 is the height and ideal of mere association? Delirium." "What Juxtaposition and succession are present here and the author
This amassing or spatial power is apparently ever-expanding; and it can become determinate by being subjected to its opposite. "Free unresisted
action, the going forth of the soul,
is,
1*
life
properly
infinite, that
is
is,
unlimited.
is
limits,
This, psychowhile the sense of resistance or space, logically speaking, 18 limitation is time, and motion is a synthesis of the two."
is
and whatever
unresisted
unlimited.
The
spatio-temporal unity
is
motion; and in terms of the and the temporal can be harmoNature "works from within by
and Shakes-
peare "worked
by evolving the germ within by the imaginative power according to an idea for
10.
Anima
11.
12. 13.
14.
15.
Anima
Ibid.,
Poetae, 55.
56.
II,
170-71.
Anima Poetae
57.
w
as
Coleridge's
Thtory ef Pwtry
in the mind to a power of seeing is to light, so is an idea 16 idea and the imaginative power law in nature." Perception,
are needed for the expression of the creative process. The imaginative activity is not a series of elements rolled
into one.
is
of all
narrative, nay, of
all
Poems,
events,
series into
which in
real
or
on
in
straight line,
assume to our understandings a circular motion its tail in its mouth. Hence indeed the almost
Poesy,
i.e.,
poiesis,
mak-
ing."
infinite progression
because
of
it
its
act
is
circular since
is
realises
Poetry
a making,
Coleridge learnt from Berkeley that "certainly we oursome wise whenever we imagine."" The ideas
emerge from an act of the will, and 10 have "an entire dependence on the will." they Berkeley also of the "one presiding mind" which spoke "gives unity to
of imagination are said to
the infinite aggregate of things." Combining Berkeley with observes that to copy the spirit of nature Schelling, Coleridge
is
20
to externalise one's
own
c
seeks
human
mind.'
of
the
external with
the internal.'
As such we have 'a reconcilement The external ceases to mind in the grip of the imaginative
21
The external acquires its real character by being reabsorbed and assimilated in the inward process. Accordingly the poet can "transfer from his inward nature a human interest
16.
17.
Misc
Crit. 42-43.
II,
Unpublished Letters,
128.
18. 19.
Commonplace Booh,
Principles, 27.
p. 295.
20. 21.
Sim,
B.L.
279.
II,
255-59.
Theory of Imagination
99
and a semblance
creates.
of truth to the
shadows of imagination" he
Hobbes was not aware of this principle. Imagination for 28 The traces him was the same as memory it is 'decaying sense.'
;
left by the impressions of sense are the 'phantasms' or images. These images are in course of time set free from their old
connections and sequences. It is fancy that selects and combines these phantasms; and the desire of a writer "brings in
all the
The
mind
storehouse
forth
like
memory
is
characterised
brought
is
by
association.
In
the
a kaleidoscope, and ideas can be so manipulated there as to give rise to new combinations. This is the "liberty
and change
24
its
ideas."
As
such he could observe that "our imagination runs easily from 25 one idea to any other that resembles it." This associating activity in the imagination
38
is
soul."
Ideas are combined by imagination when it is reby the laws of association. This imagination "has
of mixing, compounding, separating, and these ideas in all the varieties of fiction and vision."" dividing
and
ideas,
are capable of
The laws
of association are
first
time by
Hume, who
considered
association to be
operating principle in aesthetic activity. Imagination presents the images of previous percep and these are true or real images; consequently Hume tions,
the basic
took imagination to be a natural function of the mind and to be a creative It is not a wild, chaotic principle. principle.
22.
23. 24.
Leviathan, Part
25.
I,
Hume:
Ibid., Ibid.,
I,
I,
Treatise
319. 331.
(Ed.
318.
25.
26.
27.
Hume: Enquiry
(Ed. Selby-Bigge)
23.
100
Coleridge's
Tkovy
*j
Pwtry
This
interfere
associationist imagination is free because it does with the original order of the previous impressions and because it is not under the absolute control of the intelIt is also
Humean
lect.
it is
of association.
Akcnside,
whom
Hume.*
Since
imagination is capable of making associations quickly, it was taken to be inventive. The essence of genius was sought in this quickness and in the range of association. These accounts
way
if
into the
"My mind
feels
as
it
ached to
and know something great, something one and inIt was a mind that "had been habituated to the fdivisible."* and he remarked "I never regarded my. senses as in vast",
any way the criteria of my belief. I regulated all my creeds ** by my conceptions, not by my sight, even at that age." To those who did not possess this pathway to Reality, the universe "is but a mass of little things." Imagination gives rise
1
a vision of significant forms and values and Coleridge .emphasises the awareness of these higher values as the most
to
'important feature of the imaginative activity. The products of the Hebrew mind too nourished this im-
agination. "In the Hebrew poets each thing has a life of its own" for there is "imagination or the modifying or coadunating
faculty."
30
These poets "move and live and have their being, not Newtonian theology represents, but
28.
:29.
&
66.
39*.
30.
Theory of Imagination
sent a state of self-transcendence, a unique
101
form
of higher
im-
derived his idea of the immedi1 from Addison." Though Addison took imagination to be a compounding power, he did state that "Imagination has in it something like Creation." Yet it is as
mediacy.
Coleridge
may have
imagination interested him. And does not speak of a mere response but Coleridge's approach of a vital and transforming power.
perceptive response
that
Writing to Godwin on
according to you and
May
21,
1800 he observes:
"If
Hume,
our being,
have a tendency to become a god, so sublime and beautiful will be the series of my visual existence."
I shall
active when it is creative, and this activity must have a unity. The Humean activity is a series of impressions and ideas having no centre of unification, and there-
and temporal
series.
By March
16,
1801 he could
tell
Thomas
and space, but have overthrown the doctrine of association as taught by Hartley and with it all the irreligious metaphysics of modern infidels especially the doctrine of necessity." This was the result of an 'intense
extricated the notions of time
5
study
of
time, the
the judgment of
taste
be regarded in
freedom, then, to begin with, it is not taken as reproductive, as in the subjection to the laws of association, but produtive and exerting an activity of its own as
origina38 tor of arbitrary forms of Instead of depossible intuitions." pending on fixed and definite forms, it must be of
capable
creating
its
own
forms.
"The imagination
(as a productive
31. Spectator 411. Cf. J. G. Robertson: The Genesis of the Romantic theory in England, p. 241. Carritt: "Effects in England of Kant's Philosophy", the Monist, Vol. 35, p. 322-23, Essays and Studies,
iy3/,
p.
32.
p. 3(
102
Coleridge's
Theory of Poetry
is a powerful agent for creating, as it nature out of the material supplied to it by were, a second actual nature. It affords us entertainment where experience
faculty of cognition)
to remodel experiproves too commonplace; and we even use it ence. . .By this means we get a sense of our freedom from the law of association (which attaches to the empirical em.
ployment of the imagination), with the result that the material can be borrowed by us from nature in accordance with that
law, but be worked up by us into something else namely, what 33 The material or the content may be surpasses nature."
taken from the world of physical experience; but the individual must be free to visualise it or to re-create it with a
to
it
The
from
its
spatial
and temporal
limitations.
reproductive imagination can reproduce the data of experience in a new order. The productive one is not free
The
it
and
The
aes-
thetic
creative.
imagination is productive and free since it is truly The Platonism of Coleridge was helped by
such Kantian
association.
studies in formulating his own theory of In 1803 he told Southey "that ideas never recall ideas as far as they are ideas, any more than leaves in
forest create each other's
it is
motion
the breeze
it
is
that runs
It is the
the soul, the state of feeling." emotional nature of association that is emphasized.
tion cannot refer to the series of ideas;
through them
Associaso-called
series of
These series are in reality impressions, images and sensations. unified by what may be called the felt background. The in the Aristotelian law of association is underlying principle stated in the Biographia. "The general law of association, or, more accurately, the common condition under which all exciting causes act"
S3.
Ibid.,
is
.stated thus:
176.
Theory of Imagination
103
or every pargether acquire a power of recalling each other; tial representation awakes the toal representation of which it 34 had been a According to this formulation, ideas are
part."
not to beget given a power and a vitality to recall other ideas, new and further ideas. Association is thus taken to explain
"the whole mechanism of the reproduction of impressions, in universal law of pasIt is the Aristotelian Psychology.
sive fancy
to all
its
The reproduction
it
of impressions
makes
associa-
the materials
supplies
The common
'the sole
condition of
is
said
to be contemporaneity by Aristotle.
Hence instead of taking will, reason, judglaw.' and understanding to be the determining causes of ment, association, he represented them "as its creatures, and among
its
mechanical
that
36
effects."
contention
of thought
"the
Coleridge sought to demolish the and with the will, all acts will,
of this blind
mechanism, instead of being distinct powers, the function of which is to control, determine and modify the phantasmal
chaos of association."
37
into
an
or-
ganized whole by will and thought, and consequently the latter cannot be subject to the associative process. At best association can refer to impressions which can be looked
upon
as
is
being
the
contemporaneous
condition of
or
all
continuous.
Contemporaneity
common
true general law is therefore stated thus: certain parts of a total impression more vivid or distinct than
the
rest, will
B.L.
72.
72-73.
76.
81.
I,
I,
opposite contention.
104
Coleridge's
Theory of Poetry
equally linked together by the common condition of contemporaneity, or (what I deem a more appropriate and
to others
This formulation involphilosophical term, of continuity." ves selection determined by emotional interest, vividness of
the image
38
and value
Selection
implies the construction of a world of experience; and the subject of the experience is then viewed as an organism, as
an organic whole.
Man
is
Dark
A
The mental
tion,
phantom dim
of past
images are
The
elementary state of ideas. with ideas round which the emotions and feelings are grouped;,
and
ideas are
Coleridge's Platonism provided an important step in the formulation of his theory. The platonic ideas are "constitu9 This, tive and one with the power and life and nature/'"
is
is
essen-
tially
all
accident
40
and that
the idea or form develops a form from within the materials. Thus we are told that Shakespeare's gift was of experience.
is
Shakespeare reveals the concrete uniThe poet must "create forms according to the severe versal. laws of the intellect", must trust imagination more than
4"
memory.
"The power
of poetry
is,
38.
B.L.
I,
86-87.
39.
App.
B.L.
E. of Statesman's
II,
Manual.
40.
33.
41.
42.
Theory of Imagination
43
105-
The Aristotelian theory agination to produce the picture." would take one to over-emphasise the understanding, the conceptual element. But the Platonic Coleridge liked to contemplate understanding distinctly, to look down upon it "from the throne of actual ideas, or living, inborn, essential truths.""
is
the realm
by the artist. This transformation has evidently nothing to do with the unconscious or the state below consciousness. If at all we explain it, it proceeds from the supercon-
immediacy.
It
an
in-
There he
deep feeling with profound thought; the balance of truth in observing, with the imaginative faculty
and above
all
the
origi-
nal gift of spreading the tone, the atmosphere, and with it the depth and height of the ideal world around forms,
incidents,
and
situations,
all
of which,
for the
common
view,
the lustre,
and the dew drops." But this was only a stimulus that made him express his theory. Long before he met Wordsworth, he arrived at the theory from a study of Plato, Plotinus, the Bible and the Christian Platonists. Even here Coleridge does
not interpret imagination in terms of the unconscious, for
it
involves "the depth and height of the ideal world"; and this ideal world is no other than the actual world seen through the proper perspective, seen in its essence. It is "the prime
merit of genius and its most unequivocal mode of manifestation, so to represent familiar objects as to awaken in the
46
This
43.
44. 45.
Shak. Crit.
II,
174.
56-60.
106
Coleridge's
Theory of Poetry
its
essence
is
which
Credibility
as
a charac-
emancipated
Space and time spatial and temporal limitations. under which the objects of the actual world appear are forms
from
its
to us. Imagination visualises the objects not under the forms of sensibility but in their real or ideal character. This is an unfamiliar kind of apprehension and yet it is not something unbelievable or unacceptable since such experiences do occur
in
normal
life.
Coleridge speaks of the "true imaginative absence of all 40 The temporal stream is "virtually particular space or time."
contained in the present.'" The sky for Boehme, it may be is more than the recalled, sky; it is the appearance of God, a symbol of his presence. Then space and time can have no place in a universe that reveals itself to the imagination as a symbol-language. Boehme and his commentator Law "contributed to keep alive the heart in the head." 48 They taught Coleridge that "all the products of the mere reflective faculty partook of Death", and that "a sap was yet to be propelled" into them "if they were to afford my soul either food or shel8
ter."'
idea;
It is not a mere idea that can and the idea is alive when we
it.
satisfy us,
feel
it,
apprehension we get beover his shadow, Poets leap leap 40 over Death." Poets are capable of this because enerthey gise, and energising is the antidote to death and the
emotionally apprehend
this
In
yond death.
synonym
for the imaginative This process activity. described by Coleridge in the significant
affects
fies
is
admirably well
note:
it
me much
I
"Nothing
at the
moment
it
happens
either stupe-
me, and
46. 47.
48.
Misc.
Crit.,
36.
49.
Notebooks,
I,
134.
Theory of Imagination
107
hay
of
fiies,
Clock/or
or listen entirely to the loud Click of the great am simply indifferent, not without some sense of
is philosophic self-complacency for a thing at the moment but a thing of the moment/it must be taken up into the mind,
through the whole multitude of shapes and thoughts, not one of which it leaves untinged between which and it some new thought is not engendered/This is a work
diffuse itself
Then there quicken with me." results the experience of the imaginative absence of time and This experience is analogous to the state of inspiration space.
of Time/but the
50
Body
feels it
felt
by some
of
The divine frenzy and the enquiry. creative imagination outlined in the Ion was read with the Enneads where the artist is said to shape his material imprestion
in
his
aesthetic
"The essence sing it with a character according to an idea. or character was not in the material, but it was in the conceiving mind, even before it entered into the stone. But it was in the artist not by virtue of his having eyes, but by virtue
of his imagination.
in his imagination,
And
was
this beauty,
far greater.
For
him, but abode with him and gave birth to a lesser beauty. The artist may take up any object he likes. But it is he who
gives a character to
because he visualises or imagines it. This character develops a form when it is externalised. The beauty that is rendered objectively is but a feeble representation
it
what he had imaginatively experienced. The artistic products thus turn out to be the shadows of imagination, and the mind of the artist is full of activity.
of
is
Coleridge's
speaks of the
divine breath of
within
50.
Ibid.,
I,
1597.
5.8.1.
51.
Enneads,
108
Coleridge's
5
Theory of Poetry
of Plotinus.
us and abroad,
in the
manner
The
poet might
be passive; but once the divine inspiration is breathed into him, the soul is transformed and the poet is aware of
power
in light,
.
Rhythm
Over
in all
Plastic and vast, one intellectual At once the Soul of each, and God
all.
This faith
is
the
ground
It is
and
the
many.
not only in the neoplatonists but in Spinoza whose natura naturans implies that God in his creative asit
Coleridge found
In a marginal pect is revealed in a multiplicity of forms. note on Kant we read Coleridge going beyond the Aeolian harp symbol: "The mind does not resemble an Aeolian harp,,
not even a barrel-organ turned by a stream of water, conceived as many times mechanized as you like, but rather, as far as objects are concerned, a violin or other instrument of few
strings yet vast compass, played
The mind
is
a sensitive
52
stimulus coming from the soul; and it can release only a few notes in all their infinite variety. It is the soul that wields
imagination and makes the mind adopt itself to the required tune. As Fairchild remarks: "When he thought of creative
genius, he thought of Spinoza's amor intellectualis, of Plotinus' association of the divine Nous with the mind of man,, and Bochme's identification of imagination with a
godlike
creative will.
5 ' 88
The
soul in
its
appears in certain contexts and for a specific end as Such an imagination cannot have anything in imagination. common with the mechanical and blind association or with the unconscious. It is truly creative.
reason
52.
53.
Quoted by Muirhead: Coleridge as Philosopher, 91-92. Religious Trends in English Poetry, III, 295.
Theory of Imagination
109
Creation
is
poet and the creator parallel to each other* but there is a third The creative process of parallel called the mind in perception.
God
is
and
it is
The
creativity
is
again reflected in
"The completing
power which
the comprehensibility of the understanding, is the imagination, impregnated with which the understanding itself becomes intuitive,
and a
50
55
living power."
The mind
of the percipient
is
not passive, for it is, "in the sublimest sense, the Image of the Creator/" The world of imagination is, as Muirhead rethe world of sense twice-born. The Forms or Ideas marked,
subsist
eternally
in
their
ideal
space,
become
internal
and
evolve themselves endlessly into ideas of the world. These ideas of plastic nature are reiterated in and through the 'esemplastic'
imagination.
human
it
being.
It
'idealize
and
unify'
objects; but
The primary
imagination apprehends the identity of the universal with the particular in the individual; and thus discovers or realizes
value in all concreteness. The secondary imagination is concerned only with the material offered by the phenomenal world. Hence he speaks of "the limited sphere of men87
mean
Cole-
He
writes: "the
54.
B.L.
55.
56.
57.
Notebooks,
1,
110
Coleridge's
Theory of Poetry
,
rather as far
as objects are concerned a violin or other instrument of few of Genius.'* strings yet vast compass, played on by a musician
Imagination gives
entry of
rise to
mediacy. An rendered not dangerous by the Imagination which contemhence vice always hateplates immediate, not remote effects
March 1796
This and although equally monotonous as virtue." transcends the dualism of good and evil, or right mediacy wrong, of truth and falsehood, of beauty and ugliness. the same time it synthesises these dualisms, just as it harmonise the conscious and the unconscious activities.
ful
is
88
im-
and At
can
It
an
works with elementary particles; and Coleridge's idea of fancy shows that fancy operates with 'fixities and definites' which are derived from sense. The seassociative theory
The
quence in which these particles appear is determined by the law of association and by selection. Hence memory is said
to be 'mechanical
5
and fancy
50
'passive.'
The
latter
is
a 'mir-
rorment';
it
a sort of juxtaposition.' But imagination 'recreates'; it is 60 a 'synthetic, permeative, blending, fusing power,' an 'assimilative
grow together
all its
own.
It is
a vital
To coadunate is 'to an organic plant with a life power which 'generates and produces
It is
a form of
its own' and its rules are "the very powers of growth 08 and production." The analogy with a plant is complete; and like a plant the highest workings of the mind breathe, assimilate and develop. The mechanical and corpuscular
philosophy
is
rejected in
no uncertain terms.
The philosophy
58.
Ibid.,
I, I, I,
156.
73,
B.L. B.L.
193.
B.L. B.L.
II,
I,
Theory of Imagination
08
111
of
It is a replaced by life and intelligence. that evolves itself into the plant called the mental process poem. The materials of sense are surrendered to the mind
mechanism
is
which
"assimilates
them
to
itself
and
to
each other."
The
initiative idea is the seed from which "successive Ideas ger"Events minate." The mind is both a being and a becoming. and images, the lively and spirit stirring machinery of the
and
air,
and moisture,
to the
In all seed of the mind, which would else rot and perish. processes of mental evolution the objects of the senses must
stimulate the
Mind; and
the
it
Mind must
in turn assimilate
61
and
The
or a
sensation
is
The
plant
a living whole whose parts are "so far interdepoem pendent that each is reciprocally means and end"; and thus we have the 'dependence of the parts on the whole, and the
is
dependence of the whole on its parts.' The living organism the synthesis. Here we have the 'law of polarity or essen-
tial
dualism' according to which "every power in nature and in spirit must evolve an opposite as the sole means and condition of
its
05
manifestation;
to reunion."
The
thesis
interpenetrate
each other, and generate a higher third including both the former." That which is thus manifested is life which is in
all
one.
80
Such a
all
living organ-
of poetry, like
other
living
itself;
but a living
is
body
tion,
is
of necessity
an organized one,
and what
organiza-
but the connection of parts to a whole, so that each 67 is at once end and means!" part Imagination then modi63. 64. 65. 66. 67.
Friend,
I,
121.
Works,
6.
101.
I,
Shak. Crit.
223.
112
fies
Coleridge's
Theory of Poetry
the things,
of growth.
It
is
It is
and it is as such a vital process, a process one and a unity, a whole and an individual.
is
Imagination
the synthesising
the "synthetic
power in the world of art. and magical power" and it "reveals itself
in the balance or reconciliation of opposite or discordant qualities. It is similar to the organic function of assimilating.
scale sublim'd,
To To
With
animal:
intellectual.
these significant lines opens the thirteenth chapter of Biographia Literaria. Parts of the physical universe are assi-
intellectual
lost
its
being.
original
At
this
last
stage the
has
character by becoming
intelligible
state.
organic to a
Such a transformation is explained in terms sophy" which assimilates the partial truths
all these are to
of other systems;
61*
be "united in one perspective central point." The history of thought shows that the chief error has been 7" exclusion, not subordination; and "Nature excludes nothing."
Talent and fancy are then included in and transcended by genius and imagination because "the higher intellectual powers
71
Thus
genius and talent, organism and mechanism, symbol and allegory, imitation and copy, are all the contradictory pairs which are synthesised in and through imagination. In each
pair the first term expresses a more inclusive concept, though it does also at times That is, express a narrower content. the first term has a larger meaning and also a narrower one.
The
latter
makes the
and
68.
69.
70.
71.
Theory of Imagination
the
in
113
former
embodies
the
reconciliation.
The
first
term
each pair superior concept ever cannot exist independently of the second term. Thus reason seeks spiritual truth, understanding is after verifiable
expresses a
which
how-
scientific truth,
and imagination is after the beauty of truth. Writing to William Sharp in 1804, Coleridge speaks of Wordsworth's unity of interest and homogeneity of character.
This "most original poet", this "greatest philosophical poet", he continues, "has effected a complete and constant synthesis of thought and feeling and combined them with Poetic Forms,
Power
word
in
which
have ventured to oppose it to fancy, or the aggregating power in that sense in which it is a dim analogue of creation, not all that we can believe but all that we can conI
ceive of creation.""
feeling.
The
first
and
This acts as a
In this harmony arises a larger reconciliation or harmony. one can notice the activity of imagination which is a creative
process.
Nothing
is
external
to
this process.
"The
poet's
heart and intellect should be combined, intimately combined and unified with the great appearances of nature, and not merely
73
It is
the
creative intercourse between the poet and the universe. Such an intercourse, implies a kind of synthesis of the active powers of the mind with the passive; and this synthesis, as Tucker felt,
gives rise to a
new
constituent
element
their
74
separate properties.
This
is
by Ges-
psychology. As Coleridge remarked, the mystics "define beauty as the subjection of matter to spirit so as to be trans-
spirit
re-
74.
The Light
I,
127-28,
114
Coleridge's
Theory of Poetry
veals itself'";
mony
is
of
an
arises from the perceived harwhether sight or sound, with the inborn and object,
constitutive rules of
it
even such is beauty but have complacency in whatever to the mind, which cannot always
intuitive.
As
76
is
perceived as preconfigured to
its
living faculties."
The apprehension
to be ultimately real
what
is
taken
and
its
the key to the nature of imagination any enquiry concerning it. All pure speculation has foundation in "the full apprehension of the difference beis
to
tween the contemplation of reason, namely, that intuition of things which arises when we possess ourselves, as one with
the whole,
sents itself
substantial knowledge, and that which prewhen, transferring reality to the negations of reality,
which
is
framework
of the
uniform
life,
we
think
of ourselves as separated beings, and place nature in antithesis to the mind, as object to subject, things to thought, death to
life."
The
latter is
mere understanding.
its
The former
tells
us that "existence
is
own
all
predicate, self-affirmation, the one attribute in which others are contained, not as particulars, but as manifestaIt is
tions.
an eternal and
comprehensive.
It is
and the absolute is neither nor that which is affirmed; but the
absolute
of both."
77
which
living
affirms,
and
copula
The
artistic activity
and
the
ject
human
and
consciousness together. It is the subject and obalso the very act of affirmation. It is revealed in
and
also as the
work
of art.
Starting with the product, Coleridge proceeds to give an account of the process. The poet "brings the whole soul of man into activity"; and "he diffuses a tone and spirit of
unity
that blends,
75. 76.
77.
and
(as
it
were)
fuses,
BiTlI,
239.
BX.
II,
245.
III, 202.
Friend,
Theory of Imagination
synthetic
115
and magical
78
"re-
cordant qualitites."
inclusiveness
this criterion
is
The
is
an
the
of
which
and
criterion
of
creation
and
it
renders
the
manifestation
the many a necessary possibilty. As he put it, "grant me a nature having two contrary forces, the one of which tends to expand infinitely, while the other strives to apprehend or find
itself
in this infinity,
70
and
I will
The two
and
and object
of experience.
These con-
trary forces are inherently capable of being harmonised. Coleridge undertakes to explain this harmony or synthesis
The
ten
main tenets of "Dynamic Philosoand these are to be applied "to deduction of the Imagiphy", nation, and with it the principles of production and of genial
theses presented here are the
criticism in the fine Arts."
and theory
a higher
the chief one being the synthesis of the conflict of opposites into
third.
crete, idea
and
old,
fresh
and
80
and through the imaginative activity. image the ideal; and believes in abstracting from the images, not in understanding These two activities are fused in imagination. idealising them.
order, nature
art, are all synthesised in
and
Reason
fails
to
These important formulations seem to owe something to Nature for Schelling is that which strains to deveSchelling.
lop jtself into consciousness.
It
is
78.
B.L.
II, 12.
I,
79. 80.
B.L.
B.L.
196.
12.
II,
116
From this principle emerge ing principle is immanent in it. the opposites and there is a creative synthesis between the The imagination or the aesthetic subject and the object.
faculty brings about this synthesis.
lops
Nature
realises or deve-
imagination. because Schelling too passed through the Coleridge's possibly same stages of devotion to Boehme and Kant.
Schelling held that art organon and document of
is
consciousness
in
energy or creativity in
its
and
in
its
conscious
81
mode
is,
world develops
of the artist.
also as ideas
That
in
the mind.
Then
and
is
reconciler of, nature and man" is postulated as art which "the power of humanising nature, of infusing the thoughts and passions of man into everything which is the "object of
8"
his contemplation."
The
"all
twelfth chapter of Biographia Literaria tells us that knowledge rests on the coincidence of an object with a
Truth presupposes a knower and a known, and many truths have a derivative character. But Coleridge wanted an ultimate truth which must be "self-grounded, unconditional, and known by its own light", and which must be unique.
subject."
This philosophical basis leads him to state his idea of the The ultimate truth is a fusion of the objective creative act.
self
and the subjective and this fusion is the self or I AM. The has will and it is neither finite nor infinite. "In the reconciling and recurrence of this contradiction consists the
religion
process
of production of life."
thesis
88
This leads to
81.
82. 93.
185.
Theory of Imagination
117
lies
The poetic truth is neither subjective nor objective. It neither in him alone not in his object, but in 'the identity The
is
of both.'
purely human, for all its materials are from the 84 The poet and mind, and all its products are of the mind." his object act and react upon each other; for poetry "avails
itself
of
the
forms of nature to
recall,
to express,
84 mind." *
and
feelings of the
might
recall
the sights
and sounds
experience; but "poetry impregnates them with an interest 85 not their own by means of the passion." The poetic passion
is
the
medium
and
is
of
the artistic
it
embodiment.
itself."
"The
spirit,
in
all
the objects
which
views, views
One
informs the
other
is
controlled
informed by it. This counter-action of forces and regulated by imagination. The Images of
human mind,
to
as to elicit
to
make
the external
thought nature,
Arts."
88
The
make nature thought, and the mystery of genius in the fine objects of sense are acted on and transformed
and imagination.
by the
poet's feelings
poem is a tcrtium aliquid, "an interpenetration of the counteracting powers, partaking of both." Here are the 'numberless goings-on' which the poets are "accusby tomed to watch the flux and reflux of their innermost nature,
87 to venture at times into the twilight realms of consciousness."
The
resultant
thought and feeling are the When they venture into they interact.
Sensation,
'facts
of
mind' and
Poesy or Art.
B.L. B.L.
B.L.
II,
84.* Ibid.
85.
254,
86.
87.
II,
I,
258.
172-73, II, 120,
118
Coleridge's
Theory of Poetry
ence.
They
exhibit self-transcendence.
is
not
a thought, not a thing, but a "middle quality', having its own laws. It is not inapt to recall that Akenside believed
"the powers of imagination" occupy a place "between the organs of bodily sense and the faculties of moral percepthat
Truths belong to the region "quite foreign to the 90 These powers of imagination "relate to matimagination."
tion."
89
Only at the hands of Coleridge the powers have also a higher ajid a more valuable place because imagination is organic andi>ccausc it is foundational
ter
and motion."*
of imagination
to the universe.
the
Cambridge
Collins'
and
divine
poem
Coleridge
tells
Was woven on
"inspired and whirled me along with greater agitations of enthusiasm than any the most impassioned scene in Schiller
or Shakespeare." Herder, who was known to Coleridge, of the poet as one working in close co-operation with spoke nature. As the sap rises in the tree, so does the creative
process proceed.
98
normal
cognitive act not as sensuous ones merely, but as objects qualified by these qualities. That is, the perceptual act involves an
intuition of a real object aided by the sensuous The qualities. mind in such an act constructs or creates the object to itself. Because of this 'intimate coalition 3 between subject and object this
ment
of
is called the primary imagination which is the instrunormal perception. It renders the phenomenal world
88.
89.
B.L.
II,
254.
90. 91.
The
92.
Letters, 196.
Theory of Imagination
possible.
119
discovers
a value, the
noumenon
the latter.
same world; and the creative artist exercises The mind in both the activities is creative and
constructive.
When
is
both these forms are designated by the bound to be some confusion. Coleridge
"In philosophical lan-
when he remarks:
guage, we must denominate this intermediate faculty in all its degrees and determinations, the Imagination. But in common language, and especially on the subject of poetry we appropriate the to a superior
name
to
voluntary
secondary imagination
the primary;
will.
and
it
need^Ae
over
98
it."
Imagination is the ^5ula between the active and the passive powers, between the idea and the image, between the subject and the object; and functioning as a copula it makes
the external world possible In any perceptual act
its
and
real.
we do
entirety.
phantom of a table, from which he may argumentatively deduce the reality of a table, which he does not see." The true realism "believes and requires neither more nor less, than the object which it beholds
or presents to itself, is the real and very object. In this sense ... we are all collectively born idealists, and therefore and
But we do not have any difficulty in designat"It is the table itself which the man of common
we
at the of
of a part or
have the knowledge of the object. This is rendered possible by the primary imagination which gives a meaning, k significance, to perception.
It
is
'the living
power.
The
second-
ary imagination
jects
are
said to be 'essentially vital', while the obfixed and dead.' The fixed and essentially
is
dead
93. 94.
objects
B.L.
I,
cannot
86.
be
those
of
the
primary
imagina-
B,L.
I,
179,
120
of fancy or
is
The world
of the understanding
an ab-
sociated
as
upon that of the primary imagination. Disand self-consciousness, the world appears the 'inanimate cold world'; and then it is the world anafrom
will
by the understanding or transformed by the secondary Will and understanding exercise a gentle conimagination.
lysed
trol
We may
trine.
Any
here notice the neo-jilatonic origins of the docperceptual act, says Plotinus, involves selection
based on interest; and the mind in such an act is creative.* This is Coleridge's primary imagination. It involves the
interaction
the object.
is
creative communion between the subject and The object or nature is that in which the spirit both immanent and transcendent. The communion is
and
actually an interchange because Coleridge held that the productive power in nature is not different from the creative
power
in
man.
He
observes:
ception,
we
us,
at once identify
without
world.
mysterious predisposition exist without evolving a belief that the productive power, which in nature acts as nature, is essentially one (that is, of one kind) with the intelligence, which is in the human minds above
nature."
90
Least of
can
this
saw
its
This view was accepted by Coleridge because he confirmation in the writings of the neo-platonists.
Coleridge borrowed Cudworth's True Intellectual System in May, 1795 from the Bristol This was written with Library.
a neo-platonist outlook. According to Cudworth, even in sensation there is a kind of intellection present, for a sensation reveals the interaction of the active
Yet
it
and the passive states. was Kant that brought forth the final summing-up of
Enneads,
Friend,
4.6.2.
95. 96,
Theory of Imagination
the
theory.
121
serves:
Employing the Kantian concept, Coleridge ob"of the discursive understading, which forms for itself
general notions and terms of classification for the purpose of comparing and arranging phenomena, the characteristic is
clearness without depth.
in their limits only,
ficies
It
is
and
without substance.
it
entan-
comprehendunites
clearness with depth, the plenitude of the sense with the comprehensibility of the understanding is the imagination, impre-
itself
becomes
intuitive
and a
living power."*
The understanding
world.
it
reveals the
con-
It
fails to
Heracleitus and the Neo-Platonists spoke of the synthesis of the oppositcs. John Scotus Erigena held that God "is the
similarity of the similar, the dissimilarity of the dissimilar, the The opposition of opposites, and the contrariety of contraries."
God
sites.
of Nicholas of
reconciliation of oppo98
Coleridge speaks
of
Boehme's thought we
In polar logic' of Bruno. find that contrasts are essential for the
of manifestation;
emergence of
life,
any kind
and Boehme
even declared that "all things are created out of imagina99 tion." This doctrine becomes central to Coleridge's thought. "Every power in nature and in spirit must evolve an
opposite, as the sole
of
its
manifestation; and
all
a tendency to reunion The identity of thesis opposition and antithesis is the substance of all being." 100 These are the
active
at times
appear
also as im-
97.
98.
99.
The Signature
Friend,
II, 91,
100.
122
Coleridge's
101
Theory of Poetry
agination
and fancy. But imagination in such a context has a wider meaning as well as a narrower one. The wider significance transmutes the passive activity by assimilating it into
In this assimilation, the passive ceases to function as
side
is
itself.
passive.
The
passive
which thinking curbs and rudders", in the ocular spectrum, and in the dreams. In a letter of April 8, 1820,
association
he speaks of how "we establish a centre, as it were, a sort of nucleus in the reservoir of the soul; and towards this needle
shoots after needle, cluster points on cluster points, from all 108 He speaks parts of contained fluid, and in all directions."
mode in which our thoughts in states of morbid slumber become at times perfectly dramatic" and of the law by which "the form of the vision appears to talk to us in its
of "the
own
thoughts in a voice as audible as the shape is visible; and 104 connected trains." Association is active
in dreams,
cess.
is surely no inare asleep and build105 But the ing up imaginations of this sort half our time." dreams that Coleridge has in mind are those which reveal
built
on
this
we
experiences as coherent as those of normal waking life. They do not refer to the unconscious, nor to the incoherent associa-
According to
Schiller,
its
whkh
intimations. The poet seeks to blend thought with sensibility, intuition with reflection. The "total idea, obscure but powerful" is "anterior to all technical apparatus"; and without it no poetic composition is possible.
sends forth
own vague
how
to express
and com-
Cf. B.L.
I,
85-86.
Anima
Poetae, 46.
105.
Theory of Imagination
123
municate
to
is
this
it
unconscious
in other words, in
5 ' 108
knowing how
embody
in
art.
This unconscious
scious.
It
may
referred to by analysts or closer to the supraconscious state In Coleridge, however, the latter appears to the mystics.
figure
more prominently.
and it springs from the Imagination is "esentially vitaY "There is in genius itself an unconscious actiunconscious.
vity; nay, that
is
man
108
of genius."
The
these
To
"the attributes of tim^.and space are inapplicable and alien", and they can be conveyed only "in symbols of time and
100
space."
expression.
Mental
This,
events can be given only a metaphorical however, does not mean that Coleridge
makes the poet a mechanical agent in an unconscious activity. As he remarked: "Shakespeare, no mere child of nature; no automaton of genius; no passive vehicle of inspiration possessed
by
the
spirit,
not possessing
it;
first
meditated
deeply,
understood
10
minutely,
till
intuitive ... at
stupendous power."' the sense that he is not inspired but controlled by his inspiration. This is possible when the artist is not exercising merely
his
The
artist
the total personality is active. The into activity by the poetic probrought cess; for imagination is "first put into action by the will and
when
is
and unnoticed,
control."
To
these
we have
least
to
add
"judgment was at
equal"
107.
108.
202.
257-58.
is
II,
of the unconscious
109.
II,
maximised.
120.
19.
110.
B.L.
II,
124
Coleridge's
111
Theory of Poetry
If
the
is
to the genius
11
it,
unconscious in genius
it
possibly
more
not
rational than
we understand
consciousness
Genius
does
foi
the simple reason that Coleridge's metaphysic speaks of the higher category as including the lower. This contention is not
negatived at
all
composition of Kubla Khan which speaks of the sleep "of the external senses, during which time he has the most vivid confidence that he could not have composed less than from twc
that indeed can be called compositior in which all the images rose up before him as things, with a parallel production of the correspondent expressions, with112 The sleep o) out any sensation or consciousness of effort."
to three
lines*; if
hundred
the external senses does not here refer to reverie or day-dreaming, but to the intense awareness experienced by the soul
This awareness
is
similar
to the
consciousness
.of
being in
The sentiments oJ spired during the moment of inspiration. Daniel are "drawn from depths which few in any age have cour113 The desecent into the depth? age or inclination to descend." is actually an ascent, for the depth refers to the unfathomable,
to the profound.
liar significance
The
is
is
similar trouble
work
is
is
so impressed or
It the unconscious as to appear in it." blends the conscious with the unconscious.
form
to
life
and
free will,
is
form
the
ground of the beautiful. If the conscious is the regular, minate form, the unconscious is the free and infinite.
111.
deter-
The
B.L.
II,
12;
Shak. Grit.
II,
263.
112. 113.
Poems, 296.
B.L.
II,
II,
120.
114.
B,L.
258.
Theory of Imagination
125
former
controlled while the latter has a spontaneity. Jl| understand this we must go back to the metaphor of the G$p
is
ganic unity that Coleridge frequently employs. The growth of the plant from the seed is spontaneous, and this is predeter-
mined.
Then
there
may
not
nation "subordinates art to nature, the manner to the matter", and that the unconscious "is the genius in the man of genius",
we might be tempted
and the unconscious.
to
derive poetry
But Coleridge does speak of the presence of the conscious will in the activity of secondary imagination. Spontaneous impulse functions in close cooperation with voluntary purpose. Imagination "blends and harmonizes
natural and
the
artificial."
the
The natural
is
the spont-
aneous creative power, while the artificial is the voluntary In Shakespeare "the creative power and intellectual energy. the intellectual energy .... were reconciled, and fought each
with
the
its
shield
before
activity
it
the
breast
115
of
the
other."
It
is
conscious
which
alone
can
conscious; otherwise
would be
formless.
embody Where
the
the
un-
em-
could say that the judgment of the artist is equal to his genius. The conscious is thus the that which can be understood. But the unconintelligible,
is
bodiment
beautiful, one
scious
is beyond the power of the understanding. If it below consciousness, it is analysable and explicable; but is
is
it
not.
The thesis of Lowes lays greater emphasis on the unconscious operation, on the power of association. Coleridge had "one of the most extra-ordinary memories of which there
is
record,
and
stored with the spoils of an omnivorous reading, endowed into the bargain with an almost uncanny power
118
of association."
tion (1759)
115.
tells
B.L.
II,
19.
116.
Road
to
Xanadu,
43.
126
Coleridge's
Theory of Poetry
it
not to be explained."
dormant abilities of which the poet may be uHaware. But Coleridge was referring to the abilities inherent in us because of the great genius that plays on the sensitive
is
points to the
"The marvellous independence and true imaginative absence of all particular space or time in the Faery* Queen" is
due to the fact that "the poet has placed you in a dream, a 117 But "dreams have nothing in them absurd charmed sleep." 5lj8 for "even in dreams nothing is fancied withor non-sensical' 110 This may be a form of out an antecedent quasi cause." "the reproductive imagination, unsophisticated by the will, and
But it is imagiundirected by intrusions from the sense." nation which is "the true inward creatrix", and which "instantly out of the chaos of elements or shattered fragments of
120
memory, puts together some form to Df the conscious and the unconscious
the
121
fit it."
The
interaction
activities gives
a form to
This form emerges because the stream of consciousness has an indivisibility and a continuity,
chaos of the unconscious.
At any single noment we have the microcosm of the stream: "What a iwarm of tho.ughts and feelings, endlessly minute fragments, ind, as it were, representations of all preceding and embroys 183 >f all future thought, be compact in any one moment."
.t
128
In this context
ike the
LS
we may note his statement that the poems Immortality Ode are "intended only for such readers
to
watch the
flux
and
reflux of their
modes
of inmost
117.
118. 119.
120.
1st
May, 1832.
Ibid., 86-87.
Ibid., 208.
Theory of Imagination
127
time being, to which they know that the attributes of are inapplicable and alien, but which yet cannot space 1** This is tEe conveyed save in symbols of time and space."
1
basic
problem
recreate.
The
imagination mediating and struggling fb twilight realms are those that cannot be studiof
ed with the help of the categories, because they are the very ground of these categories. The inmost nature thus turns out
to
is
space.
up
they "become proofs of original genius only as far as they are 125 modified by a predominant passion." He speaks of "the 188 link of association." In such passages the Shakespearean
Coleridge was not unaware of the atmosphere of suggestion in all great poetry. This atmosphere takes us to a world where time and space are absent." Profound sensibility is "one of the components of
is
term association
equivalent to 'suggestion.
genius";
and "a more than usual rapidity of association, a more than usual power of pa^ig from thought to thought, and image to image, is a component equally essential; and " in the due modification of each by the other Genius consists."
15
It is not a simple assertion of the balance of the active with the passive powers that we have here. Coleridge's 'more than usual' is a significant qualification. The extraordinary rapidity of association is a way of referring to the profound power
of intuition
which dispenses with the connecting links and and the poetic intuitioii is an important
"In every work of art aspect of the imaginative activity. there is a reconcilement of the external with the internal; the conscious is so impressed on the unconscious as to
in it";
appear
and he who combines the two is the man of genius; and for that reason he must partake of both. Hence "there
124.
B.L. B.L.
II,
120.
16.
I,
Cf.
I,
163-7.
125. 126.
127.
II,
Shak. Crit.
B.L.
I,
17.
30-1.
128
is
Coleridge's
Theory of Poetry
activity;
in genius itself
in
an unconscious
138
gltiius
the
man
of
genius."
infinite
is
That
which
it
is
simi-
and
it
means more
more valuable. The "region of unconscious thoughts, 130 more working the more indistinct they are." The indistinct is the indeterminate, the infinite. Thus Pan
oftentimes the
"represents the intelligence blended with a darker power, deeper, mightier, and more universal than the conscious intellect of
man."
1" 1
And
Coleridge's endeavour
was directed
to raise the
132
mind above
This elevation
self-transcendence exhibited
"The Images in Dante are not only taken from obvious nature, and are intelligible to all, but are ever conjoined with the
universal feeling received from nature,
138
and therefore
affect the
It is the inherent self-transcendgeneral feelings of all men." ence that gives rise to this experience of universal feelings. Such a self-transcendence is exhibited at the level of prerational
immediacy and
The
that of the post-ideation experience. felt back-ground in both the states exhibits similar characalso at
teristics,
immediacy Coleridge could assert that Shakes134 "In peare's imagery is "a series and never a broken chain." one sentence begets another naturally: The meanShakespeare
possible levels of
ing
is all
inwoven.
B.L.
II,
He
128.
129.
258.
I,
Shak. Crit.
B.L.
B.L. B.L.
II,
II,
I,
224.
130.
131. 132.
133.
260.
93. 189.
134.
B.L.
II,
15.
Theory
135
of.
Imagination
129
The passive, the spontaneous and the dark atmoshpere." 8 the voluntary classes of inward experience" are harmonised
in the great creative artist. Consequently the higher diacy which a great work of art evokes does not have
finite
immean inemana-
progression.
It
appears
like the
neo-platonist
tion,
tion
Thus "Shakespeare's intellectual acunlike that of Ben Jonson or Beaumont and wholly Fletcher. The latter see the totality of a sentence or passage,
and
it
is
circular.
is
Shakespeare goes on creating and out of B, and so on, just as a evolving, serpent moves, which makes a fulcrum out of its own body and seems for ever twisting and untwisting its own strength."
and then
project
it
entire.
out of A, and
The
is
serpent shows the possibility of such an emanation which This makes the imaginaorganically related to its being.
phantasmal chaos
of association/'
1 17
'
The coherence achieved by imagination is symbolic of the unimaginable. As Coleridge remarked in his lecture on Romeo and Juliet: "The grandest effects of poetry are when
the imagination
is
produce a
.
distinct form,
mind
what
of a
poet impress, namely, sublime feeling of the imaginable for a mere image."
is
The
unimaginable only suggested by or by both. This unimaginable is Reality which seems to be realised by our consciousness. As a result of this, it is metaphorically remarked:
158
the image, or
by the words
"How much
lies
below
his
own
cons-
ciousness."
supra-consciousness being foundational apto be hidden or concealed; and the creative pears imagination seeks to remove the veil a little and present it to us suggestively
The
and symbolically.
to seek "the
135. 136.
66.
81.
137.
138.
B.L.
Anima
Poetae, 25.
130
Coleridge's
Theory of Poetry
increase of consciousness in such wise that whatever part of the terra incognita of our nature the increased consciousness
discovers,
itself
our will
The
terra incognita
may be the foundational consciousness; but it should be made That which realises this task to intelligible and explicable.
the secondary imagination of the artist who has genius; and "genius of the highest kind implies an un55140 usual intensity of the modifying power. This modifying
some extent
is
power belongs
ing
itself
It
can never
ever be static.
It is
Constantly reveal-
"The
139. 140.
141.
Stateman's Manual, Appendix B. Table Talk, 1st May, 1833. B.L. II, 65.
The
fine arts
embody
and
But
not
it
"the
Apollo
Belvedere
is
it
pleases,
but
it
pleases us because
is
beautiful."
objective because
they are real, because they conform to universal principles. The pleasure of art is grounded in the awareness of the beautiful
is
which
is
aesthetically agreeable
it
this agreeability,
and
if it is
3
a work alone
is
beautiful.
Such pleasing for its own sake. The work must not evoke pleasure
is,
but must embody that pleasure in itself. That of art must be intrinsic, not derivatory.
being sympathy. And it can excite/any Dabbler in
I
is
the pleasure
think, the
more
am
an
essen-
Delight." pathy, and the sympathetic imagination takes the reader to an experience similar to that of the poet. Later when we
realise the
full
tial
element of poetical
value of that experience, our sympathy gradually gives place to, or is assimilated in, our admiration of the poet. Regarding the value of this state of experience,
we
find
Coleridge stating:
"If I can
do nothing
else
with
1.
B.L. B.L.
II,
224. 236.
I,
2.
3.
II,
957.
132
Coleridge's
Theory of Poetry
itself
beauty, I can show it to somebody. Sympathy may have some connection with this impulse to
perhaps
feel-
embody
if
The accumulation
may
woman
be near, will probably kindle or increase the passion of sexual 4 love/' There is no question of the beautiful having any utilitarian function. The experience of beauty is an expansive
It
compels
the
experiencing
This desire to
stimulated by the presence of sympathy and it results This is the path of the feelin a sympathetic interpretation. in the work and experienced by the reader. It ing embodied
is
Pleasure,
on the contrary,
has
ground
As such he remarks:
may
(built
"Pleasure, itself (too often) Delusion, her Tent on enchanted ground. Happiness can be pitch on Virtue (only, must of necessity) Truth for its founda5
tion."
which involves not pleasure but delight and emotion. .peritJKe The blending of the spontaneous impulse with voluntary purin the metrical form. pose results
The voluntary
design and "the purpose of blending delight with emotion."* "This fusion offers a disinterested state of exepcriencc which has an intrinsic value. It is determined by no ultimate motives.
.It is
company
at
of
;the young.
"Laughter
of
little
children's motions,
is Laughter in its original state a little motion to get rid of a pleasure rising into pain convulsive 7 Love Desire." Love and this worthy of further thought
desire, pleasure
of
pain, are involved here; and the first term each pair assimilates the second to such an extent that
and
4.
5.
Ibid.,
I,
1356.
1375.
50.
I,
Ibid.,
I,
6.
B.L.
II,
7.
Notebooks,
1533.
13S
It is sponthe total experience purifies and refines the spirit. taneous and sincere; and the feelings involved in the fine arts
have
this character.
But does not the experience of a poem or a play give to feelings and emotions which we may not normally rise have? A play like King Lear may evoke the experience of
"Poetry excites ingratitude even when one is unaware of it. us to artificial feelings makes us callous to real ones."* This is possible when the poet is too subjective, when he is
on the verge
needs
of becoming, sentimental.
is sympathy. Thus he writes: "The sympathy of the with the subjects of his poetry is particularly remarkable poet in Shakespeare and Chaucer; but what the first effects by a
strong act of imagination and mental metamorphosis, the last does without any effort, merely by the inborn kindly joyous9 ness of his nature." Imagination and innate humanity deter-
mine the nature of sympathy. And Coleridge remarks: "When a mere stripling, I had formed the opinion that true 10 taste was virtue and that bad writing was bad feeling."
True
sive,
taste
is
it is
found, he would say: 11 do we know of Shakespeare." absolutely nothing Taste and virtue refer to sound feelings that are not alien to
all-inclusive soul.
this
Where
"How
us,
but revealed to us in a poetic mood as being implicitly These are not original feelings for "those only present in us.
feel
who
no
originality,
their thoughts
no consciousness of having received and opinions from direct inspiration, are anxi-
The
certainty,
man
of genius."
This absolute
and he
8.
9.
conviction comes to the genius from his quest for certainty; is not very much worried whether his feelings are ori-
Anima
87.
10.
Anima Anima
11.
12.
134
Coleridge's
Theory
of Poetry
ginal or familiar.
eccentricity. "Original? 13 The implied in the very idea of a Monster." cannot be absolutely original since the poet may poetic process draw his impetus or material from the objective world or
an
from
his
own mind.
The
latter
was
affected
by Milton:
"In
it
is
Milton himself
whom you
Adam,
it is
his
Ra-
are all
a sense
me the greatest pleasure in 14 Milton's works." And yet earlier Coleridge could reading say that Milton's sympathies or personality did not come in the way of the plan or objective of the poem: "In the desof this intense egotism that gives
you have Milton's sunny side as a man The love of Adam and Eve in Paradise is of the highest merit No one can rise from the perusal of this immorcription of paradise itself
tal
sense of the
how
enjoyments he really was, notwithstanding the discomforts which actually resulted from an apparently choice
in marriage."
curious irony that made Coleridge breathe himself into the last sentence here in 1818 when his own
It
is
15
unhappy
'unhappy choice in marriage drove him away from the hearth. It is likely that, like Milton, Coleridge too wanted a wife like
Eve.
And
make the feeling in that very personal feeling process undergoes a transformation and appears to be impersonal.
intensely deep experience tends to
An
too personal.
But
this
feeling acquires an important place in Coleridge's theory of poetry. The artist "must always be a poor and unsuccessful cultivator of the Arts
if
.
he
.
inward powei, a
13.
feeling.
14.
15.
Feeling
and Poetry
135
in his Art, if in the course of his progress, the obscure impulse does not gradually become a bright, and clear, and living Ideal!"" The mighty or dominant feeling or passion must
become a bright, living idea. The original feeling centres round an object or an image. As his feeling grows and develops, it replaces the original by itself and then becomes one with the idea embodied by the original object or image. The intensity of passion gives rise to an understanding of the symbolic character of its starting point, and the symbol is then replaced by the idea.
Throughout the process is determined by feeling which is a personal feeling, and there does not seem to be a way of "When a .man is attempting to describe escaping from this.
another's character, he may be right or he may be wrong but in one thing he will always succeed, in describing himself. If he expresses simple approbation, he praises from a
consciousness of possession If he approve with admiration, from a consciousness of deficiency." 17 The personal factor appears to be unavoidable. But if a work were to embody the
personal feelings, can it have an objective value? With reference to The Prelude he observed: "It is for the biographer,
not the poet, to give the accidents of individual life. Whatever is not representative, generic, may be indeed most
cally expressed, but
is
poeti-
not poetry.
5518
The poem
is
not to be
At the same time the poet cannot piece of autobiograhpy. his exclusive experiences and go beyond present humanity ob"unbiased mind an absurjectively, since it is remarked:
519
dity.'
The mind
is
to
one
his
may struggle; and yet one is own life. That is, the personal
into the impersonal. The true poet gets the "facts elevated into theory, theory into laws and laws into living and in-
16.
Treatise
on Method,
I,
63,
17.
18.
Notebooks,
B.L.
II,
74.
33,
101.
I,
19.
Notebooks,
59.
136
Coleridge's
Theory of Poetry
telligent
powers
realism,
and realism
true idealism necessarily perfecting itself in 80 Facts are refining itself into idealism."
apprehended as instances or symbols of a theory. Then the Facts are thus translated theory is transformed into a law.
into
truths,
and
these
truths are
is
to be
embodied
as living
powers or ideas.
This
form
to
of feeling
known
as intuition.
kind of sympathetic intuition enables the imagination identify itself with the object; and through feeling, this,
And
too deep, we have the "substitution of a subfeeling of the unimaginable for a mere image." lime feeling The em-
when
is
it
a rare power of
and ade-
"By deep feeling we make our Ideas what we mean by our life ourselves. I think of the wall it is before me, a distinct Image here. I think of the Idea and the thinking I as two disnecessarily tinct and opposite things. Now (let me) think of myself
dim
and
this
is
the Idea becomes dim whatever it be dim that I know not what it is but the feeling is deepand steady and that I call I identifying the Percipient and 21 the Perceived." The subject is identified with the object and in such a deep feeling all the distinctions and differences
of the thinking Being
so
are obliterated.
The
resulting experience
is
one of identity or
unity; and in seeking to understand it fully the mind becomes active and the feeling becomes identical with its substance.
This substance comes from ideas and images. The power of poetry, he says, is "to instil energy into, the mind, which compels the imagination to produce the pic22 ture." This picture embodies an idea and
and
its
vividness
is
20.
21.
22.
Notebooks,
I,
921.
II,
Shakespeare Criticism,
174.
137
feeling.
83
"Strength
is
of
feeling
connected
with vividness of
Idea",
substance of feeling.
intensely only
himself.
felt
when
withdraw himself
in solitude that
into<
"I
must be
can
either
2*
my
It
is
Imagination or Heart
the
meditating
self
feel fully.
1794, Southey heard that "When a he writes damned bad poetry." This does unhappy, not imply that poetry emerges from a subjective state of exul21st October,
On
is
man
tation.
only means that joy as such is an integral aspect This is an objective state. Taking of the creative process. Milton's adjectives 'simple, sensuous, and passionate' as an
It
defmiteness and articulation of imagery." The articulation emerges from the innermost core of the poet's being. And it
25
was in my heart it is only the echowhich you hear from my Mouth."* The echo comes from a
is
observed:
"the Voice
voice that has realised a unique state of objectivity. What is the kind of objectivity that a lyric can express? Is it not the expression of a personal emotion? The lyric "in
its
very essence
is
poetical."*
The
lyric
is
no more the
Then alone can 'I-representative' but the poet as a person. he argue that poetry for the early men "was the language of passion and emotion; it is what they themselves spoke and heard in moments of exultation, indignation." 28 Yet he observes that 'deep
and quick'
sensibility
and depth
of emotion are
and
23. 24.
Notebooks,
ibid.,
I,
I,
1099.
1610.
I,
25.
26.
27.
165-66.
28.
38
'energy of thought.
an
essentially
it
human
The depth of emotion refers to its being emotion, and the energy of thought sePoetry
is
cures for
the pro-
duct of
'the
whole soul
of
man
in action
55
can
be, or
ought to be,
is
all poetry.
Passion
the 'soul of
Poetry'; and
good poetry
poetic genius, imagination is 'the soul that that give us is not the 'striking passages
5
is
everywhere.
It
poetic excellence
nation
art.
30
;
work
of
Without the 'framework of objectivity and without the 'definiteness and articulation of imagery poetry becomes day,
5
dreaming; and "passion provides that neither thought nor imagery shall be simply objective, but that -the passio
vera of humanity shall warm and animate both. Pure objecAncient poetry, tivity, is not possible because of passion.
"It is this inwardness however, is said to be objective: or subjectivity, which principally and most fundamentally
distinguishes
all
5531
the
is
classic
from
all
the
modern poetry."
is
32
Modern
jectivity
poetry
of
more inward.
or
5533
;
There
even
the persona,
dramatic
character,
uni-
lyric
no manner. 5533 * Then certain forms like and the ode are subjective, while the epic
bound
is
to express
and omnipresent
29.
creativeness
B.L.
B.L.
I,
30,
II,
14-19. 84.
I,
30. 31.
32.
II,
11-13,
109.
33.
Table Talk.
Ibid.
33.*
139
that
is,
it
characters emerged out of his once true to nature, and fragments of the divine
mind
that
drew them."
35
He
harmo-
nious fusion of the subjective and the objective. He imitates not 'his own nature, as an individual person', but the natura
88
In psychological terms
all the
*
this
is
forms of
all
'becomes
"my
affects
is
more than
my
all
within
something
whole soul of
man
The
creative act
is
a kind
But the product represents an aspect of this state of being. Possibly here may be found the distinction between poetry and the poem. "Poetry of the highest kind may exist without metre, and even without the contraof yearning.
30
Poetry
is
that state of
experience where imagination has not yet succeeded in subjugating the movement of passion. "In all violent states of
passion the mind acts and plays a part, itself the actor and 40 the spectator at once;" In the poem proper, the mind is a detached agent and there is the embodiment of the essence
of poetry. The poem is the embodied expression of poetry. In poetry the ideas are under the gentle control of the
feelings.
Coleridge observes:
"Our
dex and hand of the dial; our feelings are the hidden springs which impel the machine, with this difference, that notions
34.
35. 36.
37.
38.
39.
40.
140
and
feelings react
41
The
artist
turns this interaction to a significant end. The passion that is at the basis of the creative act is so closely connected with
metre "that
of metre
many
we read
in prose are
which we
forward
48
only they are forms have not been familiarised to and are not
us
brought
English readers in the In the actual poem or a poetic passage shape of metre." some words may have a jarring effect on the ear since they
to
and other
rhythm.
that
Coleridge defends poetic diction; for he notes "Nose not usable in poetry because no passion but nostril is noIt is
worthy passion.""
the words.
passion makes poetry the ideal,, That is, the poem is the highand the est possible manifestation of the ideal. The poem is related to poetry as the symbol to the idea.
In
this
context
we may turn
to
an
interesting note:
"Poetry without egotism comparatively uninteresting Mem. write an Ode to Meat and Drink."" But if the Ode is written,. we will have a poem, not poetry. The latter may breathe
da Hence poetry and the poet are defined subjectively. The famous definition of the poet emphasises the wholeness of the soul and activity which are revealed in and through a series of relationships.
egotism to some extent, but a
that.
poem cannot
is
convincingly
The
obiectification of poetry
the poem.
45
It is the failure
that
responsible for the absence of genius in the poetry of Dryden and Pope. Thus he notes: "Like Pope and Dryden
is
till
15,
well!
if
from thence to 25 or
Genius
41. 42.
but
may
II,
Shak. Crit.,
Ibid.,
12.
79-80.
I,
43.
44. 45.
Notebooks,
Ibid.,
I,
644.
62.
12.
B.L.
II,
141
The series of relationship that a genius effects are reducible to a system governed beside others by the principle of the reconciliation of opposites. This principle, however,
yer.""
assimilation of one
entity
to
the other; and this is intuitively "We should not, however, argue that poetry is illogical, for poetry has a logic of its own. It is an activity that is regulatrealised.
and immediately
ed and
controlled
by the
logical tendency.
As a
significant
note reads:
"A
,"
words in which
with pleasure
The
tut assimilated and transcended. The poetic process involves This struggle is chargthe struggle "to idealize and to unify." ed with a dominant passion which centres round a prominent
idea.
The two
is
contem-
The two
and
of poetry
is
immediacy
" the communication of immediate pleasure. This carries with it a spontaneity that seeks to subordi-
nate the volitional activity, even though the volition is necessary for the emergence of form. Poetry differs from science
exhibits "those powers of mind, which are spontaneous rather than voluntary, and in which the effort required bears no proportion to the activity enjoyed."
in that
it
review of Burgher's Gedichte in the Jenaische Literatur Zeitung, January 1791, employs the exAllgemeine pression 'emotion recollected in tranquillity.' Through ColeSchiller's
ridge it passed on to the famous statement about the origin of poetry in Wordsworth's Preface. Coleridge's emphasis is
not so
much on
tranquillity as
on the emotion
itself;
for poetry
Notebooks,
Ibid.,
I,
I,
669.
47.
786.
142
Coleridge's
48
Theory of Poetry
is
act of composition."
to
be
poem.
till
The
work
"Those who have written delightful poems with good sense, and the common feelings of all good and sensible men; but
without the passion, or the peculiar feelings, and stronger excitements of the poetic character Deserted Village, but especially Cowley's
Cromwell."
40
The
to-
overcome the sentimental and be charged with a predominant The poet has "a more than ordinary sympathy with passion.
He has an and an extraordinary activity of the sensibility mind. These powers enable him to have "a more vivid reflection of the truths of nature and of the human heart." The passion and the idea are then fused into one. The predominant passion around a significant idea is capable of being exHence he pressed in an orderly and harmonious manner. records in a note "Hotheaded men confuse, your cool-headed
the objects, emotions, or incidents contemplated."
uncommon
man
50
of
warm
feelings only
produces order
and
true connections."
The
sort of pleasurable emotion, which exertion of all our faculties gives in a certain This activity of the mind is spontaneous, not volundegree."
tary.
It
is
mood
are modified
"the
state
of
pleasurable expression employs words, and even in the imaginative activity there must be a verbal aspe*
highly
whole."
The
final
"Examine minutely
of the verbal
and growth
almost
the
48.
Shak.
Crit.,
I,
163.
49.
50. 51.
Notebooks,
Ibid.,
I,
I,
829.
868.
I,
Shak.
Crit.,
163-64.
Feeling
88
and Poetry
is
HS
Ideal."
The
unifying principle
imagination.
by the will to and harmony. Here is the give rise to proportion, congruity source of verbal imagination. Once it is awakened, it orders
This emotion
is
gently regulated
the entire composition; for "the business of the writer, like that of the painter whose subject requires unusual splendour 55 is to raise the lower and neutral tints." and
prominence,
The language of excitement is heightened and intensified by art. The language is selected "by the power of imagination proceeding upon the all in each of human nature", and by
meditation
that
results
is
from the
if it
61
activity
of
imagination.
Mere
observation
is
mechanical
agination which
"creation rather than painting" 65 at once upon the eye the whole picture. flashes
the
verbal imagination which brings about "a perfect appropriate80 ness of the words to the meaning." This is the criterion of "untranslatableness in words of the same language without in67
meaning
of a
The poem has in it the full meanword includes "not only its corresall
pondent
object,
but likewise
68
who
is
representing
it."
Darwin
to keep his
paints
and
analyses,
how
own
from what he
writes.
necessary to pathos.
have written
52. 53. 54. 55.
his
poems
I,
as painters
who
of beautiful objects
Notebooks,
B.L.
II, II,
II,
1275.
98.
B.L.
B.L.
64.
102-3.
56.
57.
II,
I,
115.
14-15.
58.
II,
115-16.
144
Coleridge's
5*
Theory of Poetry
is
take
studies."
Mere
succession
the
product
of fancy.
Reducing succession to an instant is an act of the imagination. While succession is governed by personal likes and dislikes, genius reveals "a choice of subjects very remote from the private in-
and circumstances of the writer himself. Regarding "I sought for a the proposed poem The Brook he observes: subject that should give equal room and freedom for description, incident and impassioned reflections on men, nature, and
terests
5 ' 60
society, yet
supply in
itself
61
and unity
prima
to the whole."
facie
view
to
be
But
"
Abruptness .... An
.abrupt beginning followed by an even and majestic greatness compared to the launching of a ship, which after sails on in
a steady breeze." The unity or wholeness of a stream is what a good poem would embody. Into this unity there enter diverse elements
63
which reveal a
poetry
8
'
"is
the
human
passions,
needed
is
The poet must have the 'sur-view. This "encomposition. ables a man to foresee the whole of what he is to convey appertaining at any one point;
and by
this
means
to subordinate
portance, as to convey it at once, and as an organised whole." This organisation involves the patterning of sounds. In a letter u he informs us, in my opinion, poetry justifies as poetry, independent of any other passion, some new combinations of
many
others allow-
59.
Notebooks,
B.L. B.L.
II,
I,
I,
132.
60.
14.
61.
62. 63. 64. 65.
129.
I,
Nootboohs,
B.L.
B.L.
II, II,
225.
19.
44.
Friend, 2-408-9.
145
able in other compositions." It is an art conscientiously and He defines the poem deliberately undertaken by the poet. with reference to an immediate 'object', 'purpose' or 'end'
Tvhich not a spontaneous overflow, but "the art of communicating whatever we wish to communicate so as both to express and produce excitement, but for the puris
pleasure.*
It is
67
This purpose
is
achieved by an
writing
is
"Good
pro-
duced more
as
it
effectually
exists,
already
8
Invention.'"*
^visual effects
We may
by
half
a dozen strokes
the
89
pencil,
or
the
is
as
many
But poetry
and compression
Poetry presents the reconciliation of spontaneous impluse and voluntary purpose, even if "the very act of poetic composition itself is, and is allowed to imply and to
The visual effects produce, an unusual state of excitement." evoked by a draughtsman or by a painter are not allowable
here.
71
"The
it
sole
difference in style
it
78
is
that poetry
demands
a severer keeping
admit, but
may
not oftener
Poetry implies a severe disciFine descriptions usually evoke their effects "by a charm pline. of word, with which and with whose combinations we associate
oftener rejects."
but no distinct images." This might gratransform even the nature of reason. He told dually Southey on 18th September 1794 that Caldwell told him "that the
feelings, indeed,
66. 67. 68.
73
B. L.
II,
8-10.
II,
Shak. Crit.
67.
May
1796.
69.
70. 71.
16-18.
Letter to Thelwall,
B.L.
II,
56.
72.
Anima
Poetae, 229.
I,
73.
Collected Letters,
349, 511.
146
strength of my Imagination had intoxicated my Reason and that the acuteness of my reason had given a directing influenceto
my
Imagination."
Poetry
is
spontaneous impulse.
and understanding.
and then employ it carefully. "Through the same process and by the same creative agency will .the poet distinguish the degree and kind of the excitement 74 Then he produced by the very act of poetic composition."
proper to the creative process
will intuitively
know
and degree
of the fusion of conscious volition required, and the necessity of figurative language. The story and the event are not sa
important as imagination and feeling. Referring to Sou"I am fearful they he wrote in April, 1797 to Joseph Cottle:
that he will begin to rely too
much on
story
and event
in his
and
feeling
presents discrete
fine arts, has "to express intellectual purposes, thoughts, conceptions, sentiments, that
human mind."
7*
74. 75.
B.L. B.L.
II,
64.
II, 102-3.
76.
7.
NATURE OF POETRY
The
as
the
individual in a specific state of experience is knownThe nature of the poet provides the clearest poet.
Taking up
this line of
ap-
proach Coleridge observes that the pogLls_g__nian of passion andjrf sensibility. Rejecting the 'state of excitement' expressed
crudely
and
directly,
he
insists
that
excitement
figurative
language.
Thus
he
command
'a
and
7
that a strong passion employs language more measured than 1 that in common speaking. Hence too 'passion is the true parent
of every
word
This passioiv
feelings.
"The poet
the
is
who
carries
8
childhood into
powers of manhood/'
a
and simplicity
are
accordingly
some
characteristics
distinguishing
poem
feeling
is
cooperation with sensibility. stand for emotionalism or ability to receive sensations vividly. The sensations are inseparable from the emotional excitement.
This excitement
tion.
is
the
same
as joy,
and
it is
other than
emo-
Since passion and emotion are most important along with ideas, Coleridge considers plot to be only a canvas. He
1.
Shakespeare Criticism,
S.C.
II,
I,
206; B.L.
II,
50.
2. 3.
15.
S.C. II,
148.
148
"I told Joseph Cottle early in April 1797: will begin to rely too much on story Southey
am
fearful that
and event
in his
poems, to the neglect of those lofty imaginings, that are peculiar to, and definitive of the poet." This, however, does not mean that Coleridge was not aware of the other factors in
the poem.
ed
*flie
In a letter to Wordsworth on 23.1.1798 he analysa tragedy into "language, character, passion, sentiment and
particularly unmindful of the story and of This might lead to an identification of plot-construction.
is
conduct."
He
He remarked, "a poem of any length 4 But the term can be, or ought to be, all poetry." .neither poetry, he observes, is applicable to painting and music as
the various arts being differentiated
8
nvell,
by the
differences in
their media.
The medium
is
which
it
can
any
art.
He
considered
genres.
medium.
iDthcr,
This classification depends on the nature of the While the medium varies from one art-form to andifferent
is
passion.
Passion, however,
is
no chaotic
state.
Coleridge observes:
.order
"By excitement of the associative power passion itself imitates and the order resulting produces a pleasurable passion whence metre)." Passion is not only a state of excitement, ((
it
'but
with
it.
In
this
consequential ex-
citement
pattern.
there
arises
an order,
is
This pattern
will
a
it,
the
poem
cease
to
be
by poetry acquire an
interest
objects touched
4.
5.
B.L.
II,
11; S.C.
I,
226.
Lectures, 30.
t6.
Nature of Poetry
all
distinct
human
soul."
Just as the
volitional act suspends the volitional attitude of belief, the passion or excitement that gives rise to the poem not only excites
our emotions but tempers them. In other words, excitement with which poetry is concerned is a strange blend of two divergent trends.
It excites
and
also refines.
In this polarity,
we
A
8
sensi-
a component part of genius along with imagination and will. As Coleridge told Daniel Stuart on May 16^
1801, "cheerful thoughts come with genial sensations." The poetic activity thus includes the physical and non-physical activities; it is the whole individual that is active, not some
1
mystic essence. As a consequence the poem too embodies varied aspects that make up the human being.
tfcfc
In this activity the individual has an experience, in which his feelings are so deeply stirred that he does not have a consciousness of his exclusive personality. This state has been described by many, at least since Plato, as an inspired one. Early
"I would write 1797, Coleridge informed Cottle: not unhearing of that divine and rightly-whispering voice, haply
in April,
which speaks to mighty minds of predestinated garlands, starry and unwithering," Late in life in his .lectures he remarked:
"what Hooker
'Her seat
world;
is
law
the
bosom
of
all things in heaven and earth do her homage.' It is the language of heaven, and in the exquisite delight we derive
as
it
that not only explains the spiritual quality of the poetic content, but it also reveals that the joy or delight communicated
by poetry
a spiritual experience. In this experience the body ceases to be physical and it is transformed into the spiritual^
is
The poem
7.
resulting
205-6.
I,
not,
however,
M.C.
B.L.
8.
30.
9.
Lectures, 391-2.
150
tell
Coleridge's
Theory
.of
Poetry
us something original; for, inspiration is that moment of texperience where we intuit the meaning and value of life, the
true nature of
reality.
though we
liarity
are
unaware
is
and
selfish
solicitude.'
offers
an
insight
veiled in
normal
feel
in
Thought, or in Action
combined with the power of conveying such perceptions and feelings to the minds and hearts of others under the most pleasurable forms of eye and ear this is poetic genius." The
poet does
not
feel
reveal
anything new.
It
is
said:
'Those
having
only who
no
originality,
no
consciousness
of
received their thoughts and opinions from direct inspiration, are anxious to be thought original. The the certainty,
feeling that he
is
right,
is
enough
for the
man
10
of genius."
poetry what we have is the authentic voice of experience, a voice that rings with the truth of the intuited, not with the claim of originality. This feature is re-
In
true
vealed by the feeling experienced and communicated by the Hence it is that the specific character of the poet. poem
This genius experi"originates in the poetic genius itself." ences the world not as it appears to the senses and the understanding. 512 world.
11
That
is,
The man
world
it is
is
of genius lives
real
The
life
ideal
more
of daily
because
ex-
perience. it, the poetic genius reveals an intense imaginative activity. It is such a "poetic genius, which sustains and modifies the emotions, thoughts, and vivid repre13 sentations of the poem."
It is therefore
In apprehending
10.
Anima
B.L.
II,
Poetae, 160.
11.
Lectures, 12.
30.
12.
13.
Lectures, 12*
Nature of Poetry
151
mature of poetry.
To
feel, to intuit,
is
not something that comes from agination. Imagination outside, nor is it regulated by any principle other than itself. "The profoundest activity of the self is called imagination.
f
Genius then
14
is
nation."
But reason
not
other
than
imagination.
The
And
be known before
we
know
by imagination.
"At least no ridge informed Thelwall on April 23, 1801: poet has a right to be certain, that any poem will remain what it is, until he has written the whole." That is,
the great poet is not fully conscious of what he is doing even during the composition. "There is in genius itself an uncons-
cious activity; nay, this is the genius in the man of genius." It is unconscious in the sense that one does not know it,
18
though he
so
feels
it.
In
other words,
state
not self-conscious.
impresses
In this
the
the
itself
on
it.
the
so-called
it
unconscious
exter-
nal as to appear in
Thereby
realises
a synthesis, tend-
As the genius begins to compose the ing towards an identity. poem, there is a faint return of self-consciousness. This envaguely the specific character embody in his work. As he informed Southey on December 17, 1794: "Before you write a poem, you should
least
ables
is
him
to
know
at
he
going to
say to yourself
it
what do
is
thiSj
to be
predominant in
is
it?
So you makd
Some
idea of purpose
of composition to begin. because in the act of poetic composition the genius is no longer self-conscious. He is in the hands of the imaginative
necessary for any act This idea may or may not be realised
spirit.
Even the
will
cannot regulate
it.
15.
152
Coleridge's
it
Theory
of Poetry
"The rules of imagination are themCould a rule be selves the powers of growth and production. from without, poetry would cease to be poetry and sink given
Hence
is
observed:
into a mfcchanical
It is
art.'*
because of this imagination that works from within It is a form developing that a poem has the organic form.
The form
is
one
as-
pect of the manifestation of imagination. And reason and' understanding, that make the poet set before himself the specific
and regulated by the imaginative activity. This activity is an ever growing one in the sense that it develops itself in order to idealise and unify. It captures the richest moments of life and then tends to express and communicate these. This;
power
is
is
It
is
not acquired.
it
It
its
also constantly developing in the sense that career in human life during childhood and
begins
human
being.
Thereby
it
tion grapples with temporal succession which it arrests in an eternal present. This is what is aphoristically stated as resuccession to an instant, as ducing resolving succession into simultaneity.
In
this
light
the
expression or revelation of the self but of reality. tion may therefore be said to be the activity
realise the identity of the self
character and privilege of genius' is "to carry the of childhood into the feelings powers of manhood, to combine the child's sense of wonder and novelty with the appearances which everyday for perhaps forty years had rendered familiar." It is therefore "the prime merit of and its
The
genius
most un-
equivocal
of manifestation'', "so to represent the familiar objects as to awaken in the minds of others a kindred
mode
concerning them and that freshness of sensation which is the constant accompaniment of mental no less than of bodily, convalescence." Genius produces in "th*
feeling*
poems
strongest
Nature o/ Poetry
15&
most admitted' impressions of novelty, while it rescues the from the impotence caused by the very circumstance of truths The focussing of imagination on their universal admission." the familiar objects will reveal the novel hidden to normal
perception of novelty, the insight into the true character of the object, evokes the feeling of wonder.
observations.
The
This
feeling
of
wonder
links
genius
to the child;
and
in-
expressing his experiences, he acquires accordingly a rare simplicity arising from the freshness of sensations and emotions.
Then the truths with which we are all familiar strike us as new and powerful. This is an essential feature of poetry. The poetic quality does not, however, originate in the
sensations.
It is the poetic
sensations which are inseparable from the emotions. The imagination makes the feeling active by giving it a substance;
and
this feeling
As Coleridge observed, "The Beautinot originating in the sensations, must belong 17 to the intellect." But this intellect is that already animated
feeling.
by imagination and
objects agreeable, the judgment, and
able.
As he
said:
"When we
find
always precedes
it agreethe contembeautiful,
We
find
its beauty precedes the feeling of complacency, in the order of nature at least: nay, in great depres18 sion of spirits may even exist without it." sensibly
plation or intuition of
producing Poetry which aims at giving expression to the Beautiful is based on the contemplation or intuition of the beauty of the This intuition may co-exist with, or give object apprehended.
rise to,
genius,
municating
16.
17.
is
this intuition.
5.
Friend, No.
B.L.
II,
242.
18.
B.L.
II,
241.
a 54
Coleridge's
Theory of Poetry
Coleridge accordingly observes that "the most general and distinctive character of a poem originates in the poetic genius
19
itself."
fies
It is the poetic
thoughts, and vivid representations of a 80 the energy without effort of the poet's own mind." poem by The poet's individual personality has practically nothing to do
the
emotions,
As a dim analogue of the -creative process, it is present in every one; it is no exclusive property of any one. The Beautiful does not arise as an exOn the contrary it "arises from the pression of personality. perceived harmony of an object, whether sight or sound, with the inborn or constitutive rules of the judgment and imaginawith
this activity of
imagination.
With regard to the lines always intuitive." "I had addressed "To a Gentleman" he told Wordsworth:
tion:
and
81
it
is
Since
as
I
on the
first
it
as well
ed
not being publishmy personality respecting myself .... It is for the biographer, not the poet, to give the accidents of individual life." Hence "the choice of subjects very remote
could, I
in
lifetime
interests
and circumstances
50
of the writer
himthe
poet
a feature of genius." The personality relevant to the biographer, not to the poem.
of
The impersonality of creative art is an important feature emphasising the universal as the fit theme. Even the intuitions which the poet has and which he seeks to express,
.are
And
cannot be expressed adequately in or through any medium, the artist is compelled to employ symbols. The symbols he
adopts are, however, charged with suggestion. Hence it is said that it is "not the poem which we have read, but that
to
S.C.
I,
106.
20.
21.
22.
B.L.
B.L.
II, II,
243.
14.
Nature of Poetry
33
155
We genuine power, and claims the name of essential poetry." undiminished feelings because return to the great poem with
^ach reading advances our apprehension of the suggested by it, because the power of suggestion
stible.
felt
is
content
inexhau-
In these symbols
idealization.
we
and
greater substance as
com-
as sympathy.
is
emergence from that state of feeling known In sympathy we lose our exclusiveness by tend-
In other words, it ing to share in the experiences of others. a principle unifying man with the external. This unificais
tion
The
The
the direction in which the imaginative activity proceeds. poet is then a 'genius' apprehending the whole universe.
universal that is 'potentially in each particular' is revealed to the artist "as the substance capable of endless modifications."
The
24
;
poet's
own
personal existence
is
yet he does not intuit or express these modifibut that of which they are the modifications. In this cations, ^endeavour he embodies in his work that which is of value to
fications
and
the entire
in
mankind
lives.
which he
He
seeks
and
intuits the
Hence it is said: "As a living real, not the appearances. poet must surely write, not for the ages past, but for that in which he lives, and those which are to follow, it is, on the one
hand, natural that he should not violate, and, on the other necessary that he should not depend on, the mere manners 25 and modes of his day." These external detachable features
s
life,
or in em-
The
25. 24.
poetic activity
14.
is
B.L.
I,
Lectures, 241.
Ibid., 49.
25.
15
contemplative imagination.
In
this
contemplation the
truth, to
menin-
an
But the insight demands a sigh* into the nature of reality. The contemplative activity involves an severer experience.
absorption in the impersonal. It interprets reality by creating a fresh one; and in this creation it needs judgment. "Shakes-
not peare shaped his characters out of the nature within", "Shakes"out of his own nature as an individual person."
peare in composing, had no
genius in poetry is the universal. Because of this elevation he can elevate things not only to the level of words but to that of living words.
The but the I representative." elevates himself into therefore one who
I,
3*
which we
is
It presents that
mo-
ment
of reality or
life
which
extending far
discovered.
In
this
experience
genius
reality.
discovers
re-
conciliation
appearances
with
He
of
harmonises
on
unity,
on
the
indivisible
is
In
no other medium
as powerful
power "to
find
no
Poetic imagination involves the contradiction in the union of old and new;
all
and all his works with had then sprung forth at the first
that feels the riddle of the world"
creative fiat."
"The mind
has this power with which it can attempt "to unravel it."* There is a magnificent passage in the Biographia where Coleridge summarises aphoristically the specific nature of the
therefore of poetry. He observes that the poet "described in ideal perfection" is one "who brings the whole soul of man into activity, with the subordination of its faculties to each
poet*
and
He
dif-
27.
Friend, No.
5.
157
it
and
were)
fuses, each into each, by that synthetic and magical power to which we have exclusively appropriated the name of ImagiThis power, first put in action by the will and undernation.
and unstanding, retained under their irremissive, though gentle noticed, control, reveals itself in the balance or reconciliation
of opposite or discordant qualities: of sameness, with difference; of the general, with the concrete; the idea, with the
image;
the
individual,
with
representative;
the
sense
of
novelty and freshness, with old and familiar objects; a more than usual state of emotion, with more than usual order; judg-
ment ever awake and steady self-possession, with enthusiasm and feeling profound or vehement; and while it blends and harmonises the natural and the artificial, still subordinates art to nature; the manner to the matter; and our admiration of
Here we have the poet to our sympathy with the poetry." an account of the equipment and faculties of the poet, a description of the nature of the work of art, and the effect of All these aspects are interpreted the work on the reader.
in the light of the holistic logic based
28
on the principle
of unity.
The
ideal poet
is
whom
are
im-
and judgment.
life
He
is
not only a
historian
5
and
of philosophy.
He
one
Imagination comprehensive, all-inclusive character of But this character needs a dynamic soul and the reality. poem resulting therefrom must breathe this dynamism. Bewithin himself the
and more
enables
cause of
perpetual activity, the poem comes to express a genuine experience of wonder at the mystery of the universe.
this
as
it
unifies the
mani-
28.
158
Coleridge's
Theory of Poetry
said
the Beautiful.
Hence
of
it
is
that
"the
is
safest
definition,,
that of Pythagoras:
sense of beauty sub-
The Reduction
to each,
Many
to
One
The
and
an immediate and
The
and from the intellect are harmonised by being regulated and controlled by imagination. A good poem then
the senses
can be neither predominantly sensuous nor too intellectual. The poetic activity involves 'the whole soul of man.'
Here imagination is the nucleus or the indwelling principle around which all other faculties or activities are organised.
In uniting of this arises the unity of the composition. 'sameness with difference', the poem appears as a growing It is an imitation and or evolving form in spite of a pattern.
yet a creation.
it
Out
expression and reason or understanding. In other words, the ideas emerging from the intuitions are shown in poetry as coalescing with
the images arising from sense impressions. And the experience thus expressed is unique and yet symbolic. In such a poem we have the novelty of the fact intuited and the freshness
of the sensation
we have a
which this intuition brings in its wake. The and the freshness are presented as permeating the old novelty and familiar objects and pattern as well. This evokes the reader's surprise and recognition.
we do discover and an unusual ordering of emotion, the emotions, sensations and symbols. This ordering or arrangement distinguishes the poem from a prose composition.
In the
poem
an unusual
state of
in the evolution of this pattern that the poet's powers of judgment are ever awake; and this judgment comes from
It
is
.29.
B.L.
II,
238-9.
Nature of Poetry
159
unusual tranquillity and sanity of mind. a sanity that carries with it a great enthusiasm,
the
Yet
it
is a.
vitality
with
tremendous
exists
potentialities.
with a profound or vehement feeling. With all this we are told that imagination not only "blends and harmonises the
artificial",
but
it
manner
to the matter."
nature to
art.
The
artist
for the simple reason that he has to depend only on symbok which are inadequate. Moreover, the imaginative activity is-
not the same as the creativity inherent in the universe, but only a dim analogue of that. It is therefore essential that art
should have the power of suggestion.
In
this suggestion
we
have the self-transcendence of all the finite forms. The work of art as an embodiment in a determinate medium is characterised
by
finitude;
and yet
this finitude
is
animated by the
Because of this art conspiritual activity called imagination. to become one with nature. Nature for Colestantly aspires
ridge
is
it is
Reality.
In aspiring to be-
work
of art leads us
beyond
itself.
experience, the artistic composition takes us to a wider and more significant experience. again In this self-transcendence, the manner or the form is subordi-
Here too
this
subordination
only the self-transcendence of the manner. The form aspires to become one with its matter, just as the complete work exhibits a straining to become one with the spirit.
Such a work
who
is
able to
But
this
admiration slowly gives way to 'sympathy with the poetry.' That is, we tend to become one with the experience which the
poem embodies; and through the poem we seek to realise the harmony with the spirit embodied in nature. The poem or the work of art thus comes to mediate between man and
In this mediation imagination has a significant role because it humanises nature; it functions like "the soul that
nature.
JW
is
everywhere, and in each/' This soul takes the medium of rhythm which has a molten because of which it is treated as
life
the
of the composition.
fine arts "certainly
80
The
sible
.artist
sight
sen-
This however does not mean that the impressions." or reproduces the external universe. The precise copies
relation
fic
is
a speciis
one.
within the thing, for so only can he hope to produce any work truly natural in the object, and truly human in the
-effect."
nature
31
In other words, he has to imitate the beautiful in and embody it in a proper form. Thus the beauty of
refers to lines
a painting
and
colours.
The
lines
"belong to
Shape and
presence of
life
are the
of
work
life
As he observed more
clearly,
"No
object of sense
sublime in
itself, but only as far as I make a symbol of some Idea .... The circle is a beautiful figure in itself; it becomes sublime,
and
life,
38
it."
It
is
the fusion of
of
that
renders
the
familiar
objects
the
and
by the
contemplative imagination.
object might appear as sublime; and this sublime is "neither whole nor parts, but unity as boundless and endless allness"; it is a "total
In such a
mood an
completeness."
It is
a form of the
all
Infinite.
And
earlier in
however,
Treatise
is
on Method,
Lectures, 314.
Ibid.. 354.
32. 33.
XXII
(1925), 532-3.
Nature of Poetry
Intuits
it.
161
Hence the
lines
but the language of nature, universal and intuitive, by virtue of the law by which man is impelled to explain visible motions by imaginary causative powers
his
analogous to
own
acts.'"*
and
But Cole-
"Colour
is
because
it is
sensation.
But a
mass of
attention to the form of the mass or of the parts, 30 delightful but not a beautiful object or colour."
artistic interest.
shapeliness unrelated to the intellect denies the freedom of the creative mind. It is the significant shapeliness as enliven-
Mere
ed by
This significance
aris-
human
One
which
.senses."
is
38
the beautiful.
congruous with the primary constitution of our Even here "those objects can be admitted which
belong to the eye and the ear, because they alone are susceptible of distinction of parts." The universe as perceived by these two developed senses is the only one which art presents as a whole.
may have many parts. But conveys what we see and feel
It
"the very
:
word
'part' imperfectly
it
in division, the
charm
ceases."
The
beautiful arrangement
exclusively
in
itself
3*7
35.
Ennead,
Allsop,
1.6.1.
I,
36.
37.
197.
Lectures, 354.
38.
B.L.
II,
231.
39.
162
Coleridge's
Theory of Poetry
40
Thus in expressing the. the unity of the shapely with life, the work of art transmutes of art is analysAnd where a work parts beyond recognition. able into its component parts, it is not a great work. The work of art has an intrinsic value. The beauty
as beauty:
and
this
is
called order.
it
embodies
fit,
is
the
or the useful.
itself
is
The
sense of beauty
41
is
intuitive
and
aloof
beauty
is
all
and
The work
of art thus
own
must
sake.
It is
an end unto
itself.
And
which
yet to be great
This brings man and the universe into an organic oneness. feature is revealed by the organic form without which there
can be no
artistic creation.
in every empiri-
cal intuition
mines the agreeable: but when a thing excites us to receive it in such and such a mould, so that its exact correspondence
to that
mould
is
42
what occupies
is
the
mind
this
is
taste or the
sense of beauty."
The
arts.
thus the main preoccupation of the fine This beautiful intuited by the creative imagination is
beautiful
of the universe.
no formal quality
"Beauty too is spiritual, the shorthand hieroglyphic of Truth the mediator between Truth and Feeling, the Head and Heart The sense of Beauty
is
implicit
knowledge
silent
communion
the Spirit in Nature, not without consciousness, though with 43 the consciousness not successively unfolded." Our conception
and awareness
of Reality
is
is
apprehended by
limitation
40.
is
"we confine beauty ...to objects of sight and combinations of sounds." 44 This
due to the very framework of the
arts.
Where
Lectures, 355.
Lectures, 314.
Ibid., 355.
41.
42.
43.
44.
Nature of Poetry
the eye and the ear are excluded, the intuitions of the creative artist.
it
is
16$
difficult to
embody
the influence of imagination mediate between the internal and "The mythe external, between the appearance and reality. stery of genius in the fine arts", he said, is "to make the
and
thought
This
Nature."
45
In
this
transmutation
nature.
felt
achieves
the identity of
identity,
man and
is it is
however,
And
"To
And
mind
'music',
and
the very rhythm of the soul's movements." The movement or activity of the soul in its imaginative activity has a rhythm >
a harmony; and
This
is
this
rhythm
is
the
first
medium through
fine
to express
itself.
the vital
process of
life
which
art
endea-
vours in various ways to express. A. W. Von Schlegal described romantic spirit as that which "is perpetually striving
after
^marvellous births" thereby "approaching more 40 to the secret of the universe." This is generalised by Cole-
new and
Art becomes ridge to refer to the character of Fine art as such. more true and more profound when it presents the living process of life; and Shakespeare is taken to have presented "our inward nature, the working of the passions in their most re47
tired recesses."
is
ren-
of Coleridge's conHe is interested in character rather ception of organic unity. than in plot because it is the consciousness of the individual that is 'the focus and mirror' of the "loving and life-producing ideas" which carry with them "the certainty that they are
essentially
45.
dered actual.
This
an important aspect
Ibid., 315.
Lectures,
S.C.
I,
98-99.
198.
Lectures,
315.
164
Coleridge's
Theory of Poetry
The
which
great
poem
consists in the
4*
said elsewehere, "The shapely (i.e. formosus) with the naturally agreeable, constitutes what, speaking joined
As Coleridge
accurately,
we mean by
the
word
80
beautiful."
It is the
good
In
identity, even
opposites.
"The
two
balance, the perfect reconciliation, effected between the conflicting principles of the free life, and of the confining
is
7
form"
necessary
"The
stiffness
that
would have
is
resulted
of the latter
almost volatalized, by the interpenetration and electrical flashes 51 But such a view does not truly represent
is central to Coleridge's theory. the ancients, he speaks of beauty as the one in the Following many, as harmony. "The beautiful, contemplated irt its essen-
tials, i.e., in
jstill
kind and not in degree, is that in which the many, It is 'the unity of the maniseen as many, becomes one."
fia
53
the 'unity in multeity.' It is the development of an identity into the manifold, and the involution of the many into the one. Taking such a stand,
fold, the coalescence of the diverse',
54
He could 'Coleridge spiritualises poetry and all the fine arts. .even speak of 'the beauty of virtue and holiness' like Plotinus.
.Accordingly the immediate intuition of beauty is like 'light to And the mind "cannot but have complacency in tthe eye.'
^whatever
Hence
i.e.,
is perceived as pre-configured to its living faculties. the Greeks called a beautiful object Kalon quasi Kaloun,
calling
on the
soul,
which
55
receives instantly
and welcomes
it
as something connatural."
49.
50.
51.
*
Ibid.,
314.
II,
B.L.
234.
52.
53.
236.
Lectures, 314.
Ibid., 318,
54.
55.
B.L.
II,
243.
8.
VALUE OF POETRY
"the art of communicating" something "both to express and produce excitement, but for the purpose of im1 The excitement giving rise to an immemediate pleasure."
Poetry
is
diate pleasure
by
it.
poem.
is expressed in the poem, and it is also evoked This end or value is said to be already present in the The value is intrinsic, it is inherent. Coleridge
also speaks of "that pleasurable emotion, that peculiar state and degree of excitement that arises in the poet himself in
The excitement
the poet
had dur-
the excitement expressed in the ing the act poem, and the excitement evoked by it in the reader are all
of composition,
similar.
The excitement
is
exclude an emotional atmosphere; and this gives rise to an experience of pleasure which is not mediated by reason or
human
pleasure.
He
informed Thelwall on
May
13, 1796:
which
interests."
On
December 17
of
him
that "poetry ought not always to have its highest relish; and, secondly, judging of the cause from its effect, poetry, though treating on lofty and abstract thoughts, ought to be deemed
impassioned by him
who
reads
it
Here Coleridge
pleasure.
is
He
is
trying to qualify or specify the kind of speaking of a pleasure which is not one of
feeling
in
an
1.
166
but with impassioned feelings. Here poetry differs from other branches of human activity. "The proper and immediate object
of science
is
the acquirement
proper and immediate object of poetry is the communication 8 In other fields of human endeavour of immediate pleasure." the immediate object is the communication and apprehension of
truth.
But
in poetry
it is
pleasure.
it is
in
itself, it is
immediate.
is not a pure undifferentiated one. an art of representing, in words, external nature Poetry and human thoughts and affections, both relatively to human
affections,
by the production
is
1
of as
in parts, as
the
whole."*
nised
not
Human thoughts and affections are harmowith external nature in poetry in such a way that only is the external humanised, but throughout the
there
is
poem
is
human
its
interest.
This
human
interest
is
comthus
in
factors.
The poem
component
parts.
an
organic whole like the poem must be capable of giving rise to an immediate pleasure. And the pleasure communicated by each part must not be at variance with the pleasure arising
to
be
The poet considerably modified later on. brings "the whole soul of man into activity", "the subordination of the faculties of the whole soul of man to each other,
is
This view
He has a according to their relative worth and dignity." peculiar state of excitement in the act of composition, and this
may
be designated 'as the pleasurable emotion, which modifies
Ibid., 9-10. Ibid.,
2.
3.
398.
II,
4.
B.L.
12.
Value of Poetry
167
of the
and
and
human
heart.
This pleasure too is them to the various distinguish its components by referring a poem from a prose composiWhat distinguishes faculties.
tion
is
of all our faculties gives in a certain degree; but which can only be felt in perfection under the full play of those powers
which are spontaneous rather than voluntary and in which the effort required bears no proportion to the activity
of mind,
6
The pleasurable emotion involves the activity of human being, not any one faculty only. And though
arises
poem
from that
activity of imagination
which
is
colost
exists
the will
When
means that
external to
he speaks of pleasure as the immediate object he it is realised without any mediation of the factors
it.
After
all
men put
more meaning into their words than I." And he was using the word immediate in its significant philosophical sense. The is an immediacy: it is an unmediated poetic pleasure experience by reason or understanding. "In other works the communication of pleasure may be the immediate purpose; and
though
truth,
either
moral or
intellectual,
ought to be the
ultimate end, yet this will distinguish the character of the author, not the class to which the work belongs/' The im-
mediacy he speaks of is that which does not take us to an end different from pleasure. Where pleasure is immediately evoked and yet truth is the ultimate end, pleasure becomes
only a means; and with regard to such a work one can say that the author is not a true poet. Poetry is poetry only when it has an end intrinsic to the not when it has an ulterior poem,
motive.
5.
ulterior end,
we have only
6.
168
ons
the poetic value of the composition. If pleasure is all that characterises the experience of the does he have the same pleasure in the apprereader or
spectator,
It is in this
context that
The aesthetic experience: Coleridge's formula appears striking. It is not the same as, is no illusion, nor delusion. or situation
a normal experience.
He
describes the
mood
as one of "will-
The
Belief
and
tion.
An
When
the individual's-
intellectual and emotional beliefs and disbeliefs are suppressed or suspended, the kind of pleasure that arises and interestSL us. will have no colouring of the personal prejudices, likes and
dislikes.
It
is
is
truly impersonal
or universal.
This pleasure must be inherent in the work of art. "Nothing can permanently please, which does not contain in itself 7 In other words, the pleasure that is. the reason why it is so."
experienced by the reader or the spectator is the pleasure that is embodied in the work of art. If this state of feeling or emopresent in the ugly or in the tragic, the reader or the do not and canspectator too is bound to experience it.
tion
is
We
not bring an emotion or feeling from outside in order to exWe willingly suspend our normal categoperience the poem.
ries
and
principles as
we go through
the experience
communi-
cated by the poem. Hence it is that in the aesthetic experiencewe do not begin discussing whether this experience or its em-
bodiment
concern
apply.
is
it is
real or unreal.
Our
with the work to which these predicates do not Speaking of fiction, he observed that it "is not felt to
is
7.
B.L.
II,
9.
Value of Poetry
169
be
fiction
when we
We know
be representation, but we
to be a reality."
knowledge situation we are concerned with the normal categories of ordinary life; but in experience these categories are
suspended because they have no application. Between the normal life and the poetic experience there lies the wide gulf that separates knowing from feeling. Every other branch of
human knowledge
or doing.
or endeavour
is
it.
Poetry
basic to
distinguished
It is
which
is
is
directed towards
therefore of the consequent joy that Coleridge bemoaned in his Ode; and in that poem he related feeling and joy to imagination.
taste.
pleasure evoked by poetry depends on Taste involves "an intellectual perception of any object blended with a distinct reference to our own sensibility of pain
The immediate
and
pleasure."
being.
That
is,
our
own
Without
intellectual perception
has no meanat
an
and
attains this
of lan-
8 guage natural to us in a state of excitement." Just as the poem originates from the union of deep thinking and deep
feeling,
the experience
it
is
union; and
we
give the
name
taste.
Consequently
tion
is
taste functions
more or
less like
its
imagination.
It
appointed funcit
latter, while
realizes the
It combines and unites "a sense of immediate pleasure in ourselves, with the perception of exter11 nal arrangement. The images are blended with the ideas,,
Lectures
Ibid.,
10.
II,
and Notes,
227.
9.
10. 11.
B.L.
170
Coleridge's
Theory
of Poetry
Taste thus becomes the experience of the total individual and yet it agrees in its broad generality with the experiences of all
declare an object beautiful, and feel "an inward right to expect that others should coincide with us." "involuntarily claim that other minds ought to think and feel
others.
We
We
the same.""
Each reader or spectator would then be "legislatmen" only because he is convinced that "each intel13
representative of all."
it
'certain universality.
This universality
is
namely, pleasure.
tual
It
basic to the immediate object of poetry, depends on the blending of our intellec-
In this blending the sensibility. images arising from sense impressions are harmonised with
perceptions
with our
In other words, the pleasure expressed in and communicated by a poem is not the so-called pure feeling or pure
ideas.
In order pleasure, but one charged with a universal content. to distinguish this pleasure from that of other moments, this
one
It is a pleasure requalified by the word immediate. with those intuitions that are at the basis of all human plete life, intellectual and moral. Coleridge thus observes: "When a mere stripling, I had formed the opinion that true taste was
is
virtue
refers
and that bad writing was bad feeling." 14 to "the close and reciprocal connection of
15
Elsewhere he
just taste with
is
The immediate object then pure morality." which is both intellectual and moral, and yet
tional experience.
it
a pleasure is an emo-
While knowledge may bring forth dejection, feeling gives rise to joy. But this joy or delight is not external to feeling. As he said in the Ode, it issues forth from the same soul that feels. This delight .may be viewed as passion, joy, and the like.
joy.
or
it
is
the
same
as Joy;
feeling
From
Ibidr
Ibid.
Anima
15.
Value of Poetry
171
this
is
standpoint
for
two
it
different
levels.
It
is
passion
the
in
the
poet
excite-
is
in
when
the reader
is
infected with
he 'tends to
the resulting joy, not so much on the excitement that leads him to this state of delight.
This however
told
is
is
not active.
He Southey on 21.10.1794, "When a man is unhappy he The pleasurable emotion arises writes damned bad poetry."
from the apprehension of the whole, "of which each part shall 16 also communicate for itself a distinct and conscious pleasure."
The
ciousness of pleasure
from the component parts" and this characteristic distinguishes the poem from other species of comThis way of stating it appears also in 1811 when he spoke of "pleasure from the whole, consistent with a cons18 ciousness of pleasurable excitement from the component parts."
Is this
position.
As
a quantitative standard that Coleridge is laying down? far as poetry is concerned, "each part shall also comitself
municate for
greatest immediate pleasure from each part should be com19 As patible with the largest sum of pleasure on the whole."
he defined
it
in a clearer
is
composition, which
for
its
immediate object pleasure, not truth; and from all other species (having this object in common with it) it is discriminated by proposing to itself such delight from the whole, as is compatible with a distinct gratification from each component
Each component unit of the whole must give rise to part." a certain pleasure; and the pleasure arising from these parts
16.
17.
20
10.
18.
19.
.20.
Shak. Crit.
Ibid.,
I,
II,
78.
164.
12.
B.L.
II,
172
should agree with that evoked by the whole. Coleridge applied a similar analysis when he spoke of the intellectual, moral, emotional and sense elements in the total feeling of pleasure..
On
The physiological system exquisite electrometers of taste." as much as the mind participates in the immediate pleasure
or the soul.
felt is felt
not by
a part of the individual but by the entire organism. In such an experience each part of the organism is involved in its own way. Likewise it may be said that each part of the poem has a specific contribution to make to the final immediacy; and all these are harmonised by the whole. Yet the
specific
pleasure communicated by the whole is not qualitatively identiAnd since the cal with that evoked by any part or parts. evoked must be inherent in the composition, there pleasure
fails to
communicate some
specific ele-
ment
Coleridge is thus deducing the pleasure as an intrinsic feature of the composition from the organic unity of the poem, from his concept of
of the total experience of pleasure.
organic form. In this light he tells us that where pleasure is the immediate object of a poem it refers to "the two master
impulses and movements of man the gratification of the love of variety, and the gratification of the love of uniformity." The former arises from the component parts, while the latter
is an organic form. This pleasure has no personal element. "Beauty is all that inspires pleasure without and aloof from and even contrary to-
Probably translating Kant's 'interessenloses Wohlgehe speaks of the 'immediate pleasure.' The poet must fallen', 21 The end is always aim at pleasure as his specific means." one of 'cultivating and heart of the reader', the
interest."
predisposing
and
23
may
also
As he observes
at
one
Just as imagination is
21.
22. 23.
B.L.
Ibid.,
II,
II,
105.
104.
Value of Poetry
175
is
striving
it.
towards depersonalization, so
from
The
no
direct or
The term comequivocal. of placency 'expresses the intellectual nature of the enjoyment The to preclude all emotion.' the beautiful', but it 'seems
But pleasure, he admits,
is
delight 'conveys a comparative degree of pleasurable emois therefore unfit for a general definition, the object tion,
word
and
-of
which
is
Coleridge
is
therefore
aware
name
-embodied and communicated by a poem; and when he employed the term pleasure, it was only for want of a more suitfoist
Consequently it is an error of interpretation to on him the theory of a pleasure-calculus. By pleasure he does not mean what we normally mean by that word. This
able word.
collate his different statements.
In
or Locke having as his immediate object not pleasure, but "truth which might hereafter enlighten the pursuit of pleasure, or something nobler,
for which
Newton
distinct altogether
from
what
common-sense can be brought under the name of pleasure, but which was expressed in the
in the ordinary
sacred writings as a peace that passeth all understanding, the delight of which could never be known but by experience,
which, consisting of no difference of parts, but being in itself 23 Here entire, must be altogether unknown, or fully known."
he
is
and which
It is in
carries
with
it
expressing
to
and suggesting such a state and in enabling the reader have such an experience that we have to seek the value
poetry.
24.
25.
Ibid., II, 224.
of
Shak. Crit.
II,
75.
174
Coleridge's
Theory of Poetry
This state of feeling has something of the character of reads: "Symsympathy. A note book entry of June 1801 the poet alone can excite; any dabbler in stories may pathy
excite pity.
The 'more
is
am
convinced that
38
admiration
an
Sym-
pathy
is
when we
feelings
and emotions
a state of in-
ducing a sort of unity with the external. In order to understand the nature and value of poetry, therefore, "we must combine a more than ordinary sympathy with the objects, emotions, or incidents contemplated by the poet, consequent on
sensibility,
acti53J7
mind
necessary to ap-
That
the affective-
They are
inci-
dental to the
main imaginative
activity
which gives
rise to
'more than musical delight.' It is not a simple delight emergThe ing from the form alone, but from the work as a whole.
organically linked to the imaginative activity; imagination becomes active by stimulating all other mental
delight
is
and
and
physical
the
activities.
And
poem we,
therefore,
apprehend the value of need "a more than usual state of emo-
in order to
more than usual order; judgment ever awake and steady self-possession, with enthusiasm and feeling profound or vehement.'** Emotion and understanding have to function
tion with
vehement
There
feeling
which alone
may be a moral feeling in this experience. If the moral feeling is present, "there will accrue an excellence even to the
26.
Notebooks,
Shak. Crit.
B.L.
II,
I,
957.
164.
27.
I,
28.
12.
Value of Poetry
175-
89
But
this
is
to evoke.
The
upon is a unique harmony of thought As he observed in a note on Hartley's Observafeeling. tion on Man: "Ideas may become as vivid and distinct, and the feelings accompanying them as vivid, as original impressions. And this may finally make a man independent of his senses. One use of poetry." The immediate pleasure which
pleasure Coleridge insists
and
the object of poetry thus turns out to be a pure spiritual experience, an experience in which we are emancipated from
is
the conditions
imposed on us by the body. This state emerges in and out of the resolution of an inner conflict. It arises from the overcoming of the dark night of the soul. Thus he observes: "To the idea of life, victory or
limitations
and
virtue consists not simply in the absence of vices, but in the overcoming of them. So it is in beauty." Out of the conflict there emerges the richest moment of life,
strife is necessary, as
10
moment where we
experience a value.
as a result of the reconciliation or balance of the opposites. Coleridge in a letter of 1806 remarked that "the source of
our pleasure in the fine art" is to be found "in the antithetical The revelation of eternal balance-loving nature of man."
values is the basic function of the secondary imagination. These essentially humaji values may be designed by a few convenient names. But they are apprehended best not by the underbut by the feeling. A notebook entry of standing, early 1799
"Poetry gives most pleasure when only generally and not perfectly understood." This is because "by deep feeling we make our ideas dim." 31 Understanding fails in adequately translating into language the felt content or the felt background. We are conscious of the value communicated and
felt;
reads:
we can
only
intuit
it.
Hence
it
is
observed:
"The
29.
30.
31.
Friend,
I,
177.
176
Coleridge's
Theory of Poetry
to
interest,
sense
of
beauty
will)
(not
attached
in
it
does
not
act
on
the
rests
gratified
the
mere
or intuition
regardless whether
be a
the
fictitious
contemplation Apollo, or
a real Antinous.
fine
The
mystics
meant
beauty as the subjection of matter to spirit so as to be transformed into a symbol, in and through which the spirit
reveals itself;
32
beautiful,
come."
32.
9.
THEORY OF ART
"the immediate and inward beholding of the The ideas of reason and spiritual as sense is of the material." of imagination are "living and life-producing ideas which
Reason
is
In are essentially one with the germinal causes in nature." its higher reaches reason appears to be no longer different from
the creative imagination.
2
Reason
is
versal."
their
power of universal and necessary convicand substance of truths above sense, having Its presence is always marked evidence in themselves.
It
"is the
by the necessity of the position affirmed: this necessity being conditional, when a truth of Reason is applied to facts of experience, or to the rules and maxims of the understanding; but absolute when the subject-matter is itself the growth or
offspring of the Reason .... Contemplated distinctively in reference to formal truth, it is the speculative Reason; but in
we name
invisible
it
Reason
of
is
jects."
with
realities
or spiritual ob-
way
between poetry
and
Reason apprehends the truths that cannot be grasped by the senses. It is immediate and it cannot be analysed or examined by the discursive intellect. It originates all thought
and from
1.
it
we
derive our
ideas
of
God,
spirit
and
unity,
B.L.
II,
258-9.
2.
5.
4.
257-9.
178
Coleridge'*
Theory
of Poetry
the full and substanpractical reason alone is Reason in 5 It is embodied in the will, which together with tive sense."
"The
understanding first puts imagination in action. Genius cannot be opposed to rules because of the dominant role played
by will. "The spirit of poetry, like all other living powers, must of necessity circumscribe itself by rules" so that it can harmonise power with beauty. It can reveal itself only by
being embodied, and "a living body is of necessity an organized That which constitutes genius is "the power of acting one." " The creative creatively under laws of its own origination.
3
imagination of the
harmony
arc
of passion, will,
understanding and
reason.
most
of
the
basic
principles
They
carry
the soul of
man
unexpected sounds of his native language, when after long years of absence, and almost of oblivion, he is suddenly addressed'in his own
mother-tongue.
as his brother.
08
an
He weeps
This
is
to the gloss
stanza
And nowhere
Softly she
did abide:
And
The
that
existence
5
reason
can
it is
be
affirmed
'it is.
In
this sense
equivalent to
since
with
it
necessity.
Reason
is
is
"source
actual
all
truth."
/\nd
it
"prime agent in
perception",
the
We
Appendix
B.L.
II,
to
Aids to Reflection.
6.
7. 8.
19-20.
I,
Shakespeare Criticism,
First
223-4.
9.
Theory of Art
consciously a
10
179
ciousness."
power and an implicit wisdom deeper than consBut can we accept the great religious and philo-
denial or affirmasophical truths expressed in poetry without himself defined a poem as one "proposing for tion? Coleridge
its
11
If fall
this
were
so.
us that the
feel
Ode was
tomed "to
Immortality addressed only to those who are accusa deep interest in modes of inmost being, to
Ode would
down.
But he
which they know that the attributes of time and space are inapin plicable and alien, but which yet cannot be conveyed save 12 and space." Then there are certain truths symbols of time
expressed in poetry, but these are not to be taken as affirmaYet he takes Wordsworth to task for calling a child a tions.
philosopher, though one can willingly suspend his disbelief for the moment even on such occasions. This is an instance of
an
outline, not
mind of the critic. But Coleridge is aware of such a tyranny when he said: "Outline imprisons the mind of
over the
the
Artist
within
the
"
first
conception/
in
This
does
not
It
imply the
absence of freedom
the
creative
process.
One
is
under which the reconciliation of opis the necessity of a copula that can
unify,
by between the
for
it is
the possibility of reconciliation implied Thus we are told that "the contest
their
and
social
humanity."
for reform.
human
sense
metry, diminishes
solves
10. 11.
the
of
magnitude"
because
are
it
re-
the
opposition.
The
I,
"opposite
224.
powers
always
Shakespeare Ciiticum,
B.L.
B.L.
II,
II,
10-11.
120-1.
I,
12.
13.
Notebooks,
Ibid..
I,
1312.
14.
1350.
180
of
the
or by a
common
that
15
product."
is
to
either
copula
reconciles
the
imgination,
"an
intermedi10
ary faculty
It
which
is
at
once
both
active
and
passive."
can do nothing
If
with beauty, I can show it to somebody." cannot always create, it can at least show
conciliation of the opposites
is
imagination
reality.
The
re-
as
much
is
as to the poet;
of both
and character
it
of beauty in the
medium
work
of art.
Poetry expresses the beautiful, and great poetry expresses not in terms of perfect symmetry but in those of harmony.
In this harmony the opposing forces are neither eliminated nor The imaginative act seeks to show that the opposuppressed.
sition
is
it
is is
It
light
that Coleridge
faculties.
ties,
But when Coleridge talks about the different mental faculhe is aware of their inseparability. They are distinct,
"The
office
of philosophical
distinction
of
is
not division.
any
truth,
we must
this
so,
is
distinguish-
able parts;
and
the technical
process of philosophy.
we must
18
and
this
is
do not have separactivities since in any mental able, independent activity we have the total mind as a single unit. Yet we can analyse
faculties
The
the
mind,
15.
within
certain
limitations.
Thus
and
reason
needs
On
B.L.
State, 38.
16.
17.
86.
I,
Notebooks,
B.L.
II, 8.
1356.
18.
Theory of Art
the understanding even
if
181
other.
opposed to each but imagination is supreme faculty; more important because it reconciles reason with understand19 ing, because it "brings the whole soul of man into activity."
the
logically
two are
Reason
is
the
The terminology
fore mislead
ridge's thought.
us in understanding
When
to
"to
from notional
its
yet
counteracting
and the
or
generations to
which
their interpenetration gives existence, in the living prin80 and in the process of our own self-consciousness." The ciple
entities
of
must be opposites, not contraries. Thus sweet and and therefore irreconcilable. The opposweet is sour, and the two can be reconciled. Copy
contraries.
The primal
human mind
The
artist
must
apprehend and control the natura naturans "which presupposes a bond between nature in the highest sense and the soul
of
man/'
together.
lect
"Man's mind
is
which are scattered throughout the images of nature." And the mystery of genius is to elicit from these forms moral reflexions, and "to make the external internal, the internal
external, to
The thought, and thought nature." of sense to thought, of the opposition physical to the spiritual, is reconciled which has consequently a unique by imagination
place in
19.
make nature
21
human
B.L.
B.L.
II,
I,
life.
12.
20. 21.
197-8.
B.L.
II.
257-8.
182
Coleridge'*
Thccry
of Poetry
"must imitate that which is within the thing, that which is active through form and figure, and discourse The idea which puts the form together to us by symbols
The
artist
cannot
itself
be the form.
It is
is its
essence,
2"
itself."
True imitation involves the union sameness and difference, and when
ciled,
and
unlikeness,
we
it is
Hence
are actually implying the strife of the opposites. "To the idea of life victory or strife is remarked:
necessary; as virtue consists not simply in the absence of vices, but in the overcoming of them. So it is in beauty. The sight of what is subordinated and conquered heightens the strength
and the
'
"
pleasure.
The
strife of
the opposites
is
overcome
by imagination.
the language
employed by and all symbols give outness sophical essence and purpose
"Language
philo-
Thoghts/and
12 *
this the
of
Language.'
is
The
thought
in
which
is
inward
or
internal
made
external
the
form of symbols. These symbols in poetry are words. The strife between the inward thought and the outward symbol is
resolved in the emergent organism called the
Life
is
work
of art.
the
unity
of
thesis
and
antithesis
and
"in
consists:
two counterpowers, life subsists; in their and in their reconciliation it at once dies
a
and
new
form,
either
falling
back
into the
of
anew
is
in
the
process
of individuation."
vital unity,
The law
of polarity
ganic unity
the interpenetration of the counterpowers a higher third which includes them." This evolugenerating
we have
22. 23.
B.L.
II,
II,
259.
B.L.
263-4
I,
Notebooks,
1387.
Works, Works,
I, I,
391-2.
See Foglc:
399.
Theory of Art
tionary process illustrates "the unceasing polarity of
the form of
its
life,
183
as
process,
and
its
its
direction."*
The
reconciliation of
described as balance, equilibrium, harmony, polacoordination, conrity, fusion, interpenetration, coexistence, It is coextensive with life and it substantiation and identity.
implies that imagination
verse.
is
Human
ship of these
life
under-
many
others.
The
inter-relation-
Understanding at the human level is Reason the sensuous faculty combined with self-consciousness. 28 In The Friend we find is the faculty of the supersensuous.
reason treated as synonymous with conscience which "commands us to attribute Reality and Existence to those Ideas"
real
and
consistent.
Under-
"the faculty of thinking and forming judgments on standing the notices furnished by sense'' and talent is grounded in the
understanding.
Talent
can
have
only
"the
faculty of ap-
propriating and applying the knowledge of others" while genius has "the creative, and self-sufficing power." Thus we have
"the shaping skill of mechanical talent, and the creative, pro29 ductive life-power of inspired genius." The two correspond to the mechanical and organic forms. And we respectively
are told that
"Form
is
factitious thinking,
and thinking
is
the
process; imagination the laboratory in which the thought ela30 borates essence into existence." Imagination is the mediat-
active
and passive
"relatively to each
Understanding
it
can
with
'inanimate cold
world' and
deals
Works, 1.401.
Friend, Nos. 5 and 9; Letter to Tulk, 1821.
29.
30.
I,
I,
4-5.
Anima
Poetae, 186.
184
mechanical structures.
with truth.
Reason
is
And
so
he states:
Truth, that Poisoner of "Mix up Truth and Imagination, so that the 1803 tells us: Imagination may spread its own indefiniteness over that which
really
its
sense of substance
and
18
distinct-
and truth
Imaginagives im-
The
new dimension
Coleridge
to reality.
speaks of "that illusion, contra-distinguished from delusion, that negative faith, which simply permits the images presented to work by their own force, without either
denial or affirmation of their real existence
3*
by the judgment."
That which
is
expressed
is
an
The
him
This contact involves a symbetween the external symbol and the apprehending mind. pathy Even the intuition, he quotes from Hooker to tell us, is "a
a reality
is
which
emotional.
direct
to the
of
an object
84
the senses or the imagination." intuition unravels the mystery of the given because it
mind through
It
is
This
is
not
conditioned.
be
its
real content,
beyond time and space. Whatever may it comes to us after gathering substance
from the world of experience. In this it is not the same as the Kantian imagination which is a free, but formal activity;
it
reality.
Coleridge's imagination
passive.
is
Even the
senses
Because of his imagination, "the great artist does that which nature would do, if only the disturbing forces were abstracted."'*
31. 32.
Then
that
which
is
Notebooks.
B.L.
II,
I,
1541.
107.
B.L.
II,
230.
1815.
Letter to Allston,
Theory of Art
185
capable of being accepted as true or real, and therefore subWhat kind of belief does a poem ject to affirmation or denial.
Coleridge's plea for the "willing suspension of disusually taken to imply that questions of truth or Poetry induces falsity are irrelevant with regard to poetry. "a sort of temporary half-faith"; it may be a "negative be-
involve?
belief"
is
lief" like
we have
in
Since "any act of judgment, whether affirmation or denial, is impossible" in connection with
dream,
"We
neither
believe
in
it,
nor disbelieve."*
we
his
This takes us to the importance of content. Judging from earlier writings, Coleridge made the remark: "I cannot
write without a body of thought hence my Poetry is crowded and sweats beneath a heavy burthen of Ideas and Imagery It has seldom Ease.'" Thought and imagery are taken to
!
charge his poems with an unusual intensity, even though he would not deny the value of these. An image by itself is not poetical. Only when the images "are modified by a predominant passion, or by associated thoughts or images awakened 38 by that passion", they become "proofs of original genius."
This original genius has. a social value. He told his brother George on 10th March 1798 that he devotes himself not to
His task in poetry is "to elevate the tune by the beauty of the inanimate as with a living soul, impregnated, by the of Life." This is possible "when a human and intelpresence
imagination and
set the affections in right
lectual
life is
The
highest
36.
them from the poet's own spirit." 39 emotion must enliven it; and the absence of pastransferred to
I,
Shakespeare Criticism,
Letter to Southey, B.L. II, 16.
199-203.
37.
38.
llth
February 1794.
39.
B.L.
II,
16.
186
sion behind the figures shows only "the madness prepense of or the startling hysteric of weakness over-exert-
pseudo-poesy
40
ing
itself."
we have an
in-
tellectual element.
41
poetry."
Such an
"A
and
has no place in poetry; for the secondary imagination animates and humanises every thing. It transfers a human
it
and
The poet
objects his
And the instances given by Colelife and passion. The are mostly similes, metaphors and personification. ridge is seen to act "by imcreative imagination in these instances
pressing the
stamp
55 *3
of humanity, of
sort of
human
mate
objects.
creative process, and this Humanisation contains the verse of artistic experience. of all mythology and symbolism.
empathy seems to take place in the empathy humanises the entire uni-
germ
Imagination
symbols.
sets
The myths
urge to expression they had. But those myths live no longer in the faith of reason!
But
still
still
4*
The
the old instinct bring back the old names. heart controlled the reason and the emotional setting en-
Doth
abled the creative process to discover myths. The Greek way of myth-making is taken by Coleridge to be akin to allegorisIt has little use for the symbolic presentation which alone ing.
is
carried out
interest,
by the animating creative imagination. The life; and "Nature has her and he will know what it is who believes and
life
own, and that we are poet's heart and intellect should be combined, intimately combined and unified with the great appearances
that everything has a
life.
of
its
one
40.
41.
II,
103;
B.L.
II,
65-6.
42.
43.
I,
212-3;
B.L.
II.
16-18.
The
Ptccolomini,
II,
iv.
129-131.
Theory
of Art
187
of nature, and not merely held in solution and loose mixture 41 The fusion of with them, in the shape of formal similes." the heart and the intellect cannot be denied to the Greeks,
though Coleridge's religious bias appears to cloud his judgment in this particular context. Nature was not dead to the Greeks. But since the Greeks are said by Coleridge to have
included in each statue a
to
God
is
be dead or hollow.
This
faculty of the
tion.
together organically as
bound the case when "the modifying and 40 The artist must know at the operates.
you should
"Before you write a poem, say to yourself ... what do I intend to be the
.
this Poem which feature is to be predomi46 nant in it?.... So you make it a unique." Ideas are not to be transformed into finite entities. The "translation of ab-
Character of
picture language" can present only "empty echoes which the fancy arbitrarily associates with 47 The finished entities, the 'fixities and apparitions of matter."
definites',
is
do not grow.
They echo
"At
least
poem
until
a growing organism.
no Poet has a
right to be
is,
certain, that
any Book of a Poem will remain what it he has written the whole/ 548 The last syllable will
vision at the start was.
tell
the
is, the poet durthe act of composition cannot be conscious of the ing poem in
That
its
form
of the supra-conscious.
is
symbolic or imita-
Art
is
The reader
44.
in
dissimila-
Letter to Sotheby,
Ibid.
10th September
45.
46..
Letter (o Southey,
17th
191.
December
1791.
47.
48.
Mwf.
Crit..
148,
Letter to
John
1801.
188
rity,
and
also
The and outlook into the objects. of poetry is versal and "the essence
ever
is
1
artist
universality."
"What-
not representative, generic, may be indeed most poetiIn poetry we have "an cally expressed, but it is not poetry/
51
The
ideal or
poem must be a coherent system and also a great symbol. As a form of experience it is an end in itself, and as capable of evoking that experience it is symbolic as well. This twofold character makes the work of
art stand
verse.
It
on terms of equality with the Berkeleyan Uniand it is therefore is a sign and also a symbol;
not different from the activity and product of the human mind. This led Coleridge to remark that the "productive power which is in nature, as nature, is essentially one with
the intelligence which
is
in the
nature/"'"
Art reveals the spiritual process and also symbolises it. It is a process of self-revelation guided and determined by imagination.
evolving the
to
"Shakespeare worked in the spirit of nature, by germ within by the imaginative power according
53
an idea."
Th germ
is
is
nic Idea
which
The Idea
when
it
is
apprehended as one
never becomes the equivalent of a concept and different from an image. Hence one can only contemplate it, though it transcends form. It is through a
it.
The symbol
is
a sound
B.L.
II,
56.
II,
Shakespeare Criticism,
B.L.
II,
9.
51. 52.
53.
33, 159.
Friend.
Misc.
Crit.,
43.
54.
II,
B. L.
259.
Theory
of Art
189
chosen by the poet; and this sound is other than an image. It is a determinate existent with rich powers of suggestion.
in
Art employs symbols which embody "the germinal causes Nature" and which therefore do not appear as copies. A
close
is
copy gives only masks, not "forms breathing life." The similarity between the natural processes and the poetic
basic tenet of
the Coleridgean
aesthetic.
The
poets of
the
Renaissance, he notes, are "like fair and stately plants, each with a living principle of its own, taking up into itself and
diversely
soil
organising the nutrient derived from in which each grew .... In all their hues
the peculiar
and
qualities
an organic
gives
it
existence.
It
it exhibits vitality. originates out of it. idea of a self-originating or self-evolving form does not appear only in his aesthetic. In The Theory of Life, life
The form
The
"the power which discloses itself from within as a principle of unity in the many"; it is a principle "of unity in multeity", for it is a power that "unites a given all into a
is
said
to be
whole that
is
presupposed by
still
all its
parts/*
Beauty
is
is
it
"that in
is
seen as
"mul-
teity in
unity."
The
determined
by extension and
A
to
work
it
of art
which
by inclusiveness and organization .* "rich in proportion to the variety of parts holds in unity." The parts are organically related
intensity,
is
511
Yet
it
reveals itself in
artist are
and
through symbols.
tionary.
not evolu-
When
55. 56. 57.
Shakespeaie Criticism,
242-3.
Theory of
B.L.
II,
Life, 42.
232.
Life, 44, 47-50.
58.
59.
Theory of
B.L.
II,
255.
190
Coleridge's
Theory of Poetry
indiimagination with reality, we have value and therefore This uniqueness embodies the ideal and the value viduality.
The real and the ideal are therefore real. Thus a poem expresses the real and it also The concrete particularity of the given is universalises it. transformed into individuality and the character of the univeris
significant
and
not different.
80
As against Aristotle and Kant, we find Coleridge following Plato and arguing that the When these universals emerge in universals are constitutive.
sal
constitutes
its
very
essence.
the particulars,
lity.
81
cess.
we get a higher order of being called individuaThis implies for Coleridge that the universal is a proIt is not a state but an activity. It is well to remem-
ber that the voluntaristic idealism of Coleridge is based upon the basic concept of an act of the will. This is taken by him
as a
also
way
from
of escape
from
Aristotle's objections to
Plato,
and
metaphysics.
universal,
and
it
is
When
it
"ela-
we apprehend a
is
value; and
when
every idea is living, containeth an endless power of semination.'"" tial idea of ingratitude is elaborated into the
Thus
the essen-
of as
play King Lear; more than the originating idea. is winnowed by imagination and transmuted into a power tremendous significance. The idea in its turn strikes us
it
embodies
is
more
real than
actual
life.
It
is
more
real
because
its
power
The Idea
60.
B.L.
Ibid.,
I,
178.
'01.
61.
62.
6.3.
I,
Ibid., II,
187,
259.
Theory
of Art
191
But
brings this universal into a relationship with the particular. for the symbol, the universal will have only a mental existit
ence;
will
work
of art.
The mere
hand
will
remain an existent without a significant essence. Even if a poet were to take it up and seek to express it without the aid
the expression would be too personal. The composition would present snatches of autobiography and this
of the symbols,
is not what we About the really expect of poetry. 'To a Gentleman" he wrote to Wordsworth stating that poem
at least
individual
life."
biographer, not the poet, to give the accidents of 04 These accidents will remain as particulars;
enter poetry
and
proper.
Poetry reveals the universals. The discrete particulars of nature are the organs of the universal, u as the lungs in relation to the atmosphere, the eye to light, crystal to fluid, figure to space." Art shows the universal as that which is "capable
''
of endless modifications
culars.
It
0150
working
in
parti-
demands a
Shakespeare,
we
variety that can present organic unity. arc told, follows "the great law of nature
that oppositcs tend to attract and temper each other", and he achieves an organic whole "by the balance, counteraction,
inter-modifications,
result
unit)'.
is
and
final
harmony
which
of different*."
is
07
The
Such a unity may an individuality. The form and the content acquire an integral character.
versal
work
of art
The
uni-
and the
and the
as
to
real,
if
value and
reality
is
concreteness
have
be
realized
identical
to be apprehended.
64. 65. 66. 67.
have
this reali-
Cf7 B.L.
B.L.
II.
3
B.
State smew' *
II,
Manual, App.
I,
Shakespeare Criticism,
224;
II,
262-3.
Coleridge's
Theory of Poetry
zation
is
imagination.
act of creation." repetition in the finite mind of the eternal The counterpart of the external world is constituted by the
senses
and
the understanding
The
universal processes of
reason and in its counterpart exalted state this reason is not different from the creative imin
human
is
all
It
"the living power and It not only creates, human perception." constructs or reconstructs reality and ex08
a creativity of nature revealed through a certain energy which fuses the universal and the particular. A simiis
There
is
which harmonises
the impressions, images and ideas derived from the external world with the insights and intuitions of reason. Both these
energies are directed to render reality concrete Imagination, therefore, is "that reconciling
and
significant.
and mediatory
by the per-
energies of the reason, gives birth to a system of symbols, harmonious in themselves, and consub-
Here is a point of nation unifies only reason and understanding, and not senseThis passage also reveals the departure from Shelexperience.
ling according
which they are the conductors." departure from Kant who held that imagi-
00
to
whom
all
"a dim analogue of creation not all that we can believe, but 70 that we can conceive of creation."
The understanding
68.
69.
is
discursive, mediated,
and matter-
B.L.
1,
202.
70.
1804.
Theory of Art
193
moulded.
It
is
analytical
It is
and
reflective,
sense experience.
lities,
preoccupied with "the quantities, quaand relations of particulars in time and space. The
is
understanding, therefore,
their
and
of
subsumption under
71
distinct kinds
and
sorts.
Its
func-
and
ence."
All that
is
assimi-
memory, fancy and understanding, and the remainoffices of the mind are ing appropriated to reason and imagi72 nation. Reason works with the physical universe employing
lated to
different categories.
object but the material world in relation to our worldly interests/'" It brings the world and man together in order to
facilitate the realization of specific ends.
But when
it
seeks
to
go beyond
74
stance."
it
comprehending the idea of subThese contradictions are inherent in the very tools
its
employs and in
own
nature.
And
Coleridge preserved
autonomy religion by assigning to them respectively the dominance of understanding, imagination and reason. "The judgments of the understanding are
binding only in relation to the objects of the senses, which we 73 reflect under the forms of the But imaginaunderstanding.
tion involves unities.
see unity everywhere. The component parts of this do not explain it but "they unity necessarily presuppose it as the cause and condition of their existing as those parts; or even of their existing at all. 55 The root, stem,
the
of science, poetry,
and
We
and
leaves, petals the like cohere in one because of "an antecedent plant Power or Principle in the Seed. 5576 The whole is a
inorganic
76.
194
Coleridge's
Theory of Poetry
mere
is
collection of
its
parts,
and
whole
"Depend on it r whatever is grand, whatever is truly organic and living, the 78 The work of art is logically whole is prior to the parts." and existentially anterior to its components. The artist reeverything, and the parts are nothing."
veals
is
"growth as in a plant."
79
Explaining it, he observes: "all each line, each word almost, beis
not merely an organism, but This explains Coleridge's it is a growing organism, a process. with the psychological process that brings great preoccupation
poem
The
tuates
80
it
'effec-
its
own
secret
to
it.
The
unity here develops from within; it evolves itself. emergent form is not the impressing of "a predetermined
It is
The
the organic
form which
shapes as
it
develops
is
itself
fullness of
its
fection of
its
one and the same with the perdevelopment 81 8 outward form." It is "form as proceeding",
It
has an inherent teleology, "Not only the characteristic shape is evolved from the invisible central power, but the material mass itself is acquired by assimilation.
fixed air
But
if
there
organic self-generation,
how
does consciousness
cious component;
we
read:
"what the
78.
79.
80.
Shakespeare Criticism,
Statesman's
I,
Manual,
77.
See
Fogle:
Coleridge's Idea of
Criticism.
81. 82. 83.
Shakespeare Criticism,
B.L.
II,
I,
2234.
262.
Theory of Art
195
plant
is
by an
act not
its
own and
85
unconsciously, that
must
Read together the various thou make thyself to become." mean that of which we are not passages make the unconscious
normally conscious because
tional consciousness.
it
is
the higher
The
it
embodied content.
develops
is
"is innate; it
itself
fulness of
one and the same with the perfection of its outward 88 form. Such is the life, such the form." The component their determinate form simultaneously from the parts develop
ment
seed.
seed.
The developed organism is potentially present in the The form of the developed entity represents the limits
and form
is
is
thus
content,
and
is
the
part
not
separable
is
The
com-
The
final
expression
then inexhaustible.
It
cannot
be fully analysed.
The poem is comparable to a plant. In such a comparison we are only pointing to a certain likeness, not to an idenAs Coleridge remarked, "no simile runs on all four tity.
legs.""
It
is
of a difference.
The
creative,
distinction
is
that
talent,
In the mechanical activity "each part is separately conceived and then by a succeeding act put together." 88 But harmony is manifested in each case of organic unity since the are
productive
inspired
genius."
parts
It is
what may be
called
It is at organization which reveals a specific unique value. times designated method which is "a of unity with principle
85.
86.
Shakespeare Criticism,
I,
224.
II,
87.
88.
On
112-3..
Shakespeare Criticism,
4-5.
196
Coleridge's
Theory of Poetry
is
progression."
.itself,
a manifestation of
is
intellect."
Organic unity
and
expression of imagination.
life
conceptual
equivalent of
of sense
is
and
it is
also symbolic of
but only as far as I is a beautiful figure in itself; 80 it becomes 'sublime, when I contemplate eternity under it." The organic unity is felt as a value only when it is contemitself,
sublime in
. .
.The
circle
plated as a symbol.
gestion
it
a power of sug-
and
it
is
uniting
it
and progressive
power
of the mind.
Suggestion invests
with a sublimity.
The Coleridge's account of the sublime is helpful here. sublime is "neither whole nor parts, but unity as boundless and endless allness"; it is a "total completeness." 91 It is infinity.
It is
of
no help
in
any attempt
only "the faculty judging Understanding by the senses"; and Aristotle "was a conceptualist, and never could raise himself into that higher state which was natural to Plato, and has been so to others, in which the understanding
is
is distinctly
truths."
contemplated, and, as it were, looked down upon of actual ideas, or living, inborn, essential The Idea is like a seed germinating successive ideas.
The
artist
50 that he
should have a proper choice of the initiating idea may follow it carefully. That is, "a constant wake-
fulness of the
mind" is an absolute necessity. This brings forth "between our passive impressions and the mind's harmony * reaction on them." Then alone can the work of art evoke
the pleasure proper to it. It is an immediacy of pleasure jand yet it docs not exclude the intellectual content.
8.9.
0.
J532-3.
91.
B.L.
II,
309.
02. 93.
1830.
on Method,
7.
Theory of Art
197
is
The immediate
The
98
object of a
poem
9*
we
of poetry.
The
essence of
these arts
is
Coleridge's theory of poetry not different from his theory of beauty. The fine arts reconcile the image with the idea. They "belong to the out-
ward world, for they all operate by the images of sight and sound, and other sensible impressions; and without a delicate
tact for these, no man ever was, or could be, either a musician or a poet; nor could he attain to excellence in any one of 97 these Arts." Painting, we are told,
like a second and more lovely nature, Turns the blank canvas to a magic mirror; That makes the absent present, and to shadows
Gives
light,
and motion. The artist is impelled by a mighty, inward power, by a profound feeling which transforms the original obscure imThis idea works pulse into a bright, clear and living idea.
out the unity of the composition.
"The unity
will
be more
in-
tense in proportion as it constitutes each particular thing a whole of itself; and yet more, again, in proportion to the num-
it
unites as a
each is reciprocally means and end, an individual, and the individuality is most intense where the greatest dependence of the parts on the whole is com98 * bined with the greatest dependence of the whole on its parts."
so far interdependent that
is
The
is
B.L.
Ibid.,
II.
10.
95. 96.
220.
97.
98.
Treatise
on Method,
I,
62.
388.
198
Coleridge's
Theory of Poetry
is
Individuality
an emergent
is
of the
an organisation,
a unity, and that it has a life of its own. Life is with which it logically or ontologically prior to organization is inseparably bound. This life is conceived of as growth, It also comes from above and its source is the continuity.
99
infinite
am,
and
yet
it is
individual.
It is a process the great self-consciousness. It has "a circular motion, the snake
mouth."
100
higher
lie
state:
But beauty
itself.
is
outside of
It
is the highest state of life where subject and object, spirit and matter, are reconciled.
Beauty
"is,
the union of
In the dead organic it depends the shapely with the vital. on regularity of form, the first and lowest species of which is
the triangle with
all its
it is not merely regularity of form, which would produce a sense of formality; neither is it 5101 subservient to anything beside itself.' There is no absolute
may
organic unity
is
human
soul.
Such a
principle
the natura
of
intellect
"Man's mind is the very focus of all the rays which are scattered throughout the images of
so to place these images, totalized, and fitted to human mind, as to elicit from, and to superthe forms themselves the moral reflections to
nature.
Now
induce upon,
99.
B.L.
I,
202.
II,
100.
Unpublished Letters,
B.L.
II,
128.
101.
257.
Theory of Art
\vhich they approximate, to internal external, to make
199
make
thought, and thought Dare this is the mystery of genius in the fine Arts. nature, that body is I add that the genius must act on the feeling
nature
but a
striving to
become mind,
that
it is
mind
108
in
its
essence!"
dialectic
is
an aspect of the mind and in the aesthetic conor experience it becomes the mind. One loses the templation awareness of the body. This is not a state of the unconscious,
but a higher
tionism
state of consciousness.
fails to
many, still seen as becomes one. ..so far is the Beautiful from depending many, wholly on association, that it is frequently produced by the 103 mere removal of association." It reveals the balance, which!
is
The
one
aspect
of
the
process,
between
is
the
universal
and
the particular.
finition of life;
This statement
for life
is
in
is
multeity,
as
far
as
Life
the unity to wit, "the principle of individuaunites a given all into a whole that
former,
is
presupposed by
is is
harmony*
apprehended there
like
poem
thus
a living
harmony and wherever the presence of life. The is organism. "Beauty harmony and
It is
is
. .
can alone be a component part of the beautiful. even of this those objects only can be admitted which species, belong to
;
the eye and ear because they alone are susceptible of distinc5104 tion of parts/ But real beauty emerges out of "the perceived
an object with the inborn and constitutive rules of the judgment and imagination: and it is always intuitive." 105
harmony
This
is
of
Ibid., 233.
Ibid., 243.
105.
200
To
"The theory of the constitutive character. Thus he says: shapely joined with the naturally agreeable, constitutes what,
speaking accurately,
is
we mean by
the
word
108
beautiful."
Here
the beautiful apprehended through sense. But the higher the presence of life and free
It is
between those two conflicting principles of the Free Life, and How entirely is the stiffness that would of the confining form!
latter,
fused
and
by
5 ' 107
the
interpenetration
is
and
electrical
This
of the balance
and
reconciliation
and confining
stiffness
form.
the
The
of
latter
are
resolved
by imagination.
is
the
more
elastic in
ad10*
mitting those that need not be mutually contradictory entities. Poesy, as the generic name of all the fine arts, contains
the end in the means.
109
The
it
works
it is said that beauty a reconciliation of subject and object. "The sense presents of beauty subsists in simultaneous intuition of the relation of
parts,
diate
fore,
tified
each to each, and of all to a whole: exciting an immeand absolute complacency, without intervenence, there110 of any interest, sensual or intellectual." This is iden-
with the mystic's definition of beauty "as the subjection of matter to spirit." The resultant beauty is "a symbol in and
This
is
possible only
106. 107.
108.
II,
II,
II,
109. 110.
Treatise
on Method,
239.
85.
B.L.
II,
Theory of Art
201:
when the "harmonious chaos" is subdued and harmonised,, when we have "the coalescence of the diverse.""1 Beauty thea
not simply functional, for it has little to do with "the fitness112 of the means to the end." Beauty is absolutely real, and'
is
does not "depend on a law of proportion." It exists by itself and therefore has "Life can be deIndividuality, Life.
fined only
lity
is
113
life
by individuation/that which manifests its individuato us, that, which existing, as a whole, contains
by which
life
it
mani-
as a whole."
114
Such a unique
symbolised as
ter5
the
work
of art
and whole. "The very word 'part imperminology fectly conveys what we see and feel; for the moment we look 115 at it in division, the charm ceases." The parts of an organic
of parts
significant.
not predetermined, since they depend on the poem. Aristotle, 'the lord of the understanding', speaks of the prior existence of
the parts. But for Coleridge it is the idea of the whole that has a prior existence at least in the imaginative Thus activity. we are told that "Shakespeare studied mankind in the Idea
of the
its
human
118
race;
varieties
by a
and he followed out that Idea into all Method which never failed to guide his steps
is
aright."
The Idea
prior to expression,
and the
transrise to
Great art reveals a unique form, not shape. Coleridge therefore remarks: "Remember that there is a difference bet-
ween form
as proceeding,
and shape
as superinduced;
the
111.
B.L.
II,
256.
112.
113. 114.
T.L.S.
June
14,
1957,,
369.
115.
116.
245.
Treatise
on Method,
27.
202
the former
is its
sphere of agency. Art would or should be the abridgment of nature. Now the fulness of nature is without character, as water is
self-witnessing
self-affected
and
purest
when without
taste,
smell, or colour;
but
this is the
highest, the
art
is
to give the
its ideal,
apex only, it is not the whole. The object of whole ad hominem; hence each step of nature
hath
possibility of
117
a climax up to the
Form and shape are perfect form of a harmonized chaos." contraries, not opposites; and hence they cannot be reconciled.
form and shape differ only in degree, not in kind, then shape would be an element or aspect of form. Life and free will are capable of transmutShape
is
But
if
ing shape into the vital form. The artist is concerned not with the fulness of nature^ but with the essence of nature,
the
emerging from the fusion of the soul with obAs such, art is "of a middle quality between jective nature. a thought and a thing." Here we have "the union and relatter
conciliation of that
sively
which
is
is
exclu-
human.
It is the figured
language
of thought,
and
is
distinguished
thought or idea.
pression of
is
from nature by the unity of all the parts in one Hence nature itself would give us the ima work of art, if we could see the thought which
8
The 'fulness present at once in the whole and every part."" of nature' is the creative act of the deity while beauty is only one of its aspects. The work of art is not an 'object of mere
desire'
and
5119
as such
It
it
the end.
But can a long poem exhibit this kind of unity? In order to be a unity the entire poem must uniformly be pervaded by a never flagging imaginative activity. This is not easily
ble since such
an
an
impossibility.
Cole-
B.L.
II,
263.
Ibid.. 254-5.
Ibid., 224.
Theory of Art
ridge remarks:
205
"A poem
all
of
180
Then the unity appears to be such an eventuality that Coleridge It is to ward off broken. emphasises the part played by method which is a principle
ought to be
poetry,"
of unity with progression.
Accordingly he observes:
"If
an
harmonious whole
is to be produced, the remaining parts must be preserved in keeping with the poetry; and this can be no otherwise effected than by such a studied selection and arti-
ficial
liar
arrangement, as will partake of one, though not a pecuproperty of poetry. And this again can be no other than
the property of exciting a more continuous and equal attention than the language of prose aims at, whether colloquial or
121
written."
Method
is
when
it
works
artist
we
will
have an
spontaneous
the
Then the work demands and imUnity The creative process involves the harmony of idea impulse with voluntary purpose. The
to his genius.
growth of
Then it plant; and this growth has an inevitability. would be difficult to speak of the activities of will, understandThere is no room for art, for the techniing and judgment.
que
of of the artist.
It is to
overcome
Cole-
secondary
the
to nature;
imagination. Imagination "subordinates art manner to the matter." Still "it blends and
we find the artist's "judgment equal to his genius." The organic metaphor cannot then be taken to emphasise the
unconscious and inevitable growth, but the complexity of the
creative process.
120.
B.L.
Ibid.
II,
11.
121.
10.
WORDSWORTH'S PREFACE
of
the
Lyrical
Ballads
in
1798
was-
On
September 30, 1800 Coleridge informed Daniel Stuart that "the Preface contains our joint opinion on Poetry. If this were true, we could have missed many valuable chapters of the
Biographia. It is quite probable that Coleridge did not seethe Preface in its full form prior to its publication. He and
Wordsworth
poetry; contain the views shared by both. It was this hope that was shattered considerably as can be seen from later references to*
this text
many a discussion on the nature of and Coleridge may have felt that this Preface wouldi
had
by Coleridge
letter to
in his letters.
In his
"We have had lately some little metrg, Coleridge observed: on the subject, and we begin to suspect that there controversy
in our opinions/' a radical difference separating the traditions of the eighteenth century from the new outlook of the nineteenth century.
is
It is
purpose, Wordsworth poetry which is mainly individualistic. was too much a child of the eighteenth century to give up this diction, style or empiricism even when he was faced with the
It separates
poetry
composed
deliberately
with a
from
But the Preface does contain some common ground, Only on July 29, 1802 he told Southey: "Although Wordsworth's Preface is half a child of my own brain, and arose out of conversations so that, with few exceptions, we could frequent
scarcely either of us, perhaps, positively say which
first
started
Wordsworth's Preface
205
any
as it particular thought (I am speaking of the Preface stood in the second volume), yet I am far from going all
is
This common ground lengths with Wordsworth." to discover. The two did not differ irmr.h nn
tion._of thejaaJure^and. function
not hard
thf.-qucsthis
of .poetry.
On
pro-
blem Wordsworth
is
enthusiastically eloquent
romantic principle unequivocally. and nature of the office and character of a Poet", Coleridge admits, "is very grand"; "but it is, in parts (and this is the
fault,
me
beyond any
The
obscurity
diction.
evidently
refers
to
Wordsworth himself came to realise that his views on dichad "so little application to the greater parts, perhaps, of the collection, as subsequently enlarged and diversified, that they could not with any propriety stand as an Introduction to 1 it." So the Preface became an Appendix, "to be__iad. or 2 But the fact that he retainnot at the reader's choice." ed it even as an appendix implies that he did not give up the general outline sketched in the Preface. He was only .seeking to modify some of the statements made in the original text which came to be looked upon as some kind of a manifesto even
re-
garding
the
poetry. /JBut
Coleridge
remarked:
"With many parts of this preface in the sense attributed to them and which the words undoubtedly seem to authorise, I
never concurred; but on the contrary objected to them as errone-
ous
in principle, and as contradictory (in appearance at least) both to other parts of the same preface, and to the author's
own
The
practice in the greater part of the poems themselves." self-contradictions in the statement of the theory need an
examination.
Before
1.
we proceed
II,
8.
further
we have
to
remember two
2. 3.
7-8.
206
facts.
Coleridge's
Theory of Poetry
The
first is
was
published as an experiment.
The
Xhffl3
was intended to
far, byjfoting to mftriral^ajxangemcnt a selec, tion of the reaLlanguag(L of_ men in. austate of vivid sensation,
how
quantity joLpleasure. may he-imparted, which a Poet may -rationally- endeavour to impart. The poems are experiments consciously controlled by a definite The end is to impart a certain quantity of pleasured end. This is dangerously nearer to the pleasure calculus of Bentham
and
it
has
its
in
Hartley's
associationist
psychology.
of
What
in
psychology
that
Wordsworth
do
in
poetry.
revealed religion
But had
is
Hartley's
its
defence
Wordsworth.
This
The means employed to achieve the Hartleyan end refers to is metre which JWordsthe medium in its two aspects. (jf^One The other is the worth takes to be an grrflng^ninit nf wnrHs
"selection of the real language of
tion."
men
in
Both these aspects are governed by the end which a certain quantity of pleasure. impart
to
face.
of the medium is explained in the Preclaims that his choice of rustic life provides immediate pleasure. pleasure may be due to the "natural-
The
content
He
Butjhis
ness of the things presented", and not to the rustic life as such, It is also possible that the pleasure arises from the fusion oi
with "the
also
talent."
is
It
may
spring
thc_charatrs presented.
The term
to be dubious.
from one's
and meditation
life
cannot hold that others too will have that pleasure from
perusal of the
4.
poems
30.
depicting that
as such.
Ibid.,
II,
Wordsworth's Preface
207
'But Wordsworth argued that he chose rustic life because of the importance he attached to the primary feelings and The rustics being unsophisticated and simple, the affections.
essential passions
grow naturally
in them.
They
are uninhibit-
Consequently when
powerfully Since these primary
is
language
and
sincerity.
can be ob-
served well, and contemplated accurately. They are easily comprehended. They are durable. They are expressed effectively
by the
rustics
communion
is
"with the best objects from which the best part of language
originally derived."
The
"convey
their feelings
expressions."
"Humble and
rustic life"
argues,,
"in that condition, the essential passions of the heart find a better soil" in which they are capable of being freely developed.
In "The Brothers", "Michael", "Ruth" and others Wordsworth introduces characters who do not seem to belong to the low or
rustic
nothing in the poems to show that they come from such a life. The feelings they have and the langulife.
is
There
ages,
to speak have no necessary connection with and abode.' The thoughts, feelings, languoccupations and manners' of these characters are traceable to causes
results or effects
made
even in the
One causejs^
the sense of
They
work
for the
profit of others,
to struggle in order to preserve the frugal simplicity of their domestic life. The other
cause
is
to
The
particular
mode
of
life
the
have
is
by
itself
capable of
moulding
their sensibility.
As a
result the characters presented appeal to us, they are rustics and better than nth^,
not because
they nrr,
Kt bWiw
what
208
and
their
common
to the class."
In "Harry Gill" and "The Idiot Boy", "the feelings are those of human nature in general", though Wordsworth did not take
these feelings. pains to focus the attention of the reader on And when he chose "to imitate truly a dull and garrulous discourser", it is impossible to do SO "without repeating the
N
and garrulity" even when the poet is prepared "to throw over them a certain colouring of imagination." In taking up the humble and rustic low, his primary object was to 'trace ip them the primary laws of our nature.' These are the laws common to all human~beings, and they are not
effects of dullness
^with "the
Here he is concerned the exclusive property of the rustics. manner in which we associate ideas in a state of exThis
is
citement."
Wordsworth the basic presuppositions of these experiments. establishes a connection between the language of the common
people and their humble life. the spirit of human passions.
in
"The
How
other
men who
feel
vividly
ideas
and see clearly?" There is an associative link between and feelings and between feelings and words. Then the
other.
ideas
"The them
are,
to "speak a plainer in a
They
This criterion of sincerity which a critic can handle to cry edged weapon raise high any expression he dislikes or admires.
word, sincere.
a double
or to
down
Essential passions
Then we
state
coexist in a
of greater
existents
of
Hartley,
the
inde-
pendent
5.
reals unrelated to
Ibid., II,
Ibid.,
II,
34. 36.
6.
Wordsworth's Preface
plate
itself,
209
is
them more
contemplated in
one may find a certain difficulty in integrating them to the unity of the individual or in relating them to "the beautiTo find the nature of ful and permanent forms of nature."
the difficulty inherent here,
we may turn
to
what he
says re-
Wordsworth observed: "The language, too, of these men has been adopted (purified indeed from what appear to be its real defects, from all lasting and rational causes of dislike or
disgust) because such
men
objects
from which
the best
is
originally
all
derived."
vincialism
it
When
and
'purified
is
from
proit,
grossness',
when grammar
introduced into
Only
others
and the
rustic only
a few
vague or obscure ones. The rustic's mental faculties are not well developed, nor are they trained properly; and hence he aims at expressing a few isolated ideas concerning his limited
range of experience, or tradition, or
belief.
Con-
sequently, the "simple and unelaborated expressions" of the rustic will not give us a unified whole, though they are free
The
tions that
rustic
would
daily
life.
These he
he has a
precisely.
For the
is
rest
"The
best part of
human
It
is
symbols
ness of
7.
in the conscious-
uneducated man."*
Biogmphia,
II.
38-39.
210
and
to reflect.
But
tend
human mind
we
Such an abof the
to be
straction
more exact and therefore more abstract. Wordsworth condemns as being the product
If
does not operate, it is 'meddling intellect/ not only impossible to be precise and accurate but difficult to
this intellect
Language as spoken in daily life is essenit is not in itself or by itself captially 'matter-moulded'; and Even the able of expressing the nature of any excitement.
express with clarity^
rustics
convey their emotional experiences partly by gestures because of the difficulty in finding suitable words in their
language.
The movements
of the
side, the discourses of the religious, and the talks and conversations of the social reformers and politicians do continuously increase the number of ideas and expressions the rustics have.
As the number
tions
and
as
communica-
between different parts of the country develop, there will A be a regular flow of ideas and consequently of words. of the rustic's vocabulary is derived from this significant part
source and not from the so-called
communion with
is
nature.
And
not 'more
philosophical', but
more
utilitarian.
tunately led to exaggerate the value of this utilitarian language because of his antipathy to the poetic diction of the eighteenth
century as embodied in Pope's Iliad. Instead of arguing for the adoption of a simpler and homlier language, he builds up a fantastic theory of the 'philosophical' nature of the language
of
common
If,
life.
however, the peculiarities of the language spoken by the rustics have to be omitted, what kind of expression do we The same process may as well be applied to the language get?
of different literary artists. Such a purification applied to the of Sir Thomas Browne can then language agree with the purified
It
would be
the
Wordsworth's Preface
substitution of "a language of folly
211
and vanity.
.for that of
good sense and natural feeling" because this resulting language may be either devoid of any value worth mentioning or be the same as the standard language. And a standard language is also by utilitarlargely governed by custom and tradition and
'
ian considerations.
]
;*
^
Wordsworth spoke
in
of his choice of
language at different
it
In 1798 he called
"the language
of life."
conversation
the
middle
"a
and lower
of
classes
In
of
1800
this
became
selection
the
real
language
in the
man
same preface:
possible, to
adopt the very language of men." These two formulations were retained in 1802 and also in 1805. But in
1802 and 1805 he spoke of 'bringing my language near to the language of men/ In 1802 he said that the mechanical poetic
diction 'differs materially
situation.'
from the
real
language of
men
in
any
In 1805 he used four expressions: 'a selection of used by men', 'a selection of the language really language really
'selecting
spoken by men', 'the real language of nature', and from the real language of men.'
The word
varies with
faculties,
real
is
equivocal.
his
The language
of
man
'the extent of
depth quickness of his faculties.'* These conditioning factors contribute to the peculiar features of that man's language. Another part of his language is col-.
and the
or
oured by the customs and traditions of the class to which he belongs. Then he has also 'words and phrases of universal
use/
All these factors
others.
from that of
make his language real, and it differs What Wordsworth had in mind was
But
it is
the ordinary language, the lingua communis. nary language is nowhere to be found, because
this
ordi-
a language
individual's
common
ped,
*
it is
to all
when
the
peculiarities
of
each
these peculiarities are dropnot the real language of any one. As Dante has
II,
And when
Biographia,
41.
212
said, this lingua
communis
8
exists
where as a whole.
Wordsworth's expression can be valid to a certain extent This appears to if he used simple or natural instead of real. be his intention from his declared hostility to the language he
employed
in his
earlier
sketches
and poems.
Even then
it
and
as such
it
solves
no difficult^Jl
he means the elimination of the painful and This elimination is necessary because he repulsive elements. felt that poetry should always 'produce excitement in co-existence with an over-balance of pleasure.' But words by them-
By
'selection'
selves
are not
first
They must
us
capable of evoking any pleasurable emotion. become members of an organic whole. Even
a state of excitement* do not help expression of an emotional excitement depends on the mental equipment of the speaker. Passioh does not
the qualifying
words
'in
much.
The
create words;
the ideas
of
it only gives an increased activity and vitality to and words that arc already present. The language excitement is no more natural than that of an intellectual
debate.
make
increased activity and vitality of the ideas would the language highly figurative; and then it would not
The
be the real language of the pcoplc/j^Wordsworth's process of selection should then refer to those words which Jn^olYc^ the
interaction^ of ideasr_ieelings
and
sensations;
and
this
may
be
the real language of developed minds in a state of excitement If the poet has to 'compose accurately in the spirit of sucfi
Such a
work
of imagination because
work of the human understanding and will. a selection one should possess the language already and in selecting he uses his own powers of judgment and reflection, not those of the class to which the language
all selection is
the
To make
8.
Ibid.,
II,~41-42.
Wordsworth's Preface
belongs.
213
class of
of the
words used by a
persons
In order
to adopt that language one has to "follow the order in which 9 the words of such men arc wont to succeed each other."
The order
is
what Coleridge elsewhere called method. The rustic lacks the method or "prospectiveness of mind which enables a man to foresee the whole of what he is to convey, appertaining to any one point"; he fails "to subordinate and arrange
the different parts according to their relative importance, as to 10 And when convey it at once, and as an organized whole."
poet takes up the language of the common people, he makes a selection by introducing his method, his sense of order; and to this extent it is a language made his own.
the
[t is no longer the language of common people. Even Wordsworth observes that the poet contemplates man "with
a certain quantity of immediate konwledge, with certain convictions, intuitions, and deductions, which from habit acquire
the quality of intuitions."
applicable to those
object
to
it
sense in
Even then as a rule it is useless." By poetic diction Wordswoith meant a fixed vocawhich excludes what it deemed to be low or trivial. bulary
or
deny
He
latinisms,
inversions,
frequent
antitheses
and the
like."
At
times he
direct,
would prefer to reject any expression that is not any statement bordering on what is called the pathetic He was critical of the line 'She bowed to taste the fallacy.
9.
Biographia,
Ibid.,
II,
II,
48-44.
10. 11.
44.
30.
:
Ibid.,
II,
12.
N. C. Smith (Ed.)
20,
45-46.
214
wave* only because no one bows actually in drinking Bath waters, and no one calls the bath waters drunk from a goblet
a wave.
13
This
is
"Lycidas".
And
have at
all
my
subject:
consequently, there
of descriptions."
hope
in these
Poems
little
falsehood
bring his language near to the language of men took pains to avoid 'what is usually called poetic diction.'
looked
To
he
He
disfelt
5
down upon
'the
gaudy
affectations
of
a style which
His passed current with too many for poetic diction.' And when he gust for a time 'narrowed his view.
5
'preference
for
the
language
of
nature
for
good
sense
he gave expression to his thoughts in an exaggerated manner.Thus arose "his predilection for a style the most remote possible
from the
false
And yet if he felt that there and he became partial to it. was an undercurrent of genuine feeling he could accept quaintThus he praised ness, conceits, exaggerations and verbal wit. Donne's Sonnet on "Death" as "weighty in thought, and vigorous in the expression.
chanical device of
All the
5518
And
sonification 'prompted
by
passion',
though
in itself
it is 'a
me-
style.'
a simple
language, a language employed in daily life by the This is a language easily understood by people.
common all. He
sought to establish the lingua communis "as the only commend55 able style. But his own style is "the most individualised and
.
characteristic
and the style of the poets whom he admired and followed was again a highly artificial one. As long as the theory dogged him, he could not resolve the conflicting tendencies of his understanding and intellect. And where he
;
5516
Ibid., pp.
126-7.
16.
Biographia Literaria, II, 69-70. Smith (Ed.) Wordsworth's Literary Criticism, pp. 246-7. Biographia Literaria, II, 77.
:
Wordsworth's Preface
liked a passage, he
215
was ready with a facile explanation bringeven a passage replete with the artificial devices in line with ing And when he talked of the language his theory of language.
of the
common
Even
in real life
There
veying pictures.
object to
These pictures
may
make another
specific; or they
may
or they be "the exponents of his particular turn and unusual exmay 17 This last variety appears in the works of Jent of faculty." art because the activity of the writer is directed "to literary
raise the
tints."
The
metrical pattern
is
words and spoke of the 'colouring of the imagination', he could not distinguish the normal usage from aware
of this use of
In good poetry the language of the common ppnpfc gets purificd_and charged with the Jlifc of feelings jmd__ejnQtions.
he argued, can "separate the composition fromthfvuTgarity and meanness of ordinary life"; and then 18 he "composes accurately in the spirit of such selection." This
thc^ selection,
is
But
a round-about
way
of arguing
ideal
of "the general
"common
principles
10
which govern
in
nations and
Just as in his early style he was too much under Darwin and others, so he was in his theory influenced by Hartley and by the neo-classicists. The purification of language through grammar, syntax and decency is not enough. Poetry demands and illustrates a continuous trans-
tongues."
the spell of
formation of the normal language of the people. Wordsworth was aware of this. Yet he observed that language in a
17.
18.
Ibid.,
II,
93.
11,
13,
14,
24 and 30.
117.
19.
Ibid., 90,
216
vivid sensation", "if selected truly and judiciously, "statc^of must necessarily be dignified and variegated, and aliv-.with
>20
metaphoK_andjfigures.'
The
'dignified
The
spirit spoke of 'noble phraseology' and of 'dignified ed composition' in enumerating the characteristic sources of remarks that the earliest poets the sublime. (j\nd Wordsworth "wrote naturally, and as men feeling powerfully as they did, This cannot be the their language was daring, and figurative."
and
life.
It
At the back
poet's
Wordsworth's
of
language
is
inferior to that
men
in passion.
"The
men
language of the poets falls short of that which is uttered by in real life, under the actual pressure of those passions,"
men
and
employed a language of these exand though it is not the language of traordinary occasions;
earliest poets
21
The
normal
was actually spoken by the people. But it is an irony that Milton was his ideal, and so was Spenser. These are the most learned poets employing an artificial language; and in a letter he states: "to this day I could repeat, with
life,
it
little
previous
28
rummaging
of
my memory,
it
several thousand
lines of
An
quotes the authorities he likes, and quotes them for an occasion in which We do not they do not quite fit.
He
know anything about the language spoken by Homer in actual life. If we come to the historical times, we find Wordsworth
contradicting himself.
20.
21. 22.
Percy,*
lbid.,~T\, 22.
Ibid., 24, 43.
Letters, Ed.
23.
Smith
(Ed.)
193, 202.
Wordsworth's Preface
217
and though he wrote in that ballad tradition, he spoke of Ossian as the "phantom begotten by the snug embrace of an " Yet he impudent Highlander upon a cloud of tradition."
5
accepted as good the tradition of learned Latin poetry. Judgthat ing from his literary taste* one comes to the conclusion
the language of the common people was Wordsworth's way Then the selection of pleading for a language he liked most.
of
of
the
real
language of
is
Milton and
This
peare.
the language Spenser, possibly also the language of Shakesinconsistent with his view that the poet "must
to
men comes
mean
men
express themselves",
if
this ex-
only
to
language.
And
if
this
were to be
an expression expressive of a state of excitement, the emphasis But the prowill fall not on language, but on the passions. blem of language acted on Wordsworth as an obsession like
(
the head of
in
by Dick
history planned
He
of
argued
poetry
is
"the
spontaneous
overflow
lan-
powerful
feelings'',
of passion to capture vividly that state of excitement. This language is said to be natural or sincere. And yet he observed: "My first expression I often find detestable; and it
guage
frequently true of second words as of second thoughts that 15 Elsewhere he remarks that "composition of they are best."
is
'
verse
is
believe;
infinitely more of an art than men are prepared to and absolute success in it depends upon innumerable
26
minutiae."
his
poet should not be viewed as 'pouring easy 7 And yet he says that the numbers unpremeditated verse/"
28
The
"came spontaneously" and "in such a torrent that he was unable to remember" the passage," and that he poured out a
poem
24.
25.
truly
30
ibid.,
26. 27.
Letter to Gillies, Dec. 22, 1814. Letter to Haywood, 1828; Letter of Nov. 22, Milton.
Prelude, 1, 51-2. Letter to Beaumont, May 1, 1805. Letter to Dora and Fenwick, April
1831.
28.
29. 30.
7,
1810.
218
whpn HP .rame to This inconsistency Js preserved Even in speak about nature and place of metre in poetry.
wn
poem of the most elevated character, he argues, there is ajanguagc which does not differ from that of good prose, Some of the finest passages even in the best save in metre.
a good
poems
is
refers to
Milton and quotes a sonnet of a difference of degree, not of kind, between the lanonly
guage of prose and that of metrical composition. But Wordsworth forgot that this is a difference in the degree of significance communicated by the writer. In other words, the difference is to be found in the use to which a poet puts his language.
neither
is
Ignoring this point, Wordsworth states that "there nor can be, any essential difference between the lan-
guage of prose and that of metrical composition." The body or form of these two has 'the same substance', apparently be-*
cause language is the common medium. Their 'affections are kindred, and almost identical.' They do not essentially differ.
But
in
certain
minor
is
details there
is
a difference.
In other
words, Wordsworth
tinction
not so
much
between prose and metrical composition. On the other hand, he seems to be establishing the nature and value
of the distinction in a precise
manner.
the problem^of^ metre from the standpoint of associationism. Metre is associated -* wwith poetry, and poetry is associated with certain qualities of lan*
guage, thought and emotion. Then metre too may be associated with these very qualities. He writes: "It is supposed,
that by the act of writing in verse an
engagement that he will gratify certain known habits of association; that he not only thus appraises the Reader that certain classes of ideas and expression will be found in his book,
but
that
others
will
be
carefully
excluded."
Metre thus
appears to be a factor in a chain of association. kind of jif.tina. too is associated with metre, and
is
certain
Wordsworth's Preface
219
is
associated with
a necessary causal relation. to Accordingly when he rejects that diction, he is emboldened But he declares that while declare his rejection of metre too.
is
poetic diction
is
and therefore
is,
arbitrary, "metre
That
metre
is
now
dissociated
When we
5 5
have the
'selection
the
language
really
spoken by men
distinction
form a
between prose and poetry; and it will distinguish and meanness of ordinary life.'
Prose is distinguished from poetry by virtue of this selection; and yet Wordsworth makes out that the antithesis of prose is not poetry but metre. / Instead of the diction of the earlier poets, it is the selection of the real language with which metre will now be asso-
metre be superadded thereto, I believe that ^dissimilitude will be produced altogether sufficient Jforjthc gratificaciated.
"If
tion of a rational
mind." This does not mean that metre directly contributes to this gratification; for, it can only "heighten and
improve the pleasure which coexists with it/' Metre is superadded to tfrfit whirh is nlrenHy interesting hccaiisp it i& supposed to have
n
rharm
of
its
own.
is
It is .adventitious.
The
entire
argument
based on
confusion between
metre and rhythm. In good prose and in good poetry we have rhythm. Since the appeal of poetry is largely dependent on rhythm, which does not have a fixed pattern ab extra, Words-
an appendage. But he forgot that metre provides the basic framework of rhythm in poetry. The Preface curiously enough provides a strong defence
to be for the use of metre in spite of the explicit statements to the
contrary.
Metre
is
poem. aware
He
speaks of
"paves the
way
220
distinctions of a style.
these artificial
His objection is evidently based on distinctions based on, and derived from, metre.
5531
In order to reject the associated consequences, he exaggerates Yet he is aware of the contribution of metre to the a little.
evoked by a poem. "The end of poetry is to 55 This "excitement is an unusual and irproduce excitement. 55 regular state of the mind which may overstep its bounds when
total impression
it is
and uniform,
it
employed
of
is
to
exhibits
5 '
its
power
is
sion.
This process
of feeling
substance of poetry with feeling connected with the passion." Metre, strictly necessarily as Dryden said earlier, restrains the movement of the exuthe
which
"not
and
It also helps the inberant fancy and overflowing emotions. It tends to "divest Ian* troduction of a tone of dissimilarity.
gauge, in a certain degree, of its reality, and thus to throw a sort of half-consciousness of unsubstantial existente over the
whole composition. Some form of a dream-state is induced on us by the recurring pattern through which feeling is unfolded to us. Thereby "the more pathetic situations and
sentiments
55
5538
become capable
of being
endured
in metre.
relieved of its intensity to a certain extent. pathetic metrical form renders the familiar feeling unfamiliar.
is
The The
And
then the tragic atmosphere of an incident is rendered in such a way that it does not depress us. We have an "indistinct
perception perpetually renewed of language closely resembling that of real life, and yet, in the circumstance of metre, differing from it widely. 55 is one of similitude
5583
dis-
sources of
pleasure
produced by
a poem. And this is necessary not only to endure the pathetic, but to understand the feelings and emotions that are founda-
Smith
(Ed.):
21, 31.
Ibid., 34-35.
Wordsworth's Preface
tional
221
to all
human
life.
primary feelings and the ideas Then metre has a necessary into the characteristic feature,
the material,
L\nd yet the doctrinaire approach lands Wordsworth into an inconsistency when he takes up an illustration. Dr. Johnson's stanza
on the hat
is
resembling that of
life
and nature.
Wordsworth answers
to a stanza
this
Wood."
similar
words;
the
words
is
that of
ordinary conversation. Yet the first is not poetry, while the second is. This evidently means that the metrical form has
or nothing to do with the nature of poetry. reject Johnson's stanza because the matter it expresses is contemptible.
little
We
It gives
no pleasure because
It
it
of feeling.
has nothing to do with those primary feelings that arc at the very basis of human life. In other words,
the essential character of poetry depends on the primary and of human life. But does the stanza of the permanent feelings
Wood"
affect us as poetry?
Here
react
we do not
to
it
react in the
We
We
react
more or
our
own
childhood with
its
hopes and
fears.
Wordsworth's
error then appears to consist in equating a feeling with a poem. The feeling can at best be contributory to the atmosphere of
the
of the
poem;
it
cannot be the
222
ing.
Coleridge's
Theory
of Poetry
He
eighteenth century.
we
are told,
memory.
They
Imagination
refers
are "processes of creation or the composition." to creation, while fancy may be said to
refer to composition.
phorical transfers. tion to see the samphire gatherer in Lear 'hanging' on the cliff, because the speaker visualises only the precarious position.
But the examples he gives are only metaAccording to him, it is an act of imagina-
a form of synechdoche is apparent when Wordsworth gives as another example his own description of the
That
this is
Cuckoo
all
as the
'wandering
this
4
voice.'
It
"consolidating numbers
555
into
Iu unity", "dissolving and separating unity into number." other words, imagination is not only a unifying power, but Elsewhere he attributed this analytic also an analysing one.
activity to the
"meddling
intellect"
which he
is
here confusing
we
the faculty
and that fancy is "the power by which and surprise are excited by sudden varieties of situapleasure tion and accumulated imagery." The words simple elements ind accumulated imagery tell us that Wordsworth's distincnut of simple elements",
by the associationist psychology and one of quantity only. This is clear rvhen we look at another statement he made on Coleridge's
tion is
largely coloured
:hat
the
difference
is
is
the "shaping
fancy
is
'the aggregative
and
associative power."
This,
;ays
Wordsworth, 'is too general', because both these powers and associate', 'evoke and combine.' Both are
Ibid., 157.
Ibid.,
34.
.85.
162.
36.
Ovnniana, 1812.
Wordsworth's Preface
223
But as Coleridge pointed out, Wordsworth equally creative. had "mistaken the co-presence of fancy with imagination for
That these are two differthe operation of the latter singly."" ent activities is clear from the fact that Wordsworth does not
He talks of fancy as give an equal status to these two. were a lower power. It is viewed as a kind of trick.
if
it
In
fancy we have the "curious subtility and successful elaboration with which she can detect the lurking affinities." Imagination
is
and the
indefinite."
Imagination in Wordsworth's theory is the eighteenth cenAt tury associationism governing the combination of images. times he employs the term like a neo-Platonist to mean intellectual vision.
The former
is
prominent
in
the Preface of
left him completely. When he that the poet has "a greater promptness to think and feel says without immediate external excitement", he speaks of day-
dreaming which
he said,
is
is a form of associationism or fancy. Fancy, a power that "forms casual and fleeting combina3 tions in which objects are united, not in a permanent relation",
"
But there
is
in
him
Imaginathe
or
interaction
of
human
It is
41
ing of
probably what he meant by "throwing a certain colourthe imagination over the incidents and situations ol
1
common
Likewise he states that the poet has "to treat not as they are but as they appear, not as they exist things
life/'
37.
38.
"
39.
Biographia Literal ia. I, 194. Smith (Ed.) Wordsworth's Literary Criticism, 164. Robinson's Diary, June 3, 1815.
:
40. 41.
42.
Ibid., Sept.
10,
18J6.
Prelude,
13,
375-6.
13.
Smith
(Ed.),
i>24
Coleiidge'*
Theory of Poetry
in themselves
43
passions."
but as they seem to exist to the senses, and to the It is a form of visualising, creating through visual
Such a process would have contributed to his general retheory of the substance of poetry, if only he examined the
images.
lation of imagination to feeling as such.
is 'interchange of action from within and without' but of his expresreminiscent not only of Coleridge's theory,
The
Following Coleridge, Wordsworth states that the activity Nature 'moulds, enof nature is similar to that of imagination.
sion.
minds'
who
a
is
"communion with
Their imagination
"absolute strength
And And
of the entire
clearest insight,
amplitude of mind,
4
'
human
life.
It is
dental reason, not the 'meddling intellect.' Imagination here is an intellectual intuition which is associated with the love
of
man and
of of
God.
It
is
and produces
standpoint "the faculty by which the poet conceives that is, images individual forms in which are
it
man
From
this
is
This
is
is,
of course,
actually derived
from Coleridge's Lay Sermons and essays* in The Friend. It is an idea that fits very little into Wordsworth's Prefaces, it can be though amply illustrated from his poems. At one
place
'turns
upon
infinity.'
47
eternal.'
ibid.,
Ibid., 79,
105,
121-2.
Prelude,
168-170.
11,
1816.
Wordsworth's Preface
225
Coleridge's
influence
is
Wordsworth
good poetry. It is not easy to distinguish the views of these two on this question for the simple reason that Wordsworth does not develop his arguments systematically. They are sporadic; and he goes at a
and
of the characteristics of
tangent to other problems. Before we go through his views on the nature of poetry, we have to note his observations regarding the value of poetry.
question again Wordsworth is a typical product of the eighteenth century, a century which emphasises the moral value of poetry along with pleasure or delight. The insistence
this
On
links
him with
the neo-classicists in a
"The poet
and hence
from that
his
thinks
and
human
and
passions",
of all other
is
men who
feel vividly
see clearly."
a social product and its function too must It cannot serve any exclusively individual be a social one. It has a social value. ends. Thus he writes: "A great poet
Literature then
ought to
rectify
men's
feelings, to give
more
in short, more consonant to nature, that is to eternal 48 and the great moving spirit of things." And his work nature, is intended to 'humble and humanise' the readers "in order
manent,
be purified and exalted." This relationship between feelings and ideas is taken from Hartley's associationist
that they
48
may
Hartley argued that our affections or passions psychology. are only aggregates of simple ideas bounded together associatively.
The
ideas.
These simple
ideas that survive the sensations are the simple ideas, says Wordsworth, are present in
the incidents and situations of common life. Starting with these simple ideas, the poet should exhibit the affections pre-
48.
49.
Ibid.. 7.
Ibid., 196.
22ft-
Coleridge's
Theory
of Poetry
human life. The poem should embody feelmen may sympathise with, and such as there
5'
reason to believe they would be better and more moral 80 1 It is thus a stimulant beings if they did sympathise with.
to right feelings
and
right understanding.
As he observed, "sympathy arises and where he has no pleasure he has no knowledge." Pleasure, knowledge and sympathy
gether.
of ends sustained
by a common end.
It
the duty of the poet to "bind together by passion and know1 The poet not only ledge the vast empire of human society."*
experiences his unity with the Universe, but he has to foster the sense of unity among all the human beings. This he can achieve by meditating long and deeply on the nature and value
of the feelings.
sibility, for
It is
the sphere of human sen88 the delight, honour, and benefit of human nature." a moral sense of the cohesive life that the poet has to
in his compositions.
Thus he "widens
embody
nature:
common
as far as
regards the
of associationism thus
form the
life
structure will have a reference to the moral interpretation of based on the primary feelings regulative or constitutive of
life.
is
human
love."
Accordingly, poetry "joy of that pure principle of 54 Satire which saps the Vital power of social ties' can-
not be poetry.
Wordsworth
offers his
poems
to
remedy "the
among
ibid., 10.
Ibid., 28.
51. 52.
Ibid.,
198,
202.
4,
53. 54.
Excursion,
Prelude,
7,
1213.
547.
Wordsworth's Preface
05
227
of society."
It
is
poetry should
of
offer.
not any instruction or any pleasure that The poet should teach the great lesson
how
to live in society
and he should
at the
same time
offer
a rational gratification of the human mind. This is a gratifiThus in a letter we cation based on the knowledge of truth.
find
I
Wordsworth observing that "Every great poet is a teacher: 88 wish either to be considered as a teacher, or as nothing."
Poetry has its value In framing models to improve the scheme 87 Of man's existence, and recast the world."
It is
an essay
in social reconstruction
on the
basis of certain
primary laws governing human nature. The relationship between feelings and truth
if
is
inexplicable
we do not
theory.
to a
recognise the Hartleyan basis of Wordsworth's Feeling involves sympathy, and sympathy takes us
Then he could
is
observe that
"w
propagated by pleasure.
Feeling, sympathy, understanding and pleasure are all brought together to clarify the end characterising the poetic activity. All these are analysed and examined from a purely social
the passions, thoughts, and These, says Wordsworth, are connected "with feelings of men. our moral sentiments and animal sensations, and with the standpoint.
expresses
The poet
To this moral interpretation he joins the theory of pleasure, and here he argues from the nature of metre. Metre with
its
association of pleasure
is
"The music
But
To Beaumont,
Excursion,
3,
57.
58.
Smith
(Ed.),
228
it is
a complex feeling in which metre is a necessary component; and this metre he endeavoured to dismiss as something adventi"
tious.
J
all
With
titude
science.
this
there
is
in
58
He
multiply distinctions'
and he
is
states
and inanimate'
of science
is
but
'a
prop
The
scientific attitude
held to be
these are
Though both
an understanding of the ideas of truth concerning human life and the world, the scientific attitude gives a
knowledge
poetic
in
which
is
the
human
to
observer
is
left out.
The
approach
directed
knowledge.
will
And
he
speaks
of
science.
He
visualises a time
when
the poet,
be "carrying sensation into the midst of the objects of The remotest discoveries of the Chemist, the science itself.
the Botanist, or Mineralogist will be proper objects of the Poet's
art."
The
of things.
He
the poet
who
of things
and
to present
them
from within.
the scientist.
scientist.
That
is,
beyond that of
He
men, shall be ready to put were, a form of flesh and blood, the Poet will lend 01 his divine spirit to aid the The poet tends transfiguration." to make the scientific data organic to human life. This is one
on, as
it
is
credited,
though Wordsworth
may not have actually meant this by the But he is aware of such an expression organic sensibility.
59.
Ibid., 31.
60.
61.
2,
Wordsworth's Preface
activity
229
when he
Even the physical midst of the objects of the "oience itself." universe comes alive, it acquires a being and a value when
the poetic activity
is
rightlv focussed
on
it.
Consequently, as
an emotional approach to the knowledge and apprehension of is in the reality, poetry is "the impassioned expression which
countenance of
2
all
sicence."*
This approach is through tne ieelings and emotions, and it is directed towards the unfolding of the truth lurking in the The knowuniverse. It offers a knowledge of the universe.
ledge given by the poet appeals to us more than that offered by the scientist. The knowledge of the latter is not personal; it is divorced from the life of the feelings and emotions whence
it
bind us to our fellow-beings. It is poetry which is It presents the "the breath and finer spirit of all knowledge."
fails to
and
of
it
enables us to
state apprehend these principles pleasure. These very principles emphasise the organic unity of the universe. The poet views neither man nor nature in isolation.
in
rational
man and nature because and regulated by the spirit of love or sympathy. The emotional approach gives him his ideas or knowledge concerning the world; and this approach is not
He apprehends
the organic unity of
an analysing or separating one. It binds together, it unifies the entire human society. In other words the poetic activity is directed towards a clearer understanding of the primary affections
basic,
permanent
beings in
feelings.
These feelings
Since these
feel-
are
common
human
all times.
ings form the content of poetry, it is said that "Poetry is the first and last of all knowledge it is as immortal as the heart of man."
the
action
men and
to offer
objects.
able
"an
infinite
complexity of pain
and pleasure."
This
62.
Ibid., 27.
230
Coleridge's
Theory of Poetry
historian.
from the
only,
human
lively
The
By
poet
is
one "endowed
with
more
than
sensibility."
sensibility
He
he means emotionalism.
Then
the poet
is
one
who
is
capable of
receiving
the
periencing and the inner emotions are organically related to one another. While Coleridge was a Hartleyan ar^umgjojjthe "corporeality of thought" and deriving the mind out of the senses, Words-
state
eximpressions through the senses, thereby In this state the senses of excitement.
about it. But by 1800 had already given up Hartley; and with his innate Coleridge Platonism and study of Berkeley he underwent a thorough change. And at the time the Preface was written Coleridge
worth
was trying to derive the senses out of the mind. But Wordsworth in his theory retained the old associationist doctrine of deriving the intuitions of the poet from his sensations and impressions.
of the
The poet is then one who has a keener awareness nature and quality of his sensations.
this sensibility the
required to think for, our thoughts are capable of directing or the feelings. Even these thoughts are in reality "the modifying
poet
is
representatives of all our past feelings", thereby looking like the empiricist and associationist ideas which are derived from
the impressions. By contemplating the relations of these general ideas to each other, we come to know the basic facts of
human
life
feelings.
In
other words, this contemplation is directed to determine the associative links between ideas and feelings. Out of this association springs the
poem which
it is
is
poems
said that the feeling developed in the Each 'gives importance to the action and siutation.'
Hence
Wordsworth's Preface
231
thus presents an action or situation from the standpoint Yet considered historically, this is a valuof the psychologist.
poem
Then
easily enter into an emotional experience by virtue of the sympathy that he has for all forms of existence and experience. Since he can enter into the ex-
tenderness."
He can
by identiiymg himself with them, he was "a human nature and a more comprehensive greater knowledge soul." He can become truly impersonal and transform his own emotions in such a way that they become universal. It is "the spirit of life that is in him" which enables him to have a This spirit delight in the feelings and passions of mankind. of life makes him not only similar volitions and "contemplate passions" but "create them where he does not find them." This is the imaginative activity which plays a very minor role
periences of others
of
in
tion
Wordsworth's theory proper. There is a close interacbetween the feelings and imagination/ This is evident
when Wordsworth observes that the poet has "a disposition to be affected more than other men by absent things as if were present." Such a disposition was held to be the they
essence of imagination by the eighteenth century; and Wordsworth explains it in terms of sympathy. It is the same sym-
pathy which enables the poet to "consider man and nature as essentially adapted to each other, and the mind of man as
naturally the mirror of the fairest
perties
of nature."
is
communicates
of "the
and most interesting proEven the immediate pleasure the poet directly derived from a sincere apprehension
"looks at the world in the spirit of love." In "conjuring up in himself" the passions of others, the poet tends "to bring his
near to those of the persons whose feelings he desAt times he would even "identify his own feelings with theirs", for the simple reason that this act gives him pleasure. Unlike the historian, or the scientist, or the
feelings
cribes."
philosopher
232
the poet
is
"a
man
speaking to men."
He
has to communicate
that
it
Any such communication implies observed must have a human value. When Aristotle^
is
or aim of poetry to be "general, and only stating the object the It is universal truth "carried alive into truth. operative" Passion or emotion is the central principle heart
t
that "poetry
all
writing", he
was
by
passion."'
in
and through which the poet seeks to understand, interpret of and express his experiences, observations and meditations
Passion has a tendency to unify, to bring the there is the universe into a
life.
human
entire
grand unity.
nature,"
Consequently
representation
is
of
life
in all poetry. It
the image of
life
man and
the
derived
from human
feelings,
all
affections
human
"All
good
it
poetry
is
the
is
spontaneous
overflow
o.
something Feeling should be one's own. It is powerful when it spontaneous The "spontaneous overflow of s primary or permanent. tend to make the poem an expression powerful feelings" would
powerful
feelings."
exclusive.
To be
of the poet's personal feelings, an externalisation of his persoIn order to remedy this defect, Wordsworth nal emotions.
observes that the poet should have a developed organic sensihis energies to deep thinking bility, and that he must devote
for
a long time.
modify them.
self-revelation.
This thinking will direct the feelings and Even then poetry tends to be a piece of simple
This
is
a kind
of poetry
which Wordsworth
does admit.
And
der
the
to consi-
impersonal
variety
great
poetry.
Accordingly
"It takes
Wordsworth modifies
its
the definition
by observing:
of
origin
is
tion
by
species
reaction,
the
tranquillity
to that
disappears,
gra-
Wordsworth's Preface
233
63
dually produced, and does itself actually exist in the mind." Thus first there is an experience which the poet as an individual has. This experience is coloured by the accidents of
time, place,
and person.
The second
needs
It is
stage
is
that wherein he
he
had.
This recollection
not
its
Then there is the place and person. third stage wherein the poet reflects on what he remembers and begins to contemplate it dispassionately. The mood of
time,
tranquillity
is
It
is
in
the
selection.
contemplative stage that he exercises his But here the selection is directed
powers of towards a
greater universality.
Then arises the fourth stage in which overtakes the individual as a result of this contemplative passion
This passion
is
activity.
similar in
its
templative act universalises what was originally a personal emotion or feeling. It is in this mood that there begins the poetic composition, "and in a mood similar to this it is carried
'
on,"
63.
Ibid., 34-5.
PART
GERMAN THOUGHT
11.
can
satisfactorily
and prove by reference to writings (Letters, Marginal Notes, those in books that have never been in my possession since I
first
left
England
for
Hamburgh,
I
etc.)
that
all
the elements,
my
present opinions
me
before
of
German Meta-
physics later
if I
had."
than Wolf and Leibnitz, or could have read it, Coleridge's acquaintance with the German thinkers
began
a*t
in or after 1798.
By
that time he
were forced on him by his thinking and by his varied study which included the Cambridge Platonists, the neo-Platonists
and the
mystics.
is
There
statement:
an example strengthening
this
contention in his
"From the following sentence in his life (that invaluable work published from Baxter's own Manuscript by
Matthew
stituting
Silvester) I
Trichotomy
of
and
alas
the
still,
prevailing
method
in
Dichotomy, which forms the prominent excellence Kant's Critique of the Pure Reason, belongs to R. Baxter,
a century before the publication of Kant's work. Nay, it that the claim of our own countryman rests on a appears
For Baxter grounds the necesstronger as well as older plea. sity of Trichotomy, as the Principle of Real Logic, as an absolute Idea presupposed in all intelligential Acts:
Whereas Kant
adopts
1.
it
It
To John
1825.
2.
Misc. Crit.
238
first
Coleridge's
Theory of Poetry
dialectic;
and
Coleridge never read Kant and the other sophers he would have found this out.
even
German
philo-
By 1802 he came to feel that German metaphysics did not allow him to proceed in his own way; and he was therefore trying to recapture the 'self-impelling, self-directing Prin21
ciple/
German
thinkers
for
tions to
my
soul,
bowing
it
down,
the pride
and Laodicean
It
self-confidence of
human Reason be
thinking and
was the union of feeling that Coleridge sought to u have as the basis of his entire Metaphysic. philosophi4 cal opinions", he informed Thelwall, "are blended with or
My
deduced from my feelings/' The development of his was temporarily checked by the German philosophers.
Early in
life
position
*
spell of Spinoza.
Even
And
he could declare that Spinoza's book "was his gospel, and, in less than a minute, added that his philosophy was after all
false.
am,
Did philosophy commence in an It is instead of an I 8 He felt that Spinoza would be altogether true."
Spinoza's Absolute is the negation of all 'the determinations that go to make the individual'; and he could not reconcile
his doctrine of personality as the unity of thinking
and
feel-
ing,
lost
with
this Absolute.
Even
after he studied
Kant, he never
23, 1801
On March
he told Poole:
of deep feeling,
on August
ideas,
7,
as far as
1803 he told Southey that "ideas never recall they are ideas, any more than leaves in a
3.
Letters,
Letter,
I,
782.
17,
4.
5.
Dec.
1796.
3,
1812.
Coleridge and
forest create
German Thinkers
239
it
is
The
breeze
that runs
through them it is the soul, the state of feeling." This state of feeling, however, is alien to German transcendentalism, though it is commonly found in all the writings of the mystics
and the
the
neo-Platonists.
It
was
the importance he
attached
to feeling that
brought him
associationist
gave
to feeling drove
mystics and to
and the same importance he him away from this psychology to the Berkeley and Spinoza. The basic principles
psychology;
main stream
of
little in common with the German thought which began with an enquiry
And yet the eclectic Coleridge did Hence take over the methodology of Kant and his successors. is it that at every significant moment he finds a way
of going
Following
thinkers.
his last
Critique, and adopting Kant's illustrations, he gave his essays "On the Principles of Genial Criticism" (1814). Even the dis-
between genius and talent is Kantian. But as he he leaves Kant behind by the suprarational an essential element in all genius. making The fragment of an essay on "Taste" (1810) is based on
tinction
came
of human nature. In "this context, the enquiry tends to advance from the Kantian position. Kant has only provided him with a starting point and with a definite method. And
Coleridge was not interested in defending or explaining Kant. Thus when Kant's last Critique established a relationship between the purposiveness or teleology of nature and the creative
activity of the artist,
af=
symbol
of morality.
Then again when we come to his specific doctrine of imagination, we do not find Coleridge repeating or echoing Kant.
On
is
the other hand, he departs from Kant; and this departure based on the doctrine that was basic to Coleridge's
position
240
The so-called freedom of imagination a formal activity in Kant's theory; and accordingly only imagination cannot enlighten us about the nature of things.
since
is
But for Coleridge, imagination is creative of both the sensuous and the conceptual. Hence he rejects the Kantian
standpoint *of the essential passivity of our sensible and emotional nature/ Even before he studied Fichte and Schelling,
Coleridge was moving
letter of
away from
In a
December
to
13,
his rejection of
Kant belongs
the
Aristotelian
school
in the Platonic
school, Coleridge goes on to show that he is not a Kantian." This rejection of the Kantian view is basic to his doctrine of imagination where he advocates the view that the universal is
On
September
18, 1794,
Caldwell "told
intoxicated
me
my
my
reason
had given a directing influence to my imagination/' This was long before he heard of any German thinker. At this time
interaction between reason and imagination. On 12th December, 1796, in a letter to Thomas Poole, he referred clearly to "my own shaping and disIn the "Lines on a Friend", quisitive mind.' composed in 1 794,
1
he
he observes:
To me
And
in his
hath Heaven with bounteous hand assigned Energic Reason and a shaping mind. sonnet addressed to Sheridan (29th January, 1795)
soul hath
he writes:
marked thee in her shaping hour. mind' or the 'shaping hour' is the 'shaping gift of nature with which the creative artist is born. As he said
My
The
6.
To
Gooden, Jan.
14,
1820.
Coleridge and
in 1802, it
is
German Thinkers
241
What
nature gave
spirit of
me
at
my
birth,
My
We
shaping
Imagination.
'shaping spirit of Imagination', at least in its outline, was He did not derive it from any metaColeridge's own doctrine.
physical school of ween the shaping
ful instance of
Germany. And the curious coincidence betmind and Einbildungs-kraft is only a powerColeridge independently arrived at this
others.
how
to
(1817) took Einbildungs-kraft be a 'potentiated brightly-coloured memory', and Phantasie to be the power of 'making all parts into a whole.' This was
view of Schlegel and others. But for Coleridge, phantasie is a power inferior to the other one. Even for Kant, the freedom of imagination is only a formal activity whose creaalso the
and contingent. This activity cannot us anything about the real nature of things. And for Coleridge imagination is a supreme power which alone can give
rise to intuitions
As
against Kant, he denies the essential passivity of our sensible and emotional nature. Though Kant would refuse to accept
Coleridge argues that human reason can reconcile the temporal and the transcendental. Imagination, said Kant, can mediate between reason and understanding. But Coleonly
it,
ridge considered
capable of synthesising reason and sense and also powerful enough to transform the understanding into an
it
intuitive
and
living
power.
of
His
discussion
literature
the
contrast
between
ancient
and
and SentiBut the romantic principle he advocates is not the same as that of Schiller. We can admit that his discussion of associationism owes a great deal to J. G. E. Maass' Versuch
Schiller's 'Naive
modern
owes much to
mental Poetry.'
(1797).
He
even
attributes
to
242.
Coleridge's
Theory of Poetry
8
Then again
his
manu-
on Wit and Humour contain many from Jean Paul Richter's Vorschule. These quotaquotations tions may have been employed as his points of development in
a different direction.
different
he adopts in distinguishing organic form from mechanical regularity came from Schlegel. So are his
principle
distinctions
The
between
classical
a free rendering of Schlegel. There has been a good deal of controversy, however, about his lectures on poetry and drama.
Coleridge delivered such lectures at least thrice.
tures
ter
The
lec-
on the
by him
in the win-
1807-1808 are practically the same as those he gave in 1812. SchlegePs Lectures on Dramatic Art and Literature
in
were delivered
1808.
The
first
29th January 1811 Coleridge discussed Schlegel's idea of the Greek chorus with H. C. Robinson. On 6th November 1811, he tells Robinson: "I am very
third in
On
anxious to see Schlegel's Werke before the lectures commence." The lectures commenced on 12th December 1811. In the
second
series, therefore,
ridge's indebtedness to
appeared
in
Earlier
still it
appear-
Coleridge must have been acquainted with this essay long before he delivered his first series. But Coleridge did not admit any such knowledge till 1811.
ed in
Schiller's
Horen
in
And
He met
Tieck in
Rome
in 1806.
6th February
8.
1806
72.
Kant,
B.L.
I,
Coleridge and
German Thinkers
243
and
She too does not appear to have known about his acquaintance with that essay. In a letter of December 1811 he refers to one, Bernard Krusve who told Coleridge
immediately after the latter's lecture on Romeo and Juliet: "Were it not almost impossible, I must have believed that you
had
this
my countryman
same.
Schlegel's lecture
play, given at
But the
were
week
I
since,
Germany, scarcely more than a and the only two copies of the work in England
I
One
Mr. Boosey's." Coleridge replied that he had not "seen any work of SchlegePs except a volume of translations from Spanish Poetry, which the Baron Von Humboldt had lent me when I was at Rome." Schlegel's lectures t were delivered in 1810. Coleridge could not have borrowed
I retain:
at
as the
one of 18 II.
We
have
no reason to doubt the veracity of this statement. It is no doubt true that there is a remarkable similarity between Coleridge's lecture on Romeo and Juliet and that of
Schlegel. Coleridge himself recognised it. After going through the lectures of Schlegel, he discovered a similarity with his
"in all the lectures that related to Shakespeare or to the One may stage in general, the grounds, train of reasoning/'
own
doubt whether such a coincidence can take place. But the explanation offered by Coleridge is not unconvincing. He observes that this is a coincidence between 'two writers of similar
Both of these "studied and perseverantly the philosophy of Kant, the distindeeply guishing feature of which is to treat every subject in reference
pursuits,
and
which
it
speciallv
appertains
9.
and
to
commence by
244
of
Coleridge's
Theory of Poetry
what
is
essential,
i.e.,
explicable by
mere consideration
empirical,
i.e.,
of the
faculties in themselves,
from what
is
the modi-
fying or
stances."
forces of time,
logy
common
different in
an attempt to provide an epistemological and metaphysical basis for his theories. But the basic doctrine does not go to He took Cudworth's True Intellectual SysSchelling at all.
tem from Bristol Library in May-June 1795, and also in November-December 1796. Cudworth was a Cambridge Platonist; and prior to this, he borrowed Bishop Burnet's History of My Own Times which describes the struggle of the Cambridge
Platonists against the influence of Hobbes.
Here was a
of
re-
ference to
that the
the
mind has a
creative
function
genesis Coleridge's theory which resulted in the synthesis and identity of subject and object. The appeal to the unconscious too does not go
to Schelling; for
knowledge.
This
is
back
Mesmer's theory of the dynamic unconscious. The supposed similarities between Schelling and Coleridge in many cases are traceable to the neo-Platonic influence on both, and where this is not possible, we can explain the similarity as arising from
Kantian methodology. Yet there are a few essays which are bodily taken over by Coleridge from Schelling. Thus we have the essay "On Poesy
their
a paraphrase of Schilling's Academy Oration of 1807 on 'the Relation of the Formative Arts to
is
Such essays may have been his manuscript notes an unspecified purpose. Nothing can be definitely stated on the basis of such essays alone. Coleridge came to distrust and reject reSchelling's system even before he
meant
for
openly
jected Kant.
Coleridge and
German Thinkers
245
In a letter of December 13, 1817, to Green, he observes: "As my opinions were formed before I was acquainted with the schools of Fichte and Schelling, so do they remain inde-
them
that
I
in the
development of my thoughts, and yet seem to feel should have been more useful had I been left to evolve
them myself without knowledge of their coincidence." The few terminological borrowings came to him along with their suband clouded his jective implications and then they obscured
with the Platonic tradition.
aim which was to harmonise the British empirical intuitionism These German thinkers impeded the growth and development of his own philosophical and
aesthetic position.
Schelling
lations
between
and
nature,
the
reconciliation
of
Schelling he learnt to relate imagination to cognition. All this Coleridge freely admitted. As he stated in the Biographia, "In Schelling I first found a genial
distinction
coincidence with
much
that I
I
his
By abridging others deprived him of a endeavours, Schelling real interest for some time in pursuing his speculations freely.
own
and
yet to do."
Art
is
of philosophy';
'the
and enduring organon and document keystone of its entire arch.' At the
is
a creative energy.
it
When
when
conscious,
it is
revealed as art.
becomes conscious in the subject. And so reality u with a significance in the world of art. Even this appears doctrine goes back to Cambridge Platonists who held that there
objectivity
is
called
an organic principle animating nature. Cudworth even it and Coleridge could assimilate Cud'plastic nature
5 ;
10.
11.
B.L.
I,
102.
246
worth more
easily
and
to reason as well.
Schelling's theory of creative imagination
intended to
object.
This, he said,
that Schelling reveals "a confusion of the creaturely spirit in the great moment of its renascence with the deific energies in
12
Deity
itself."
The
is
a my-
human mind
is
admit
dangerously enough on the object. Coleridge's marginal note on Schelling's Briefe Ueber Dogma"The tismus Und Criticismus is revealing in this context:
Schelling's
emphasis
more convinced I am of the gross materialism of the system!" That gross materialism Coleridge rejected when he came to disown Hartley and Newton. This disowning was hastened by his study of the mystics and Platonists and
more
I reflect,
the
his own deep thinking. And Coleridge could therefore state with confidence that "All Schelling had said he (= Coleridge) had thought out for himself, or found in Jacob Boehme." 18
by
The
work
of Art;
and Coleridge took it over from them. Possibly Schelling too got it from the same source, with a difference. Schelling took
imagination to
nature.
be
identical
he read Schelling. He was not acquainted with Schelling before he reached Malta in 1804; and he employed this expression in a letter of January 15, 1804 adcreation', even before
dressed to Sharp.
fying power.
Here he speaks of imagination as the modiIn his famous letter of September 10, 1802 to
Sotheby, he talks of 'the modifying and coadunating faculty.' The central doctrine of imagination as stated by Coleridge owes little to very Schelling. T Note on Jacob Boehme's Aurora, cited by Muirhead, 56.
13.
Robinson's Diary,
May
29,
1812.
Coleridge's Theory
247
was interested in comprehending that activity of imagination which humanises nature. In this endeavour he was more deeply interested in the problems of personality and spiritual life. This interest was with him from an early date when he knew practically nothing about Kant and his successors in Germany. Thus in a letter to Thelwall in December 1796 he said that he. is 'a mere apparition, a naked spirit, and that life is, I myUnlike the
German
transcendentalists, Coleridge
self I.'
it
in
his
"Destiny of Nations."
Self-distinction
lost
in the
higher experiences like those of the sublime. He refers to this in his letter to Poole, dated October 16, 1797.
He
feels as if it
informed Thelwall on October 14, 1797: "My mind ached to behold and know something great, some-
thing one and indivisible. And it is only in the faith of that that rocks or waterfalls, mountains or caverns, give me the sense of sublimity or majesty! But in this faith all things
counterfeit infinity."
Seven years later Coleridge must have read Schelling's Transcendental Idealism where it is said that
'every single
work
15
14. 15.
ff.
Werke,
I,
627.
12.
SLEEP,
Sleep
is
pinions,
8
Sleep offers an experience rich with dreams of varied hues; and these dreams are the splendid visions. Coleridge's poems abound in plenty of references to sleep, dream and vision; and
from a study of these passages we can understand an important aspect of his theory of poetry. from precipices of distemper'd
"Tears of doubt-mingled joy' come to those 'that 'Start 3 Even such a sleep can sleep.' beget the joy of the creative artist. But it is not a creative
joy because it is jarred by doubts and these doubts owe their When it is not origin to the distempered character of sleep.
There
is
'slumber's
shadowy
vale.'
These
shadows are not other than the 'shadows of imagination' which people the world of poetry. And yet the shadows are not lifeless,
'silent
poesy of form.'
is
The calm
of peaceful slumber
an anathema. since
it
it is
so calm, that
disturbs
And And
its
strange
extreme silentness
1.
Poems
(O.S.A.), p. 26.
2. 3.
Ibid., p. 27.
Ibid., 69.
Ibid., p.
4.
80.
Sleep,
Dream and
Vision
249
Sea,
and
5
hill,
and wood,
life,
With
all
Inaudible as dreams.
The The
sleep
entire external
silence of a
is
world partakes of the character of a dream. happy sleep is strange in itself since a passive
taken to be self-contradictory. Even sleep has its own dynamism in that it is not only the awakener of dreams and
visions
but
it
has
its
is
specific
it
gets arti-
culated.
Dream
him
to sleep; 'and
sleep prolonged
my
dreams.'
Psychoanalysts have been telling us that in the dreamThe individual state the unconscious struggles for an escape. and is aware of something during this state. has an experience
This kind of awareness can best be described as the subconscious or the subliminal.
A state similar
to this
is
found in day-
in reverie. The fascinating "Fears in Solitude" the subliminal self looking at the world. The humble presents man 'found religious meanings in the forms of Nature' in his
dreaming and
meditative joy.
And
wrapt
In a half sleep, he dreams of better worlds, And dreaming hears thee still, singing lark,
That
singest like
state lulls
The meditative
sights
and
and unreality are not Yet what is experiapplicable to the cognitions we then have. enced does transcend the limitations of time, space and persona-
During the experience what is cognised the relative characteristics like reality
5.
Poems,
"Fears
p.
240.
6.
7.
Ibid., p. 241.
in Solitude,"
II,
25-8.
250
and the lark can appear as an angel in the clouds. The indeed blessed. sleep that begets such dreams and visions is The Ancient Mariner came to realise at one stage that sleep is 'a gentle thing', and Mary gueen sent the gentle sleep from Heaven,
lity;
That .slid into my soul. comes from heaven to the soul in travail; and though it Sleep becalms the senses by sliding into the soul, it does not render the soul passive. v/The soul is dynamic and is somehow consIt cious of the numberless goings-on in the universe around. mariner could hear the conis in a trance-like state whence the
versation of the
two
Nothing of significance
can be
lifeless
or unconscious.
We
Yet
still
the sails
till
made on
A A
pleasant noise
noon.
That
to the sleeping
woods
9
all
night
The
sleeping
woods do
listen to
a quiet tune
made by a
flowis
The
Music,
foi
necessary source of artistic inspiration; and woods are bewitched by music we get something like the
'silent
by
When
the
mariner
he
cries:
He
does
joy of creation with the waking moments since he committed the crime in the so-called wakeful or conscious state. He would
prefer to have a perpetual sleep
if
this ecstasy
were to be found
8.
II,
295-6.
9.
10.
Ibid.,
II,
470-1.
Sleep,
Dream and
Vision
251
Music, ecstasy and sleep are inseparably united; and poetry cannot be sought elsewhere.
sleep that
is
ecstatic
is
as valuable as the
moment
of
inspiration to poet.
Christabel too
11
Of
and
It imagination, and Shakespeare to mercy. And one seers. ciated with saints and
12
usually asso-
can
then
say
There
It is
is
"The Pains
of Sleep"
which
is
an outcry
of agony.
who
is
afraid of sleep:
me
13
This
in strange contrast to the mariner's invocation to sleep This contrast seems to have become more ffve years earlier.
is
acute in the
lines:
As 'twere a giant angry in his sleep." Frightened, he wants Nature to 'lull me into sleep and leave
me
dreaming.' As the notebook records, it is "the dark spirits' 13 In "The Pains" we read that the next night worst infirmity."
dream, Overcome with sufferings strange and wild, I wept as I had been a child." Such dreams arise out of the distempered sleep, not from the blessed one. Yet the reaction is similar to that of a child who
a visionary, with all its innocence, freshness and spirit wonder. This distemper again appears in another passage:
is
of
11.
12. 13.
II,
I,
375-6.
An
502.
Ode",
128.
14.
15.
Poems,
p.
16.
252
Coleridge's
Theory of Poetry
curses of his dreams,
7
And
dreaded
sleep,
Each night was scattered by its own loud screams.' The creative process has nothing to do with such sleep and dreams because these are intensely personal and because they
beget a state opposed to that of joy.
Sleep interested Coleridge primarily because it is the parent of dreams, and dreams have a good deal to do with the
origin
and nature
of sleep', near his 'dear native brook' for the first time
young Poesy
Star'd wildly-eager in her noon-tide dream. Day-dreaming might get itself expressed in the form of poetry. But it cannot divest itself of the wildness associated with fancy.
18
We
rise to
19
we
a divine analogue to the artistic process. This is a variety dreaming where the individual is asleep without closing the
eyes.
With open eyes (ah woe is me;) Asleep, and dreaming fearfully,
Fearfully dreaming, yet, I wis, Dreaming that alone, which is
"
81
what was elsewhere called 'memory's dream.' It is an 28 dream' and Christabel had one such. She dreamt open-eyed and in dreaming she recollected the sweet vision and also
This
is
Where
its
com-
17.
Poems, p. 416.
Ibid., pp. 54, 521. Ibid., p.
18.
19.
442.
II,
20.
"Christabel",
292-5.
21. 22.
Poems, p.
87.
Ibid., p. 318.
Sleep,
Dream and
Vision
253
and where its significance seems to extend plexity and intricacy to unknown regions and frontiers, we have that As
It is
a perplexity which
The
of
liveliness is
due to the
vision
and the
activity
is
of
the
subconscious in imagination.
shapelessness.
the result
Imagina-
tion has yet to reduce the liveliness of the vision into a proper
form emerges, Though my slumber was gone by, This dream it would not pass away
It
seems to
24
live
upon
till
my
eye!
The
the organic
form evolves
its
itself
pro-
This
In "Phantom or fact", he tells us that tale's a fragment from the life of dreams;
say, that years
'tis
But
matur'd the
silent strife,
25
And
There
is
life.
dreams along with dream of life. Ordinary human beings have dreams in their lives, but the poet has a dream of life. All our values including the aesthetic emanate
a
life
of
life.
There
is
a fragment illumining
this
know 'tis but a dream, yet feel more anguish Than if 'twere truth. It has been often so.88 Even when he knows that it is only a dream, he feels more anguish because it is more than the truth with which we are
acquainted in our ordinary life. It has a higher truth, a greater reality, and he does not want to be exiled from the
23.
24.
"Christabel",
Ibid.,
II,
II,
385-6.
557-9.
25.
26.
Poems,
p.
485.
Ibid., p. 495.
254
dream.
ceress'
We
are
ako
is
This aiding is necesthat can give a shape or only imagination form to the dream. Once the dream acquires a form under
'aid the Poet's
who must
it
dream.
"
sary because
is
it
And
dream.
Speaking about the joys evoked by love, he such joys with sleep did 'bide,
That
the living
8"
Image
of
my Dream
Fondly forgot.
us that he was the living image of his dream and that his poem is 'a record from the dream of life',
When
a poet
tells
He get Coleridge's equation of the poet with the poem. admits that he was given to 'dream away' the tame 'pampering
we
The coward heart with feelings all too delicate for use.' dream has no practical utility. On the other hand it has ^n intrinsic value, it is valuable for its own sake. He would not
give
28
up such a value
some
utility.
And
he
therefore observes:
My
He would
strive.'
strive
intellectual content
which can
at times
logical.
He
says that
Lull'd her,
Rose in
murmuring tide and many a pensive pleasing dream 81 sad shadowy trains at Memory's call.
sleep-like state in
the
The witchery
of
sound induces a
which one
has pensive dreams. They are full of thoughts. And yet because memory intervenes, there are only series of shadows. We
107.
Ibid., p. 348.
Ibid. t p. 527.
Sleep,
Dream and
a dream.'
'swift as
321
Vision
255
find
him saying
But
'light as
Besides this
88
we
also hear
of 'dark as
a dream' and
swift as
a dream.'
I
dreams myself
34
found
Within the
Pilot's boat.
The dreams are fleeting, inscrutable and mysterious, since they And he has a 'sweet are like moments of inspiration. The dream where Susquehannah pours his untamed stream.'
35
When an exclupleasantness of dreams needs no comment. is evoked, the dream can be sweet/ and sively personal feeling
Thus we read that Chrispleasant in a very very narrow sense. 38 tabel 'had dreams all yesternight of her own betrothed knight.'
Such personal emotions bring the dreamer into direct contact with the hard facts of life; and this contact rings the death-knell of
But then the dreams
of love 'prove seldom true.'"
7
dreams.
The
around
my
mind' are
and
'mad
Cutanist.'
a thought,
39
dream remembered in a dream. This dream within a dream is more fascinating than the normal dream. But sometimes there start Sad recollections of Hope's garish dream, That shaped a seraph form, and named it Love. 40 In the true dream there is no awareness of a recollection. Where one is conscious of remembering, he is having only
fancy, not imagination.
But there
epode
32. 33.
also the nightmare-variety of dream. of the "Ode to the Departing Year", in the
is
In the
epode which
Poems,
p. 336.
Ibid., p. 475.
34.
35.
II,
554-5.
36.
37. 38.
"Christabel",
29-30.
p. 426.
"Dejection:
152.
An
Ode,"
II,
94-5.
39.
p. 410.
40.
Ibid., p.
256
Coleridge's
Theory of Poetry
Lamb
And
ever,
when
the
dream
to
of night
sight,
Renews
the
phantom
my
my
limbs;
My My
my
eye-balls start;
Wild
And my
Restless,
Imitates the
death!
41
dream which
that
uneasy and frightened, he shudders at this kind of is a kind of death-in-life and which therefore is
This anti-aesthetic dream
is
which has engulfed man who is busy wrecking the hardwon values and ideals of life. We read that the present activities of
men
look like
c
wild and dream-like trade of blood and guile, Too foolish for a tear, too wicked for a smile. 4*
The wild and foolish and wicked dream is to be compared with the dream of life that made the Wedding Guest 'a sadder
and wiser man.'
And
all
and drunken passions wove A dance more wild than e'ver was maniac's dream.48 These maniacal dreams of desolation and destruction are busily
the
fierce
engaged in a struggle with the physical and material problems. They are the dreams which can trace their genesis to the first
murder or crime committed by man who did not know what it is to love and to dream. "Cain stood like one who
struggles 44 in his sleep because of the exceeding terribleness of a dream. And Coleridge asks us to overcome this kind of dream if we
aire
the enduring
ture.
41.
human
Ode
to the
p.
Departing Year,
361.
II,
105-12.
42.
43.
Poems,
44.
Sleep,
Dream and
Vision
257
45
;
In his "Dark Ladie" he speaks of the 'waking dreams' as he narrates his love to Genevieve,
Like the
I
murmur
of
a dream
4"
my
name.
And
yet Earl
I
am
Since the
more real and valuable and since it is complete, independent and autonomous, he cannot give it up. There is "A Day-dream" addressed to Asra. He opens the reverie by
admitting that his 'eyes and he proceeds to say:
I
make
pictures
when
dream thee with mine eyes, and at my heart I feel thee! A dream where the eyes and the heart are together active reminds us of the saying that the poet's heart and intellect must Le combined, intimately combined. But there is 'passion's 80 feverish dream' too; it is the 'unholy Pleasure's frail and is the feverish dream' product of simple passion. Then we
51
have
Alas, vain Phantasies! the fleeting brood Of woe self-solaced in her dreamy mood.62
Thus
The
Bard
Bracy had
To
45. 46.
Ibid.,
clear
unblest,
p.
552.
334, 555.
Ibid., pp.
47.
48.
49.
50. 51. 52. 53.
285.
588.
Poems,
Ibid., p. 55.
Ibid., p. 130.
"Christabel",
I,
527.
258
Warned by a
The
vision
vision in
my
rest!"
can indicate the things to come; and if they are the unblest, the vision demands that they be suppressed or des-
in music, the troyed with the help of music. The harmony in thought, and the shaping spirit operating on the rhythm In all these the common condream-material, are all alike.
trolling principle
is
that of music.
separable.
That an organic form is evolved from within is one of Such a form can emerge from the dreams Coleridge's tenets.
too.
we
read
We
The shaping
the
spirit
dream has colour, and colour is the first affirmation of form. The gay dreams have a sunny-tinctured hue; they arc He speaks of the 'day-dreams whose bright and variegated. 6 tincts with sportive brightness glow." These are the dreams of the lover; and yet as far as the immanence of colour is concerned, they do not differ from those dreams that give birth to poetry. Besides colour, the dream has a movement:
On
To
Seraph wing I'd float a Dream by night, 87 soothe my love with shadows of delight.
Colour and motion together give us a form that is dynamic, growing and evolving. In this light we can have
the love-lorn Serenade
Now
That wafts soft dreams to slumber's the dream is made to acquire a sound
and sound
find that
is
88
listening ear.'
too.
the dream.
An And
entity
in the
"Destiny of Nations"
we
54.
Ibid., 528-30.
55. 56.
57. 58.
Sleep,
Dream and
a
Vision
259
arose,
Dream
fire." Shaped The dream has a shape, a form; and the poet seeks to express This work is it in another form through significant sounds.
like
carried out silently, semi-consciously. The semi-conscious state is closer to that of the trance
arising out
of
an intense
concentration
or
contemplation.
limitations,
difficult
When we
we
human
Sometimes
it is
in prayer',
'brief
trance of abstraction.'
That
is,
emotional experience or a purely intellectual one. Great poetry presents a synthesis of these two varieties; and the poetic
ttance does not appear to be different from a dream or sleep where consciousness is active without having the interference of the will. One such was the Mariner's trance08 wherein
Even Geraldine 03 had 'lain entranced' when the five warriors This would imply that there are only certain seized her. trances which can give birth to poetry. While Geraldine 'seems to slumber still and mild',
says that she
Ghristabel
Gathers herself from out her trance; Her limbs relax, her countenance
soft.*
a trance that begets sadness; but the softness that is present is not the wisdom which dawned on the mariner and on the wedding guest. To be artistically creative the trance
59.
Poems,
p. 141.
60.
429.
31
1-4.
260
Coleridge's
Theory of Poetry
wiser.
Who, praying
65
This trance disturbs and yet pacifies because it works merely on the emotions; and such an experience has its aching joys
There is, however, another which gives raptures. a blessed visionary experience. Christabel had 'a vision sweet**; and there was another Vision' that fell upon her
rise to
07
and dizzy
soul.
The
is
earlier
68
'vision blest',
which 'put a
70
The poet
inspired
by the former
In a vacant mood, one sultry hour, he had an experience which may have come to him in 'a transient sleep' when he 'watched the sickly calm with aimless scope'; or it be
may
'
71
But then
Some hoary-headed
friend, perchance,
May
And
gaze with
oft, in
stifled
breath;
trance, the waste of death." Forget Forgetting the waste of death is to have the
momentary
dream
of
life.
In such a dream everything is charged with a new light. We 73 hear of the 'row of bleak and visionary pines' ; and we find 74 that the moon is the 'mother of wildly-working visions' and
65. 66.
Ibid., 320-2.
Ibid., 326.
Ibid.,
Ibid.,
67.
68. 69. 70. 71.
451-2.
464.
589,
607.
Pocmi,
p. 489.
72. 73.
74.
Ibid., p. Ibid., p.
176.
503.
5.
Ibid., p.
Sleep,
X
Dream and
Vision
26,1
dreams.
7*
He
Charlotte Brent,
7*
At once a
and
reality.
He would
The
vision
'dream' of them,
Only dream of you (ah! dream and pine!)." must be felt to be real. And the Pixies say that
at the visionary hour,
s
Along our wildly-bower'd sequester d walk, We listen to the enamour'd rustic's talk.78 That makes them happy. But the blessedness of the muse of
poetry implies music: The music hovers half-perceiv'd, And only moulds the slumberer's dreams.79
music that moulds the dream; and the dream is moulded into the poetic form by the joy which is at the heart of
It is
scondary imagination.
makes
fall is
'heard only
of poetry
but the
silent
Mount
the dilating soul, enrapt, transfused, Into the mighty vision passing there As in her natural form, swelled vast to Heaven! 81
higher reaches, the dream stimulated by music and regulated by imagination gives us poetry that constantly aspires to the heavenly state of experience.
In
its
The poet
is
a visionary
who
feels truth.
82
But Coleridge
it
when
we
read:
Life
is
75.
Ibid., p. 43.
Ibid., p. 411.
Ibid., p. 412.
76.
77.
78.
79.
80.
53-5.
81.
82.
Ibid.,
p. 523.
26j2
And
This idea
vice,
Shapes of is based on Berkley's thought, as Coleridge admits Then life refers to what we have in our norin a footnote.
After
'
And the dream partakes of reality. experiences. the shooting of the albatross
mal
'
Some in dreams assured were 8 Of the spirit that plagued us so. The waking moments never gave them any idea of the spirit. It was a dream that made them conscious of it; and what they dreamt was true as the mariner came to realise. The mariner
dreamt that the buckets
were
filled
I
with dew;
88
And when
this
life.
is
awoke
it
rained.
another instance of the dream revealing the facts of The mariner continues:
were wet, my throat was cold. garments all were dank; Sure I had drunken in my dreams,
My My
He drank
his body.
lips
And
still
my body
drank.
8*
in his dreams.
his soul
drink, but
His purgation began in the dream and it is futile to disbelieve it. Strange things happen in a dream; but there
are stranger events even in our
It
waking moments: strange, even in a dream, To have seen those dead men rise.87
had been
It is
is
It
not strangeness that makes a dream unreal or false. It the influence it wields that makes a dream real and true. is not for us to question what was a fact of actual
ence.
When
83. 84.
Poems,
p.
124.
131-2.
85.
86.
3014.
333-4.
87.
Sleep,
Dream and
Vision
88
263
in
'Oh! dream of joy!' a neo-platonic ecstasy: Hermit' has 'his holy dream.'* 'age'd
Even the
to us in
its
and human
This dome
is
and
struggles.
It
is
In a vision once
saw
90
and the
its
dome
gives place in
dome of poetry. The poet dreams 'of blissful and he would 81 Then wake in Heaven, and find the dream all true. Coleridge's poetry abounds in dreams and visions like these. They constitute a great source of the misinterpretation to which And because of the great part playJiis poetry was subjected. ed by dreams and visions, critics have ventured to maximise
the role of the unconscious in his theory of poetry. The statements of the poet himself convincingly tell us that dreams and visions have little of the unconscious in them.
88.
89.
Poems,
p. 464.
142.
37-8.
Ibid., p.
90.
"Kubla Khan",
Poems,
p. 350.
91.
13.
many
references to music;
throw much
1
light
on
is
his theory.
and a At the
we must remember
that poesie
It falls
*a
on a sweet instrument.'
on the ear as
it
has
its
own
musical instrument
that articulates
when
it
is
it. It is similar to the song of the nightingale blended with the sounds of the flowing, hidden*
stream.
The
and the streams under the earth and the subterraneous together; and the
music of poetry is the synthesis of these two. In such a case the sense of musical delight can only be an innate tendency being coeval with imagination.
Music has a
climbs Brockely
direct
effect
on the
passions.
When
he
Coomb
in 1795,
wild-wood melody: 8 Far off the unvarying cuckoo soothes my ear. Shakespeare was said by Milton to 'warble native wood-notes wild'; and the context in Milton associates this with
Warble
in shade their
The
fancy.
cause of the
word
'wild.'
As the bride paced into the hall, 4 The blending of the merry minstrelsy.'
1.
Poems,
p.
374.
2. 3.
Ibid.,
p.
94.
4.
35-36.
265
with the sounds of the running be soothing to the excited passions. But it can have may It beneither the wildness nor the quality of being merry. comes merry because of its association with the wedding; and
brook
the associationist background makes this music an acquired, not an inherent, endowment. Coleridge thus seems to refer to two
be partly responsible for the gross misunderstanding on the part of the critics who made out that There is a music the sense of musical delight is a product.
this
may
which
is
of others.
a product, and there is another which is productive The former emerges from a poem, but the latter is
poem.
distinct,
though at
life.
times they
may
'Mingling with the choir he 'seems to view the vision of the Heavenly multitude, who hymned the song of Peace over Bethlehem's
The rapture or ecstasy of music is an experience of a vision; and the vision is of a heavenly society of
fields.
55
There is something uniquely Coleridgean in angels that sing. the connection of music and vision. It is moreover to be noticed that music
is
The
then
vision
inspire
makes us
the
in-
aware
of
music;
and
music
may
dividual to the creation or expression of a poem. In a poem addressed to Lamb he speaks of the Aonian
mount where
Stands a lone and melancholy
tree,
Make solemn
From
music.
other references we know that Coleridge speaks of a mount and of a tree or hill of knowledge. The branches poetic of the tree make solemn music to the blast of the Lutanist. There is the link with the Aeolian Harp. As the woods 'have
5. 6.
Poems,
p.
109.
159.
Ibid., p.
266
Coleridge's
Theory
of Poetry
of the wind', he
wound
his
moonlight
of folly,
7
By each rude shape and wild unconquerable sound! The breeze of inspiration, music and moonlight bring about
It the absorption of the external universe in the individual. not a simple organic unity, but a realized identity that is 'Nature's expressed as a result of the music under moonlight.
is
Birds, trees, ocean-gale and passion-warbled plaint' melts us. 8 stiff grass, murmur and give us 'music thin of sudden breeze.'
It is
is
Exempt from the wrongs of Time! That was what the 'mighty Mount' of poetry announced.
And
out of that spring emerges poetry of the highest value. The music and the breeze are, however, not two different entities K
only
we remember
Harp
to
Coleridge.
The music that brings the different worlds together is also that which clarifies the visionary Such a music experience. can lead to poetic expression only when it inspires the individual.
In 1790,
we
11
and glows
The
divine
fire is
powers the individual and makes him glow with inspiration. Even the lyre is said to be touched with that divine afflatus.
Then its sounds would penetrate the very core The 'soul-dissolving Harmony' leads 'the oblivious
With her
of existence.
soul astray.'
18 'sacred might', music 'inspires each throat.' sonal identity is lost under the And it spell of music.
Peris
not
7. 8.
Ibid., p. 244.
Ibid., p. 324.
9.
iV/. 10.
Ibid.,
^l/tU-.j Ibid.,
p.
JJ. p.
325.
t>Cr. 352.
11.
Ibid.,
p.
15.
12.
Ibid., p.
28 (written in 1791).
267
any spirit or muse that inspires the poet, but music. Such music is anterior to poetry. Imagination brings about a synthesis of the dominant passion with the will of the individual.
Thus
Hangs
Harmony
13
And
Passion
is
divested of
released
restless,
by music. It is the fall of harmony which harmony But synchronises with the operation of the conscious will. music in itself is mysterious and startling. We read that
the matin Bird with startling song
Salutes the sun his veiling clouds among. The clouds may veil the sun; they may obscure light; but music is capable of penetrating the veil. The glorious sun
14
who
rises 'like
God's
own
head'
is
The
'far-off
music'
the breeze';
breeze
its
is
The and it may be the 'passion-warbled song.' the wind of inspiration that carries music with all
The 'warbled
w
strains soar
music soars higher into Reality and pervades every nook and
corner in the world, breaking the veils and glorying in the This is a state of joy. The 'melodies steal' over effulgence.
the ear
'like far-off joyance' or like 'the murmuring of wild bees in the sunny showers of spring.' Such sounds 'cheer the
lonely breast'
17
and make
to the
it
Departing Year" (1796) begins with an address to the Divine spirit 'that regulates into one vast har-
The "Ode
Ibid., p.
36
(written in
1792).
Ibid., p. 49.
16.
17.
268
Coleridge's
all
Theory of Poetry
*
mony
It
Harp
of
Time' and
be heard only when one has an 'inward stillness , 'a bowed 18 mind' and 'an untroubled ear.' Humility, tranquillity and an ear for music are necessary. The first two bring music into
relation with the good;
and the
last
or-
ganic to the world. The divine spirit has reduced all the events of time into the form of music. The essence of time is
music.
We
harp which
And
Music thus
is
which
it
transcends.
And
Cole-
ridge's metaphysical enquiries were directed largely towards It was in this light that he the problem of time. spoke of resuccession to an instant. is even There ducing
'
Some sweet
beguiling melody,
90
So sweet, we know not we are listening to it. Awareness is an event in time; and time does not exist in the
When music inspires, it does induce higher reaches of music. a mood of forgetfulness; and yet it is a mood in which one feels
that he has the best
the poet
moments
of existence.
And
there
is
also
who
So
He deem'd
himself, as
The stream of music so bewitched him that he not only had 10 awareness of his body and senses and became a living soul
is it
were, but he
is
Here
at the fountain of the muses. a stream of music that transforms an individual into
felt
that he
was
18.
ibid., p.
160.
19.
Ibid., p. Ibid.,
538.
20.
21.
pp. 377-8.
Ibid., p. 442.
269
a poet.
The stream
poetry and life as well. It is a living, perennial fountain. Music does not always imply something sweet and pleasant It is a poor music that has no touch with the tragic only.
element in
human
life.
We
like
harsh tunes
8
Played deftly on a soft-toned instrument.* The harsh tune played deftly on a delicate instrument loses something of its harshness. It is mellowed to such an extent
that
we
its
existence because
it fits
into
the scheme of things. The melodies preserve the memories of the wrongs and distress for which mankind and
weeps;
angel-guide, 88 pass the cup of anguish by. Music enables us to endure the anguish, for sorrow would then appear to be a necessary ingredient in the total experience of man.
such
strains,
breathed by
my
Would make me
is
transcends
pain
and
pleasure.
;
Nature's
sweet
'his
and joyance'
seems to
soul
and with
de-
disburthen his
24
full
Earlier
here
we have
like to
be free and
A soul that would disburthen itself of all its music; and a music that would dissolve the soul does not exclude it. They are one and the same. We are in touch with this
in that silent
entity
meditation where
listens
concentration.
As he
Ibid., p. Ibid.,
Ibid.,
149.
p.
236.
p. 265.
270
the
"Garden
of Boccaccio", he
like
is
affected
a stream
But casts in happier moulds the slumberer's dream.* music does not dispel sleep; but through the dream it This is puts us in tune with that foundational consciousness which
the source of all being
the real
and becoming.
is
and the
true.
When
some
is
cares-
Like some coy maid half yielding to her lover, It pours such sweet upbraiding as must needs
Tempt
to repeat the
his
wrong!
One
is
tempted to repeat
ways
all distinctions
and outlook.
rise.
influence.
Its strings
Such a soft-floating witchery of sound As twilight elfins make, when they at eve Voyage on gentle gales from Fairy-Land,
Where Melodies round honey-dripping flowers, and wild, like birds of Paradise, Nor pause, nor perch, hovering on untamed wing!
Footless
88
breeze from fairy land, the melodies of the honey-heavy bees, and the magic sounds of the elfins recall the birds of
The
The
poetry.
spirit
paradisal aspect of music is prominent in Coleridge's We have already noticed the identity of the soul or
We find that 'sweet sounds rose slowly the mouths of the inspirited mariners. This presents through' us with the core of the vision in the "Ancient Mariner":
with music.
25.
26. Ibid., p. 478. Ibid.,
p.
101
(written in
1795).
271
Then darted
to the sun;
Slowly the sounds came back again, Now mixed, now one by one."
All the
little
birds filled
'the sea
and
air
jargoning.'
And now
'twas like
all
instruments,
Now
like
a lonely flute;
it
And now
is
an angel's song,
88
That makes the heavens be mute. Sound and light are synthesised because of music which alone
can render the heavens mute.
he comes under
This music
is
a kind of
light
becharmed
to
sense,
spell.
The
sails
continued
make a
was
a hidden brook
That
In the leafy month of June, to the sleeping woods all night Singeth a quiet tune.*
We began the enquiry with the murmur of a hidden brook. Here again we have a hidden brook singing a quiet tune to the sleeping woods; and the sleeping woods have the spell of
music on them.
The woods
they have is a kind trance in which their soul trance can hear only a quiet tune.
awake.
Bard Bracy was to ride to Lord Roland's with "music so 80 Music sweet, more loud than your horses' echoing feet!" can be loud only when it is like an incantation. Without such music the bard outside the poem could not complete it, and the
bard inside does not want to undertake the journey that day: So strange a dream hath come to me,
That
27. 28. 29. 30.
363-6.
Ibid.,
369-72.
"CKristabel",
499-500.
272
Coleridge's
Theory of Poetry
clear yon wood from thing unblest, 81 Warned by a vision in my rest! The vision warned him of the evil; and evil can be exorcised
To
only
by music. This is something like that religious catharsis of which Plato has given us a good account. For good and evil
alike,
music
is
absolutely necessary.
the
same day With music strong and saintly song To wander through the forest bare,
8*
strong;
it
is
hymn
or
and branch.
Music
purifies
and
It
is
also crea-
We have only to remember how the earlier poets used to invoke the aid of the Muse for composing their poems' Coleridge has given the best account of this aspect of music
tive.
in his
"Kubla Khan". There we have the Could I revive within me Her symphony and song,
lines:
To such a deep delight 'twould win me. That with music loud long, I would build that dome in air, 88 That sunny dome! those caves of ice! The song of the Abyssinian Maid seen and heard in the vision is more powerful than the might of the earthly potentates. Kubla might have decreed a pleasure dome to be built by manual labour with physical objects. But there is the real dome called poetry which can be created only with the inspiration provided
by music.
so excite
him with
spiritual delight or ecstasy that he can build in air the sunny dome with its caves of ice. As such it would be c a
Ibid., Ibid.,
527-30.
561-3.
213
to
an
activity
.'
The
soul,
which
is
of the nature of
is
the creative
principle.
We
And from
the soul
itself
A
It is
sweet and potent voice, of its own birth, 4 Of all sweet sounds the life and element!*
is
This
luminous mist,
6
This beautiful and beauty-making power.* The strong music which is the soul in action is the Beautiful;
and
it
is
also
own
image.
that principle which shapes everything in its It is the shaping spirit which makes, creates
It is the halo beautiful objects because this music is light. and yet it is veiled to the ordinary perceptions of the indivi-
dual.
'the
It
is
spirit.
This
spirit is joy; it
is
'the
sweet voice',
luminous
cloud.'
Out
of this
charms or ear or
sight,
Melodies, colours
the spirit
light:*
all
emanations of
which
is
When
is
this
first
the
And there is 'music travelling Lutanist', the 'mighty poet.' "7 the twilight breeze which spreads everywhere.
Music
ridge there
is is
on
embodied
in the Abyssinian Maid; and for Colemusic where we have a well designed woman.
Betham we
get
The Almighty, having first composed a Man, Set him to music, framing Woman for him,
34. 35.
"Dejection:
Ibid., 62-3. Ibid.,
73-5. p.
An
Ode", 56-58.
36.
37.
Poems,
510.
274
And And
Plato's
fitted
'tis
each to each, and made them one! my faith, that there's a natural bond
88
Symposium was
unknown
to Coleridge,
the Platonist.
felt he would complete if he were given good music was "Christabel" and it is with Christa;
lovely
is
associated often.
One
aspect of
come
to Coleridge
from
word.
therefore
meaning of the word lovely. There is a poem of 1790 by Coleridge depicting a weeping which opens with the lines Lovely gems of radiance meek
Trembling down
lady's
my
Laura's cheek.
38
Here the word lovely qualifies the lifeless gems; and yet the* gems are said to have meek radiance. This is the earliest association of the word lovely with an ethical This is not quality. a mere accident. There are 'lovely native vales' 40 in another poem. The native vales that foster and develop the The indivipersonality and character can be and are lovely. dual is moulded largely by the influences of his environment in his early impressionable years. In 1794 he composed "The Sigh" where we have the lines:
early
The
It is
the lovely Prospect smiFd. lovely prospect is the future which is not merely beautiful. the future which is to present the realized dreams, ideals
all
And
41
and
4a
all-lovely.'
The
like
omnipotent,
Ibid., p. 375.
Ibid.,
p.
17.
40. 41.
42.
Ibid., p. 34.
Ibid., Ibid.,
p. 62. p.
86.
275
omnipresence and omniscience. Such a patterning introduces also a theological aspect to the already ethically charged lovely. 8 There is 'a lovely rose'* likened to a child. Here we can read
into the
of feeling
word the ideas of innocence, of freshness, warmth and purity. Above all, the word 'lovely' is the unique
It
quality of Christabel:
was a
The lady
Christabel,
when
she
44
praying at the old oak tree. of the lady praying at the oak tree sight
sight lovely
this tree
is
Was
is
not
itself lovely.
its
rarest
on
There
is
an evocation
the
spiritual;
and
in
this
set-up the sight is lovely. There are passages that might appear to conflict with such *a view. One such occurs in the "Songs of the Pixies" (1793)
:
Tearful cheeks are lovely to the view 48 As snow-drop wet with dew.
The snow-drop wet with dew is compared to the tearful cheeks. The cheeks can be lovely because of the attachment of affections implied by the word 'tearful.' The snow-drop
however
attached to the dew; and this can be a moral attachment only by a stretch of imagination. The cheeks are the
is
snow-drops and the tears are the dew. It is through this symbolism that loveliness is felt in both. In 'The Kiss" (1794) we
On
The
lips
Dawns the soft relenting smile, And tempts with feign'd dissuasion coy The gentle violence of Joy. are lovely when they breathe those affections
49
that have
an ethical
43.
44.
genesis.
p.
But more
significant
is
the association of
Ibid.,
176.
"Christabel", 279-81.
45.
46.
Poems,
Ibid.,
p. 44. p.
64.
276
shyness
In Coleridge's theory and is one with the practice alike, joy is the soul, the light, which would make the whole Then imagination creative imagination. universe lovely. During his Christ's Hospital days he
loveliness.
but the sky and stars. Elsewhere we are told that 'the blue sky bends over
saw nought
47
lovely
all'
and
if
men
48
will call.'
stars
It
is
is
harmo-
nious loveliness.
The
steadiness
and
we
about 'flowers of
the sky
loveliest blue?'
The
colour blue
like
associated with
stars'
These are explicitly said to be the 'living flowers' in the vale of Chamouni. They are transmuted into vital organisms; and
then they can be lovely. 61 In 1794 he speaks of 'the lovely starling,' Lavinia Poole becomes 'a lovely convalescent/
515
Later Miss
In his
first
3
Asra poem called "Love", he is the 'bold and lovely knight." Besides these, we hear of 'the blameless features of a lovely 54 mind' in a poem of September 1794. With the loveliness of
mind we proceed
to the supersensuous
related to the affections in the concept of the lovely. is well in the lines: expressed
47.
48.
Ibid., p.
242.
"Christabel", 330-1.
49.
50. 51.
52.
Poems,
p.
49.
Ibid., Ibid.,
p.
p.
252. 333.
53.
54.
Ibid., p. 66.
277
The
love
is
related to
the lovely.
And
bel."
Emotions and moral values are brought together. Coleridge also gives us a tree of knowledge beside the
lines of friendship in the
most famous
There are
The
Loveliness
spiritual.
Inweaving each
thus
slides
18
experience of the lovely might make one feel But this pleasure has a 'persistent pleasure or pain or both. 57 Pleasure and loveliness' and this pain has 'its lovely mound.'
The
pain cease to be contraries; and they carry meanings from another world. The ethical aspect of the lovely is best expressed in the lines:
O Woman!
Most
All lovely in thy spring of years, Thy soul in blameless mirth possessing,
lovely in affliction's tears,
58
than tears suppressing. Blameless goodness and happiness have made her lovely even
lovely
still
More
in her sorrow.
lines:
The
spiritual aspect
is
more prominent
in the
The
she
priestess
is
and
as lovely as a vision.
Loveliness here
integrated with
55. 56.
57. 58. 59.
Ibid., p.
440.
Ibid., p. 454.
Ibid., p. 455.
Ibid., p.
509.
Ibid., p.
307.
278
Coleridge's
Theory of Poetry
In a
poem on
chance some lovely maid thou find 60 To read thy visage in thy mind.
If
It is the lovely
is
of 'lovely forms'
dim fragments
Come
The
Solitude, contemplation, supersensuousness, and beauty are brought into an organic coherence with loveliness in a poem
"The Blossoming of "The finer the sense for the beautiful and the lovely, and the fairer and lovelier the object presented to the sense; the more exquisite the individual's capacity of joy, and the more ample his mean's and opportunities of enjoyment, the more heavily will he feel the ache of solitariness, the more unsubstantial becomes the
It written in prose and verse. Date-Tree." Here the Solitary
is
entitled
we have
the lines:
Loveliness brings forth the joy spread around him." of creation, a joy which is intensely felt in solitude by the creafeast
tor.
82
The joy
life
of
and death,
of creating the living transcends the distinctions of good and evil, of pleasure and pain.
The contemplative spirit of the creator finds not only life The loveliness of death refers implicitly to lovely, but death.
the ethical
and
surrenders his
In the "Religious Musings" Lovely was the death Of Him whose life was Love.63
we read
that
This
is
60.
61. 62. 63.
Ibid., p. 32.
lbid. 9 p. 372.
Ibid.,
p.
396.
110.
Ibid., p.
279
and
time.
This transcendence
is
'love'
which
a universal,
love.
The 'Lord
Evil,
Teachers of
God through
lovely."
by
brief
wrong
Making Truth
The ever-wakeful love can transform truth into loveliness. That truth is made lovely by spiritual love was given by Keats
a seemingly paradoxical expression.
trine in
an
effective
The
Hill of knowledge'
Knowwe find
Each one a
86
lovely light.
The
One such
lovely lady,
spirit is
Christabel in
07
whom
down
Coleridge studied
There
is
'the
69 69
who
'lay
in her loveliness.'
The arms of Geraldine 'have been the lovely lady's prison.' 70 Even Geraldine 'tricks her hair in lovely plight.' But Chris71 tabel is 'the lovely maid and Geraldine 'the lady tall.' It is Sir Leoline who is made to describe Geraldine as the 'lovely
1
But for the poet and his readers daughter' of Lord Roland. Christabel alone is the lovely lady; and the poem where she
appears is the most musical of Coleridge's. Loveliness and music go together since Bard Bracy wanted to clear the garden
78
64. 65.
66.
Ibid., p.
Ibid., p.
116.
157.
494-5, cf.
Poems,
p.
369.
23,
38.
238.
303-4.
507.
280
power
of music.
The Travels
of
Monsieur de Thevonot
is
a darling word of
a word that should never be applied except to I may objects that exercise a moral feeling of attachment. 'a lovely Woman' or 'a lovely Infant', but not 'a lovely say,
Diamond
spiritual.
or Topaz'."
Then
Coleridge's music
is
ethical
and
14.
Coleridge's theory of imagination was formulated in his letters and in his Biographia Literaria. Attempts have been
made
to
man
thinkers
show that this theory was largely derived from Gerand that it was not well thought out. Critics
who found
associationism in
it.
Coleridge's
formulation
may
But we have indisputable evidence to show that he had a theory of imagination from the early days of his poetic career.
poet like Coleridge gives us not only a highly valuable set of poems but poems where he gave vent to his theories and
dogmas, aesthetic and religious. In a poem of 1787 entitled "Dura Navis" we have the
first
mention of fancy:
Vain are thy Schemes by heated Fancy plann'd. in action offers vain schemes. Fancy They can be vain only because they are not unified by any single dominant prinThree years later he tells us that his only wish is ciple.
Evening Star 'mid Fancy's high career.' Such a gaze would lead to day-dreaming wherein the associative activity of the mind is supreme. Such an act has neither a purpose nor an objective nor any coherence. Fancy takes
to gaze awhile at the
8
him
the steeds of fancy to be unhorsed since he will then be brought 3 to the dreary heath. Here fancy is taken to be the means
of
facts of
life.
And
if
poetry
is
Poems,
Ibid.,
p.
p.
2.
2. 3.
17.
Ibid., p. 27.
281
282
concerned with
life,
Yet
we
read:
Her
In another
fly
tales of future
tell.
poem
of the
like
shadows 'on
same year we read of fair delights that memory's wing.' Fancy depends on
have ceased to grow.
are merely shadows or they appear burnished like the barge
Those
fixities
which Cleopatra
sailed to see
Antony.
5
implication they are shadows released by the burnished wings of fancy. They are a multitude:
The
and by
murmuring throng
their
Of
wild-bees
hum
drowsy Song,
By Indolence and Fancy brought, A Youthful Bard, 'Unknown to Fame', Wooes the Queen of 'Solemn Thought. .V Drowsiness and indolence are associated with fancy.
fied
Dissatis-
with
these,
the solemnity which belongs to imagination proper. Imagination alone can offer truth and reality. The Tea-Kettle in
a dream-like
state,
to
between
reality
and
find
unreality.
And
we
him saying
The
Propitious fancy hears the votive sigh The absent Maiden flashes on mine Eye!" flashing evoked by fancy refers to the inward vision 01
insight.
4.
5.
But there
Ibid., p.
is
He
wants
29
40.
(written in 1791).
Ibid., Ibid.,
6.
7. 8.
p. 42.
19.
Ibid., p.
Ibid., p. 49.
283
nature.
poet's
wings, not to explore the clouds or the 'lovely sorceress* who must aid the
arise
When
8
ceit.'
these are accomplished, he would And the 'dear native brook' leads
him on
to cry ear-
nestly:
Of wood,
That
All these
leased
Yet dear to fancy's eye your varied scene hill, dale, and sparkling brook between!
soars
flash
may
on Morning's wing your vales among. on the eye. But the variety that is
10
re-
And
is
by fancy is a product of deception, of something unreal. even deception can be sweet and pleasant as long as one
Ye Woods
that
wave
o'er
is
your murmuring deep! The ear of fancy receives pleasant sounds and makes the mind wander over faery regions in order that he may extract all
kinds of implications. 'Fancy's eye finds in 1797 'a potent 12 in the mother's name. The eyes and ears of fancy are spell' instruments which can make one interpret the assopowerful
ciated ideas
1
To
and images
as the true
This
possible because the poet under the spell of fancy does not know that the imaginative act is absent. In 1790 on the death of Ghatterton he writes, 'Gold my Fancy grows, and
is
But when
vision fair
his
Fancy
Paints
in the air
him many a
bosom glows.
14
Fancy
9.
Poems,
p. 51.
10. 11.
129.
176.
13.
12.
13. 14.
Ibid., p.
14.
284
Fancy
later there
is
Four years
1*
was fancy,
We
Deep-sighing, points the fair frail Abra's tomb. know from other passages that Coleridge found joy at the
heart of imagination.
activity of fancy.
But here he
finds
Hope's
whisper and
forgets
Jealousy with fevered fancies pale Jarr'd thy fine fibres with a maniac's hand." The fevered fancies are pale; they are lifeless. And yet they can so control the mind as to make one a maniac since fancy
is
When
essentially chaotic.
melodies of Southey have awakened 'Hope born fancy' which 17 flings 'rich showers of dewy fragrance from her wing.' Fancy has a beginning; it is born of Such a beginning is hope.
is
gift that
nature endows an
By contrast, fancy value to the true poet. "The Lines Written at Shurton Bars" in September, 1795,
is
moment
of his birth.
of
little
But why with sable wand unblessed Should Fancy rouse within my breast
Dim
Later on
this
visag'd shapes of
Dread?
18
gaily sings.
She
may drop
awhile her wings like skylarks.'" Fancy then alternates from one extreme to another. Jealousy, fear and are at the
hope
genesis of fancy;
of this are
dim.
shudders at the
poison'd bowl/
this
Depression brought by fancy would make power exclusively subjective; and poetry of value has very
lUlU., Ibid., p. 71. /I.
Ibid., p. 72
Ibid., p. 87.
(written in 1794),
Ibid., p.
97.
19.
20.
285
tion
to do with personal emotions. The true aesthetic emomust needs be impersonal, universal. Fancy, on the other, has a background of gloom; and out of this gloom it can make
the
mind turn
Such strange
Of Misery fancy
crazed!
81
And
is
once again there was within her 'The unquiet silence of confused thought and shapeless feelings.'* This shapelessness
1
very antithesis of the shaping spirit. Shapelessness would be the result of an activity that is not directed or regulated by the conscious will. Fancy
it is
and
would thus be an
dissociation
activity dissociated
from the
will;
and the
In
makes
1797 we find that the strange man leaves Maria Troubled with wilder fancies, than the
moon
"
The
tion
Breeds in the love-sick maid, who gazes at it. 2 wilder fancies are associated with love-sickness, the emo-
incommunicable. Such an being too personal and emotion can lead to a pleasant reverie or to a scries of violent There is an element of feelings like anger, fear or jealousy. rashness here. 1809 we find 'Wild- wood fancy and By impe4 tuous zeal.'" The impetuosity is a feature of the dominant passion which needs a fusion with will.
In the "Religious Musings" (1794-1796) the self is said to be 'far diffused as Fancy's wing can travel.' 85 This very fancy, we read later, falls from 'heights most her
idle
5
strange, fluttering
wing.
Without a goal or an
In other
words,
21.
it
is
an
p.
activity
139.
that
Ibid.,
Ibid., pp.
139-140.
182-3.
Ibid. t pp.
Ibid.,
p.
413.
115.
Ibid. t p.
26.
Ibid., p. 123.
286
Coleridge's
it
Theory of Poetry
time which
idle wings.
The "Destiny
of fancy:
good account
Fancy
is
the
power
That
first
Giving it new delights; and bids it swell With wild activity; and peopling air,
By obscure
Emancipates
thrall
Of
Till Superstition
These
lines
were written at
famous
Sotheby, and eighteen years prior to the Biographfci Sensations give rise to images and ideas. Literaria. But fancy disconnects these images and ideas from the original sensaletter to
.
tions.
Then under
is
ideas there
the powerful impact of the association of a wild activity of the mind. Strange phantoms
and
with
fears
the
its
snapped.
Once
and
its
self-control
appear,
place
is
slowly usurped by
reason.
essence
lies
a wild,
and
ideas, fears
and hopes.
present when the imagination In such instances fancy functions in a subordinate capacity only. Writing to Lloyd in 1796 he speaks of a Hill with secret springs, and nooks untrod,
is
active.
And many
Where
a fancy
blest
holiness
is
blest
by fancy; and
Ibid.,
Ibid.,
p.
p.
134. 157.
287
then the associative links partake of the character of goodness. Out of such a holy context even fancy can evoke diviner But these strains presuppose inspiration, not daystrains.
dreaming; and then imagination must be taken to be impliin which fancy plays citly present governing the entire process but a minor role. In "France" (February 1798) he tells us that
he winds his moonlight
29
way
'pursuing
fancies
holy.'
The
fancies are brought together; and when the anything can happen to Coleridge's muse. As
80
saints.
absolute freedom; and the process is charged with visual imAt the time of the ages of unusual felicity and sweetness.
'a constitutional
and
11
association'
and
combined with
it.'"
we have
and
electrical apparitions,
18
from the magic cauldron of a fervid and ebullient fancy, conWe stantly fuelled by an unexampled opulence of language."
have passages where the poet is carried away more by the magic of sounds. One such passage we have in the "Religious
tropics.
34
And
in
"The Destiny
of Nations" there
is
a para-
graph
lines, tho' I
on which Coleridge comments: "these are very fine say it, that should not: but, hang me, if I know
or ever did
tion."
know
the
meaning
is
of them, tho'
my own
Composi-
Ibid., p. 244.
Ibid., p. 481. Ibid., p. 597.
31. 32.
33.
Ibid. f p. 598.
Lines 260ff.
34.
Lines 27gff.
288
in
Coleridge's
Theory of Poetry
which Coleridge
beauty of versification/
We
have
freely within the Coleridge Space and time are its forms of senspatio-temporal world. and sibility and hence he could speak of the opulence of fancy
how
combine
it
features of
Along
Lamb:
In fancy (well
I
know)
From Thou
With
business wandering far and local cares, creepest round a dear-lov'd Sister's bed
noiseless step,
faint look,
Soothing each pang with fond solicitude, And tenderest tones medicinal of love.*
Here
is
an unusual kind
of fancy
which concentrates on
it.
**a
single visual
a product of the activity of fancy; and the picturesque does not imply
Possibly the picturesque
any idealization or synthesis. In March, 1798, we find him speaking of a woman who built a little home of joy and rest 'in fancy oft.' She peopled it with the friends she loved best and 'named the inmates of
her fancied cot/
strains' of
3"
'soft
Bowles; and
in
Wak'd
Again
all
me
87
one of them.
and fancy
is
We
Can
Here
is
88
night.
a reverie transforming
into
a state of auto-
Poems,
p.
78.
Ibid., p. 249.
Ibid., p. 84.
Ibid., p. 446.
289
hypnosis.
any
object.
This
When
restless
mercury in the barometer. and grew sickly' there comes a "poor-fancy stagger'd 40 He advised Matilda state, 'twixt yea and nay/
fancy
functions
like
Betham
in
It is
Hurried onward by the wings of fancy 41 Swift as the whirlwind, singing in their quills. a spontaneous association of ideas and feelings that she
to cultivate at the
outset.
was asked
would be
wants
his
And
is
this
spontaneity
subjective.
when
the subject
"The Nose" he
Muse
So
to aspire:
And from my
like the
Nose
sing
my
Like Phlegethon my verse in waves of fire shall flow!" This can be accomplished by fancy provided there is a burning brand called inspiration regulating
cess.
it
tion.
to the
the
same year
her
'lovely.'
He
Exalts
my
soul, refines
my
breast,
Gives each pure pleasure keener zest, And softens sorrow into pensive joy.*3
Evidently the Muse does not respond to the call of This is due to pensive joy, for fancy. joy is the essence
of imagination.
his heart
From
the
Muse he
learnt to
commune with
in
and
to laugh at the
39.
Ibid.,
p. 496.
40. 41.
Ibid., p. 467.
Ibid., p. 376.
42.
4.8.
Ibid., p. 8.
Ibid., p.
9.
290
of fancy as one of folly. ridge brought to speak of the work a complete Folly and 'gay-varying hues' go together to give us
picture of fancy.
is
Wallowing in the personal, sentimental experiences, one Chatterton 'to scenes of apt to become a slave to fancy.
46
bliss
He becomes
a solipsist
an impersonal experi48 But 'the social In 1800 his 'fancy transports' him. ence. It is sense' that spreads far and wide is 'more than fancy.'
pure and
simple, for fancy cannot offer
47
Imagination
is
crowns the Poet's cup, and not fancy. It looks outwards and is an the social sense.
4"
all-inclusive spirit.
"Dejection:
An Ode"
For hope grew round me, But now afflictions bow me down
to earth:
Nor
care
me
of
my
mirth;
visitation
me
at
my
birth,
4"
My
They emerge
some point
of
in time
But the 'shaping spirit acquired. of nature and one is born with it.
not suspend the shaping
spirit
spirit.
imagination'
gift
It
is
no more.
Hope and
44.
45.
Ibid., p. Ibid.,
p.
10.
127
46.
47. 48.
49.
405
(written in Jan.
1807)
291
is
And
alive.
In
March, 1798, we
580
51
find
woman who
'play'd
with
It is interesting to
have not only darker emotions but colours. It is not merely a colouring of imagination that can be thrown over objects, but even a colouring of fancy. This aspect in a sarcastic
mood
1798):
As
if
On
and wretchedness were tagged Like fancy-points and fringes, with the robe
which our
Pulled off at pleasure." These fancy-points are like the sensitive points emblematic of human vice and wretchedness. Through these qualities the
points acquire their colour.
of
its
own
that which develops from within. Even in 1799 we find him saying that his
wandered by day and by night, Amid battle and tumult, 'mid conquest and death. 83 Confusion is a product of fancy; and this faculty moves in its two extreme points without any steadying or balancing infancy
still
It thereby becomes changeable as the weathercock. 1800 he begins associating love with fancy, 'when This association, five years grosser eyes are closed in sleep.'"
fluence.
Thus
in
later,
makes fancy
can meet.
55
'bitter-sweet', since
lovers
Here we get a
which and
appears to be
50.
of the idea
CM. 51.
52.
DUO. 368.
pp. 261-62.
358.
Ibid. t p. 317.
Ibid.,
Ibid.,
p.
p. 392.
292
the image as practised by Donne and his Metaphysicals. It is in his fancy that he presumes to call the bosom of the lady M Once fancy is set aside and pure imagi'poor love's tomb/ nation alone is brought into play, we have only sensibility.
Fancy and reason are mutually the fancied goal* and soon finds that
exclusive.
He
starts 'for
reason^ intervenes
between
the
him and
57
his
promised
joy.
throne of fancy at the advent of self-control, we have already noticed. What he means by reason is not what is commonly attributed to the term, but systematic metaphysical enquiry. By 1802 it is the 'abstruse research' that enables him to steal from
his
'own nature
all
58
'inter-
pret Reason's light.' Fancy is then as powerful as reason; and as such it can make one believe that he is truly imaginative when all that he has is only fancy.
There
is
oj
Just after sunset or by moonlight skies, one should have a heart and ease and make pictures
of shifting clouds;
One can
inward
fancy himself to be
00
light.'
A
01
similar contrast
Tarnassian Youth/
The
brain; and as they were lured forth there was 'a freakish rout'
and they
Witched the air with dreams turned insight out."" This freakish rout can bewitch one only when he is not the Parnassian Youth or the true poet. The genuine poet does not bring forth that which is already present in 'the bee-hive'
Ibid.,
p.
475,
Ibid., p. 30
p. 367. Ibid., p. 467. Ibid.,
(written in
1791).
60.
61. 62.
(written in
1823).
293
The
lines of
1827:
He
own
conceit
"
The fancy made him glad! makes him glad while imagination Fancy
with joy.
is
synonymous
is
animal
senses.
Coleridge's use of the term 'joy' needs a proper understanding if we are to follow his theory of imagination well.
The maid he
loves
must
and calm
64
delight.'
In the same year the 'best beloved Goddess is 'Delightful Tea' Who know'st to spread the calm delight
This
is
the pure joy prolong to midmost night! a joy associated with inspiration and with 'the
00
And
05
warm
Though
this joy
is
used here to imply the state where one forgets the This state is capable of being prolonged and it is in present. a way similar to what Coleridge said in after time about re-
Which
Here
is
by.'
and innocence breathe the joy of eternity, of paradise. As against this we have luxury which offers only 'her maniac joys that know no measure', or there is 'her frown with gloomy 568 But the unmixed joys are given only to the 'favourite joy. of Heaven'; and
Heaven
shall lend
To
-
63.
64. 65.
66. 67.
68.
Ibid., p.
Ibid.,
Ibid., p.
p.
(written in 1790).
19.
Ibid.,
p. 29.
Ibid., p. 31
(written in 1791).
294
Ah! doubly
blest,
if
love supply
M
it
Love completes joy which is heavenly. the state of rapture and ecstasy.
As heavenly,
implies
itself
in
Affection shall pour tive joy being only one among others. 70 we are told. the high raptures 'of filial and maternal joy', These may give rise to artistic activity; but such raptures are
of
no
avail to a poet
if
71
There are they are self-contained. Here is a joy that becomes creaits
when
there
is
an element of discord at
core which
it
seeks to resolve.
thrilled
The
him
With deep
delight!
72
Then
This
is
clapp'd his
He
speaks
'of
573
the twilight are ominous if only because love and poetry are intimately connected with bright moonlight in the best moments of Coleridge's life. Even in 1792 he saw in the 'bright-blue eyes' of Mary Evans 'chaste Joyance danc75 ing' *; and love dips 'his myrtle flower' 'in Joy's red nectar.'
7
Brightness, blue colour of the sky, love, joy rich denotations; and one is tempted to
num-
electric
it
is
ber of passages even from the major poems of Coleridge. 'Joy's beam illumed' the vernal gleam78 in 1793. Elsewhere
a 'generous
Ibid.,
p.
77
joy.'
There
is
an
electric
charge in joy
69.
70.
32.
Ibid., p.
34
(written in
1792).
71.
72.
45
48.
(written in 1793).
73.
p.
74.
75.
Ibid., p. 51.
Ibid.,
p.
52.
76.
77.
Ibid., p.
Ibid., p.
55.
57
(written in
1794).
295
which
is expansive and comprehensive in being generous. But there can be an exclusive joy which is the very anti-
Thus
selfish joy
7"
Tasted her vernal sweets, but tasted to destroy! Here joy would refer to sensuousness which may be needed
as the starting point but
untransformed.
grace and
terton.
But he speaks of 'the charms of vernal wild gleams' lightening over the face of ChatJoy's
But
this state
Coleridge was explicitly referring to the ecstatic joy. may be one of dizzy rapture which must needs
will.
Accordingly
we
read:
the
When
its
fill
of truth
We'll discipline the heart to pure delight, 80 Rekindling sober joy's domestic flame.
>The true joy of the creative artist is sober, not wild; and the sobriety that accrues to it is the result of the will working in
unison with the dominant passion. But in the context of love it is the 'warm tear of joy.'* The warmth of joy makes it a state of experience which har-
monises contraries.
the song of
of pains.
583
As he
'listened
Wordsworth,
is
'life's
the
Voice of
his
Joy.
This muse
and goes to him that has 'the candid eye.' 83 Clarity of vision might be the poetic insight or intuition; and it is other than the dimness or glimmering which is associated elsewhere with fancy. As the eyes of Chatterton 'dance rapture and his bosom glows, with generous joy he views the ideal
84
gold.'
78.
Along with
Ibid.,
Ibid., p.
clarity,
there
is
an expansive experience
71.
79.
80. 81.
p.
128.
Ibid.,
p. 157
Ibid., p.
346
407
16
14.
82. 83.
Ibid., p. Ibid., p.
Ibid., p.
84.
296
Coleridge's
Theory of Poetry
makes one enthusiastic. Out of this cheerful enthusiasm there emerges an awareness of one's organic unity with the Even in 1790 he says that 'full oft with fixed eye world. he gazes at the evening star 'till I, methinks, all spirit seemed
that
3
85
to grow.'
accompanies
not only an with his objects, but he becomes a living soul. His identity There is 'the Muses' calm spirit is subdued and chastened.
the joy of the creative artist
makes him
abode'
song'
88
in
1792,
is
which
As sweet as when that voice with rapturous falls 87 Shall wake the soften'd echoes of Heaven's Halls!
The
is
almost heavenly.
The
of joy
We
Where first young Poesy 8 Stared wildly-eager in her noon-tide dre&m!* But 'the young-eyed poesy' of Chatterton has given the 'stately
song' that enraptured him.
'the
It
89
The day-dreaming
is
related to
young-eyed poesy', not to the full-grown poetic activity. is the latter which is free from wild restlessness. Saty'in
90
It is joy was strong to follow the delightful Muse.' 91 'the radiant light of joy/ And it is the 'deep, heartfelt, inward joy that closely clings.' 92 Here are
rane
The joys, that came down shower-like, Of friendship, Love, and Liberty. 93
85. Ibid.,
p.
16.
86.
87.
88.
89.
Ibid., p.
51.
Ibid., p. 52.
Ibid. t p.
Ibid., p.
Ibid., p.
Ibid.,
51.
130.
413
514.
p. p.
p.
Ibid.,
Ibid.,
429
440
297
These joys are like the quality of mercy dropping gently and and the recipient. This blessedness of blessing both the giver makes not only joy divine but makes him refer
experience
594
to 'Beauty's saintly shrine. of joy accompanySpontaneity, fullness and profundity and noblest expresing the artistic creation is given the fullest sion in "The Eolian Harp" (1795) which releases
floating witchery of
elfins
sound
make when
they at eve
gentle gales from Fairy-Land, Where Melodies round honey-dropping flowers, Footless and wild, like birds of Paradise,
The
pause, nor perch, hovering on untam'd Wing! bewitching sound of the elfins and the 'gentle gales' con-
Nor
90
stitute the
framework where we have melodies emanating from These 'birds of Paradise' release tjie 'footless and wild' bees. a heavenly music which alone can inspire the poet. If he
could revive within him the 'symphony and song' of the Abyssinian maid,
With music loud and long I would build that dome in air, That sunny dome! those caves
It
is
96
of ice!
sacred
not with any physical material that he can build the dome of poetry. He needs divine music, the music of
which makes him conscious of the joy underlying In this light we can understand Poesy being call-
ed
'a
poem
'a
sweet tune/
97
Joy and moonlight go together. He wants his child to 98 with the night. Elsewhere we read that joy 99 rose within the lady like a summer's morn. It has all the
'associate joy'
94. 95.
Ibid., p.
66
101.
(written in 1791).
Ibid.,
p.
96.
97.
98. 99.
Ibid., p. 298.
Ibid., p.
374 267
Ibid., p. Ibid., p.
338
298
freshness
and beauty.
We
joy.
read
A new
Lovely as light,
sudden as summer
gust,
We
is
wound
'and
strode
in
108
joy
the
plains of France.
There
We
have
108
the 'hyblean murmurs of poetic thought industrious in its joy. And the joy referred to is that which transcends the relative
and
relational context.
We
pain, sheltered herself in joy/ for 'there is joy above the name 104 of pleasure' and this is 'deep self-possession, an intense repose.'
This
lines:
is
the joy
which
is
O
A
the one
life
Which meets
all
its'soul,
power
in light,
105
Rhythm in all thought, and joyance everywhere. "The Eolian Harp" (1795) does this. 'In a world so filled'
It 'impossible not to love all things.' and soul of all being and becoming, but
is
it
is
it
-life
the
power that
is
transmutes light into sound and sound into It light. a vague joyance but rhythm immanent in all thought.
not
Rhy-
thm
implies
harmony which
is
nic philosophy.
or rhythm being synonymous with the joy of a principle of synthesis. It synthesises in aesthecreation, tic He visualises Lamb experience varied sense experiences.
Harmony
it is
100.
101.
102.
Ibid., p.
Ibid., p. Ibid.,
p.
369
65
67.
(written in
103.
Ibid., p.
405 422
101.
104.
105.
Ibid., p. Ibid., p.
299
and standing
sense; yea, gazing
till
swimming
round
the wide landscape, gaze Less gross than bodily; and of such hues As veil the Almighty Spirit, when yet he makes
all
108
On
doth seem
Deep joy brings forth swimming sense; and this movement gradually becomes disembodied and symbolic of the AbSuch an experience is one of 'a meditative joy' solute Spirit.
which alone can reveal 'religious meanings in the forms of 107 These meanings refer to the language of signs popuNature!
larised
by Berkeley
all
in his metaphysics.
of
the
sinister
while
re-
The the other features of the serene experience. taining mariners see the skeleton ship and in the beginning 'they for
This flash of joy was soon followed by horror. joy did grin.' But when the ancient Mariner beholds his native country, 100 there is the 'dream of joy; and 'it was a joy the dead men
could not
110
70*
blast.'
The
feeling of at-homeness
is
a necessary
ingredient in the
solemn experience of joy. Sometimes one may have only a fancy with which he
can give him only a pleasant or At delightful experience that can easily be mistaken for joy.
this
and
Unawed
m
3
my
lofty gratulation
sang.
But the 'meditative joy cannot be divorced from So when he sang unawed, he had only fancy, not joy creative artist. He believed that France would
awe.
of the
106.
107. 108.
ibid., p.
Ibid., p.
180
257
109.
110.
Ibid.,
506-7.
p. 245.
111.
Poems,
300
Coleridge's
Theory of Poetry
to be free
call the earth
their
own.
113
Here he
is
more
its
and
as such
in
has
all
the wild
which has no
place
the
higher
experiences.
When
nearer,
the
moment
The
is
uneasiness of the head that wears the temporal power the result of a mixed or impure joy which excludes the
state.
detached
But
her
if it is
Joy
This
is
lift
spirit,
the spiritual joy which realises an organic kinship with the world and which gradually leads to an awareness of iden-*
tity.
The
my
Life
and
life's
own
secret
'
joy';
and the
soul
is
The pure
vision.
'The monody" ( 1 790) begins with the Muse who imagination. The songs of the inspired moment are prompts 'poetic lays/
the valuable expressions of imagination, of joy. These emerge 118 from the genius who 'pours forth her soul-enchanting strain.' These soul-enchanting strains have a halo of divinity around
them.
We
poem:
116
Whom
Pity or
Pity's self
is
had taught
an expansive feeling going out to share the experience of others, not fancifully, but imaginatively.
sympathy
is
This sharing
possible only
when
112.
113.
114.
p
p.
249.
Ibid., p.
Ibid.,
368
378.
13.
(written in 1802).
115.
116.
Ibid., p.
301
may
demands
One is never great, we read, the impassioned theme.' But by the inspiration of great passion, The whirl-blast comes, the desert-sands rise up
And
And
118
'their
shaping
spirit is fled.'"
Imagination emanating from inspiration is the shaping spirit. Hence he would join the 'mystic choir' of the spirits; but till
then
I discipline my young and novice thought 11 " In ministries of heart-stirring song. discipline is there, something of value can be realised,
Once
'With Baccaccio's provided there is a spirit inspiring him. " warm' he framed a garden 'in the silent poesy of form.' spirit
1
And
there
is
so curiously,
figures strange
and sweet,
J21
made out
In that place
we
is
dim analogue
of the
The
ming.
great poet, therefore, would not waste his time rhyInstead of 'building up the rhyme', he would like to
Of
song
And
117. 118.
119. 120.
121.
of his
104
fame
forgetful!
Ibid., p.
Ibid., p.
Ibid.,
423
124.
p.
Ibid., p.
478
265
"Christabel,"
(written in 178-180.
1828).
122.
Poems,
p.
(written in 1798).
302
absorb and assimilate all the pleasant sounds and and the poet is 'a visionary wight* whose thoughts shapes; Music pours forth 'on his be'hover round the Muses' home.' In this experience he has not only an incharmed sense.'
He would
188
a synthetic unity, he has also an intuition of the organic form or shape and an experience that 'In his lone yet genial hour' the synthesises these two intuitions.
tuition
of
his content as
poet's eyes
the poet
is
have 'a magnifying power/ This might mean that fond of exaggeration. So he corrects the expression
and
says that
size.
Thereby
His gifted ken can see
Phantoms
124
of sublimity.
and expresses are 'shadows o4 Here these are called 'phantoms imagination', as he said later. of sublimity.' The sublime thus becomes synonymous with imagination which is 'a light, a cloud, a fair luminous mist/
All the forms that he visualises
The light reflected, as a light bestowed Of fancies fair, and milder hours of youth, Hyblean murmurs of poetic thought
Industrious in
its
joy, in vales
and
185
glens.
Wordsworth's
the
dynamic principle
is
what within
mind
By Of
vernal growth, oft quickens irf the heart 189 Thoughts all too deep for words!
123.
Ibid., p.
442
345
124.
125.
405
404.
126.
303
Creative imagination cannot fully express itself in any medium. It offers shadows which yet are highly suggestive.
atmosphere of infinite suggestion hovers round the best poetry because of inspiration. We read that
In inspiration's eager hour.
An
When most
Ghatterton roamed
'on the
the big soul feels the mastering power. over the wilds and the caverns and poured
5
187
The song
is
only metaphorically
something unsaid; and what is unsaid is communicated through the power of suggestion with which inbroken.
spiration charges the sounds of the
poem.
plished
by no ordinary
poet,
in
for poetry
an arduous
labour.
He
tells
Lamb
low
cares
and lying vanities' and remain Steadfast and rooted in the heavenly Muse,
sanctified
188
to
Poesy.
a. poet; and the holy oil on his head is inspiration which alone releases poured the dormant secondary imagination. He, therefore, speaks
Voice,
years
me
of predestinated
wreaths,
129 Bright with no fading colours! In silence and tranquillity, the meditative spirit becomes fit to receive the fountain of But inspiration does inspiration. not come when one wants it, nor does it depart at our bidding. It has its own inscrutable It comes like a flash of ways. light-
ning.
We
of
127.
128.
Ibid., p.
Ibid., p.
130
158.
129.
130.
Ibid., p.
Ibid.,
p.
174
212
304
experience.
to
Then
inspiration
and imagination
insight.
might
tend
philo-
Poetry and
It sophy, said Coleridge, appeared identical in his childhood. was like a gift from heaven', prattling and playing with every-
thing in the universe, for life was 'revealed to innocence alone.' Poetry in its higher reaches may join hands with philosophy.
finer the sense for the beautiful
181
and the
lovely,
and the
the
fairer
and
his
lovelier
more
ex-
of enjoyment, the
5M8
.
will
ache of solitariness
loveliness
tion
go 'together, while
is
of the good.
The
active.
Beautiful which
the
Good
is
realised in
that joy
when im-
agination
Solitude
And in giving a set of qualities whicK a poet must agination. have, Coleridge wrote:
Imagination; honourable aims; Free commune with the choir that cannot
138
die.
Imagination, ethical ideals, and divine music are necessary. The last of these appears in the Biographia as a gift of imagination;
commune
with
divine music
innate.
of
Wordsworth he speaks
Now
in thy inner
inspiration made him the recipient of the that guided his muse. This light is the antithesis of light
131. 132.
Ibid., p.
Ibid., p.
479
396
133.
134.
Ibid., p. 396.
Ibid., pp.
404-5
(written in 1807).
305
alike.
fancy and the mainspring of imagination and reason But we have also the curious lines:
Imagination, Mistress of
my
Love!
Where
shall
elfin
The
rich
is
cloud
amber-glowing floods of
light.
This imagination
ecstatic yet serene.'
final
who must
31
'aid
wand' and give him 'the thrill of joy * In the 'the lambent flame of joy.
transferred to fancy.
published draft
is
all this is
Milton,
we
learn,
'austere,
condensed, imaginative', presents truth 'by direct enunciation of lofty moral sentiment and by distinct visual representations'
;
but Taylor
is
'images of fancy' which are 'presented to the common passive 1" The latter eye, rather than to the eye of the imagination.' looks to the ideal. The 'mortal spirit' feels 'the joy and greatiiess
of
its
future being.
31 '*
It is
imagination that
He
prayeth best,
realise:
All things both great and small; For the dear God who loveth us,
He made and
nation.
loveth
"
all.
Here are the eternal values revealed by the secondary imagiThis imagination brings the urge to speak out: Forthwith this frame of mine was wrenched
Which
forced
And
then
it left
me to begin my me free.
140
tale;
He
is
under the
spell
of inspira-
135.
136.
Ibid., p.
49
(written in 1792).
137.
138.
604.
2(52
Ibid., p.
(written in
1798).
611-7.
139.
HO.
57881.
306
tion.
Coleridge's
Theory
of Poetry
an
outlet.
But
this
urge
of its
Even the
precise
moment
uncertain:
That agony
returns:
And
It is this
my
burning sense, this vague undefined aching of the spirit that comes in solitude; and it compels him to move forward:
I
I
148
the
power
of suggestion.
It
comes from
it
the secondary imagination of the inspired poet; well influences the listener and the reader:
and
equally
been stunned,
He
Sadness and wisdom are the fruits of imagination. It is a sadness that makes one reflective and contemplative. Enclosing an ode on a mathematical problem, in March,
1791, he informed his brother that in mathematical enquiry
'though
Reason
is
is
feasted,
Imagination
is
starved; whilst
Reason
Imagination
is
To assist Reason by wearily travelling on a dreary desert. the stimulus of Imagination is the design of the following production
the
may justly plume myself that I first have drawn Mathesis from the visionary caves of abstracted nymph 344 At this early idea, and caused her to unite with Harmony.'
1
141.
142. 148.
Ibid.,
582-5.
Ibid.
Ibid.,
586-7.
622-5.
307
reason with imagination. This is a kind of fusion which should not be confused with the fusion of the poet's heart and intellect which Coleridge advocated a decade after the composition
of this ode.
discipline
Reason he
refers to
here
is
a kind of mental
which he
I
refers to
on
Cam-
bridge in 1791:
haste to urge the learned toil 145 That sternly chides my love-lorn song.
In the "Lines on
Friend" (1794)
we have an
interesting
account of imagination: To me hath Heaven with bounteous hand assigned Energic Reason and a shaping mind;
And
Sloth-jaundiced
and Coleridge was using the expression long before he knew a syllable of German. Four years later he set sail for Germany and in 1802 he
is
imagination;
When we look spoke of the 'shaping spirit of imagination.' to the poems he wrote when he was of German, we ignorant are compelled to argue that the theory of the esemplastic imagination was Coleridge's own and that he was well aware of it before he came across the German thinkers. In 1795 he
wrote
was some spirit, Sheridan! That breath'd O'er thy young mind such wildly-various power! My soul hath mark'd thee in her shaping hour. 147 The shaping hour of the soul was only the moment when
It
secondary imagination
is
active.
Imagination
Its
is
essence
is
joy.
it
the shaping, unifying, synthesising spirit. It is an innate power with which we are
in the lines:
endowed; and
145.
146. 147.
pp. 87-8.
308
Coleridge's
Theory of Poetry
Joy, Lady!
and the power. Which wedding Nature to us gives in dower A new Earth and new Heaven, Undreamt of by the sensual and the proud
is
the spirit
Joy
is
We
And
thence flows
that
charms or ear or
sight,
This
is
ing imagination'
tion
is
And we
which
is
experienced in
150
lectual power.'
148.
Ibid., p. 366.
149. 150.
Ibid., p. 365.
Ibid., p. 599.
INDEX
Addisbn 101 Akenside 100, 118
AIlsop 01, 161
Aristotle 14, 22, 23, 26, 50, 95, 96, 196, 207, 190, 102, 103, 105,
166, 167, 169, 170, 171, 175,
243
118,
Letters
136,
13,
98,
111.
113,
145,
67,
198,
238
Criticism 31, 32,
98,
Miscellaneous
48,
134,
91,
97,
104,
146, 188,
9,
106, 148,
191,
12,
240
137,
149,
;
237
Notebooks
97,
8,
10,
129
H:
132,
66,
141,
180,
106, 107, 109, 110, 131, 134, 135, 136, 137, 140, 142, M3, 144, 174, 179, 181, 184, 186, 251
18
135,
Bruno
121
83,
244
Caldwell 145
Chatterton 283, 295, 296 Chaucer 133 Coleridge, S. T. Aids to Reflection 6, 45,
193,
197, 200, 201 Constitution of the Church and State 180, 195 Poesy or Art 116, 117 Lectures 95, 97, Philosophical 112, 176, 194 Shakespearean Criticism 4, 7, 13,
On
the
29,
49,
56,
57,
105,
111,
127,
138,
177
154,
194
122,
179,
140,
141,
145,
174, 189,
147,
178, 191
171, 186,
173. 188,
\nima Poetae
65, 85, 97, 150,
Afanual
63, 104,
191,
18,
170,
183
53,
109,
192,
121, 193.
Friend
130,
194,
177.
190,
7,
48, 59, 62, 73-77, 78, 111, 114, 120, 121, 122, 144, 153, 156,
175,
195
21,
Table Talk
105, 138,
183, 188
6,
Lay Sermon
68, 69,
27,
11,
33,
42, 63,
129,
178
39,
47,
40, 41, 45, 46, 31, 142 52, 55, 59, 64, Cowley 67, 69, 79-83, 87, 89, 90, 148, Darwin 143, 215 149, 150, 151, 155, 156, 157, 'David Copperfield 217 160, 161, 162, 163, 164, 165, Descartes 23, 96
48,
49, 51,
310
Coleridge's
Theory of Poetry
Petronius 92 Plato 22, 50, 83, 86, 95, 102, 105, 107, 149, 190, 240, 271
Donne
Dry den
Fancy
291
140,
18ff
220
Fairchild 108
Plodus 105,
Poole
19,
107,
30,
108,
64,
161
67,
86,
23,
101,
87,
100,
109,
138,
145,
238,
240
Pope
97,
140, 210,
216
Quintilian 216
Raysor
4,
160, 196
Read 78
Richards 24, 103 Richter 20, 241
Greenough
175,
Robinson
100,
101,
29,
92,
103,
Robertson 101
Schelling 32, 52, 98, 115, 116, 240, 242, 244, 245, 246, 247 Schiller 122, 141, 241
Schlegel 20, 163, 241, 242, 243 Scotus Erigena 121 Shaftesbury 118
Hazlitt
122
Hegel 61
Heracleitus 121
Herder 118
Hobbes
244
Homer 216
Hooker 149
Horace
23,
Shakespeare
104,
13,
15,
7o,
95
100,
133,
Hume
96, 99,
101
281ff
190,
118; 123* 125, 128, 138, 157, 163, 178, 191, 242, 264
129,
188,
Imagination
23, 33, 50, 52, 69, 76; 95, 101, 102, 108, 120, 121, 172, 184, 190, 192, 237, 238, 239,
Sotheby 286
Southey
171,
Krusve 243
102, 145, 146, 187, 204, 238, 284 Spenser 31, 126, 216 Spinoza 108, 238, 239
22, 47,
185,
Stuart 149
taste 9ff
Taylor 83
68, 96 Thelwall 47, 85, 151, 160, 164, 172, 187, 238, 247 Tieck 242 trance 259, 260 Tulk 43 Wedgwood 86 Wellek 68, 78 Whistler 85 Wolf 237
Tennemann
Lowes 125
Maass 32, 241, 242 Mackail 4 Mesmer 244
Method
Milton
73ff
11, 31,
Newton
Wordsworth
113,
3.
105, 179,
126,
135,
141,
154,
Ossian 217
191, 204ff
Percy 216
Young
7,
125