Welcome Readers!
This blog
is made on the grounds of a task assigned by Prof. Dr. Dilip Barad Sir,
Dean of Faculty of Arts and Head of English Department, M. K. Bhavnagar
University to think on Wordsworth and Coleridge as critics and to write a blog
as an answer to his assigned questions.
The eminent chapters
which are to be evaluated are-
- Wordsworth’s
Preface to Lyrical Ballads
- Coleridge’s
Biographia Literaria (Chapter 14)
Click here to view Dr. Dilip Barad Sir’s blog on Wordsworth’s
Preface to Lyrical Ballads and click here to
view his blog on Coleridge’s Biographia
Literaria (Chapter 14)
Wordsworth & Coleridge
Samuel Taylor Coleridge, at left, as painted by James Northcote. Right: William Wordsworth in an engraved portrait. Source- NYTimes |
1. Write a brief note
on the views of Wordsworth and Coleridge on Poem.
If we see
Wordsworth as a critic, he cannot be qualified as a critic either by training
or temperament, but his Literary Criticism that is his “Preface to Lyrical
Ballads” is usually considered as the manifesto of the English Romantic Movement. A deep study of his critical writings brings out his views regarding the nature of
poetry and poetic diction.
Coleridge, on
the other hand is regarded as the best English critic by many scholars and his
reputation as a critic is very high. Herbert Read considers his work
“Biographia Literaria” to be of great value and sees him anticipating
existentialism and Freud.
Here are some
briefly explained points on Wordsworth’s and Coleridge’s views on Poem which
during their stay in Somerset, had talked of the two cardinal points of poetry
that is the power of rousing the consideration (relativity) of the reader by
the truth of Nature and by giving the power of novelty and freshness with
adding colors of imagination.
Chief Aspects
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William Wordsworth
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Samuel Taylor Coleridge
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Creed
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For Wordsworth, Poem and poetry both are
same.
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Coleridge tries to bring out the difference
between prose and poetry and gives his definition of a poem.
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Definition of Poetry/ Poem
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Poetry is a spontaneous overflow of powerful
feelings, and that it takes its origin from emotions recollected in
tranquility.
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A poem is that species of composition, which
is opposed to the works of science, by proposing for its immediate object
pleasure, not truth; and from all the 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 distinct gratification from each
component part.
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Meaning of Definitions
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Wordsworth by the word ‘spontaneous’ does
not mean ‘immediate’ or ‘sudden’ but calls spontaneity as ‘natural’ and hence
poetry is the communication of ideas.
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Coleridge tries to clarify the concept of a legitimate poem which is one in which things are harmonized with the rest of
the composition.
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Nature
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In the process of artistic creation
according to the definition of Wordsworth, ‘observation’ plays a vital role.
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The nature of Coleridge’s views on the poem emphasizes
more on ‘imagination’ – a power and prime agent of all human perception.
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Subject-matter of poem
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Wordsworth in his Preface chooses the
incidents and situations from common life, to relate or describe them in a selected language used by men or general folks.
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Coleridge extends the subject by saying that
however beautiful or faithful the subject is to nature, it only becomes the imagery of higher worth when it molds and colors with poetic imagination.
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Views of Poet
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Wordsworth identifies three main characteristics of a poet-
1) Exceptionally
sensitive
2) A man
speaking to men
3) A teacher;
didactic element
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The poet, according to Coleridge brings the whole soul of man into
activity diffuses a tone and a spirit of unity with synthetic and magical
power.
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2. Analyze 2 poems with reference to Wordsworth
and Coleridge's views.
America’s greatest and one of the most
original poets of her age, Emily Dickinson’s poems are widely read and
appreciated among people of all ages. Here are the two poems which are analyzed
with reference to Wordsworth and Coleridge’s views.
SUCCESS IS COUNTED SWEETEST (112)
Success
is counted sweetest
By
those who ne'er succeed.
To
comprehend a nectar
Requires
sorest need.
Not one
of all the purple Host
Who
took the Flag today
Can
tell the definition
So
clear of victory
As he
defeated – dying –
On
whose forbidden ear
The
distant strains of triumph
Burst
agonized and clear!
Emily Dickinson’s
“Success is counted Sweetest” is a poem in a very simple language and it
clearly fits in the canon of ‘Wordsworth’s Poetry’ or his poetic creed. This is
a poem of a man speaking to men. It is also endowed with lively sensibility and
tenderness and it also provides greater knowledge of human nature and a
spirit of life in a very tranquil language. The poem further has the element of
naturalness and unforced language. As Wordsworth emphasis more on observation,
the poem simply is the result of these observational skills which plays a
pivotal role in Wordsworth’s poetic creed. The subject matter of the poem is
inspired by the daily events of common folks and tells a didactic tale of a
failure who can only understand the real worth of success.
As far as
Coleridge’s views of any poem are concerned, the present poem of Emily
Dickinson proposes a kind of pleasure with truth. All three stanzas
mutually support each other and explain each other with perfect harmony. A ‘legitimate’
poem according to Coleridge has a certain metrical arrangement. This poem also
has a particular metrical arrangement- The meter consists of iambic trimeter and
iambic tetrameter with a rhyming scheme of the poem is ABCB. Each stanza itself
to some extent delights the readers. The theme is perfectly harmonized with the
rest of the composition. Only
failures fully understand the meaning of success. Dickinson
announces this theme in the first two lines and the whole composition talks
about it in a better way.
"Success is counted sweetest
By those who ne'er succeed."
As far as the power
of imagination is concerned, with an unemotional and impersonal tone, in the
second stanza, the imaginative tone of the purple host becomes the prime agent of
human perception.
“HOPE” IS THE THING WITH FEATHERS - (314)
“Hope” is
the thing with feathers -
That
perches in the soul -
And sings
the tune without the words -
And never
stops - at all -
And
sweetest - in the Gale - is heard -
And sore
must be the storm -
That could
abash the little Bird
That kept
so many warm -
I’ve heard
it in the chillest land -
And on the
strangest Sea -
Yet -
never - in Extremity,
It asked a
crumb - of me.
Emily Dickinson in
her poem ““Hope” is the thing with feathers”
uses the abstract identity of Hope as a bird- a human entity. The poet uses a small
bird to convey her message. Wordsworth’s theory of memory that is observing nature and then giving shape to that flow of words with essential truth is
indeed worth noting. Hence this poem is a product of emotions recollected in tranquility
and simply generalizing the idea of hope in a simple language like “a man
speaking to men”. Life in a humble setting is beautifully incorporated by the
metaphor of a bird. Hence, deep philosophical truth about life is presented.
This intensity of understanding takes us back to Wordsworth’s thoughts and his
poetic diction is what we believe as the natural language of the passions. As
Wordsworth believes that a poet must make an attempt to reveal truth through
imaginative things, Emily Dickinson in her poem has described hope as maneuvering
human’s desire.
According
to the parameters of Coleridge’s views on the poem, Emily Dickenson’s poem contains
a unique rhyme scheme ABBB and has iambic trimeter. With the use of so many
figurative languages, it is designed in a poetic form, the poet has used
personification and metaphor in this poem to make the work creative and this
way it contracts science for proposing for its immediate objects. The poem has
justified the views of Coleridge by molding the theme with poetic imagination. The
poem indeed contains a spirit of unity with synthetic and magical power. The
metaphor in the first two lines gives a charm to whole poetry indeed with a spirit
of unity of concept.
Thank you.
Well woven the fine fabric of poetic views of Coleridge and Wordsworth. Sharply selected spectacular poems.
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