Contributor: Melissa Kowalski. Lesson ID: 11624
Poetry can be more complicated than what you read in a greeting card. Sam Coleridge had his theory of imagination that he incorporated into his work. At least his "Rime" rhymed and was imaginative!
How would you define the term "imagination"?
Image, via Wikimedia Commons, is in the public domain in its country of origin and other countries and areas where the copyright term is the author's life plus 100 years or less.
For the late-eighteenth- and early-nineteenth-century poet, Samuel Taylor Coleridge, the imagination was the most important characteristic of literature.
Only by using the mind could a writer draw on the images that he or she conjured, then unite that which was crafted in the imagination with words on the page. This was all in an attempt to communicate the imagery of personal thoughts to an audience.
Coleridge spent his life in pursuit of the purest expression of the human imagination in poetry, but his career and personal life often intervened and deterred him from fully achieving his goal. Coleridge was often pressed for money and had to take a series of jobs early in his career to support his family. He also found himself trapped in a loveless marriage for years and, later in life, he was frequently ill and was addicted to opium, which was commonly prescribed in that era for a variety of ailments.
To learn more about Coleridge's life, read Samuel Taylor Coleridge, from Encyclopædia Britannica, Inc., and watch Samuel Taylor Coleridge by Heather Barton (below). As you read and view, answer the questions listed below on a separate sheet of paper:
After you have finished answering the questions, discuss your findings with someone. Was there anything about Coleridge's life that surprised or intrigued you?
As you have read, Coleridge was fascinated with the operation of the mind and the imagination. In his 1817 book of literary theory, BiographiaLiteraria, Coleridge defined the terms "imagination" and "fancy." For Coleridge, there were two types of imagination: primary and secondary. Fancy occupied a different category for Coleridge.
Read the article, Critical Analysis of Coleridge's Imagination and Fancy, by kheralatika. As you read, write down Coleridge's definitions for the primary imagination, secondary imagination, and fancy on a separate sheet of paper. When you are finished taking your notes, share your answers with your parent or teacher.
You will now use this understanding of Coleridge's theories of understanding to interpret several of his poems. Move on to the Got It? section to practice your analytical skills.