Name: Vaghasiya Alisha S. Roll no.- 1
M.A. Sem-1
Paper
no.-3) Literary theory and criticism
Assignment
topic: Biographia Literaria: a critical study.
Submitted
to: DEPARTMENT OF ENGLISH,
M.K.
BHAVNAGAR UNIVERSITY.
Assignment
Assignment Topic: ‘Biographia
Literaria: a critical study.’
ü Introduction
Biographia
Literaria is written by Samuel Taylor Coleridge. Coleridge's new technique of
criticism is called 'appreciative criticism'. To quote a renowned critic,
'evidently the new poetry needed a new criticism and this was provided by
Coleridge in the Boigraphia Literaria'.
He led the way in a new method in criticism, which sought no to judge but to appreciate and interpret.
he illustrated the tendency of romantic criticism to stress the effect of art upon the critic's emotions and to regard art as a source of moral and philosophical wisdom.
Coleridge sought to give charm of novelty to things of everyday objects- by making supernatural natural. he introduced dream like quality-element of mystery- wonder and supernatural. he went to middle ages a d created the atmosphere of magic and mystery. we find elements of mysticism in his diction and he lived in the world of fancy. he differentiates prose and poetry in diction.
He led the way in a new method in criticism, which sought no to judge but to appreciate and interpret.
he illustrated the tendency of romantic criticism to stress the effect of art upon the critic's emotions and to regard art as a source of moral and philosophical wisdom.
Coleridge sought to give charm of novelty to things of everyday objects- by making supernatural natural. he introduced dream like quality-element of mystery- wonder and supernatural. he went to middle ages a d created the atmosphere of magic and mystery. we find elements of mysticism in his diction and he lived in the world of fancy. he differentiates prose and poetry in diction.
§ Coleridge’s critical work is contained in 24 chapters of
Biographia Literaria (1815-17). In this critical disquisition concerns himself
not only with the practice of criticism, but also, with its theory. In his
practical approach to criticism, we get the glimpse of Coleridge the poet;
whereas in theoretical discussion, Coleridge the philosopher came to center
stage. In chapter 14 of Biographia Literaria, Coleridge’s view on nature and
function of poetry is discussed in philosophical terms. The poet within
Coleridge discusses the difference between poetry and prose, and poetry and poem.
He was the first English writer to insist that every work of art is, by its
very nature, an organic whole. At the first step, he rules out the assumption
which, from Horace onwards, had wrought such havoc in criticism , that the
object of poetry is to instruct; or, as a less extreme from of the heresy had
asserted, to make men morally better.
ü Two cardinal points of poetry are discussed by Coleridge in
chapter 14 of Biographia Literaria
§ Two cardinal points of Poetry : Coleridge begins this
chapter with his views on two cardinal points of poetry. To him these cardinal
points are
ü The power of exciting the sympathy of the reader by a
faithful adherence to the truth of natures and
ü The power of giving the interest of
novelty by modifying with the colors of imagination.
o
According to him it
was decided that Wordsworth would write poetry dealing with the theme of first
cardinal point and the other was to be dealt by him. For the first type of
poetry, the treatment and subject matter should be, to quote Coleridge, “The
sudden charm, which accidents of light and shade, which moon- light or sun-set
diffused over a known and familiar landscape, appeared to represent the
practicability of combining both. These are the poetry of nature.” In
such poems , subjects were to be chosen from ordinary life; the characters and
incidents were to be such, as will be found in every village and its vicinity,
where there is a meditative and felling mind to seek after them, or to notice
them, when they present themselves.
ü In
the second type of poetry , the incidents and agents were to be supernatural .
in this sort of poetry to quote Coleridge, “ the excellence aimed at was to
consist in the interesting of the affections by the dramatic truth of such
emotions as would naturally accompany such situations, supposing them real. And
real in this sense they have been to every human being who, from whatever
source of delusion, has at any time believed himself under supernatural
agency.” Thus with the help of imagination the natural will be dealt
supernaturally by the poet and the reader will comprehend it with ‘willing
suspension of disbelief’
ü The
Lyrical Ballads consists of poems dealing with these two cardinal points.
Wherein, the endeavor of Coleridge was to deal with “persons and characters
supernatural”, and that of Wordsworth “was to give the charm of novelty to
think of novelty to think of every day, by awakening the mind’s attention from
the lethargy of custom, and directing it to the loveliness and the wonders of
the world before us.”
ü Coleridge’s view towards
Wordsworth’s poetic creed:-
ü In
defense of Wordsworth’s poetic creed; - Coleridge even though he did not agree
with Wordsworth’s views on poetic diction, vindicated his poetic creed in
chapter 14 of Biographia Literaria. Coleridge writes in defense to the violent
assailant to the ‘language of real life’ adopted by Wordsworth in the Lyrical
Ballads. There had been strong criticism against Wordsworth’s views expressed
in preface also. Coleridge writes in his defense ; “ Had Mr. Wordsworth’s poems
been the silly, the childish things, which they were for a long time described
as being; had they been really distinguished from the comossitions of other
poets merely by meanness of language and inanity of thought; had they indeed
contained nothing more than what is found in the parodies and pretended
imitations of them; they must have sunk at once , a dead weight into the slough
of oblivion, and have dragged the preface along with them.”
ü He
wrote that the ‘eddy of criticism’ which whirled around these poems and Preface
would have dragged them in oblivion. But it has not happened. They were founded
too not in the lower classes of the reading public, but chiefly among young men
of strong ability and meditative minds; and their admiration was distinguished
by its intensity, I might almost say, by its religious fervor.” Thus, Coleridge
gives full credit to the genius of Wordsworth.
ü It
does not mean that he agreed with Wordsworth on all the points. Coleridge
writes; “With many parts of this preface in the sense attributed to them and
which the words undoubtedly seem to authorize, I never concord; but on the
contrary objected to them as erroneous in principle, an as contradictory both
to other parts of the same preface, and to the author’s own practice in the
greater number of the poems themselves. Mr.Wordsworth in his recent collection
has, I find, degraded this prefatory disquisition to the end of his second
volume, to be read or not at the reader’s choice”. Hence, we may say that,
Coleridge is frank enough to point out that some of the views of Wordsworth
were wrong in principle and contradictory, not only in parts of the Preface but
also in the practice of the poet himself in many of his poems.
Coleridge
distinguish between prose and poem
ü The
poem contains the same elements as a prose composition. But the difference is
between the combination of those elements and objects aimed at in both the
composition. According to the difference of the object will be the difference
of the combination. If the object of the poet may simply be to facilitate the
memory to recollect certain facts he would make use of certain artificial
arrangement of words with the help of meter. As a result composition will be a
poem, merely because it is distinguished from composition in prose by Metre, or
by rhyme. In this , the lowest sense one might attribute the name of a poem to
the well-known enumeration of the days in the several months;
ü twinkle
twinkle little star,
how I wonder what you are
ü Thirty days hath September,
April, June and
November , &c.
ü Thus
, to Coleridge, mere super addition of meter or rhyme does not make a poem.
o
He
further elucidates his view point by various prose writings and its immediate
purpose and ultimate end. In scientific and historical composition, the
immediate purpose is to convey the truth (facts). In the prose works of other
kinds, to give pleasure in the immediate object of a work not metrically
composed.
o
Now
the question is “would then the mere super addition of meter, with or without
rhyme, entitle these to the name of poems?” to this Coleridge replies that if
metre is super added the other parts of the composition also must
harmonize with it. In order to deserve the name poem each part of the
composition, including Metre, rhyme, diction and theme must harmonize with the
wholeness of the composition. Metre should not be added to provide merely a
superficial decorative charm. Nothing can permanently please which does not
contain in itself the reason why it is so, and not otherwise. If metre is super
added, all other, parts must be made constant with it. They all must harmonise
with each other.
§ A poem therefore may be defined as, that species of
composition, which is opposed to works of science by proposing for its
immediate object pleasure, not truth; and from all other species it is
discriminated by proposing to itself such delight from the whole, as is
compatible with a distinct gratification from each component part.
ü Thus,
according to Coleridge, he poem is distinguished from prose compositions by its
immediate object. The immediate object of prose is to give truth and that of
poem is to please. He again distinguishes those prose compositions from poem
whose object is similar to poem i.e.to please. He calls this poem a legitimate
poem and defines it as, ‘ it must be one , the parts of which mutually support
and explain each other; all in their proportion harmonizing with and supporting
the purpose and known influes of metrical arrangement”.
ü Therefore
the legitimate poem is a composition in which the rhyme and the metre bear an
organic relation to the total work. While reading this sort of poem ‘the reader
should be carried forward, not merely or chiefly by the mechanical impulse of
curiosity or by a restless desire to arrive at the final solution; but by the
pleasurable activity of mind excited by the attractions of the journey itself”
here Coleridge asserts the importance of the impression created by the
harmonious whole of the poem. To him, not one or other part but the entire
effect, the journey of reading poem should be pleasurable. Thus Coleridge
puts an end to the age old controversy whether the end of poem is instruction
or delight. Its aim is definitely to give pleasure and further poem has
its own disatinctive pleasure, pleasure arising from the partsand this pleasure
of the parts supports and increases the pleasure of the whole.
ü The differentiate
between poem and poetry
ü
in the last section of the chapter 14, Coleridge considers to distinguish poem from poetry. Coleridge points out that” poetry of the highest kind may exist without meter and even without the contradistinguishing objects of a poem” ha gives example of the writings of Plato, Jeremy Taylor and Bible. The quality of the prose in this writings is equal to that of high poetry. Then the question is what is poetry? How is it different from poem? To quote Coleridge; “ what is poetry? Is so nearly the same question with what is a poem? The answer to the one is involved in the solution of the other. For it is a distinction resulting from the poetic genius itself, which sustains and modifies the images, thought, and emotions of the poet’s own mind. Thus the difference between poem and poetry is not given in clear terms.
in the last section of the chapter 14, Coleridge considers to distinguish poem from poetry. Coleridge points out that” poetry of the highest kind may exist without meter and even without the contradistinguishing objects of a poem” ha gives example of the writings of Plato, Jeremy Taylor and Bible. The quality of the prose in this writings is equal to that of high poetry. Then the question is what is poetry? How is it different from poem? To quote Coleridge; “ what is poetry? Is so nearly the same question with what is a poem? The answer to the one is involved in the solution of the other. For it is a distinction resulting from the poetic genius itself, which sustains and modifies the images, thought, and emotions of the poet’s own mind. Thus the difference between poem and poetry is not given in clear terms.
ü Even
John Shawcross writes “ this distinction between ‘poetry’ and ‘poem’ is not
clear instead of defining poetry he proceeds to describe a poet and from the
poet he proceeds to enumerate the characteristics of ith imagination”. This is
so because ‘poetry’ for Coleridge is an activity of the poet’s mind and a poem
is merely one of the forms of its expression, a verbal expression of that
activity, and poetic activity is basically an activity of the imagination.
ü As
David Daiches points our, ‘poetry’ for Coleridge is a wider category than a
‘poem’; that is poetry is a kind of activity which can be engaged in by
painters or philosopher or scientists and is not confined to those who employ
metrical language or even to those who employ language of any kind. Poetry in
this larger sense, brings, ‘ the whole soul of man; into activity, with each
faculty playing its proper part according to its ‘ relative worth and dignity,.
This takes place whenever the synthesizing, the integrating, power of the secondary
imagination are at work, bringing all aspects of a subject into a complex unity
then poetry in this larger sense results.
ü David
Daiches further writes in A critical History of English Literature’, “the
employment of the secondary imagination is a poetic activity and we can see why
Coleridge is let from a discussion of a poem to discussion of the poet’s
activity when we realize that for him the poet belongs to the larger company of
thise who are distinguished by the activity of their imagination”. By virtue of
his imagination which is a synthetic and magical power, he harmonize and
blends together various elements and thus diffuses a tone and spirit of unity
over the whole. It manifests itself most clearly in the balance or
reconciliation of opposite or discordant qualities such as
ü Of sameness with difference
ü Of the general with the concrete
ü The idea with the image
ü The individual with the representative
ü The sense of novelty and freshness,
with old and familiar objects
ü A more than usual state of emotion,
with more than usual order
o Judgment with
enthusiasm
and while this imagination blends and harmonizes the natural and
artificial, it subordinates to nature the manner to the matter, and our
admiration of the poet to our sympathy wuth the poetry.
To conclude,
o
We may say in
his own words, he endeavored to establish the principle of writing rather than
to furnish rules about how to pass judgment on what had been written by
others.’
o
Thus Coleridge is the
first English critic who based his literary criticism on philosophical
principles. While critics before him had been content to turn a poem
inside out and to discourse on its merits and demerits, Coleridge busied
himself with the basic question of how it came to be there at all.” He was more
interested in the creative process that made it , what it was then in the
finished product.
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