Critically examine Kubla Khan as a poem about life and poetic potentialities.
Critically
examine Kubla Khan as a poem about
life and poetic potentialities.
ANS. G. Wilson
Knight analyses the imagery of Kubla Khan and shows that it is a poem about
life and about poetic potentialities. The pleasure-dome dominates the poem. Its
setting is carefully described. There is a sacred river running into caverns
measureless to man and to a sunless seas; in other words, the river runs into
an infinity of death. The marks out area through which it flows is, however,
one of teeming nature, gardens, rills, incense-bearing trees, ancient forests.
The river is a symbol of life since the sacred river which runs, through
Nature, towards death could easily correspond of life.
Born
on a height, the river descends from a deep romantic ‘chasm’, a place which is
savage, holy and enchanted and which is associated with both a waning moon and
a woman wailing for her demon lover. The river’s origin blends romantic, sacred
and Satanic suggestion. This part of the poem hints at a mystery, blending
Satanism with sanctity and romance with savagery.
The
lines that follow contain such expressions as the ceaseless turmoil, the
earth-mother breathing in fast, thick pants the fountain forced out with
half-intermitted burst , the fragments rebounding like hail, the chaffy grain
beneath the flail, the dancing rocks, these expressions create in us a riotous
impression of agony, tumult and power; the dynamic process of birth and
creation
Then
the river goes ‘meandering in a mazy motion, The maze is, of course, a
well-known figure suggesting uncertain and blind progress and is sometimes
expressly used for the spiritual complexities of human life. After five miles
of mazy progress, the river reaches the ‘caverns measureless to man’, which
represent infinity and nothingness. The
river sinks, with great tumult (that is, death-agony), to a ‘lifeless ocean’,
that is, to eternal nothingness, namely death. This tumult is aptly associated
with war: the principle of those conflicting and destructive forces that driven
man to his end. The ancestral voices suggest that the dark compulsion that
binds the race to its habitual conflicts is related by some psychologists to
unconscious ancestor-worship, to parental and pre-parental authority.
As
far Kubla Khan himself, becomes God, or at least one of those huge and mighty
forms, or other similar institutions of gigantic mountainous power, in
Wordsworth or we can say that the poet’s exploits, finds itself automatically
creating a symbolic and universal panorama of existence.
In
the second movement of the poem, the dome’s shadow falls half way along the
river The river, as indicates above, is the birth-death time-stream. The shadow
is cast by a higher, more dimensional reality. It is directly associated with
the ‘mingled measure’ suggests the blend and marriage of fundamental
oppositions: life and death, or creation and destruction. These mingle under
the shadow of the greater harmony, the crowing dome-circle. It is a paradoxical
thing, a ‘miracle of rare device’, sunny but with the caves of ice’ which
points to the resolution of opposites in the new dimension, especially those of
light and heat, sunny for Eros-fire of mind, and ice for the coldness of inorganic
nature, ultimate doing, and death, the ice caves being perhaps related to the
earlier caverns. Only more optimistically tones, light instead of gloomy, just
as ‘sunny’ suggests to torturing heat. The ‘caves of ice’ may also hint at cool
cavernous depths in the unconscious mind blending with a lighted intelligence;
whereby at least coldness becomes kind.
These ice and sun fire are the two elemental antitheses, and their
mingling may lead us farther. We are at
what be called a marriage-point in life’s progress half way between birth and
death, and even birth and death are themselves mingled or married. We may imagine a sexual union between life,
the masculine, and death, the feminine.
Then our ‘romantic chasm’ and ‘cedarn cover’ the savage and enchanted, yet
hold, place, with its’ half-intermitted burst’ may be, in spite of the
interpretation given earlier, vaguely related to the functioning of a man’s
creative organs and their physical setting, and also to all principles of manly
and adventurous action, while the caverns that engulf the sacred river will be
correspondingly feminine with a dark passivity and infinite peace. The
pleasure-dome may regard as the pleasure of a sexual union in which birth and
death are the great contesting partners, with human existence as the life-
stream of a mighty coition.
The
third and final movement of the poem starts with the Abyssinian damsel seen in
a vision, playing music. The aptness of a girl- image here is obvious. The poet
equates the once- experienced mystic and girl- born music with the dome. Could
he revive in himself that music which can build the spiritual dome. In air,
that is, in words, in poetry. Or, may be, he would become himself the domed consciousness
of a cold, happy, brilliance, and ice- flashing, sun- smitten, wisdom. The
analogy between music and some form of architecture is not unique. After this,
the movement of the poem grows ecstatic and swift. There is a hint of a new
speed in the drawn- out rhythm of such a deep delight it would win me…? Now the
three rhythm lines gather up the poet’s message together with his consciousness
of its supreme meaning with a breathless expectancy towards the climax. Next
follows a fall to a ritualistic solemnity, phrased in long vowels and stately-
measures motion, imaged in the ‘circle’ and the eyes drops in ‘holy dread’
before the heavenly paradise. The pleasure-dome enclosing and transcending
human agony and frustration.
Sir, please provide the answer of the question below :
ReplyDelete1) Examine the role of the witches in macbeth ?or , how far are they responsible for Macbeth's tragedy ??
Please sir help me
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