P - 370 DATE - 21 Dec 2023
(toc)#title=(Table of Content)
Coleridge - Organic Wholeness of a Poem
I(caps)n chapter XIV of Biographia
Literaria, Coleridge offers
a celebrated definition of a poem. He poses a number of questions
regarding the nature
and function of poetry and then answers them. He also examines
the ways in which poetry differs from other kinds of artistic activity and the role and significance of
metre as an essential and significant part of a legitimate poem.
Coleridge begins by emphasizing the difference between
prose and poetry. He states that “a poem contains the same elements as a prose
composition”. For each,
they employ the
same medium i.e. words. The difference remains only in the
combination of the elements, in
consequence of a different object. If the object of a poem is merely to
facilitate memory, all it has to do is to put words in the metrical form with or without rhyme, as
in the following verses on the number of days in the months:
"Thirty
days hath September,
April,
June and November"
The immediate purpose of this
kind of composition is to keep in mind the numbers of days in the
months. If we put it into a prose composition, the word order would be:
September, April, June and
November have thirty days. In that case, it might be difficult to keep in mind
the number of days. Thus, because of the different purposes,
the combination of words would be different. And as a particular pleasure is
found in anticipating the recurrence of sounds and quantities, all compositions
that have this charm super-added (Coleridge
is ironically using Wordsworth’s term), whatever be their
contents, may be called poems.
Coleridge differs
from Wordsworth in the concept of
the metre
Coleridge
counter argues Wordsworth’s statement that, “metre is a super
added charm”. Coleridge very confidently states that anything
that is written in metre might be called a poem though not a legitimate one.
The object of prose
composition is to convey truth whereas the
purpose of poetic composition is to convey pleasure. Coleridge
insists on the distinction between the immediate end and the ultimate end. The immediate
purpose of a scientific work is to convey truth and while communicating truth
it may communicate pleasure but that is an incidental by-product. Similarly, if the
immediate end of poetry is the communication of pleasure, truth
may be the ultimate end.
But, the communication of
pleasure may be the immediate object of a work not metrically composed – in
novels, romances for example. The question is, do we make these into poems simply
by super
adding metre with or without rhyme? Coleridge’s answer is that
nothing can permanently please which does not contain in itself the reason why
it is so, and not otherwise. The part must contain pleasure but
permanent pleasure comes from the totality of
the thing. Thus, metre
if it is super added, must be demanded by the content. Each
component part must justify
itself on its own why it is written in metre. To be clear
enough, metre should suit the language and content of the poem, and
not be a mere super added for ornament’s sake or
to facilitate memory.
Metre is thus in consonance
with the language and content of the poem.
It excites a perpetual and distinct attention to each part and
carries the reader forward to the end by the pleasurable activity of the mind
excited by the attractions of the journey itself. The concept
of organic unity demands the interdependence of parts on
the whole. That is why a novel or any other prose work which also has pleasure as
its immediate object,
rendered into metrical form, would not be called a poem. Coleridge
thus puts forward the organic, as opposed than
a mechanical theory of poetry. A legitimate poem is thus a composition in which
the rhyme and the metre bear an organic relation to the total work; in
it, the parts mutually support and explain each other, all in their proportion,
harmonizing with and supporting the purpose and known influence of metrical
arrangement. The pleasure
that derives from the parts must be
consonant with the pleasure derived from the whole.
Coleridge also distinguishes
'poem' from ‘poetry’
A prose
work which is highly poetic in nature may be called poetry, not a
poem. Poetry
of the highest kind may exist without metre and even without the
contradistinguishing objects of a poem. Coleridge argues that a
poem of any length neither can be nor ought to be
poetry. Poetry is almost the same as
a poet. The poet, described in ideal perfection, brings the whole
soul of man into activity. The poetic genius i.e. the one with
the modifying power of the secondary imagination must have the ability to organise and reconcile
dissimilies or discordant qualities: sameness with difference, general with the
concrete, individual with the representative etc.
Coleridge thus provides a
clear discussion of
the definition and function of a poem. And makes
a distinction between a poem and
poetry. He concludes his discussion with a conceit in which good
sense is the body of poetic genius, fancy the drapery, motion the life and
imagination the soul that is everywhere and in each.
Thank you