09 - Chapter 4 PDF
09 - Chapter 4 PDF
09 - Chapter 4 PDF
' ..... a hundred years before William James and James Joyce he was aware
When J.V Baker made this comment on Coleridge's "Kubla Khan" in The Sacred
unconscious thoughts) into the sacred' river in "Kubla Khan", the most widely read and
diversely interpreted of Coleridge's poetical works . What fascinates me is not merely the
poetic symbolism of the river of consciousness employed in this poetic masterpiece. Pro£
narration that undertakes to capture the full spectrum and flow of a character's mental
process in which sense perceptions mingle with conscious and half- conscious thoughts,
memories, feelings and random associations (Abrams 164). We can discern in the poetics
of "Kubla Khan" a revelation of the poet's mental processes where his sense perceptions
mingle with conscious and half conscious thoughts derived partly from wakeful thoughts,
partly from opium-induced dream reveries, partly from dreadful nightmares and
memories of his diverse readings. These resources also include feelings associated with
the past and the present, personal and general, his aesthetic perceptions, a random
association of all these and a crowning effort of imaginatively stringing all together. In
fiction such a technique is applied by means of broken syntax disjointed sentences and in
some cases by violation of logical grammatical rules. In poetry where a poet enjoys
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greater liberty of syntax and other rules of logical construction the stream of
the form of a narrative technique revealing the unfathomed of the human mind
complexity of the human mind caught up iii the maze and mire of rapidly changing
works a study of"Kubla Khan' in this light will enable us to understand better the richness
of thought and the delicacy of feeling that marks this climactic phase of Coleridge's
genius. There have been immense critical debates over "Kubla Khan" as a dream reverie
that led to its composition tends to complicate the issue. Coleridge criticism has even
Coleridge's statement about his hallucinating after taking opium. All such studies,
scholarly though they are, tend to take us away from the aesthetic pleasure of reading the
poem. In fact, "Kubla Khan" is not the product of wholly conscious efforts, or entirely
memorable readings, nor ·_~ ~- -' "' does it merely record the feelings of a romantic- it is all
As to the alleged fragmentary nature of the poem we tend to assert that a closer
reading reveals a basic coherence between the two sections. In a notebook entry of 1814,
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Coleridge has randomly jotted down his flitting thoughts; these have an astonishing
which it struggles against, bears but for a while and then sinks with
the alacrity of self seeking into dust or sanies, which falls abroad
havoc! What is the beginning? What the end? And how evident an
alien is the supernatural in the brief interval.If a man could pass through
his soul had really been there, and if he found that flower in his hand when
There is no evidence that the continuity of this entry had been disrupted by any
'man from Porlock' and that the entry is of fragmentary nature. Hence there is no
justification in denying the continuity of thought pattern in the two sections of "Kubla
Khan". If the first section presents the opposites, in their distinctiveness, the second
attempts to blend them into unity in the paradisial vision of the poet. But then, there is
more to convey by "Kubla Khan" than the prose entry of the notebooks cited above . The
, ~ , . . ; at a time, but in our dreams, diverse thoughts clash with each other for
other cross-currents of thoughts to cast their shadows in the former's place. Now such
dissolution of one image into another is valid when explained by the dream analogy.
Hence, there lies a ground for Coleridge's assertion that the images came to his mind in a
inspiration is evident in his numerous notebook entries. Strangely enough, his drowning
consciousness in state of sleep, that have been quite often referred to, have a faint
connection with the sacred river in "Kubla Khan" that rushes with tumult into a deep
cavern.
To fall asleep is not a real event in the body well represented by this
or sink down, all things sinking beneath us, or drop down (NI 1078
21.203)
.... 0 then what visions have I had, what dreams .......... I sink down the
The waters, thro' Seas and Seas yet warm, yet a spirit.
The reference in the poem to images from Milton's Paradise Lost. justify another random
Again, when Coleridge speaks of his desire to receate in poetry through love what
the conqueror Kubla Khan intended to do in art through force and decree, we gauge the
Bear witness for me, what thoughts I wandered about with if ever I
turned away from these thoughts to more humane and peaceable dreams.
The frequent use of capitals to denote the word 'dream', compel us to accept the
vision where ''the conscious is so impressed upon the unconscious as too appear in it."
(BLU258)
Khan appear to have been rationalized only when wetake into account the figures that
welled up from his memory as he penned them. Now, Coleridge was by nature a forgetful
person; his mind was loaded out of capacity with such out-of-the·way thoughts and ideas
he gathered from his diverse readings and experiences, and he would often scribble a
flitting thought in his notebook for the fear of forgetting it. This is confirmed by his own
Memory carried on by the fear of forgetting/ then writing a thing down rids
- ·, -, Prof. Livingstone Lowes in his epoch-making study The Road to Xanadu draws
our attention to the immense erudition of Coleridge ranging from classical literature of
Plato to Milton, from the religious texts, the mythologicallores, the history of the eastern
culture and also the highly fanciful tales from The Arabian Nights. WhetColeridge
the role played by memory in culling out the poetic images in "Kubla Khan". Again,
Patricia Adair discern in the sacred river a distant echo of the legendary river of Mount
Helicon indissolubly linked with Orpheus, the sweet singer of ancient world and quotes
Miss Harrison's translation of Orphic tablets that speak of a 'spring on the left, which the
soul is warned not to touch'. The spring, she contends, is the legendary river of
The diverse images in "Kubla Khan's'~ owe their origin partly to 'a mode of
memory emancipated from the order of time and space'; 'but equally with the ordinary
memory, it must receive all its material ready made from the law of associations'. The
immediate spark of thought, as Coleridge claims, had been initiated by the following
Here the Khan Kubla commanded a palace to be built, and a stately garden
there unto and these ten miles of fertile ground were inclosed with a
wall.(PW 296)
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With walls and towers girdled round: (PW 297 11 1-2 &6-7)
But wherefrom did originate the idea of' Alph, the sacred river', that 'ran/
Through caverns measureless to man/ Down to a sunless sea'?. The diverse theories
regarding the origin of the idea point to Coleridge's diverse readings, from Maurice's
Indostan to Greek mythology, from Milton's Paradise Lost to the biblical allusions to the
guilty Cain, that impart a richness to the symbolic connotation of the river. Naturally
enough, these readings were stored in his memory and in "Kubla Khan" these have been
culled out to give the poem a richer complexity than was originally intended.
'Alph' might have derived its name from the Alpheus of greek mythology which
ran under ground to re-emerge as the fountain Arethusa in Sicily. It seems very probable
that the Alpheus merged in Coleridge's mind with Lithe and Mnemosyne and Helicon.
Again in the description of the earthly paradise of Kubla, we find faint reflections of
Elysium, the gardens ofthe Hesperides, thePromised land of Canaan, Milton's Paradise,
paradise.
In a notebook entry of 1803, we come across these words which are to some
extent relevant to our analysis of Coleridge's memorable readings which were at the back
In her note to this entry, Kathleen Coburn comments that Coleridge was well acquainted
with Maurice's Hindostan, Wilkin's translation of the Bhagavadgita and T.A.Dubois The
People of India. Maurice whose study attempts to connect the two ancient civilations,
Indian and Greek, speaks of the origin of Bacchus in India, though he is generally
thought of as the Greek God who intoxicated his worshippers with wine and possessed
relating the conqueror to Bacchus is conceivable fi:om one ofhis lectures ofl813-14.
India,and allegorically the Symbol- in the narrower and the popular notion
organic energies of the Universe, the work by passion and joy without
skill and contrivance than result .... with the ancients Bacchus or
Criticism 184)
'deep romantic chasm' symbolize the organic energies of the universe, the sunny pleasure
dome being a 'work by passion and joy' without apparent distinct consciousness and
finally the frenzied poet having drunk the milk of Paradise speak of the Dionysian
worship-all these closely follow Coleridge's words on Bacchus and his conquest oflndia.
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II
The idea of a conqueror and his great Conquest obviously reminded Coleridge of
'Cublai Can', who 'began to reign, 1256 the greatest Prince in People, Cities and
Kingdoms that ever was in the world'. Again, in Kubla's pleasure resort we discern
followers.(Lowes 330)
Coleridge's lines on Mohammed, the prophet and priest, in his poem "Mahomet"
of the same year, establishes a faint connection between Mohammed and Kubla Khan for
both 'scattered abroad both evil and blessing /huge wasteful empires founded and
Even the landscape that Coleridge describes as the site ofKubla's pleasure resort
might have an immediate link with that he recalled from hiS trip to Germany and noted in
his diary
The waterfall at the head of the vale (the circular mountain walled
vale ) white, steadfast, silent from Distance/ the River belonging to it,
Smooth, full, silent the Lake into which it empties also silent/ yet the
far off and yet everywhere I and the pillar of smoke/ the smooth
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Added to this first hand perceptual inspiration, were others from various works referred
to earlier. In Coleridge. Opium and Kubla Khan, Elizabeth Schneider notes a clear
(Schneider 266)
Again, the descent of the river into subterranean depths may be connected with the
discern echoes from Milton's Lycidas in the water haunted lines of"Kubla Khan". The
caves of ice, as they appear in the poem, too might have come, as Lowes points out, from
Commenting on the supernatural in the poem, Jolm Beer too detects Miltonic influence
'The woman wailing for here demon lover' is also reminiscent of the Syrian
damsels' lamenting the fate ofTharnmuz in Milton's poem, while in the last
stanza the mount Abora of which the damsel with the dulcimer
sings .... .looks back to the mount Amara ........ which Milton presents as
one of the types of his true 'paradise' and the 'symphony and song'
with which the poet would build his dome recalls the 'Dulcet Symphonies
and voices sweet' with which Milton's daemons built their palace of
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pandemonium.(Beer 63)
The figure with 'flashing eyes' and floating hair', resound with echoes from
Plato's Ion and Phaedrus and also recalls the inspired poet -prophet in Gray and
whose hair on one occasion floated, and the youths who were followers of
Nights beheld by Coleridge in his dreams. The description also derives a good
deal from the accounts of persons possessed by the god in Dionysus worship and
the orphic cults. It also reminds us of Shakespeare's alignment ofthe 'poet, lover,
It is hideed intriguing that a poem which asserts the triumph of poetry and
superiority of poets above all artists, Coleridge should so heavily draw upon Plato
who considered poetry to be a morally impoverished art form and hence banished
poets from his Republic. In Coleridge's description of the poet in creative ecstasy,
~translated by Jowett:
In the like manner the muse first of all inspires man herself .... For
all good poets, epic as well as lyric, composed their beautiful poems
not by art , but because they are inspired and possessed. And as the
Corybantine revelers when they dance are not in their mind, so the
lyric poets are not in their right mind when they are composing their
beautiful strains; but when falling under the power of music and
metre they are inspired and possessed; like Baechle maidens who
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draw milk and honey from the rivers when they are under the
influence of Dionysus but not when they are in the right mind. And
the soul of the lyric poet does the same, as they themselves say: for
they tell us that they bring songs from honeyed fountains, culling
them out of the gardens and dells of the Muses; they, like the bees
winging their way from flower to flower. And this is true. For the
invention in him until he has been inspired and is out of his senses,
and the mind is no longer in him; when he has attained to this state,
mythological texts show how he called up memory from the deep of the cavern of
the mind through conscious and semi conscious processes by the power of
I ahnost think that ideas never recall ideas,any more than leaves
Now is the right occasion to look into the true 'state of feeling', the 'soul'
of"Kubla Khan".
III
In his search for the 'oneness' of vision, Coleridge turned to the East for
inspiration; it seemed that the Oriental world would offer him a vision of the
multiplicity that he would try to order into unity. An exploration of the East with
its bizarre remoteness would not only lend the charm of wonder and mystery, but
claim that Coleridge's romantic leaning towards the oriental civilisation bore fruit
etc. etc. to find the Man who could explain to me there cail be
observed in the description of the site for Kubla's pleasure- palace, seems to be an
Eastern possibility. The Lake District with its too tame and cultivated backyard
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would have provided the poet little scope for an imaginative and romantic
exploration of the remote and the savage along with the ordered and the
cultivated. The juxtaposition of the bright sunlit dome with the 'sunless sea' that
the river Alph runs into, the measured garden and the measureless caverns, the
I
natural forests and the cultivated gardens, the stately height of the hills and the
sublime depth of the 'romantic chasm, silence and clamour, movability and
immovability, slow and fast motion, activity and passivity, rise and fall- all these
Coleridge chose the persona of Kubla Khan to study the dualism that lies in the
a man with immense artistic potential, and the fit subject to be studied in romantic
But I strongly feel that Kubla's personality, like his pleasure site,
embraces both the opposite extremes that critics speak of. Now, Coleridge
admired Shakespeare's 'signal adherence to the great law of nature, that all
opposites tend to attract and temper each other,.. This 'signal adherence to the
great law of nature' is observed in the personality of Kubla Khan that exhibits him
on the one hand as a dictating autocrat given to sensual pleasures, and on the
other, as an artefact of a civilisation that can boast of r~e specimens of art and
comment, 'I shall go on with the Mohammed'(Ll 531). This is because the
mighty conqueror, his artistic sensibilities juxtaposed with his brutal, despotic
propensities, provided Coleridge with ample scope for his study of human nature
as a unification of the agreeables and disagreeables. The Khan's love for Beauty
on the one hand, and beastly brutality on the other, speak of the ambivalence that
is inherent in the nature of every man. With Kubla, Coleridge launched his
remarkable quest for 'One Life' where the disagreeables and the agreeables co-
The sacred river Alph has been given a wide variety of symbolic
interpretation, and judging from Coleridge's philosophic and aesthetic views, all
the critical interpretations seem to have sound arguments in their favour. Hence
the river may be taken to symbolise Life (personal and general), one's stream of
seemingly discreet though they are, are linked by a Unity of Vision- Coleridge's
attempt to sanctify the Truth of our inward Nature through the medium of Poetry.
'cedam cover'. But the sacred river that flows through both these contrasted
realms establishes a sacred link between the two. The river, then, is the process by
reveals Coleridge's view of Life in the same vein as ''Kubla Khan" does.
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The river ~lph that hugs the light of the sun for a brief spel~ flows, for the
greater part of Its. course, in the cavernous depths embracing infinite darkness.
Now, light for Coleridge is linked with hope and optimism, it is also associated
anything but sensory and hence, concrete. On the other hand, darkness may
symbolise despair and a death-in-life attitude; it also holds out promises for
abstract experience and abstruse research of a world beyond the reach of sense
without earthly pleasures, when finds himself deeply embedded in out of the way-
is no progression'.
sense to sensibility
brief spell in life when Man, like the Kubla, orders his impulses into measured
activities. It is also a momentary phase in one's life when he consciously reins his
thoughts and gives them balanced utterances and translates them into orderly
deeds. But for a major part of one's life, man's deeds and words spring from the
words ' sacred', 'holy' associated with the river's underworld course affirms
.. .. .. the greater and perhaps nobler certainly all the, subtle parts of
god alone/-yea ,in how much lies below his Consciousness.(Nl 1554
21.274)
The descent of Alph into the romantic chasm in the poet's attempt to
be able to communicate all the greater part of his Being must (be)
Consciousness and to restore the demonic underworld force in its purest form as
When he looked into his own Soul, a self critical Coleridge detected in his
river's earthly course('F•Vt miles meandering in a mazy nation') while the very
course.
deeds.
The sacred river may also be taken to symbolise Truth. Coleridge seems to
have been toying with this idea whenhe.recorded Milton's words in a notebook
"
entry of 1796.
101
Coleridge, as he himself confessed, had always looked upon Truth 'askance and
strangely'. He was sceptical of men who are guarded towards Truth by the
They contemplate nothing but parts, and all parts are necessarily
true that the mind may become credulous and prone to superstition
grandest truths, if they have not the testimony of their own senses
The Truth that Coleridge speaks of is that which encompasses the grand
paradoxes in Life and Nature. It is a positive affirmation of the rational and the
irrationa~ the logical and the illogical that co-exist side by side in Life and
when they originate in our consciousness, but a majority lies beyond ~he reach of
education can provide logical explanation to a few phenomena; the greater part
however, like, the underground river, is inaccessible to the rational and scientific
minded man.
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IV
subsequent failures, and finally asserting its triumph the medium of poetry.
Kubla's sacred river 'Alph' descended into his subconsciousness from the
memory of the river Alpheus which I have already referred to. However,
suggest that 'Alph' may have some hidden connection with alphabet, and its name
may have been drawn from the first letter of Greek alphabet alpha. The
probability is not a far fetched one because in one of Coleridge's notebook entries
we find him to have established a link between Kubla Khan and 'letters'.
( NI 1281 8.30)
The sacred river may be human language that gives fertility to the human
mind (language and all symbols give outness to thought ) and empowers it with
the skill in Communication. The terrestrial site ofKubla's pleasure dome watered
fertile by the meandering river makes us aware of the conscious, social pattern of
The problem arises when we try to translate our subliminal thoughts and
passionate feelings into words. They are dismissed as socially and morally
attempt to make his subjects lettered may be taken as man's attempt to pragmatise
his actions in social and civilised terms. The figure of man as social outcast, a
recluse, a solitary being communicating with God in the realisation of his deepest
consciousness, may appear noble to the poet's view, but it is equally repugnant to
the civilised world guided by a singular notion of social decorum. The river of
psychological consciousness. At times, however, such thoughts burst out into the
open in the form of words, and the silence of the river to eloquence as vestiges of
the dark underworld ('rocks and stones') are flung out into the open. In the midst
ancestors, then, may be taken to be our primitive forefathers who gave a free rein
to their unimpeded passions, feelings and desires. The 'prophesy of war' is the
that lies too deep for comprehension by rational senses and logical understanding,
104
that we can unravel the Universe; the true, the only eyents are those
of the soul, and the essential domain of poetry is this inner theatre.
( Leguois 1012)
It is therefore obvious that in the savagery of the natural chasm and it is not in the
tameness of the artificial garden that the spirits would find their dwelling place.
which no logic or reason can check or impede. Coleridge in his advocacy of the
Supernatural and the Unconscious, anticipates Freud and Jung and their theories
on psychology.
explanation of the universe and of the human mind. He was sceptical of views
was anxious to probe beyond the surface of things, to explore the deep dark and
1()5
secret vistas of human mind and to draw out the inner essence, the 'natura
miturans' ofthings.
world. It is relevant, in order to restore Art and Truth to its former glory, to water
both the Conscious and the Subconscious, to link both in an interrupted stream of
progression.
sacred but secret connection with all that is seemingly disparate and inconsistent
Let us now compare and contract this natural unification with the Kubla's
perfumed by aromatic trees, the site of the Kubla's pleasure dome is anything but
a feast for the senses. Kubla's sensual paradise is too earthly to take even the sub-
earthly into its domain. Girdled and encompassed by walled towers, it is symbolic
of a confined vision that leaves out the brute and pravity of Nature from its
sensual interests. It becomes clear that the presence of the deep romantic chasm
into which the sacred river plunges would have put the Emperor into. discomfort;
hence his effort to remain encircled by what appeals strictly to the senses.
But there is more to Nature than that which appeals to our senses. The
depths, yet it is a holy as the terrestrial site. Kubla's pleasure- garden marvels
man's creation, but the chasm with cedarn cover marvels Gods creation, hence it
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is 'holy' and 'sacred'. The essential Oneness that characterises the artificial
garden and the subterranean plot, requires for its realisation a perfect intellect.
The Khan stands for the dim Intellect who is aware of the multiplicity of
Nature, but, he is in such love with life, that he turns his back to the brute and the
Nature. Inspite of his wide expanse of vision that could discern, the
Wordsworth remained contented with the comprehensible forms, leaving out the
pravity and brutality of life and Nature out of his domain of interest.
Coleridge was obsessed with the dark, cavournous consciousness that plunge into
the sea of Death, and this is suggested by the recurrence of 'death in life' images
in his poems, starting from The Rime to the lines he composed for his epitaph.
But it is also true, that in these moments of anguish, he toyed with abstract
thoughts and metaphysical solutions to the Mystery of Life. And again, he was
aware of his shortcomings as a poet because, as he himself says, 'I think too much
for a poet'( LI 294 ) and 'A great Vice is Metaphysical solution in Poetry'( NI
673 10.34 ). In this respect he found Wordsworth way ahead of him, because 'he
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human persuit, and regulate his wishes in strict subordination to that knowledge,
because he feels, and with practical faith, .... that we can do one thing well and that
Genius. In that way, Nature could be translated into thought, and Thought into
Nature, the external Internal and Internal External. John Bier's comment on the
fountain and creates his workof art with the effortlessness of a sun
symmetry on the one hand and truthful entirety on the other. It would be an
When Coleridge speaks of' the various outcries of battle in the song of
triumph.the same intention runs behind the image of the 'sunny pleasure dome
with caves of ice'. I shall again refer to Coleridge's words the same essay in this
context
kind, as the heat in ice, invisible light etc; whilst, for practical
disparates. ( BL II 255)
Did the Khan achieve the desired reconciliation in art? The second section
that contains the following words answers in the negative; the poet endeavours to
a model of the creative artist. I too agree with his view that Coleridge, with his
romantic and liberal tastes might have seen through the brittleness of the Khan's
prodigious pleasure palace. Whatever Kubla does, he cannot escape the fact that
his sensual paradise must inevitably be lost, just as Milton's was eventually
forced to move down to desolate sea. It would then require a poet, inspired by the
shews the greatness of man, and should at the same time teach him humility'.
Music, then, is the most entirely human of the fine arts because in it man discovers
associated thing, and recalls the deep emotions of the past with an
The poet would reconcile by Love, not by 'decree', and music shall be his
Now, to draw all things in one, in humane and peaceable forms, requires
the power of the poet, who alone can combine feeling with thought, sensual
delight with profound wisdom. When Yeats in his 'Sailing to Byzantium' speaks
craftsmanship of Kubla's empire. Yeats's final attempt to sing, like the golden
attempt to unify the architecture of the lost world with the power of a divinely
ecstatic song.
the sensuality to spirituality. The poet in Byzantium emerged from the purgatorial
fire; the poet in "Kubla Khan'' emerge purged of sensuality when he has had a
glimpse into the paradisical world of the Abyssinian maid. She too would be his
soul's singing master as the sages who stand in the holy fire would be for the
Byzantine poet. In this process he would acquire the SelfKnowl~dge that makes a
poet.
Having attained self knowledge the poet exudes the same. Mystery as that
of the poet wild in creative frenzy, the references to Bacchus and Dionysian
obsession with the figure of the poet as a social outcast, an awe- inspiring
Mystery, or being with more than common interests which imp~rt a fierce
vivacity to his appearance. The lines describing the poet. in the creative frenzy in
'Kubla Khan'
These have a close resemblance with the lines from "Apologia Pro Vita
( NI 197 G .193 )
The poet thus turns out to possess two fold energies- that of a profound
Imagination, the power that reduces the multitude into a Unity of effect by a
strong passion deserves the title of poeta nascitar nonfit- he is a child of Nature
and not a creature of his own efforts. He is a miracle in Genius marvelling in the
11:)
miracle in Nature. He is a Mystery in himself and hence, sacred and holy and so,
process of associating from Memory and partly conscious and active process of
fusing with Imagination. Man may come, and man may go, but Kubla's sacred
river shall go on for ever so long as poets shall live and Poetry shall survive.
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WORKS CITED
Adair, Patricia. The Waking Dream: A Study Of Coleridge's Poetry. London: Edward
Arnold, 1967.
Baker, J.V. The Sacred River: Coleridge's Theory oflmagination. Lousiana State UP,
1957.
Beer, John. "Coleridge and Poetry: Poems of the supernatural" From Writers and their
-------u··---, Cathleen Raine ed. Selected Poetry and Prose . London : Penguin Poetry
Library ,1957.
---------------, Raysor ed. Shakespeare Criticism Oxford : Oxford UP , 1970.
Lowes, John Livingston. The Road To Xanadu. New York: Vintage Books, 1959.
Schneider, Elizabeth. Coleridge, Opium and Kubla Khan. New York: Octagon Books,
1970.