Romanticism in Kubla Khan: C.U. English Honours Notes
Romanticism in Kubla Khan: C.U. English Honours Notes
Romanticism in Kubla Khan: C.U. English Honours Notes
The shadow of the dome floating midway on the waves is also sensuous. The
sensuousness is further reinforced with the description of the Abyssinian maid
playing on her stringed instrument and singing of Mount Abora. The images
employed in the poem are sensuous. The dome is an agreed emblem of fulfilment
and satisfaction. Its spherical shape is likened to a woman’s breast, both being
circular and complete. Moreover, the word “pleasure” is the recurrent qualifier of
dome---“a stately pleasure dome” in the line 2, “the dome of pleasure” in the line
31, “a sunny pleasure-dome” in the line 36. The other sensuous images are
“thresher’s flail”, “rebounding hail”, “caves of ice”, “sunny dome” etc.
Kubla Khan is essentially a dream-poem recounting in a poetic form what the poet
saw in a vision. It has all the marks of a dream—vividness, free association and
inconsequence. The dream-like texture of Coleridge’s poem gives it a kind of
twilight vagueness intensifying its mystery. This dream-quality contributes greatly
to making the poem romantic. To conclude, it has been rightly said that
Coleridge’s poetry is “the most finished, supreme embodiment of all that is purest
and ethereal in the romantic spirit”.