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FREE ESSAY ON WHATS GOING ON IN KUBLA KHAN

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Femininity in "Kubla Khan" and "Jane Eyre"
This paper illustrates the feminine projections in "Kubla Khan" by Samuel Taylor Coleridge and "Jane Eyre" by Charlotte Bronte. -- 1,619 words; MLA

“Kubla Khan or A Vision in a Dream, a Fragment”
A literary review of Samuel Taylor Coleridge's poem “Kubla Khan or A Vision in a Dream, a Fragment”. -- 4,849 words; MLA

“Persons from Porlock.”
A look at how A.D. Hope's poem satirizes Porlock's legend about Samuel Coleridge's "Kubla Khan". -- 764 words; MLA

Coleridge's Contradiction
A look at the effects of drug usage with regard to Coleridge's two poems, "Kubla Khan" and "Pains of Sleep". -- 1,144 words;

Romantic Poetry
Examines Romantic elements of William Blake's "The Tyger," Samuel Taylor Coleridge's "Kubla Khan" & William Wordsworth's "I Wandered Lonely as a Cloud." -- 1,575 words;

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WHATS GOING ON IN KUBLA KHAN

What's Going on in "Kubla Khan"?
In 1798, a poet named Samuel Taylor Coleridge wrote the poem called "Kubla Khan". In his
preface, he stated that he had dreamt the poem, and wrote it down just as it was
"preserved". The speaker also stated that the poem is merely a fragment, it is not
complete. "With the exception of about eight or ten scattered lines and images" that had
been lost in the transition between sleep and being awake. 
In the first stanza, it seemed that the speaker was talking of a far away land, Xanadu.
Kubla Khan was the leader of this land. This land had a sacred river running through it.
It had many spots of greenery around it with forests that were almost "ancient". In lines
one and two it says, "In Xanadu did Kubla Khan A stately pleasure dome decree". What
could that mean? It could perhaps imply that Kubla Khan is a leader of some type, and he
lives in a "stately" palace. The speaker used the word dome instead of palace. Perhaps in
his dream he saw a dome as big or a stately as a palace, and that is where Kubla Khan
lived. 
In the second stanza, the speaker goes on to describe the land of Xanadu. He says that
there is a cedar forest that is haunted by a "woman wailing for her demon-lover." 
"A mighty fountain momently was forced...
...Huge fragments vaulted like rebounding hail...
...It flung up momently the sacred river...
...And 'mid this tumult Kubla heard from far
Ancestral voices prophesying war!"
It seems, in lines 17-31, that there could possibly be a war started. It is never said
why the war was started or if there in fact is really a war, but after that sequence of
lines the speaker goes into another rant. He said that there was a "sunny pleasure-dome
with caves of ice." It is not understood what the voice is trying to get across to the
reader in this line. It is known that ice does not exist in the sun, at least not for
long, so does this mean that there is not really a dome at all? 
After talking about the dome, the mask speaks of a damsel in the pleasure dome. The
damsel was playing the dulcimer. The persona also says how the damsel could win his heart
by playing the instrument. After those few off-set lines, the speaker goes on to say that
he would build the dome in the sky, and that all that heard about it would see it there
and yell "beware, beware!" To whom they would yell this is unclear. 
The last couple of lines seem to be talking about Kubla Khan.
..."His flashing eyes, his floating hair..." 
He must have been a sight to see. The voice also says that he "drank the milk of
paradise." That could potentially mean that he lived a life of luxury and was a very
mighty leader. 
In research done with help of the World Wide Web, it was found that Samuel Coleridge was
addicted to a drug much like today's Acid. Could that signify that Mr. Coleridge might
have been on a "trip" when he wrote this poem, and that is why it remained unfinished and
a fragment? Or quite possibly, it could be that Mr. Coleridge was just dreaming of the
wonderful world of Kubla Khan. 

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