17 pages 34 minutes read

Samuel Coleridge

Kubla Khan

Fiction | Poem | Adult | Published in 1816

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Further Reading

1.

Frost at Midnight” by Samuel Taylor Coleridge

Samuel Taylor Coleridge wrote a series of conversation poems, a groundbreaking technique that replaced previous poetry’s elevated language with a more plainspoken English. In “Frost at Midnight,” the poet uses a wakeful winter night to reflect on his childhood and the future of his infant son sleeping beside him. 

2.

“Floating Island” by Dorothy Wordsworth

Coleridge enjoyed an important friendship with poet William Wordsworth, whose sister Dorothy (1771-1855) also wrote poetry. A lesser-known female Romantic, Dorothy Wordsworth studied nature and laments its fragility in “Floating Island.” This seven-stanza poem describes an island in a lake and invites readers to observe their environment as closely as the poet does. 

3.

“Dream Song 29” by John Berryman

John Berryman (1914-1972), a poet of the modernist era, dwelt on dreams and the mind throughout his poetry, particularly in his iconic series of poems The Dream Songs. First published in 1969, this poem depicts Henry (the persona character throughout the Dream Songs) contemplating guilt and thought itself. Whereas Coleridge glorifies the mind’s capacity to dream in “Kubla Khan,” Berryman depicts a more tumultuous mental environment in “Dream Song 29.”