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Fancy, in Coleridge’s view, is:

AThe highest form of imagination

BA mechanical and ornamental process

CSynonymous with genius

DIrrelevant to poetry

Answer:

B. A mechanical and ornamental process

Read Explanation:

According to Samuel Taylor Coleridge, fancy is the act of combining different things into pleasing shapes, but not fusing them into a new creation. He considered fancy to be inferior to imagination, which is the power to shape and unify. 

  • Coleridge believed that fancy is a repository for lust and the source of baser desires. 

  • He considered fancy to be an acquired talent, while imagination is related to innate genius. 

  • Coleridge was the first critic to distinguish between fancy and imagination, and to define their roles. 

  • Coleridge believed that imagination is the soul of poetic genius, while fancy is its drapery. 


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