At the opening greetings of Samuel Taylor Coleridge's inconsistent poem "Kubra Khan", we saw a very different way of literacy rate from his predecessor. This is due to his role as a founder of the Romantic era. Coleridge and William Wordsworth announced a collection of poems called "Sentimental Songs". This series is not the power of reason, but the beginning of overwhelming exercise praising imagination. Although Kublai Khan is not part of this work, it expresses clearly all the ideals of romanticism, such as the importance of imagination, nature, emotion, individualism.
The poetic inspiration of Kubla Khan and the ancient sailor Rime examines the characters presented at "Ancient Sailor's Kite" and "Kubla Khan" by Coleridge and the context of their discovery and reveals an interesting aspect of Coleridge's own role I will. It is similar to the letters in the titles of these verses. In particular, consideration of these figures focuses on the concept of poetic inspiration for Coleridge's development of a new world culture, as Mongolian Khan pursues peaceful trade and diplomacy (220) . The epidemic of the plague of the thirteenth century was destroyed by the death of the Mongol empire and in addition it abandoned its morals by abandoning trade and tributes and deprived the main source of support for the Mongolian gold family (247 ). An unsuccessful attack in Japan and Java informed Kubilai Khan about the reason for shipping food by ship
Samuel Taylor Coleridge's poem "Cubra Khan" is an ambiguous masterpiece from its beginning to its meaning. "Kubiri Khan" is a literary poem, the most remarkable are metaphor, implication, internal rhyme, personification, similarity, rhyme, and the most important structure. - "Magical Realism" as an official technique of "midnight children in the colonial era after the colonial period and the magical realism related to midnight children since the colonial era" Including magic and reality of Mixture of many critics as a combination of postmodern and post colonialism (131)