Fixities and Definites
The primary IMAGINATION I hold to be the living Power and prime Agent of all human Perception, and as a repetition in the finite mind of the eternal act of creation in the infinite I AM. The secondary Imagination I consider as an echo of the former, co-existing with the conscious will, yet still as identical with the primary in the kind of its agency, and differing only in degree, and in the mode of its operation. It dissolves, diffuses, dissipates, in order to recreate; or where this process is rendered impossible, yet still at all events it struggles to idealize and to unify. It is essentially vital, even as all objects (as objects) are essentially fixed and dead. FANCY, on the contrary, has no other counters to play with, but fixities and definites. The Fancy is indeed no other than a mode of Memory emancipated from the order of time and space; while it is blended with, and modified by that empirical phenomenon of the will, which we express by the word CHOICE. But equally with the ordinary memory the Fancy must receive all its materials ready made from the law of association.
, Biographia Literaria, Chapter XIII (1817)
Coleridge wrote these lines in 1817, trying to pin down a distinction that philosophers and artists had been circling for centuries. He arrived at something deceptively simple: there are two fundamentally different operations of the creative mind, and they should not be confused. The Imagination, as he describes it, “dissolves, diffuses, dissipates, in order to recreate.” It breaks things apart before building them up again as something new. It is “essentially vital.” Where Fancy remembers and recombines, Imagination transforms.
What strikes me most is the verb “struggles.” Even when the full process of dissolution and recreation is “rendered impossible,” the Imagination still struggles to idealize and to unify. There is effort in it, perhaps even failure, as the creative mind pushes toward a coherence it cannot quite reach. Fancy, meanwhile, is described in terms that sound almost comfortable: it plays with its counters, it chooses, it arranges. There is no struggle in Fancy because there is nothing at stake.
We live now amid systems that are extraordinarily good at the operations Coleridge attributed to Fancy: recombining vast libraries of human expression, freed from the constraints of time and space, governed by sophisticated patterns of association. The outputs can be beautiful, even startling. And yet Coleridge’s framework poses a question that lingers. The Imagination is “essentially vital, even as all objects (as objects) are essentially fixed and dead.” He is pointing to something about aliveness in the act of creation, something that precedes the product and cannot be located in it after the fact. When we make something, when we struggle toward a unity we can feel but not yet see, where does that vitality reside? And if we delegate parts of that process, does the vitality redistribute, or simply dissipate?