Thursday, April 12, 2012

11th British Romantic Poetry

British Romanticism does not refer to Mick Jagger making out with a bimbo. It refers to a literary movement in England that took place roughly between 1785-1830.
The Romantics rejected the idea that reason could explain everything and pledged their faith in the powers of nature and the imagination.
The imagination was a creative force comparable to that of nature and was the fundamental source of morality and truth, enabling people to sympathize with others and to picture the world.
Simplicity and directness of language
Expression of spontaneous, intensified feelings
Profound responses to nature, in which nature appears to reflect the soul and contemplation of nature leads to a deeper awareness of self
Gothic Literature because a popular feature of the Romantic Movement.
-events take the reader from the reasoned order of the everyday world in to the dark and dreadful world of the supernatural.
                -set in dark towers, eerie monasteries with underground passages, disquieting, mysterious atmosphere
-word Gothic describes the style of architecture used in many European castles, and the literary tradition was given this name for its uses of these castles as settings
                -novels like Frankenstein and poems like “Rime of the Ancient Mariner”
                -modern science fiction, horror and ghost stories
               
Romantic Poets
Romantic Poets include Keats, Shelley, Wordsworth, Coleridge, Blake, and Byron.
·         Characteristics of Romantic Poets
Beauty of the Supernatural: British Romantics believed something existed beyond the physical world. The Spirit world, according to Romantics, had unleashed its power and inspiration to overthrow tyranny in government and in literature. Unlike the American Romantics who wrote of ghosts, demonic cats, and rope-gnawing rats, British Romanticism's treatment of the supernatural excluded horror and the macabre and focused on supernatural energy and beauty.
Championing of the Individual: Revolution in Europe brought to light the importance of the individual. Ordinary people now became the subject of lofty language. British Romanticism attempted to free itself from traditional forms and subjects.
The Importance of Nature: The poet, according to the Romantics, is only at peace when in nature; moreover, while in nature, the poet intervened with the great Universal Mind. Romantic poets made frequent use of personification with nature, ascribing human traits to daffodils, fields, streams, and lakes. Nature, in essence, became emotionally expressive.
The Dangers of Technology: A natural consequence of celebrating nature was a disdain for technology and industrialism.
·         Major Early Romantic Poets
The following share characteristics of Romantic poets:
William Blake (1757-1827): Blake's poetry dwelt upon his divine vision and rebelled against traditional poetic forms and techniques. He created his own mythological world with man as the central figure. His more famous poems include The Lamb, The Tyger, The Chimney Sweeper, and The Clod and the Pebble. What makes Blake's poem especially attractive for teaching in high school is he often wrote two poems with the same title--one poem negative and one poem positive, excellent for compare and contrast writing.
William Wordsworth (1770-1850): The most famous of the British Romantics, Wordsworth is considered the nature poet. He revolutionized poetic subjects, focusing on ordinary people in rustic settings. He, in addition, wrote about and considered the poet as superior to all other writers. His most famous poems include I Wandered Lonely as a Cloud, We are Seven, and I Travelled Among Unknown Men. Most high school literature textbooks have at least one poem by Wordsworth.
Samuel Taylor Coleridge (1772-1834): Coleridge and Wordsworth are often grouped together as The Lake Poets, and for good reason. Together they are credited as the founders of the Romantic movement. Coleridge's most famous poems, Rime of the Ancient Mariner, Kubla Kahn, and Christabel have a distinct supernatural element and strongly influenced American Romantics such as Poe and Hawthorne.
·         Later Romantic Poets
The following share characteristics of later Romantic poets:
Lord Byron (1788-1824): Lord Byron enjoyed unmatched popularity. Byron's most famous creations are his dark heroes, called Byronic heroes, who, in fact, were not heroes at all, but stood out from ordinary humans as larger than life. The Byronic hero brooded, possessed insatiable appetites and incredible strength, rebelled against societal norms, and forced upon himself exile. Byron's most famous works include Don Juan and Childe Harold's Pilgrimage. Lord Byron is generally reserved for university level literature courses and is rarely found in high school anthologies.
Percy Bysshe Shelley (1792-1822): Like all Romantics, Shelley was a radical non-conformist. He campaigned for social justice, even marrying the daughter of Mary Wollstonecraft, an English leader in the women's rights movement. His wife would later write Frankenstein. His most famous poems include Mutability, Ozymandias, and Ode to the West Wind.
John Keats (1795-1821): Perhaps the most popular Later Romantic poet, Keats accomplished great things during his short life. His Ode to a Nightingale, Ode on a Grecian Urn, and Ode on Melancholy find their way into anthologies throughout the English speaking world. Keats considered contact with poets as a threat to his independence and therefore shunned his contemporaries.


“Rime of the Ancient Mariner”
-written in a dreamlike language, set in an indeterminate past, and filled with supernatural events – is part of the British tradition of fantasy literature
-fantasy writers like Coleridge use strange settings and supernatural tales to break the spell of ordinary life.
- by plunging the reader into a wild, unfamiliar world, they remind us that human imagination can always envision worlds beyond the one into which we are born
-encourages power of scientific discoveries and social reform

Occasion = wedding
The Mariner kills the Albatross with his crossbow and wears it around his neck as a sign of his crime of killing it.
The Mariner’s shipmates drop dead as a symbol for the ways in which guilt can cut off an individual from others.
The Albatross falls off the Mariner’s neck because his guilt has been forgiven.
The Mariner’s lifelong penance is to wander the Earth telling his tale and teaching love of all things great and small.
His listener is sadder and wiser…much like a mature adult becomes after gaining knowledge and experience in the real world and discovering the truth about things. This point is much like the same which William Blake alludes to in his Songs of Innocence and Songs of Experience.


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