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ROMANTIC AGE

ROMANTIC AGE. Sreekala B. CHARACTERISTICS OF ROMANTIC AGE. Individualism The Poet - As prophet, seer and legislator

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ROMANTIC AGE

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  1. ROMANTIC AGE Sreekala B.

  2. CHARACTERISTICS OF ROMANTIC AGE • Individualism • ThePoet -As prophet, seer and legislator -In the age of American and French revolutions , when moral, religious and psychic systems of control had collapsed, the social responsibility of the poet is emphasized. • The Romantic Hero • A solitary dreamer, even an outlaw, who turns away from the society, one who is plagued by guilt and remorse. • In revolt against social conventions

  3. 2.The Poet as Prophet • Yearning For The Infinite • Subjectivity and Introspection • Sublime Beauty of Nature • Idealization of Rural Living • The Lure of The Exotic Orient • The Ideal of The Picturesque • Related to travel, landscape painting, to places like Switzerland, France, Germany, Italy and Lake District

  4. 9.An Organic View of Poetry Poets began to regard a poem as an organic whole to be described in terms of a biological organism. Coleridge, drawing on German philosophy , was the first to emphasize the organic nature of art Recognition of a unique universe created by an individual poem Decorum and rules become irrelevant Rather than ‘delight’ the reader or ‘imitate’ nature , the objective of poetry is the reflection of the experiences of the author

  5. PRINCIPLES OF EARLY ROMANTIC POETRY • Revolted Against • Industrialization and Modernity • Aristocratic and urban values of Enlightenment • Scientific rationalization of nature • Supported • Strong and sublime emotion ( including terror , horror and awe) as the authentic source of aesthetic experience • Rustic life and folk arts as noble • Spontaneity of artistic expression • Medievalism and exoticism • The power of imagination to envision and to escape

  6. EARLY ROMANTIC POETS • WILLIAM WORDSWORTH (1770-1850) • Born at Cockermouth in Cumberland, Lake District, Northwest England • Third of five children of John Wordsworth, who was always away from home being a solicitor to Sir James Lowether, Earl of Lonsdale • Wordsworth lost his mother when he was 8, and his father when he was 15; after this the children lived separately with relatives • First poem to be published (in the European magazine, 1787) was “ On Seeing Miss Helen Maria Williams Weep at a Tale of Distress” • The borderers(1797)- In 1797, Wordsworth completed his only play, The Borderers • The Publication of Lyrical Ballads- In 1798, Wordsworth and Coleridge jointly brought out a collection of poems, the historic Lyrical Ballads which is believed to mark the beginning of Romantic Movement.

  7. Poetic Career • “Tintern Abbey” Full title- “Lines Composed a Few Miles above Tintern Abbey, on Revisiting the Banks of the Wye during a Tour, July 13, 1798” • The Prelude Spiritual Autobiography in blank verse Written between 1798 and 1805 subtitled as “Growth of a Poet’s Mind” Prologue to the unfinished long poem, The Recluse which he did not complete • “Michael”(1800)

  8. Immortality Ode (1807) • Lucy Poems- A series of five poems written between 1798 and 1801 • “The Solitary Reaper”, “Daffodils”, “Resolution and Independence” etc. • DEFINITION OF POETRY • Poetry as the product of “ the spontaneous overflow of powerful feelings” which results from “emotions recollected in tranquility”

  9. SAMUEL TAYLOR COLERIDGE(1772-1834) • Poet, critic and philosopher • Born in Devonshire, as the youngest of 14 children of a vicar • Met Robert Southey in June 1794, with whom he struck an instant friendship. • They made a plan to build a utopian society, called Pantisocracy. • A hasty marriage with Sara Fricker • In 1795, met Wordsworth and his sister Dorothy, and they spent much time discussing poetry, politics and philosophy. • The Eight Conversation Poems • “Kubla Khan” • Lyrical Ballads- wrote in collaboration with Wordsworth • Asra Poems

  10. “Christabel” (1816)- Incomplete gothic ballad • BiographiaLitteraria (1817) • The biographical preface originally intended for Sibylline Leaves grew into a lengthy, 2-volume work in 23 chapters called BiographiaLiteraria • A combination of literary criticism , autobiography and philosophical speculation. • Coleridge As a Critic • Two major critical works • BiographiaLiteraria • Lectures on Shakespeare and Other poets

  11. ROBERT SOUTHEY( 1774-1843) • Poet, historian and critic • Went on to Oxford, where he wrote the poem Joan of Arc(1796) in support of the French Revolution. • Also wrote the republican play, Wat Tyler(1817) • He collaborated with Coleridge and wrote the play, “The Fall of Robespiere” • Secret marriage to Edith Fricker • Calleda Lake Poet • Poetic career • “The Inchcape Rock” • “The Battle of Blenheim” • “The Curse of Kehama” – The long epic poem • “Thalaba the Destroyer”- Oriental verse epic

  12. LATE ROMANTIC AGE (1815-1851) Early Romantic visionary optimism and belief in change vanished Shared their predecessors’ passion for liberty Desire to be free of convention and tyranny A new emphasis on the rights and dignity of the individual Criticism of the bourgeois society Displays of intense emotion continued Experimentation with form and technique was generally reduced, often replaced with meticulous technique.

  13. LORD GEORGE GORDON BYRON(1788-1824) • The most flamboyant and notorious of the major Romantics • Born in London with a clubbed right foot • Inherited barony and family home when he was 10. • Profligate behaviour • Had a few love affairs • Poetic Career • Fugitive Pieces, a small volume of verse , was published in 1807 • “Hours of Idleness(1807)”, By George Gordon , Lord Byron, a Minor” • “Childe Harold’s Pilgrimage’ (1812)- Account of his travels in Spenzerian stanza “I awoke one morning and found myself famous”

  14. Oriental tales • The Giaour, The Bride of Abydos, The Corsair and its sequel, Lara • In 1815, he wrote Hebrew Melodies, lyrics for the Jewish music composed by Isaac Nathan. • The Prisoner of Chillon • Beppo • Mazeppa • Don Juan (1821) Satiric picaresque novel in verse mock epic Spanish legend of Don Juan reversed Naive hero’s travels and accidental adventures

  15. P B SHELLEY (1792-1822) Born at Sussex as the eldest son of Timothy Shelley, a country squire At Eton College, his independent spirit won him the nick name “Mad Shelley” and “Eton Atheit” In 1811, with Thomas J Hogg, he wrote and circulated The Necessity of Atheism, and were expelled from the college Scandalous marriages Eloped with the sixteen year old Harriet West brook Second elopment with Mary Godwin who is later to become Mary Shelley

  16. Poetic Career • Queen Mab(1813) • Alastor or, The Spirit of Solitude (1816) • The Revolt of Islam (1818) • Ozymandias • Prometheus Unbound- the lyrical drama which he wrote in 1820 • The Cenci (1819)- a sordid verse tragedy • The Mask of Anarchy(1819) • Adonais (1821)- Elegy on the death of Keats • Epipsychidion (1821) • The Triumph of Life – His last major poem- unfinished visionary poem

  17. JOHN KETAS (1795-1821) • Keats’ father was the manager of the llively stables of his father- in-law in Moorfields, and died when he was eight • His mother Frances Jennings remarried soon but died of TB when he was 14. • John was the eldest- had two brothers and a sister, Fanny • Poetic Career • First poem motivated by Faerie Queene, “Lines in Imitation of Spenser”(1814) • The first volume of poetry, Poems was published in 1817 • In a review that appeared in Blackwood’s Magazine, Keats, Hunt and Hazlitt were ridiculed as the “ Cockney School”

  18. In 1818, his first long poem Endymion was published • Isabella, or The Pot of Basil(1818) Narrative poem in ottavarima story adapted from Boccacio’sDecameron • 1819 can be considered as the Annus Mirabilis of Keats • Important Poems • “The Eve of St Agnes” Odes- • “On Indolence” • “On a Grecian Urn” • “To Psyche” • “To Melancholy” • “To Nightingale” • “To Autumn”

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