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Unit 4 Literary Focus Essays
Collection 7: Themes of Romantic Poetry Collection 8: Forms of Romantic Poetry
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Collection 7: Themes of Romantic Poetry
Influences on Romantic Poetry Spread of democratic ideals through the American and French Revolutions and disillusionment after failure of French Revolution Reactions against harsh living and working conditions created for urban poor by the Industrial Revolution and laissez-faire economics Fascination with nature and country life, which seemed a blissful retreat compared to city slums
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Collection 7: Themes of Romantic Poetry
A New Focus in Poetry Invited readers to feel power and passion Tried to capture personal experience Romantic Period Augustan Era Order had just been restored Society needed social change Poets celebrated order, hierarchy, and enlightened rule Poets wrote about personal feelings, supported individual rights, and used everyday language
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Collection 7: Themes of Romantic Poetry
A New Focus in Poetry Romantic comes from the world romance. A medieval romance is a tale of high adventure that idealizes knightly virtues and has supernatural elements. Romantic writers used elements of romance to go beyond neoclassical formality and explore psychological and mysterious depths of human experience.
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Collection 7: Themes of Romantic Poetry
A New Focus in Poetry Romantic poets Were fascinated with youth and innocence, particularly a child’s fresh view of the world Saw history as a cycle in which tradition and authority must be constantly questioned to improve living conditions Percy Bysshe Shelley Believed people had to accept change to survive
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Collection 7: Themes of Romantic Poetry
Imagination: The Inspired Guide Many say the Romantic movement began in 1798 when Wordsworth and Coleridge published Lyrical Ballads. The Romantics are often considered nature poets. However, they are really “mind poets” who sought to understand the bond between humans and the world of the senses.
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Collection 7: Themes of Romantic Poetry
Imagination: The Inspired Guide The Romantics saw imagination as the link between mind and nature. To them, imaginative experi- ences were especially moving, perhaps superior to human reasoning. The mysterious forces of Nature inspired them. All six of the major Romantic poets had their own ideas about imagination, but all believed that it could be stimulated by nature and the mind.
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Collection 7: Themes of Romantic Poetry
Nature: The Wise Teacher If imagination is the Romantic poet’s guide to truth, Nature is the wise teacher that can deliver the lesson. Romantic poets considered themselves especially sensitive. They wanted to help people see the world in all its beauty, sadness, and tenderness.
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Collection 7: Themes of Romantic Poetry
Nature: The Wise Teacher For the Romantic poets, nature was a balm to soothe the relentless hounding of an industrialized world. The poets had a strong sense of nature’s transformative properties. Poets tried to translate scenes of natural beauty into words so that readers might know the power of natural forces to shape thought and feeling.
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Collection 7: Themes of Romantic Poetry
Nature: The Wise Teacher The Romantics’ interest in natural images and themes was reflected in Gothic literature. Novels such as Mary Shelley’s Frankenstein appealed to the imagination through Eerie settings Supernatural events Questions about humans’ ability to manipulate nature
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Collection 7: Themes of Romantic Poetry
Experience: The Worthy Subject Romantic poets favored idealized rural settings. However, some celebrated the people who lived in crowded cities. They promoted rights to Healthful living conditions Relief from political or economic oppression Self-expression
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Collection 7: Themes of Romantic Poetry
Experience: The Worthy Subject Some Romantics dreamed that poetry could offer an example of model behavior to improve horrific social conditions: Undemocratic governments Dangerous factories Child workers in coal mine Child labor Laissez-faire economic policies that left businesses unregulated
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Collection 7: Themes of Romantic Poetry
Ask Yourself 1. Where did Romantic poets look for inspiration? Why? 2. Why do you think Romantic poets wrote about nature during a time of change? [End of Section]
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Collection 8: Forms of Romantic Poetry
Characteristics of Romantic Poetry Expresses the emotions and concerns of an individual as well as of society Varies the structure of traditional forms to suit a poem’s purpose Focuses on a poet’s personal connection to nature
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Collection 8: Forms of Romantic Poetry
Function over Form The Romantics took poetry in a new direction. Romantic Poets 18th Century Poets Poetry was a strictly defined literary genre. Poetry was a playground of feelings. Poets experimented with forms and expressed feelings in natural language. Poets used formal language and structured traditional forms such as odes and sonnets. Function was more important than form. Form was more important than function.
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Collection 8: Forms of Romantic Poetry
Function over Form “Tintern Abbey” a First In “Tintern Abbey,” Wordsworth for the first time used blank verse that sounds like the flowing rhythms of natural speech. Like other Romantics, he experimented with simpler rhythms and language. Tintern Abbey by J. M. W. Turner
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Collection 8: Forms of Romantic Poetry
Romantic Forms The Romantics favored these poetic forms: 1 ode 2 sonnet 3 Spenserian stanza
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Collection 8: Forms of Romantic Poetry
1 The Ode An ode is a long complex poem (usually a meditation on a serious topic). “Ode to the West Wind” Percy Bysshe Shelley Ode Looks both inward and outward—exalting the powerful, but invisible, wind and reflecting on unseen forces in the poet’s own mind Each stanza is a variation on the sonnet form.
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Collection 8: Forms of Romantic Poetry
2 The Sonnet Wordsworth made the sonnet popular again. A sonnet is a fourteen-line lyric poem in iambic pentameter. Byron used the Spenserian stanza. 3 The Spenserian stanza Invented by the Renaissance poet Edmund Spenser, this form has nine lines with a complex rhyme and rhythm pattern.
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Collection 8: Forms of Romantic Poetry
Ask Yourself 1. What was more important to Romantic poets, form or function? Why? 2. What topics did Romantic poets pursue? Why? [End of Section]
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The End
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