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... themselves in the themes of neo-classicism and romanticism. ... Discussion Question. List 5 crucial differences between neo-classicism and Romanticism. ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Passage Review


1
Passage Review
  • Identify Text
  • Identify Author
  • Write a sentence or two expressing main idea or
    theme
  • Write a sentence or two expressing importance to
    a literary or intellectual period or to World
    Literature generally

2
Identify Text, Author, Theme, and Importance to
World Literature
  • Ah, brother, mans a strangely fashioned creature
    / Who seldom is content to follow Nature, / But
    recklessly pursues his inclination / Beyond the
    narrow bounds of moderation, / And often, by
    transgressing Reasons laws, / Perverts a lofty
    aim or noble cause

3
Identify Text, Author, Theme, and Importance to
World Literature
  • . . . Thou breath of Autumns being/Thou, from
    whose unseen presence the leaves dead/Are driven,
    like ghosts from an enchanter fleeing . . . Wild
    spirit, which art moving everywhere / Destroyer
    and Preserver hear, O hear!

4
Identify Text, Author, Theme, and Importance to
World Literature
  • That riddle was not for anyone who came along to
    answer it called for prophetic insight. But
    you didnt come forward, you offered no answer
    told you by the birds or the gods. No, I came,
    know-nothing _________, I stopped the sphinx. I
    answered the riddle with my own intelligence.

5
Identify Text, Author, Theme, and Importance to
World Literature
  • Getting and spending, we lay waste our powers
    Little we see in nature that is ours / We have
    given our hearts away, a sordid boon!
  • Great God! Id rather be a pagan suckled in a
    creed outworn / So might I, standing on this
    pleasant lea, / Have glimpses that would make me
    less forlorn / Have sight of Proteus rising from
    the sea . . .

6
Identify Text, Author, Theme, and Importance to
World Literature
  • But in my opinion, for what it is worth, the
    final thing to be perceived in the intelligible
    region, and perceived only with difficulty, is
    the form of the good once seen, it is inferred
    to be responsible for whatever is right and
    valuable in anything . . . And anyone who is
    going to act rationally either in public or
    private life must have sight of it.

7
Simile of Cave Quotation5 removes from the
Absolute
  • Tied Prisoner in a caveshadows of puppets.
  • Freed Prisoner in a cave
  • Looking at shadows and reflections outside the
    cave
  • Looking at the things themselves outside the cave
  • Looking at the sun
  • Realm of Illusion
  • Realm of Belief
  • Realm of Reason
  • Realm of Intelligence
  • Realm of The Form of the Good

8
Identify Text, Author, Theme, and Importance to
World Literature
  • The first money I laid out was to buy two young
    stone-horses, which I keep in a good stable, and
    next to them the groom is my favorite for I feel
    my spirit revived by the smell he contracts in
    the stable. My horses understand me tolerably
    well I converse with them at least four hours
    every day . . . They live in great amity with me,
    and friendship to each other.

9
Identify Text, Author, Theme, and Importance to
World Literature
  • But when the melancholy fit shall fall / Sudden
    from heaven like a weeping cloud, / That fosters
    the droop-headed flowers all, / And hides the
    green hill in an April shroud Then glut thy
    sorrow on a morning rose. . . She dwells with
    BeautyBeauty that must die And Joy, whose hand
    is ever at his lips / Bidding Adieu

10
Identify Text, Author, Theme, and Importance to
World Literature
  • Dull would he be of soul who could pass by / A
    sight so touching in its majesty / This city now
    doth, like a garment, wear / The beauty of the
    morning . . . Never did the sun more beautifully
    steep / In his first splendour, valley, rock, or
    hill.

11
Identify Text, Author, Theme, and Importance to
World Literature
  • Pent in cruel jail for endless hours, / I never
    called on your immortal powers. / Ive hoarded up
    the aid you promised me / Till greater need
    should justify my plea. / I make it now. Avenge a
    fathers wrong. / Seize on this traitor, and let
    your rage be strong.

12
Identify Text, Author, Theme, and Importance to
World Literature
  • I wondered thro each chartered street, / Near
    where the chartered Thames does flow, / and mark
    in every face I meet / Marks of weakness, marks
    of woe.
  • In every cry of Man / In every Infants cry of
    fear, / In every voice, in every ban, / The
    mind-forged manacles I hear
  • How the Chimney-Sweepers cry / Every blackening
    Church appalls . . . .

13
Identify Text, Author, Theme, and Importance to
World Literature
  • Chorus Wisdom is by far the greatest part of
    joy, and reverence towards the gods must be
    safeguarded. The mighty words of the proud are
    paid in full with mighty blows of fate, and at
    long last those blows will teach us wisdom.

14
Identify Text, Author, Theme, and Importance to
World Literature
  • Say first, of God above, or man below / What can
    we reason, but from what we know? / Of man, what
    see we but his station here, / From which to
    reason, or to which refer? / Through worlds
    unnumbered though the God be known, / 'Tis ours
    to trace Him only in our own. / He, who through
    vast immensity can pierce, / See worlds on worlds
    compose one universe, / Observe how system into
    system runs, / What other planets circle other
    suns, / What varied being peoples every star, /
    May tell why Heaven has made us as we are.

15
Identify Text, Author, Theme, and Importance to
World Literature
  • We are aware of evanescent visitations of
    thought and feeling sometimes associated with a
    place or person, sometimes regarding our own mind
    alone, and always arising unforeseen and
    departing unbidden, but elevating and delightful
    beyond all expression . . . It is as it were the
    interpenetration of a diviner nature through our
    own.

16
Identify Text, Author, Theme, and Importance to
World Literature
  • What law of the mighty gods have I transgressed?
    / Why look to the heavens any more, tormented as
    I am? / Whom to call, what comrades now? Just
    think, / my reverence only brands me for
    irreverence! / Very well if this be the pleasure
    of the Gods . . . But if these men are wrong, let
    them suffer / nothing worse that they mete out to
    me / These masters of injustice.

17
Identify Text, Author, Theme, and Importance to
World Literature
  • Now, to correct that error, must you embrace/An
    even greater error in its place,/And judge our
    worthy neighbors as a whole/By what youve
    learned of one corrupted soul?/Come, just because
    one rascal made you swallow /A show of zeal which
    turned out to be hollow, / Shall you conclude
    that all men are deceivers,/And that, today,
    there are no true believers? / Let atheists make
    that foolish inference /Learn to distinguish
    virtue from pretense, / Be cautious in bestowing
    admiration,/ And cultivate a sober moderation.

18
Identify Text, Author, Theme, and Importance to
World Literature
  • My heart aches, and a drowsy numbness pains / My
    sense, as though of hemlock I had drunk, / Or
    emptied some dull opiate to the drains / One
    minute past, and the Lethe-wards had sunk / Tis
    not through envy of thy happy lot, / But being
    too happy in thy happiness . . .singest of summer
    in full throated ease

19
Identify Text, Author, Theme, and Importance to
World Literature
  • . Cease, then, nor order imperfection name /Our
    proper bliss depends on what we blame. /Know thy
    own point this kind, this due degree / Of
    blindness, weakness, Heaven bestows on thee. /
    Submit. In this, or any other sphere, /Secure to
    be as blest as thou canst bear / Safe in the
    hand of one disposing Power /,Or in the natal, or
    the mortal hour. /All nature is but art, unknown
    to thee /All chance, direction, which thou canst
    not see /All discord, harmony not understood
    /All partial evil, universal good /And, spite of
    pride in erring reason's spite, /One truth is
    clear, whatever is, is right.

20
Identify Text, Author, Theme, and Importance to
World Literature
  • These beauteous forms, /Through a long absence,
    have not been to me /As is a landscape to a blind
    man's eye /But oft, in lonely rooms, and 'mid
    the din / Of towns and cities, I have owed to
    them, /In hours of weariness, sensations sweet,
    /Felt in the blood, and felt along the heart
    /And passing even into my purer mind, / With
    tranquil restoration -feelings too /Of
    unremembered pleasure . . . . ./In which the
    heavy and the weary weight /Of all this
    unintelligible world, /Is lightened

21
Identify Text, Author, Theme, and Importance to
World Literature
  • An old, mad, blind, despised, and dying King /
    Princes, the dregs of their dull race, who flow /
    Through public scorn, --mud from a muddy spring
    / Rulers who neither feel nor know, but leechlike
    to their fainting country cling. . . . / Are
    Graves from which a glorious Phantom may Burst,
    to illume our tempestuous day.

22
Identify Text, Author, Theme, and Importance to
World Literature
  • Poets are the hierophants of an unapprehended
    inspiration, the mirrors or the gigantic shadows
    which futurity casts upon the present, the words
    which express what they understand not the
    trumpets which sing to battle, and feel not what
    they inspire . . . Poets are the unacknowledged
    legislators of the World.

23
Identify Text, Author, Theme, and Importance to
World Literature
  • Chorus And now is there a man whose story is
    more pitiful? / His life is lived in merciless
    calamity and pain a complete reversal from his
    happy state . . .Time, which sees all things, has
    found you out it sits in judgment on the
    unnatural marriage
  • Messenger And when the poor woman was lying on
    the ground . . . He ripped the golden pins with
    which her clothes were fastened . . . And speared
    the pupils of his eyes.

24
Identify Text, Author, Theme, and Importance to
World Literature
  • My master heard me with great appearances of
    uneasiness in his countenance because doubting
    or not believing are so little known in his
    country. . . . . . And I remember in frequent
    discourses with my master concerning the nature
    of manhood, in other parts of the world, having
    occasion to talk of lying, it was with much
    difficulty that he comprehended what I meant.

25
Identify Text, Author, Theme, and Importance to
World Literature
  • I want you to picture the enlightenment or the
    ignorance of our human condition somewhat as
    follows. Imagine an underground chamber like a
    cave, with a long entrance open to the daylight
    and as wide as the cave. In this chamber are the
    men who have been prisoners there since they were
    children . . .

26
Identify Text, Author, Theme, and Importance to
World Literature
  • For Oft, when on the couch I lie / In vacant or
    in pensive mood, / They flash upon that inward
    eye / Which is the bliss of solitude / And then
    my heart with pleasure fills, / And dances with
    the daffodils.

27
Identify Text, Author, Theme, and Importance to
World Literature
  • Tragedy, then, is an imitation of an action that
    is serious, complete, and of a certain magnitude
    in language embellished with each kind of
    artistic ornament, the several kinds being found
    in separate parts of the play in the form of
    action, not of narrative with incidents arousing
    pity and fear, wherewith to accomplish its
    katharsis of such emotions. . . . Every Tragedy,
    therefore, must have six parts, which parts
    determine its qualitynamely, Plot, Characters,
    Diction, Thought, Spectacle, Melody.

28
Identify Text, Author, Theme, and Importance to
World Literature
  • The Child is the Father of Man / And I could
    wish my days to be / Bound each to each with
    natural piety
  • There was a time when meadow, grove, and stream,
    / The earth, and every common sight, / To me did
    seem / Apparelled in celestial light, / The glory
    and the freshness of a dream. It is not now as
    it hath been of yore -- Turn wheresoever I may,
    / By night or day, / The things which I have seen
    I now can see no more.

29
Identify Text, Author, Theme, and Importance to
World Literature
  • True ease in writing comes from art, not
    chance, As those move easiest who have learned
    to dance. 'Tis not enough no harshness gives
    offense, The sound must seem an echo to the
    sense Soft is the strain when Zephyr gently
    blows, And the smooth stream in smoother numbers
    flows / But when loud surges lash the sounding
    shore, / The hoarse, rough verse should like the
    torrent roar / When Ajax strives some rock's
    vast weight to throw, / The line too labors, and
    the words move slow

30
Identify Text, Author, Theme, and Importance to
World Literature
  • Away! away! For I will fly to thee, / Not
    charioted by Bacchus and his pards, / But on the
    viewless wings of Poesy, / Though the dull brain
    perplexes and retards Already with thee! Tender
    is the night . . .

31
Identify Text, Author, Theme, and Importance to
World Literature
  • We serve a Prince to whom all sham is hateful / A
    Prince who sees into our inmost hearts. / And
    Cant be fooled by any tricksters arts. / His
    royal soul, / Though generous and human, / Views
    all things discernment and acumen / His
    sovereign reason is not lightly swayed, / And all
    his judgments are discreetly weighed.

32
Identify Text, Author, Theme, and Importance to
World Literature
  • I drank, to give my burning veins some peace, /
    a poison which Medea brought to Greece. /
    Already, to my heart, the venom gives / An alien
    coldness, so that it scarcely lives / Already,
    to my sight all clouds and fades -- / The sky, my
    spouse, the world my life degrades / Death dims
    my eyes, which soiled what they could see, /
    Restoring to the light its purity.

33
Discussion Question
  • Compare the Deism to Pantheism, and how these
    concepts reveal themselves in the themes of
    neo-classicism and romanticism.

34
Discussion Question
  • What is Lyric Poetry? What is a Lyre? Why is
    the image of the Lyre important in Romantic
    poetry?

35
Discussion Question
  • List 5 crucial differences between neo-classicism
    and Romanticism.
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