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The Romantic Period

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Title: The Romantic Period


1
The Romantic Period
The Later Poets - The Rebels/Rock Stars
George Gordon, Lord Byron
Percy Bysshe Shelley
John Keats
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The Romantic Period
George Gordon, Lord Bryon
The most notorious Romantic poet and satirist,
Byron was famous in his lifetime for his love
affairs with women. He created his own cult of
personality, the concept of the 'Byronic hero' -
a defiant, melancholy young man, brooding on some
mysterious, unforgivable in his past. "There's
not a joy the world can give that it takes away /
When the glow of early thought declines in
feeling's dull decay, / 'Tis not on youth's
smooth cheek the blush alone, which fades so
fast, / But the tender bloom of heart is gone,
ere youth itself be past." (Lord Byron)
Byron's influence on European poetry, music,
novel, opera, and painting was immense, although
the poet was widely condemned on moral grounds by
his contemporaries.
3
The Romantic Period
  • George Gordon, Lord Byron, was the son of
    Captain John Byron, and Catherine Gordon of
    Gight, a self-indulgent, somewhat hysterical
    woman, who was his second wife. He was born with
    a club-foot and became extreme sensitivity about
    his lameness. His life did not become easier when
    he received painful treatments for his foot by a
    quack practitioner in 1799. Eventually he got a
    corrective boot. (Lord Bryon).
  • In his works short and stout Byron glorified
    proud heroes, who overcome hardships. The poet
    himself was only 5 feet 8 1/2 inches tall and his
    widely varying weight ranged from 137 to 202
    pounds - he once said that everything he
    swallowed was instantly converted to tallow and
    deposited on his ribs. One of his friends noted
    that at the age of about 30 he looked 40 and "the
    knuckles of his hands were lost in fat."
  • At the age of fifteen he fell in love with Mary
    Chaworth, his distant cousin, whom he wrote the
    poem 'To Emma'.

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The Romantic Period
  • In 1807 appeared Byron's first collection of
    poetry, HOURS OF IDLENESS. It received bad
    reviews. The poet answered his critics with
    satire ENGLISH BARDS AND SCOTCH REVIEWS in 1808.
    Next year he took his seat in the House of Lords,
    and set out on his grand tour, visiting Spain,
    Albania, Greece, and the Aegean.
  • Success came in 1812 when Byron published the
    first two cantos of CHILDE HAROLD'S PILGRIMAGE
    (1812-1818). "I awoke one morning and found
    myself famous," he later said. He became an
    adored character of London society, he spoke in
    the House of Lords effectively on liberal themes,
    and had a hectic love-affair with Lady Caroline
    Lamb. ''Mad - bad - and dangerous to know,'' she
    wrote in her journal on the evening she first saw
    him.
  • During the summer of 1813 Byron apparently
    entered into a more than brotherly relationship
    with his half-sister Augusta Leigh, who was a
    mother of three daughters. In 1814 Augusta gave
    birth to Elizabeth Medora, who was generally
    supposed to be Byron's.

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The Romantic Period
  • In the same year he wrote 'Lara,' a poem about a
    mystical hero, aloof and alien, whose identity is
    gradually revealed and who dies after a feud in
    the arms of his page. THE CORSAIR (1814), sold
    10,000 copies on the first day of publication.
  • . Byron married Anne Isabella Milbanke in 1815,
    and their daughter Ada was born in the same year.
    The marriage was unhappy, and they obtained legal
    separation next year. When the rumors started to
    rise of his incest and debts were accumulating,
    Byron left England in 1816, never to return.
    ''The only virtue they honor in England is
    hypocrisy,'' he once wrote a friend.
  • Byron settled in Geneva with Mary Godwin, Percy
    Bysshe Shelley, Mary Shelley, and Claire
    Clairmont, who became his mistress. There he
    wrote the two cantos of Childe Harold and THE
    PRISONER OF CHILLON. At the end of the summer
    Byron continued his travels, spending two years
    in Italy.

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The Romantic Period
  • During the years in Italy, Byron wrote LAMENT
    OF TASSO, inspired by his visit in Tasso's cell
    in Rome, MAZEPPA, THE PROPHECY OF DANTE, and
    started DON JUAN, his satiric masterpiece.
  • After a long creative period, Byron had come
    to feel that action was more important than
    poetry. With good wishes from Goethe, Byron armed
    a brig, the Hercules, and sailed to Greece to aid
    the Greek's, who had risen against their Ottoman
    overlords. He worked ceaselessly and joined
    Alexander Mavrocordato on the north shore of the
    Gulf of Patras..
  • However, before Byron saw any serious military
    action, he contracted the fever from which he
    died in Missolonghi on 19 April 1824. Before his
    death he had suffered a seizure, and his
    condition was worsened by a leeching procedure.
    Memorial services were held all over the land.
    The Greeks wished to bury him in Athens, but only
    his heart stayed in the country. Part of his
    skull and his internal organs had been removed
    for souvenirs. Byron's body was returned to
    England but refused by the deans of both
    Westminister and St Paul's. Finally Byron's
    coffin was placed in the family vault at Hucknall
    Torkard, near Newstead Abbey in Nottinghamshire

7
The Romantic Period
Characteristics of the Byronic Hero
A Byronic hero exhibits several characteristic
traits, and in many ways he can be considered a
rebel.
  • is a rebel (against convention, society, etc.)
  • has a distaste for society and social
    institutions
  • is isolated from society (a wanderer, an exile)
  • is not impressed by rank and privilege (though he
    may possess it)
  • is larger-than-life in his ability--and his pride
  • has a hidden curse or crime
  • suffers from titanic passions 
  • tends to be self-destructive

One of the key connections to understanding the
Byronic Hero is that he is, in some ways, like
the Romantic conception of Satan in Paradise
Lost--the rebel who fights against a tyrannical
establishment but is destroyed by his own
overwhelming pride.  This figure is an
unconventional hero--dangerous and destructive,
but admirable because he is larger than life.
8
The Romantic Period
Percy Bysshe Shelley
  • Percy Bysshe Shelley (August 4, 1792 July 8,
    1822) was one of the major English Romantic poets
    and is widely considered to be among the finest
    lyrical poets of the English language.
  • Lyrical poems are a form of poetry that does not
    attempt to tell a story but is of a more personal
    nature instead.
  • He is perhaps most famous for such anthology
    pieces as Ozymandias, Ode to the West Wind, To a
    Skylark, and The Masque of Anarchy.
  • Shelley's unconventional life and uncompromising
    idealism, combined with his strong skeptical
    voice, made him a notorious and much denigrated
    figure during his life.

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The Romantic Period
  • He became the idol of the next two or three
    generations of poets (including the major
    Victorian and Pre-Raphaelite poets Robert
    Browning, Alfred Tennyson, Dante Gabriel
    Rossetti, Algernon Charles Swinburne, as well as
    William Butler Yeats
  • He is famous for his association with
    contemporaries John Keats and Lord Byron an
    untimely death at a young age was common to all
    three. He was married to the famous novelist Mary
    Shelley, author of Frankenstein, and wrote the
    introduction to the 1818 edition of the novel.

Mary Shelley
  • In 1814 Shelley fell in love and eloped with
    Mary, the sixteen-year-old daughter of William
    Godwin and Mary Wollstonecraft. For the next few
    years the couple travelled in Europe. Shelley
    continued to be involved in politics and in 1817
    wrote the pamphlet A Proposal for Putting Reform
    to the Vote Throughout the United Kingdom. In the
    pamphlet Shelley suggested a national referendum
    on electoral reform and improvements in working
    class education.

10
The Romantic Period
  • In 1822 Shelley, moved to Italy with Leigh Hunt
    (friends with other young writers who favored
    political reform) and Lord Byron where they
    published the journal The Liberal. By publishing
    it in Italy the three men remained free from
    prosecution by the British authorities. The first
    edition of The Liberal sold 4,000 copies. Soon
    after its publication, Percy Bysshe Shelley was
    lost at sea on 8th July, 1822 while sailing to
    meet Leigh Hunt.

11
The Romantic Period
John Keats
  • . John Keats was born in Finsbury Pavement near
    London on October 31st, 1795.
  • The first son of a stable-keeper, he had a
    sister and three brothers, one of whom died in
    infancy. When John was eight years old, his
    father was killed in an accident. In the same
    year his mother married again, but little later
    separated from her husband and took her family to
    live with her mother.
  • . John attended a good school where he became
    well acquainted with ancient and contemporary
    literature.

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The Romantic Period
  • In 1810 his mother died of consumption, leaving
    the children to their grandmother. The old lady
    put them under the care of two guardians, to whom
    she made over a respectable amount of money for
    the benifit of the orphans. Under the authority
    of the guardians, he was taken from school to an
    be apprentice to a surgeon. In 1814, before
    completion of his apprenticeship, John left his
    master after a quarrel, becoming a hospital
    student in London.
  • Under the guidance of his friend Cowden Clarke
    he devoted himself increasingly to literature. In
    1814 Keats finally sacrificed his medical
    ambitions to a literary life.
  • He soon got acquainted with celebrated artists
    of his time, like Leigh Hunt, Percy B. Shelley
    and Benjamin Robert Haydon.
  • In May 1816, Hunt helped him publish his first
    poem in a magazine. A year later Keats published
    about thirty poems and sonnets printed in the
    volume "Poems".

13
The Romantic Period
  • After receiving scarce, negative feedback,
    Keats travelled to the Isle of Wight on his own
    in spring of 1817. In the late summer he went to
    Oxford together with a newly-made friend,
    Benjamin Bailey.
  • In the following winter, George Keats married
    and emigrated to America, leaving the
    consumptuous brother Tom to the John's care.
  • Apart from helping Tom against consumption,
    Keats worked on his poem "Endymion". Just before
    its publication, he went on a hiking tour to
    Scotland and Ireland with his friend Charles
    Brown.
  • First signs of his own fatal disease forced him
    to return prematurely, where he found his brother
    seriously ill and his poem harshly critisized. In
    December 1818 Tom Keats died.

14
The Romantic Period
  • John moved to Hampstead Heath, were he lived in
    the house of Charles Brown. While in Scotland
    with Keats, Brown had lent his house to a Mrs
    Brawne and her sixteen-year-old daughter Fanny.
    Since the ladies where still living in London,
    Keats soon made their acquaintance and fell in
    love with the beautiful, fashionable girl.
  • Absorbed in love and poetry, he exhausted
    himself mentally, and in autumn of 1819, he tried
    to gain some distance to literature through an
    ordinary occupation.
  • An unmistakable sign of consumption in February
    1820 however broke all his plans for the future,
    marking the beginning of what he called his
    "posthumous life".
  • In the late summer of 1820, Keats was ordered
    by his doctors to avoid the English winter and
    move to Italy. His friend Joseph Severn
    accompanied him south - first to Naples, and then
    to Rome.

15
The Romantic Period
  • His health improved momentarily, only to
    collapse finally. Keats died in Rome on the 23rd
    of February, 1821.
  • The inscription at the bottom is in Severn's
    hand, and reads (in partial shorthand)
  • 28 Janry 3 o'clock mng.  Drawn to keep me awake
    - a deadly sweat was on him all this night.
  • Keats passed away on Friday, 23 February 1821,
    around 1100 pm. 
  • He was buried on the Protestant Cemetary, near
    the grave of Caius Cestius. On his desire, the
    following lines were engraved on his tombstone
    "Here lies one whose name was writ in water."

This is the last known portrait of the poet.
16
The Romantic Period
Works Cited
Allen, Dr. Rosemary. The Bryonic Hero. English
213, Spring 2003. Georgetown University.
23 Apr. 2007. lt http//spider.georgetowncollege.ed
u/english/allen/byron2.htmgt.
----. Characteristics of Romanticism. English
213, Spring 2003. Georgetown University.
23 Apr. 2007. lt http//spider.georgetowncollege.ed
u/english/allen/romantic.htmgt.
English History.Net. The Final Months of John
Keats. 12 Jan. 2007. 21 Apr. 2007. lt
http//englishhistory.net/keats/death.htmlgt.
George Byron, 6th Baron Byron Wikipedia, the
free encylopedia. 21 Apr. 2007. Wikipedia
Foundation,Inc. 21 Apr. 2007.
lthttp//en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lord_Byrongt.
John Keats.com. Biography. 21 Apr. 2007 lt
http//www.john-keats.com/gt.
Lord Byron (1788-1824) - Byron (of Rochdale),
George (Gordon), 6th Baron. 2007. Kuusankosken
kaupunginkirjasto. 21 Apr. 2007.
lthttp//www.kirjasto.sci.fi/byron.htmgt.
Percy Bysshe Shelley. Apr. 2007. Spartacus
Educational. 21 Apr. 2007. lthttp//www.spartacus.
schoolnet.co.uk/PRshelley.htmgt.
Percy Bysshe Shelley Wikipedia, the free
encylopedia. 21 Apr. 2007. Wikipedia
Percy Bysshe Shelley. Apr. 2007. Spartacus
Educational. 21 Apr. 2007. lthttp//www.spartacus.
schoolnet.co.uk/PRshelley.htmgt.
17
The Romantic Period
Fini
Thats French for THE END
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