Title: ROMANTICISM
1ROMANTICISM
2ROMANTIC PERIOD IN ENGLISH LITERATURE
1798-1830 1789 ? Songs of Innocence
1798 ? Lyrical Ballads 1800 ?
3WORDSWORTH and COLERIDGE TRIED TO ARTICULATE
THE SPIRIT OF THE NEW POETRY IN THE PREFACE TO
LYRICAL BALLADS
4 Wordsworth
Coleridge
5(No Transcript)
6(No Transcript)
7 LYRICAL BALLADS
- THE MANIFESTO OF THE ROMANTIC MOVEMENT
8THE TERM ROMANTICISM IS DIFFICULT TO DEFINE FOR
THE VARIETY OF LITERARY ACHIEVEMENTS, AND THE
WRITERS OF THE PERIOD WERE ONLY LATER LABELLED
ROMANTIC.
9- The period was dominated by poetry since it was
the best vehicle for the renewed interest in
imagination and emotions.
10 POETRY WAS SEEN AS THE SPONTANEOUS
OVERFLOW OF POWERFUL FEELINGSTHE ESSENCE OF
POETRY WAS THE EMOTIONS, IMAGINATION OF THE
POET (NOT THE OUTER WORLD).
11POETRY THE POET
- FIRST-PERSON LYRIC POEM BECAME THE MAJOR ROMANTIC
LITERARY FORM, WITH I OFTEN REFERRING DIRECTLY
TO THE POET - THE DEVELOPMENT OF THE SELF BE-CAME A MAJOR TOPIC
OF ROMANTIC POETRY.
12- The poets began to give great value to individual
consciousness, an interest in psychological
introspection and meditation as a reaction to the
common sense and the grow of a mass-society.
13- POETS OFTEN SAW THEMSELVES AS PROPHETS IN A TIME
OF CRISIS, - REVISING THE PROMISE OF DIVINE REDEMPTION IN
TERMS OF A HEAVEN ON EARTH.
14POETIC SPONTANEITY, FREEDOM
- INITIAL ACT OF POETIC COMPOSITION MUST ARISE FROM
IMPULSE - A POET MUST BE FREE FROM THE RULES INHERITED FROM
THE PAST AND RELY ON INSTINCT, INTUITION,
FEELING.
15- This spirit of revolt against all forms of
authority resulted in a kind of - TITANISM ( overstatement of passions)
- Exaltation of IRRATIONAL and MYSTIC aspects of
life and to a concern with the SUPERNATURAL - poetry for poetrys sake, a Greek ideal for
beauty
16NATURE
- IMPORTANCE OF ACCURATE OBSERVATION DESCRIPTION
OF WILD NATURE, WHICH SERVES AS A STIMULUS TO
THINKING TO THE RESOLUTION OF PERSONAL PROBLEMS
CRISES.
17NATURE (cont.)
- LANDSCAPE WAS OFTEN GIVEN
- HUMAN QUALITIES OR SEEN AS A SYSTEM OF SYMBOLS
REVEALING THE NATURE OF GOD. - NATURE WAS SEEN AS BRINGING OUT HUMANITYS INNATE
GOODNESS.
18- Romantics see nature through lenses of emotion,
usually coloured with melancholy. - Nature is in contrast to the ugliness of the
towns of the time. - Far from the pastoral conventions of Augustan
Age, it conveyed a new sense of intimate
communion between nature and man.
19The Romantic conception of nature was influenced
by 3 philosophical theories
- Platonism or rather Renaissance Neoplatonism,
which saw this world as the image of an ideal
metaphysical world - Pantheism Nature and the Universe is moved by an
immanent God, whose presence is manifested in
every stone and tree. - German idealism Fichte- Schelling- Hegel
regarded eternal reality as a sort of illusion
20 Shelling
- with his philosophy of art, seen as the supreme
moment when man, through unconscious intuitions,
can grasp the truth behind reality, and his
conception of nature, seen as something alive,
sharing mans own feelings, since they are both
driven by the same animating principles.
21GLORIFICATION OF THE COMMONPLACE
- HUMBLE, RUSTIC SUBJECT MATTER PLAIN STYLE
BECAME THE PRINCIPAL SUBJECT MEDIUM OF POETRY.
22THE SUPERNATURAL STRANGE
- The universe was a living entity that could
reveal itself on two levels - The visible and the invisible ( the supernatural)
- MANY ROMANTIC POEMS EXPLORE THE REALM OF MYSTERY
MAGIC INCORPORATE MATERIALS FROM FOLKLORE,
SUPERSTITION, ETC , OFTEN SET IN DISTANT OR
FARAWAY PLACES.
23THE STRANGE
- RELATED TO THIS WAS A RENEWED INTEREST IN THE
MIDDLE AGES (AND THE BALLAD FORM) AS A BEAUTIFUL,
EXOTIC, MYSTERIOUS ERA.
24THE STRANGE
- THERE WAS ALSO GREAT INTEREST IN UNUSUAL MODES OF
EXPERIENCE, SUCH AS VISIONARY STATES OF
CONSCIOUSNESS, HYPNOTISM, DREAMS, DRUG-INDUCED
STATES, AND SO FORTH.
25INDIVIDUALISM
- HUMAN BEINGS WERE SEEN
- AS ESSENTIALLY NOBLE GOOD (THOUGH CORRUPTED BY
SOCIETY) - AS POSSESSING GREAT POWER POTENTIAL THAT HAD
FORMERLY BEEN ASCRIBED ONLY TO GOD.
26INDIVIDUALISM
- THERE WAS A GREAT BELIEF IN DEMO- CRATIC IDEALS,
CONCERN FOR HUMAN LIBERTY, A GREAT OUTCRY
AGAINST VARIOUS FORMS OF TYRANNY.
27INDIVIDUALISM
- THE HUMAN MIND WAS SEEN AS CREATING (AT LEAST IN
PART) THE WORLD AROUND IT, AND AS HAVING ACCESS
TO THE INFINITE FACULTY OF IMAGINATION.
28INDIVIDUALISM
- MANY WRITERS DELIBERATELY ISO-LATED THEMSELVES
FROM SOCIETY TO FOCUS ON THEIR INDIVIDUAL
VISION.( isolation in Nature) - THEME OF EXILE WAS COMMON, THE NON-CONFORMIST
ROMANTICS WERE OFTEN SEEN AS GREAT SINNERS OR
OUTLAWS .(revolt aganst society)
29Striving for the infinite
- The desire to create myths
- The Romantics were aware that the search for
infinity was destined to fail, but this
impossible task was the artists mission
30The language
- It should be written in a selection of language
really used by men instead of Artificial
Diction - There was a return to earlier verse forms
- Blank verse ( Wordsworth and Shelley) unrhymed
iambic pentameter - The sonnet ( Wordsworth, Shelley, Keats)
- The Spenzerian Stanza ( Keats)
- The Italian Terza Rima ( Shelley)
- The Italian Ottava Rima ( Byron)
- The Folk ballad Stanza ( Keats, Coleridge)
31There were several important differences between
first generation of Romantics and the younger
second generation
- Age and political convictions
- Wordsworth and Coleridge were critical of many
existing social conventions - Byron, Shelley and Keats were all exiles , exiled
from moral, social and political habits
prevailing in English life. - The second generation kept their revolutionary
spirit to the end. - Byron and Shelley thought that all authority
should be cast aside and leave man free . Keats
exiled more in spirit than in body, dedicated
himself to a search for timeless beauty
32Before analyzing one of Wordsworths
poemsDAFFODILS
- Lets have a look at the video
33Wordsworth DAFFODILS
I wandered lonely as a cloud That floats on
high o'er vales and hills,When all at once I saw
a crowd, A host, of golden daffodilsBeside
the lake, beneath the trees,Fluttering and
dancing in the breeze.
34Wandered may suggest
- The isolation and alienation of the poet
- it emphasize his loneliness, and how he feels no
connection with anyone around him - That indicates that he didn't have a destination
or purpose , he was just wandering about, almost
as if in search of a friend
35A simile as a cloud
- Floating lonely as a cloud symbolizes a
separation from the natural world - he states that he "floats on high o'er vales and
hills." ,he is far above the hills and vales, not
connected to them. He is apart and separate, and
not included. - But also the union between man and nature
- Idea of freedom
- The habit to dream/ imagination
36When all at once I saw .golden daffodils
- he re-establishes a connection with nature as he
moves through the field of daffodils - a crowd, a host.. Fluttering and dancing
- The daffodils are alive and personified endowed
with a life and a soul of their own - They are able to feel joy and to transmit it
- golden..
- Giving them a higher connototion
- A CERTAIN COLOURING OF IMAGINATION
37 A CERTAIN COLOURING OF IMAGINATION
- ordinary things should be presented to the mind
in an unusual way
38Beside the lake, beneath the trees,
- The daffodils are not described, but the poet
puts them in relationship to nature
39Continuous as the stars that shine And twinkle
on the milky way,They stretched in never-ending
line Along the margin of a bayThe thousand
saw I at a glance, Tossing their heads in
sprightly dance.
40as the stars that shine And twinkle on the
milky way,
- Earth and heaven are united in the beauty of the
daffodils - No more solitude, but a deep union with nature
41- The waves beside them danced but they Outdid
the sparkling waves in gleeA poet could not but
be gay, In such a jocund companyI gazedand
gazedbut little thoughtWhat wealth the show to
me had brought
42A poet could not but be gay,
- Only a poet can find himself in a state of
creative joy - the importance of the poet's role in society
during the Romanticism period. Romantics such as
believed it was the poet's responsibility to
demonstrate humanity's connection to nature and
relay the message to society.
43I gazedand gazed
- This repetition conveys the impression of the
poet breathless, unable to move in front of such
a beauty - but little thought
- The thought came later
- wealth
- happiness with the contact with nature. This
joy is now the opposite of the loneliness in the
first stanza, his life is awakened to new life by
the daffodils
44- For oft, when on my couch I lie In vacant or
in pensive mood,They flash upon that inward
eye Which is the bliss of solitudeAnd then my
heart with pleasure fills, And dances with the
daffodils
45when on my couch I lie
- When the poet sees the daffodils he little tought
what they meant to him. - The thought came later, remembering the daffodils
and using imagination - Only Imagination enables man to enter into and
give life and significance to the world - When at home, in a pensive mood, remembering the
sensations felt, you are able to feel emotions
46 LANGUAGE
- Language really used by men
- In the first 3 stanzas he uses the past simple,
while in the last one he uses the Present Simple. - The change of tenses underlines the gap between
the past experience and its remembrance in the
poets ecstatic vision
47WHAT IS POETRY?
- The spontaneous overflow of powerful feelings
emotions - It comes from emotions recollected in
tranquillity