Romantic Age in English Literature
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Characteristics
of Romantic Age
Experimentation with Poetic Form
When we read the Romantics now, they seem old-fashioned. They
say things like,
"Beauty is truth, truth beauty
That is all ye know on earth, and all ye need to know."
To the modern ear, this stuff can seem pretty old school. But
actually, the Romantics were groundbreaking in terms of challenging poetic
tradition.
What the early Romantics—especially William Wordsworth and
Samuel Taylor Coleridge—wanted to do was revolutionize the way poetry was
written. They wanted to make poetry conversational. They set out to write poems
that used the language of ordinary speech, but which were still beautiful and
poetic. This was the big project of Lyrical Ballads, the collection of poetry by
Wordsworth and Coleridge that marked the beginning of the Romantic period.
Nature in Romanticism
The Romantics had a huge crush on nature. They loved trees,
flowers, mountains, clouds, crags, birds etc. As long as it was outdoors, they
loved it.
In nature, the Romantics found inspiration for their poetry,
wisdom, and straight-up happiness. If we went to the Romantics with a diagnosis
of depression, they'd tell us: "Forget meds; take a walk in the park. Hug
a tree. Talk to a bird. All you need is a little green."
Part of the Romantics' obsession with nature had to do with the
fact that they were living and writing at the time of the Industrial
Revolution. In the big cities, there were factories springing up everywhere,
and mechanized manufacturing processes were changing society. People were
moving further and further away from nature.
So the Romantics took it upon themselves to remind everyone of
the importance of nature.
Emotion
in Romanticism
The Romantics were a sentimental lot. A flower could move them
to tears. An old Greek urn could set them brooding for hours. These writers
were flat out obsessed with feelings. In fact, one of the most famous definitions
of poetry is the one that William Wordsworth, the father of British
Romanticism, gave us. He said that poetry is the "spontaneous overflow of
powerful feelings: it takes its origin from emotion recollected in
tranquility"
The Romantics' obsession with emotions has to do with what they
were reacting against. Remember that Romanticism followed on the
heels of the Enlightenment, an intellectual movement of the 17th and early 18th
century that emphasized reason above emotion, rationality above irrationality.
The Romantics didn't agree with the Enlightenment point of view. Of course our
feelings count, they said. Of course we can't always behave in a rational way.
To be human is to
be emotional and irrational and moody, for crying out loud. After all we are
humans not robots.
Ruins and Relics of
the Ancient Past in Romanticism
The Romantics loved to brood.
They liked to sit, hunched over, clothes all disheveled, chin on
hand, frowning, and thinking about Time. How quickly it goes by, how mysterious
it is. It's not surprising that they loved some ruins.
There's nothing the Romantics loved more than a crumbling
building or an excavated vase from who knows how long ago. They loved sitting
there and thinking about how these fragments from the past could tell us
something about our own times…or tell us nothing at all. Romantics were
especially obsessed with Greek and Roman ruins.
Rebellion in
Romanticism
The Romantics weren't conformists. No, they would be the kids in
high school who wear strange clothes, listen to underground music, and don't
hang out with anyone else. They're not trying to fit in with the cool crowd; on
the contrary, they sneer at everything that everyone else considers
"cool" or "hip" because they have their own, extremely
sophisticated, standard of coolness.
And one of the Romantics' standards of coolness was to go
against the grain. The Romantics didn't want to be constrained by social,
literary, or political conventions. They believed, above all else, in being
true to their own individuality.
Sense and Sensuality in Romanticism
We'll find tons of sensory detail when we read
Romantic writing: lots of sounds and sights and smells and tastes. The
Romantics are really into exploring the world through the five senses.
Because of that, their writing is sensual. They get
pretty excited when talking about nature because they are really into the body
and how it perceives and interacts with its environment. While the
Enlightenment emphasized the mind, the Romantics were all about the body, baby.
Sublime in
Romanticism
"Sublime"
is one slippery term. According to the Romantics, we experience the sublime
when we're out in nature. But not just any nature—we have to
be facing nature at its grandest, it's most awe-inspiring. Think big mountains,
crazy deep valleys, a huge thunderstorm with lightning striking everywhere.
What happens when we are confronted with nature at its grandest
is that we are both terrified and uplifted all at once. It's a hard feeling to
describe.
The sublime was so important to the Romantics because (1) they
loved nature and anything having to do with nature, and (2) they believed that
the sublime transcended the rational. The feelings of awe and terror evoked by
the sublime are beyond words and the emotions that the sublime creates
overwhelm rational thought. When that big thunderstorm hits, we are terrified
and excited, we're laughing and we're crying. We're basically a whole mess of
very powerful emotions. Think of it this way:
Nature + powerful emotion = the Sublime.
The French
Revolution in Romanticism
The French
Revolution had huge repercussions not only in France, but all over Europe. It
was a time of huge social and political transformation, which was pretty inspiring
to the Romantics, who valued individuality and freedom and rebelled against
social and literary conventions of their day.
The Industrial
Revolution in Romanticism
The industrial revolution, like the French Revolution, was
bringing about lots of changes at the time that the Romantic poets began
writing. More and more people were moving to the cities to work in factories,
new manufacturing processes were being put in place, and people were moving
further and further away from nature.
The Romantics weren't very enthusiastic about these changes—they
were especially concerned about people moving away from nature. And so the
Romantic movement was a movement against industrialization and mechanization.
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