Type Here to Get Search Results !

Romanticism Questions and Answers


  • ROMANTICISM
    Characteristics Of Romanticism

    Characteristics Of Romanticism

    What are the six main characteristics of Romantic Literature?

    Some of the main characteristics of Romantic literature include a focus on the writer or narrator’s emotions and inner world; celebration of nature, beauty, and imagination; rejection of industrialization, organized religion, rationalism, and social convention; idealization of women, children, and rural life; inclusion of supernatural or mythological elements; interest in the past; frequent use of personification; experimental use of language and verse forms, including blank verse; and emphasis on individual experience of the "sublime."

    1 Educator Answer

  • ROMANTICISM
    Is Nature a dominant theme in Romantic Poetry? answer in detail

    For the Romantics, nature was a fairly dominant theme and occupied a very prominent role in the poetry.  For these thinkers, nature helped to enhance the individual experience.  The exploration of self takes place perfectly when embedded in the natural setting.  There is a powerful and potent element to the natural setting in its reverence.  The pantheistic view helps to enshrine the role of nature in the Romantic poet. At the same time, the love of nature was almost a response to what the prevailing social order espoused at the time.  Neoclassical society was cosmopolitan and conformed life took place in the urban setting.  For the Romantic thinker, to break from this into a new realm was liberating and powerful.  This is where the love of nature took on both the form of a statement and response.

    2 Educator Answers

  • ROMANTICISM
    Please analyse Wordsworth's definition of poetry from his Preface to the "Lyrical Ballads." "Poetry is the spontaneous overflow of powerful feelings: it takes its origin from emotion recollected in tranquility."

    As Coleridge and Wordsworth met and walked the countryside together in the late 1790s, they talked excitedly about the theory and meaning of poetry. Both had been political radicals, but with the French Revolution having gone bad and the French and the English heading towards war, the two men turned from radicalism to the importance of a way of living and writing that gave primacy to the emotions. 

    Wordsworth, especially, had been shattered by his experiences in France during the revolution, but he still, as he expressed later in his autobiographical poem The Prelude, wanted to stand up for the common man. He thought he could do this by capturing emotional moments that depicted the simple working person in a positive, sympathetic light.

    In the preface,

  • ROMANTICISM
    What is the contribution (importance) of Wordsworth, Coleridge, Keats and Shelley to the Romanticism?

    Each of these poets had a distinctive style expressive of his own brand of Romanticism. We can discuss them separately, and you might then draw conclusions as to the common threads among them and how each one in his own way was a part of the Zeitgeist—the spirit of the time.(2)Wordsworth laid out his aesthetic in the preface he wrote for his and Coleridge's collection Lyrical Ballads. For Wordsworth, the most important requirement of the new kind of poetry he aimed to write was that its language should be simple and direct, avoiding artificial "poetic diction" and essentially being the same as prose apart from meter and rhyme. Though Wordsworth did not identify it as such, this was a kind of "democratization" of poetry, an expression of the new egalitarian ideals of his era of revolution and social change. The degree to which personal emotion is expressed in his verse was also a change from the past. Wordsworth's The Prelude is a long autobiographical poem written in direct language and...

    2 Educator Answers

  • ROMANTICISM
    What are the differences between Romanticism and classicism?
    ROMANTICISM
  • The differences between Romanticism and classicism include that classicism emphasized order and reason while Romanticism emphasized feelings and emotions, that classical architecture insisted upon symmetry while Romantic architecture allowed for artistic flourishes, and that classical literature focused on important figures while Romantic literature focused on common people.The difference between classical and Romantic art in all genres has been eloquently expressed by numerous highly partisan commentators. John Ruskin, for instance, writing on architecture, argued that the Romantic style elevated the artisan to an artist, while classicism debased him into a slave. This was because classical architecture demanded perfect symmetry and prearranged order, while gothic architecture (the...

  • What were the material causes of the rise of Romanticism?
    Like many different literary movements, Romanticism was brought on as an outcry against the preceding movement, The Age of Reason. typically, movements arose because the new generation of writers...

    2 Educator Answers

  • ROMANTICISM
    What are the main characteristics of Romanticism in literature? 

    Artistic (including literary) movements tend to be a response to the times in which they occur. In this case, Romanticism (late eighteenth century to mid-nineteenth century) was a response to the Industrial Revolution and the Enlightenment period.

    Hallmarks of Romanticism in literature are the prioritization of emotion, individuality, and nature. There was a belief that nature was inherently good, whereas people and society tended more toward corruption. This was a rebuke of tradition and norms of "civil" behavior, allowing for more free expression. The resulting literature was much more emotional and intense than what had come before.

    Horror was also very popular. This allowed for the Gothic and "dark Romantic" literary genres to flourish during this time, as readers and...
  • ROMANTICISM
  • What were the characteristic features of poetry during the Romantic movement?   
    The characteristic feature of poetry during the Romantic movement was an emphasis on passion, emotion, and nature. These themes are apparent in the works of major Romantic poets such as Wordsworth, Coleridge, and Burns.
  • ROMANTICISM
  • What are the salient features of Romanticism?

    Revolution that swept Europe and America around 1776 created within artists a new appreciation for imaginative, unrestrained literature and other art forms. The Romantic literature that flowed out of this period embodies several key characteristics:

    Imagination: Consider the following lines from John Keats's "La Belle Dame sans Merci":

    I met a lady in the meads,
    Full beautiful—a faery’s child,
    Her hair was long, her foot was light,
    And her eyes were wild.
    I made a garland for her head,
    And bracelets too, and fragrant zone;
    She looked at me as she did love,
    Keats combines an emotion—love—with imagination. He has become enamored with a fairy woman. This isn't a realistic portrait of love or adoration, but that is key to the Romantic movement. There are endless possibilities, thanks to the imaginative power of literature.

    Idealism: Consider the following lines from Lord Byron's "She Walks in Beauty":

    She walks in beauty, like the night
    Of cloudless climes and starry skies;
    And all that’s best...

    ROMANTICISM
  • Could you explain the significance of William Wordsworth's "Preface to Lyrical Ballads"?

    Wordsworth wrote his introduction as a way of explaining why the poems in "Lyrical Ballads" were so different from popular poetry that had come before. As he says, there has been a general expectation that people who write in verse make a kind of "promise" to their readers that certain themes will be handled in a specific manner and that other themes will be excluded -- that poetry will deal with "noble" themes using exalted language. "Lyrical Ballads" defies those expectations. Wordsworth lays out how different his project is in one remarkable sentence:

    The principal object, then, proposed in these Poems was to choose incidents and situations from common life, and to relate or describe...
  • ROMANTICISM
  • Can preface to lyrical ballads be considered as a manifesto of romantic criticism?
    Yes, the Preface to Lyrical Ballads can be understood as a manifesto of Romantic criticism. In it, Wordsworth lays out his vision for a new kind of poetry, a poetry that sets itself in opposition to the Neo-Classical verse of writers, such as John Dryden and Alexander Pope. Neo-Classic poetry relied on models provided by the writers of Ancient Greece and Rome. It also used very regular, measured rhyme schemes, often employing heroic couplets, and showed emotional restraint and rationalism. It often focused on heroic, aristocratic individuals: the great men of the world.

    In contrast, Wordsworth (and Coleridge, though he later repudiated the Preface) envision a new kind of poetry. Influenced by revolutionary current, especially in France, and ideals of liberty,...

  • ROMANTICISM
    What are some short notes on Romanticism?
    The Romantic period is generally thought to have begun in the late 18th century and continued into the first third of the 19th century. More specifically, it's thought to have started around 1789 and lasted until 1832. Some of Romanticism's most famous authors include William Wordsworth, Samuel Taylor Coleridge, John Keats, Mary Wollstonecraft Shelley, Lord Byron, and Percy Bysshe Shelley.The interior experience of the individual is one of the most important characteristics of Romantic literature. Rejecting rigid social, religious, and political traditions, the Romantics emphasized the subjective experience of the individual, arguing that feelings or emotions should be prized over logic. As such, much of Romantic literature presents us with radically isolated individuals who have...
  • 1 Educator Answer
  • ROMANTICISM
    What did the Romantics revolt against, and what did they revive? In detail please.

    Romantics revolted against the Enlightenment's emphasis on reason and rationality and instead emphasized emotion. In revolt against the Industrial Revolution and its tendency towards mass movements, urbanization, and sameness, Romanticism instead focused on the individual and on individual experience. The movement was at its height from 1800 to 1850 and also sought to provoke strong emotions such as horror and awe in its works of art. In reaction to the industrializing forces in Europe and America, Romanticism also glorified nature and the ability of nature to produce emotions and to cultivate a sense of wonder at the sublime. Romantics sought refuge in nature as a place of contemplation and wonder away from the mass forces of the Industrial Revolution.

  • ROMANTICISM
    What were the main types and characteristics of literature during the Romantic period?
    Romantic literature in all its many forms was primarily concerned with expressing subjective emotion. This represented a radical departure from the previously dominant Neo-classicism aesthetic, which held that works of art, including literature, should reflect timeless, universal truths. In other words, art should reflect reality, what was "out there" in the world, instead of giving expression to the individual artist's soul.

    2 Educator Answers

  • ROMANTICISM
    What are the similarities between Romantic literature and early Victorian literature?
    An important similarity between Romantic and early Victorian literature is that both were reactions to rapid changes as industrialization and science transformed the economy and society. Romantic literature emphasizing natural beauty contrasted with man-made disruptions rebels against this "progress." Although Victorian literature is characterized by less floral and emotional language, it is similar in that it was also a response to changing times, with writers exploring challenges that "progress" produced.Both the Romantics and the early Victorians shared an interest in the gothic. Gothic literature was first established during the Romantic period, stressing the supernatural and the power of evil to corrupt the virtuous. Gothic literature was largely rejected by respectable and more literary writers for much of the late eighteenth century, but some major Romantic writers did turn out gothic works such as Matthew Lewis' The Monk and Mary Shelley's Frankenstein. Focused on more than bumps in the night, these Romantic works examined human failings and the dark depths of the human heart.Early Victorian writers also used gothic tropes and imagery for more literary purposes as well as social commentary. Charles Dickens' Oliver Twist and The Old Curiosity Shop both indulge in gothic tropes such as a lecherous villain, an innocent menaced by evil, and shadowy imagery, while Emily Bronte uses gothic character types to comment on class divisions and gender inequalities in Wuthering Heights.
  • 3 Educator Answers
  • ROMANTICISM
    Discuss your thoughts on the following statement:  "The English Romantic Movement is overwhelmingly a poetic one."
    I think that the statement is fairly valid.  It is so difficult to argue against the presence and importance of the poetry in the Romantic movement.  The Romantic artists like Wordsworth, Keats, Blake, Coleridge, Percy Shelley, and Byron all focused on the domain of poetry.  They believed that poetry was the "spontaneous overflow of emotions," and in doing so,...

    1 Educator Answer

  • ROMANTICISM
    What are some characteristics of the poetry of the Romantic period?

    Characteristics of the Romantic period include:

    • a return to (or respect for) nature
    • idealization of women and children
    • an interest in the past (especially medieval)
    • championing personal freedom
    • melancholy
    • the supernatural and the occult
    • imagination and emotion

    There are variations on these characteristics, and some reviewers will include more or fewer. This is what I have used in the classroom.

    The respect for nature (or a return to nature) was driven by the Romantics distress over seeing the environment spoiled and polluted by factories and mining in England's Industrial Revolution. Personal freedom was something most Romantics supported, especially the American and French Revolutions. Melancholy, or sadness, is also often seen in the poetry of the Romantics. Changes to the world around them (nature) and the plight of the less fortunate would have been some causes for melancholy.

    Those less fortunate were the poor, and women and children, who had no rights and were often victimized. These were...

  • ROMANTICISM
    Discuss  return to nature and the renaissance of wonder as characteristics of Romanticism.

    The return to nature and renaissance of wonder are critical traits to Romanticism.  When Wordsworth writes that "poetry sees into the life of things," it is a sentiment that challenges the artist and the audience to envision a world that is fundamentally different than what is.  Part of this involves an embrace of wonder. The Romantic thinkers stressed that the individual notion of self is unique because everything it beholds is fundamentally different than what another   comprehends.  The human experience is a renaissance of wonder. For the Romantic thinker, to explore life through this prism becomes essential.  The notion of wonder is something usually perceived to children. Young people traditionally perceive the world to be a type of intellectual playground where there is something new and vibrant in each moment of being, for each aspect of...

  • ROMANTICISM
    What is the difference between Romanticism and postmodernism?

    Romanticism was a literary, intellectual, artistic, and musical movement that began in Europe toward the late eighteenth century. Romanticism was rooted in the German Sturm und Drang (storm and drive) movement, which emphasized the importance of emotion and intuition rather than the rationalism idealized by the Enlightenment. Emotional revelation and nature's wonders were key driving inspirations of the Romantic poets—Shelley, Keats, Wordsworth, and Byron are among the most notable.Postmodernism is an outgrowth of Modernism, a movement influenced by the rapid growth of cities, the horrors of World War I, and a desire for the new—a break with structure and convention and rejection of metrical poetry for free verse and experimental forms. Postmodernism departs even further from tradition and asserts there are no...

    2 Educator Answers
  • ROMANTICISM
    How do romantics emphasize individuality?

    Taking their mantra from the French Revolution, Romantics strongly believed in personal freedom, democratic ideals, and the importance of the rights of each individual.  They were in conflict with the conformity of society and felt as Thoreau wrote that each man must "march to the beat of a different drummer."  He and the Romantics celebrated also the simple life. 

    Envisioning the Industrial Revolution as an element that destroyed the freedom and rights of the individual, William Blake wrote of the "dark Satanic mills" that subjugated people to little more than drones.  Along with other Romantics, Blake felt that Nature was the individual's refuge and teacher, and man must fight to build a world fit for habitation.

    Bring me my bow of burning gold!
    Bring me my arrows of desire! Bring me my spear! O clouds unfold!
    Bring me my Chariot of Fire!

    I will not cease from mental fight;
    Nor shall my sword sleep in my hand
    Till we have built Jerusalem
    In England's green and pleasant land.

    This love...1 Educator Answer
  • ROMANTICISM
    Why did Romantic writers reject Rationalism? Why did Romantic writers reject Rationalism?
    I think as well as the excellent points mentioned above, Romanticism allowed space for a consideration of the supernatural - for example in the poetry of Coleridge. Rationalism, with its emphasis on a solution for everything and man's intellect, explained too much, it could be said, and Romanticism gave room for what we do not understand and celebrated the limits of man's intellect in this sense. Remember Coleridge's purpose in writing the Lyrical Ballads was to make the supernatural seem natural, and this is something that we see in poems such as "The Rime of the Ancient Mariner".3 Educator Answers
  • ROMANTICISM
    Who were the most famous writers during the American Romantic era?
    The most famous Romantic writers in America were probably Emerson and Thoreau; among the Dark Romantic writers, Hawthorne, Melville, and Poe are renowned.Well-suited to American democracy and expansion, the Roman spirit affirmed the value of every man, and expressed the inspired imagination of ethical and aesthetic values. A close examination and development of self, therefore, became a trope for the American Romantic writers. According to the theories of Romanticism, since self and nature are one, it is not selfish to be self-aware; instead, this cognizance is a "mode of knowledge" that assists in the explanation of all that surrounds man.
  • 1 Educator Answer
  • ROMANTICISM
    What is the importance of 3 major concepts of Romanticism?
    Five defining characteristics of the Romantic Age of English literature (generally considered encompassing 1785-1830) are interest in the common man and childhood, strong emotions, awe of nature, celebration of the individual, and imagination. Let's take three of those traits and consider their importance. 

    Interest in the common man: Since the time of Greek tragedies and epics, literature and poetry had often focused on noble protagonists; everyday people were not considered proper subjects to write about. This was partially because kings and aristocrats commissioned works of art, including literature, for themselves, and writers made money by writing for the royal court. Wordsworth and Coleridge used Lyrical Ballads  to make literature accessible to a broader audience, as they believed in a more egalitarian lifestyle that made the common man a fit subject for literature. With printed material becoming more accessible and literacy rates increasing, such a broadening of the scope of...

  • 2 Educator Answers
  • ROMANTICISM
    What is Romanticism?

    Developing ideas from the previous two posts, a critically essential feature of Romanticism would be its emphasis on the subjective.  Prior to Romanticism, Neoclassicism was driven by universality and the use of the mind to logically determine consciousness.  Romanticism sought to change this by locating the driving force of being in the world into a subjective one.  The Romantic thinkers believed that internal subjectivity can be extrapolated into exterior truth, or even suggested that totalizing truth is impossible to achieve.  They stressed that individual experience is the only truth which is reliable because it can be absorbed by the self and experienced into its own narrative.  This personalized and subjective approach to the world operated as the basis of many Romantic thinkers and helped to drive the literary movement.

    3 Educator Answers
  • ROMANTICISM
    Victor Hugo defines Romanticism as "Liberalism in Literature." Justify this statement with reference to 19th Romantic thought.
    I think that there is much validity in Hugo's statement.  The fundamental precepts of liberalism are found in Romanticism .  For example, liberalism's stress on individual rights is very close intellectually to the idea of placing primacy on the subjective experience.  Both elements seek to locate power and understanding the nature of the universe with the individual and not an external force.  Liberalism's...
  • 1 Educator Answer
  • ROMANTICISM
    What is Romantic language and style?

    Romanticism emerged as a reaction against both the rationalism embraced by the Enlightenment and the cold mechanized society of industrialization, and the Romantic aesthetic represented a revolt against those tendencies. The Romantics appealed to emotion—the more intense and tumultuous, the better. This is perhaps most clearly expressed in the idea of the Byronic hero: tortured and brooding, unstable and perhaps even dangerous, an outcast in conventional society. The Romantics viewed emotion in terms of pathos: as something overwhelming and even sublime.So far, previous Educators have looked at this question mostly through the lens of literature and poetry, but I would note that Romanticism is multidisciplinary, and you can see its revolutionary elements manifested in other forms of artistic expression (it's not strictly literary). For example, Romantic music illustrates this dramatically, most famously in the example of Beethoven. Beethoven can get deeply violent and deeply...

    3 Educator Answers
  • ROMANTICISM
    Discuss the effect of the Industrial Revolution on the poetry of William Blake and William Wordsworth. Discuss the effect of the Industrial Revolution on the poetry of William Blake and William Wordsworth.
    William Blake wrote of the "dark Satanic mills" in which adults and children were subjected to cruel treatment and unhealthy conditions.  He felt that Nature was man's refuge and teacher.  Likewise, Wordsworth found in the individual great worth and abhorred industrialization. He worked towards more humane treatment of the downtrodden. Like Blake, he perceived nature as the refuge of man.
  • 2 Educator Answers
  • ROMANTICISM
    "CLASSICISM is Health, ROMANTICISM a Disease." Please comment. Please answer in detail
    The statement is quite interesting.  In my mind, it makes the argument that the totality and sense of complete transcendence that was offered in the Enlightenment age was needed as a condition of human happiness.  This comes from the idea that rational thought and science, if properly applied, could solve what ails the human heart in both literal and figurative terms.  Conversely, it views the subjectivity and doubt caused as a result of the Romantic period as a disease precisely because it sought to undermine such a condition.  One’s appreciation of the statement is  going to be dependent on how they stand on this issue of totality.  In my mind, if one embraces the idea that there can...
  • 1 Educator Answer
  • ROMANTICISM
    The two aspects of Romanticism "Renaissance of Wonder" and "Return to Nature" are best represented by Coleridge and Wordsworth respectively. Illustrate these features with references to their poetry.

    I think the statement holds a great deal of validity.  Coleridge was fascinated with the exploration of the supernatural and of the realm that lay beyond the realm of rationality and silence.  The root of this was his desire to initiate a sense of wonder in the reader.  For example, "Kubla Khan," generates a picture that instigates wonder in the reader's mind.  "His flashing...

    1 Educator Answer
  • ROMANTICISM
    What are the main features of Romanticism poetry?
    I think that there can be different understandings of critical or "main" features in Romantic poetry.  I think that one main feature of Romantic poetry is the emphasis on self.  There is a primacy that Romantic poetry places on the experience of the individual.  The subjective experience is something that strikes at the very heart of Romantic poetry.  This subjective experience...

    1 Educator Answer

  • ROMANTICISM
    What are the chief characteristics of the Romantic period?
    One of the most significant aspects of Romanticism was its emphasis on the strange and the mysterious. To a large extent, Romanticism was a reaction against the rationalism of the Enlightenment, which had privileged reason as a source of knowledge about ourselves and the world around us. Most Romantics welcomed the progress that the Enlightenment had made in getting rid of some of the fanaticism, superstition, and obscurantism—the deliberate withholding of knowledge from people—associated with various pre-modern authorities, most notably the Catholic Church.
  • ROMANTICISM
    Why is imagination closely linked with Romanticism?

    Romanticism, in part, reacted against Neoclassic poetry, with its focus on great men and measured heroic couplets, and also against the dry reason of Enlightenment rationalism. The Romantics wanted to bring imagination more fully back into art, because they recognized it as part of lived experience.Under imagination—sometimes called "fancy"—the Romantics included the whimsical, the fantastic, and the supernatural. The groundbreaking Lyrical Ballads , by Romantic poets Wordsworth and Coleridge, included a number of ballads. Ballads often recorded folk stories of the liminal and supernatural (the girl, for example, who disappears and then is seen as a ghost flitting across the...

    2 Educator Answers
  • ROMANTICISM
    Why is the Prometheus myth important for Romanticism?

    With a question such as this, it is first useful to consider just what traits ought to be associated with the Romantics. To begin, I would suggest that Romanticism is shaped by a spirit of rebellion, in reaction against Enlightenment era rationalism. In contrast, the Romantics prided individual expression and creativity in all its emotional turbulence, and venerated the ideal of creative geniuses, often tormented and at odds with the society around them. Just consider, for example, in the realm of music, and the lasting and powerful veneration the Romantics had for Beethoven (both for his music but also for the image he struck in the imagination). One can find, in Prometheus, a similarly powerful symbol, which aligns with much of these values and aesthetics.First, Prometheus is a rebel. He sides with the Olympians in their rebellion against the Titans, and later he rebels against Zeus. He is humanity's greatest supporter, siding with them against the gods. For this he is punished with...

  • An emphasis on humanity’s relationship with nature.

  • A emphasis on the frequent beauty of nature.
  • An emphasis on nature’s beneficent influence on humanity.
  • An emphasis on strong personal emotion.
  • The opening lines of Book I of Wordsworth’s The Prelude reveal a number of these common features of English Romanticism:

    O there is a blessing in the gentle breeze,

    A visitant that, while he fans my cheek,

    Doth seem half-conscious of the joy he brings

    From the green...


  • ROMANTICISM
    What are some salient features of Romantic poetry and where do they appear in Wordsworth's The Prelude (Book I), Coleridge's "Kubla Khan," and Coleridge's "Dejection: An Ode"?

    The Romantic movement in English poetry is often associated with a number of typical characteristics, and many of these characteristics appear in William Wordsworth’s The Prelude and in Samuel Taylor Coleridge’s “Kubla Khan” and Dejection: An Ode.” Among the typical Romantic traits that appear in all three poems are the following:

    1 Educator Answer
  • ROMANTICISM
    What are some characteristics of the "sublime"?
    The sublime is a guiding principle of both Romanticism and its sister movement gothic literature. It draws largely from Edmund Burke's 1757 work, A Philosophical Enquiry into the Origin of Our Ideas of the Sublime and Beautiful . Burke's sublime is drawn from passion and "astonishment," a state in which "the mind is so entirely filled with its object, that it cannot entertain any other." Astonishment, then, according to Burke, is what causes something to become, to us, a sublime object which pushes everything else out of our consciousness. Violent, or forceful, emotions are the key to what makes something sublime....
  • 1 Educator Answer
  • ROMANTICISM
    Compare and contrast between Neoclassical Age and Romantic Age in English literature.
    In the Neoclassical Age (approximately 1680–1750), writers attempted largely to model their work on the literature of ancient Greece and Rome. The most important English poets during this period were John Dryden and Alexander Pope. To understand their aesthetic we can do no better than to quote a famous passage from Pope's Essay on Criticism:'Tis more to guide than spur the Muse's steed,

    Restrain his fury than provoke his speed.

    The winged courser, like a gen'rous horse,

    Shows most true mettle when you check his course.

    Pope and others of his period believed in the classical ideals of restraint, order, elegance, and balance in their work. In general, they avoided intensely personal forms of expression and any sort of emotionalism. Much of their poetry had a didactic purpose—in other words, to instruct or enlighten people—or a satiric one, including the use of the "mock-heroic" style, in which language suited to epic poetry (and which often paraphrases Homer and Virgil) is ironically...

  • 3 Educator Answers
  • ROMANTICISM
    Why does Romeo stay hidden when Benvolio and Mercutio are looking for him?
    Romeo initially runs away from his friends after the Capulets' party because he loves Juliet and wants to see her again. He says,Can I go forward when my heart is here?

    Turn back, dull earth, and find thy center out. (2.1.1-2)

    In other words, he asks how he can leave while he has left his heart at the Capulets' with Juliet. He says that he has to go back, referring to himself as "dull earth," in order to find his heart, or "center," again. On a really basic level, Romeo just wants to see more of Juliet. After he runs away from his friends, Romeo stays hidden, even when they call him back, because they—especially Mercutio—tease him mercilessly about Rosaline. Mercutio shouts to Romeo,

    I conjure thee by Rosaline's bright eyes,
    By her high forehead and her scarlet lip,
    By her fine foot, straight leg, and quivering thigh,
    And the demesnes that there adjacent lie,
    That in thy likeness thou...

  • 2 Educator Answers
  • ROMANTICISM
    Why should a student study Romantic poetry?    
    The reason that a student should study Romantic poetry is probably similar to why a student should study Victorian poetry or Modernist poetry.  Romantic poetry represents a different caliber of writing.  A student should study Romantic poetry because, as a movement, Romantic poetry was a "game changer."  Romantic poets redefined the contours of what poetry could be. The Romantic poets transformed how individuals viewed poetry, and art, in general.  Students should study this in order to see how...
  • 1 Educator Answer
  • ROMANTICISM
    What are the characteristics of Romanticism?
    Excellent question, highlighting as it does a key literary period. Before starting my answer, I have included some links below that you may find helpful in answering your question. To understand...

    3 Educator Answers

  • ROMANTICISM
    How did the poetry of Wordsworth, Coleridge, Byron, Keats, and Shelley reflect the attitudes, values, and issues of the Romantic age? 
    The Romantic movement championed the feelings and experiences of the individual as well as the sublimity and nurturing effect of nature. Take Wordsworth's poem, "The Solitary Reaper." In it, a narrator is walking through the Scottish highlands when he suddenly hears a solitary girl "reaping and singing by herself." Though he cannot understand her language, he tries to describe the "melancholy strain" that so arrests his attention. He compares her voice to elements of nature and he speculates about the subject of her song. The poem, thus, addresses the intense and varied emotions that course through him as he listens to her sing, and the experience of hearing her seems also...
  • 2 Educator Answers
  • ROMANTICISM
    Are the Romantics nature poets? What two poems justify this assertion?
    Two poems that show the Romantics are nature poets are "Lines Composed a Few Miles above Tintern Abbey" and "The Prelude." Romantic poets often write about the glory and tranquility of the natural world.The Romantic poets can be described as nature poets. They often, in their poetry, celebrate the beauty and power of the natural world. Romantic poets present the natural world as a place of refuge, where one can escape the hustle and bustle of the cities. Many Romantic poets also explore the idea that man, relative to the power and scale of the natural world, is insignificant.One good example of a Romantic poem which celebrates nature as a beautiful refuge is William Wordsworth's "Lines Composed a Few Miles above Tintern Abbey." In this poem, Wordsworth describes in a reverential tone the area around the eponymous abbey. He describes, for example, "little lines / Of sportive wood run wild,"...
  • 1 Educator Answer
  • ROMANTICISM
    What are the characteristics of the Romantic school of literature?
    I think that there are some fundamentals of all literature that hails from the Romanticist school of literature.  In my mind, the most fundamental element would be the emphasis on the subjective voice of experience.  The Romantic thinker and the literature that comes from...
  • 1 Educator Answer
  • ROMANTICISM
    What inspired poets of romantic era to write poems?

    Wordsworth (et al) were also trying to escape from under the shadow of England's great poet Milton, who had dominated the poetic scene for the past half-century.  Whereas Milton wrote epics of religious and political seriousness, the Romantic poets wanted poetry for the common man: a simpler, more natural voice, shorter in length, fewer conventions, inspired by nature, and reflecting the spirit of the times.There are many other influences as well: nature; the French and American Revolutions; conceptions of art (the sublime, beautiful, picturesque); and women's rights.  Also, prose (the novel) was giving poetry a run for its money...

    ROMANTICISM
  • Does ‘Romanticism’ have anything to do with ‘romance’ in the modern sense associated with sexuality and courtship? Any sources to read would be usefull

    That is a great question and it has been addressed accurately by the previous answers. I would like to add that it is interesting that Romanticism would actually be the opposite of romance in the modern sense. When you read a modern romance novel you see a lot of exaggeration, and utter rubbish. The language might be overworked, the characters described quite superficially, and the purpose of romance modern novels is mainly to purely entertain.

  • ROMANTICISMThe Romantics of the Romantic movement had a different purpose: They wanted to break with the superficial, and indulge in accepting nature and pure character as two very beautiful things, no matter if they were not aesthetically "pretty".

    If you think about it, Frankenstein, The Hunchback of Notre Dame, and novels of this sort are considered part of the Romantic movement. Even with their deformed and disgusting characters, what they try to do is to convey the beauty of life, and the charm of existence. They explore the essence of the self, and not...

  • What is the American romantics' view of nature?
    During the Romantic period, roughly the early to mid 19th century, most of the North American continent was uncharted wilderness, the great frontier. Accordingly, writers during this time put great emphasis on the "untamed wilderness" and "rugged humanity"
  • ROMANTICISM
    romantic poetry Is Nature a dominant theme in Romantic Poetry?    
    Indeed, the motif of nature is dominant in much Romantic poetry.  Some of the Romantics, especially the American William Cullen Bryant, were attracted to the philosophy of deism which held that divity could be found in nature.  Another factor  for Americans was the fact that they were in immediate contact with everything...
  • 1 Educator Answer
  • ROMANTICISM
    Briefly discuss all literary features of the eighteenth century.
    Features of eighteenth-century literature are principally ones traditionally identified as "classical" or "neoclassical." This means that writers consciously attempted to use the aesthetic of classical Greece and Rome as the basis of their work. However, even by the middle of the century this trend had been weakened, and elements of what would later be called Romanticism were prefigured. By 1790's, the full-blown Romantic movement had emerged.This question involves a huge amount of detail required in any attempt to categorize or define the features of a 100-year period in literature. To keep things as straightforward as possible within the limits of a reasonable answer, it might be wise to start by listing the primary features of literature as the century began and to give a few examples from the major authors who exemplified them. One can then examine how these features were changed or abandoned as the era progressed.1) Neoclassicism. Critics and commentators of subsequent periods tended to define art as expressive of, or as showing a polarity between, the aesthetic of "classicism" and that of "Romanticism." The first trend was dominant through most of the eighteenth century, and its hallmarks are the qualities of balance, restraint, elegance, and a focus upon universal and timeless feelings rather than the specific and personal ones of the author.

    Neo classical is the term employed for the period of approximately 1700 to...

  • ROMANTICISM
  • Discuss the belief of Romanticism in the world today. Discuss the belief of Romanticism in the world today.

    Any aspect of modern culture that emphasizes self-expression as a purpose and end in itself is almost by definition Romantic, especially if that self-expression is highly emotional. Much popular music is Romantic, and in fact it is hard to think of a modern artform that is not Romantic to some degree.

    ROMANTICISM
  • What is a good idea for a thesis on the subject of Romanticism?
    It wouldn't serve your work to provide the thesis for you because your own approaches to and understandings of Romanticism will influence your ability to argue a thesis. Any claim I make may be reasonable but difficult for you to convincingly support.I notice you labeled the question "history," so I'll suggest you look at Romanticism as a historical item. With that in mind, your thesis should say something about its significance, causes, influences, and/or effects in terms of culture, society, politics, and/or religion. If you look at the Wikipedia entry on Romanticism, you'll find mention of literature, art, and philosophy, as well as a list of numerous countries in which Romanticism was a relevant phenomenon. The first step in creating a strong thesis would be to find your focus within these various parts of the various iterations of the movement.

    Consider the following two overarching aspects, and explore what interests you the most to get a good start.

  • ROMANTICISM
    Discuss the presence of melancholy in Wordsworth's poems.

    I would begin this answer with my own observation that Wordsworth, of the Romantic poets as a whole, is perhaps the least melancholy, in that there is nearly always a striving within his work to recognize something positive in life, despite the pain and trauma he acknowledges. "Resolution and Independence" illustrates this movement from darkness to light. The speaker begins with his reflections not only on his own dark mood but on the mentality of poets, of that peculiar sensitivity of the artist that is abnormal in some sense, with respect to people in general:We poets in our youth begin in gladness,

    But thereof in the end come despondency and madness.

    The speaker has been communing with nature and telling himself that

    My old remembrances went from me wholly,

    And all the ways of men, so vain and melancholy.

    But what is clear is that those remembrances have not really been dispelled. The poet cannot escape the sad thoughts to which he's prone:

Post a Comment

0 Comments