The Romantic Period in English Literature
Norton pages 1-21
Typically Romantic Period described as falling between 1785-1830
Social Background: Revolution and Reaction
Revolution in France, America - conservative reaction at home, fear of working class uprisings, influence of revolutionary ideas
- At home : A turbulent period of change from a primarily agricultural society with land and wealth in the hands of the land-owning aristocracy, to a modern industrial nation, balance of power shifts to large-scale employers and an increasingly frustrated working class
- Abroad: French Revolution - enthusiastic support from English Liberals at first, then horror at the Reign of Terror, Robespierre, guillotining, French invasion of Germany and the Netherlands, offer to help any country overthrow its government, Napoleon’s emergence as a dictator, then emperor
- England’s ongoing war with France ends with the defeat of Napoleon at the battle of Waterloo 1815
At home:
- fear of revolution perhaps - harsh repressive measures,
- rise of industrialism - mill towns in central and north England (cotton from plantations), new laboring population- factories and pollution
- enclosures - open fields subdivided - hedge, stone walls
- laissez-faire government - two class: rich and poor - exploitation of working class
- landed classes, industrialists, merchants became very rich
- British Empire most powerful colonial presence in the world
- Regency Period (1811-1820) lavish display and moral laxity
Women
- few rights, but first era in which women rivalled men as writers
- Mary Wollstencroft A Vindication of the Rights of Women (1790)
- Reform Bill 1832 extended the right to vote - not to women or the working class
Literary Background: Romantic Poets and Novelists
Not self-described Romantics
The Lake School - Wordsworth,Coleridge, Southey
The Cockney School - Hunt, Hazlitt,Keats
The Satanic School - Byron, Shelley etc.
sense of new energy, experimentation, creativity, new ideas inspired by French Revolution
importance of the common man, the emotions, the imagination, new sense of individualism
Poetic Theory
Described by Wordsworth and Coleridge in the Preface to the Lyrical Ballads.
The concept of poetry and the poet
18th c. poetry primarily an imitation of human life.
Wordsworth describes poetry as the “spontaneous overflow of powerful feelings.”
The source of the poem is not usually in the outer world, but in the individual poets
not external events, but the inner feelings of the author
Lyric poem - expression of poet’s own feelings, written in the first person, became a major romantic form
Poetic Spontaneity and Freedom
poetic spontaneity and freedom - rather than excellence at following rules
emphasis on the free activity of the imagination
the essential role of instinct, intuition, and the feelings of the heart, not just the head.
Coleridge: “Deep thinking is attainable only by a man of deep feeling, and all truth is a species of revelation.”
Romantic Nature Poetry
Importance of nature as an impulse to meditation.
Romantic poems habitually endow the landscape with human life, passion and expressiveness – the “objective correlative”
The Glorification of the Ordinary
“to choose incidents and situations from common life”
to use a “selection of language really spoken by men.”
the source and model is “humble and rustic life.”
The supernatural and strangeness in Beauthy
medieval revival
interest in unusual modes of experience
Individualism, infinite striving and nonconformity
high estimation of human potential and power
great 18th century writers typically dealt with men and women as members of an organized and usually an urban society.
Romantic writers often deliberately isolated themselves from society to give scope to their individual vision.
The solitary Romantic nonconformist was sometimes represented as also a great sinner
The Novel
The Gothic Novel
set in gloomy castles of the Middle Ages,
plots based on mystery, terror, supernatural phenomena, sexual persecution
themes: dark, irrational side of human nature beneath controlled conscious mind
Most famous novelists often women: Emily and Charlotte Bronte, Austen, Mary Shelley
Austen’s Northanger Abbey is “mock gothic”
Later 19th Century Gothic: Dracula by Bram Stoker, Oscar Wilde “The Picture of Dorian Gray” R.L. Stevenson Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde
The novel of education
Traces the maturation of the key character
Emma, Pride and Prejudice – most of Austen; Jane Eyre by Charlotte Bronte
The political/historical novel
Set in the past, often deals with contemporary political and social problems
Sir Walter Scott: Ivanhoe, The Heart of Midlothian