Romantic Period-notes for IGNOU Classes


Romantic Period   :  A term loosely applied to a movement in European literature during the last quarter of the 18th century and the first twenty or thirty years of the 19the century.  It was marked by a rejection of the ideals and rules of classicism and neoclassicism  and by an affirmation of the need for a freer, more subjective expression of passion, pathos and personal feelings.  As its narrowest, the Romantic period in Britain is usually taken to run between 1798, the year in which Coleridge and Wordsworth published the first edition of Lyrical Ballads, and 1832,  when Sir Walter Scott and Goethe died and the Reform Bill was passed.  The major British writers in this period, apart from Coleridge, Wordsworth and Scott, were Byron, Shelley, Keats, Jane Austen, Hazlitt and De Quincey.  Abroad, the movement was widely embracing: Goethe, Schlegel, Wackenroder, Tieck, Schelling, Novalis and Holderlin in Germany; Chateaubriand and Madam de Stael in France; Leopardi, Manzoni and Foscolo in Italy; Espronceda in Spain; Slowacki in Poland; Pushkin and Lermontov in Russia; Petofi in Hungary; and Oehenschlager in Denmark. 

Characteristics of the Romantic Poetry

Break from set rules à The  poetry of the Romantic Revival is in direct contrast to the characteristics cultivated by 18th century neo-classical poets.  In the eighteenth century, poetry was governed by set rules and regulations.  There were  well chalked out lines of poetic composition, and any deviation from the beaten  track was frowned by mentors of poetic thought.  The first thing that we have in the poetry of the new age is the break from the thrall-marked, “ says W.J. Long, “by a strong reaction and protest against  the bondage of rule and custom.  Which, in science and theology, as well as in literature, generally tend to fetter the  free human spirit.”
Interest in country life -           Poetry in the eighteenth century was concerned with clubs and coffee houses, drawing rooms and the social and political life of London.  It was essentially the poetry of town life.  Nature had practically no place in classical poetry.  In the poetry of the Romantic Revival the interest of poets was transferred from town to country life and from the artificial decorations of drawing rooms to the natural beauty and loveliness of nature.  Nature began to have its own importance in the poetry of this age, and Wordsworth was the great poet who revealed the physical and spiritual beauty of nature to those who could not see any charm in the wild flowers, the green fields and the chirping birds.  Thus, in the poetry of the Romantic Revival, we have an added zest among poets to discard the glamour of an artificial life and turn to the elemental simplicities of a life lived in closer touch with the beauties and charm of nature.


Presentation of common life – Romantic poets started taking interest in the lives of the common people, the shepherds and the cottagers, and left the gallant lords and gay butterflies of fashion to the care of novelists.  A renewed interest in simple life marked the poetry of the poets of the age.   A feeling of humanitarianism colored the poetry Wordsworth, Shelley and Byron.  Thus intense human sympathy and a consequent understanding of the human heart marked Romantic poetry.

Love of liberty and freedom – In Romantic poetry emphasis was laid on liberty and freedom of the individual.  Romantic poets were rebels against tyranny and brutality exercised by tyrants and despots over human beings crushed by poverty and smashed by inhuman laws.  In the poetry of this age we have a note of rebellion and a crusade against effete conventions and worn out traditions.  Freedom is the breath in which the Romantic poets breathed freely.

Escape to the Middle Ages – In many ways Romantic poetry proved to be the poetry of escape from the sorrows and sufferings of mundane life of their times to the Middle age,  where they found enough beauty and joy to feed the fading flame of their souls.  The essential elements of the romantic spirit are curiosity and the lover of beauty.  The enthusiasm for the Middle Ages satisfied the emotional sense of wonder on the one hand, and the intellectual sense of curiosity on the other.
Predominance of imagination and emotion -  In romantic poetry reason and intellect were subdued and their place was taken by imagination, emotion and passion.  In the poetry of all the Romantic poets of this age we have the exhibition of heightened emotional sensibilities and imaginative flights of genius bordering on empyrean heights un-scaled by the poets of the previous age.
Supernaturalism – Supernaturalism is another outstanding quality of romantic poetry.  A sense of wonder and mystery was imparted to poetry by poets like Coleridge and Scott.  It was this supernatural note that gave to romantic poetry its atmosphere of wonder and mystery, unmanliness, uncanny  and eerie feeling, and justify the title ‘ The Renaissance of wonder’ given to this poetic age by a critic of repute.
Note of subjectivity -  Subjectivity began  to have its full play in the poetry of this age.  The poets of this period were in favour of giving subjective interpretation to the objective realities of life.  Romantic poetry became individualistic in outlook.  “ The romantic movement.” Says Long, “ was the expression of individual genius rather than of established rules,” or, as Lucas says, that it was an expression of ‘id’.



Endless variety in romantic poetry -  In Romantic poetry we come across endless variety.  Poetry of this age is varied as the character and moods of different writers.  “ When we read Pope,  for instance, we have a general impression of sameness,” says Long,” but in the work of the best romanticists there is endless variety.  To read them is like passing through a new village, meeting a score of different human types, and finding in each one something to love or to remember.”

Lyricism -  In romantic poetry lyricism predominates and the poets of this school have to their credit a number of fine lyrics excelling the heroic couplet of the classical age in melody and sweetness of tone.
Simplicity in style -  The style of the romantic poets is varied.  Greater stress is laid on simplicity.  Instead of the inflated and artificial mode of expression adopted by the classical poets, in romantic poetry we have a more natural diction and spontaneous way of expressing thoughts.
Summing up the salient  characteristics of the poetry of the Romantic Revival we may say in the words of W.J. Long that the poetry of romanticism is characterized by “ the protest against the bondage of rules, the return to nature  and the human heart, the interest in old sagas and medieval romances as suggestive of a heroic age, the sympathy with the toilers of the world, the emphasis upon individual genius, and the return to Milton and the Elizabethans, instead of to Pope and Dryden for literary models.”


                                                        Romantic poets

Ans : Romantic poets were fascinate by Nature -  Nature has been a perennial source of inspiration to poets.  Romantic poets were particularly interested in nature and to them the beauties and charms of nature were an unending fountain of joy from which they drank to their heart’s content.  Like all Romantic poets,  Wordsworth, Coleridge, Keats.  Byron, Shelley loved nature and established a deep kinship with her. 

Wordsworth :
In the Prelude or Growth of a Poet’s Mind we have a complete picture of the evolution of the various stages of his appreciation of nature beginning with the physical plane and ending with the mystical and spiritualistic interpretation of nature.  The poet’s conception of nature advanced and developed as he grew in years.  His attitude towards nature may be classified under three heads :
1                    The period of the blood,
2                    The period of the senses,
3                    The period of the imagination and the soul. 
We shall now  deal  with these phases of Wordsworth’s appreciation and interpretation of Nature.
First stage -  the period of the blood -  Wordsworth’s youth and formative years of life were spent in the midst of nature’s beautiful surroundings.  In this first stage his love for nature was without any mystical and spiritual touch.  In this first stage, his love for nature, in the words of W.H. Hudson, “ was a healthy boy’s love of the open air and freedom of the fields.”  In his youth he was attracted by the physical beauty of nature, and he haunted the hills and the vales for the sake of angling, snaring birds, hunting and enjoying the lovely spectacles of nature’s varied life. 
Second stage -   the period of the senses – It was the age of sweet  sensations.  He was thrilled and enchanted by the sights and sounds of Nature.  He viewed nature with a physical passion.

Third stage – the period of the imagination -  The first rumblings of the change from the physical to the spiritual interpretation of nature are heard in the poem Nutting, where the poet describes the circumstances under which a change came in his approach to nature.
The poet began to consider himself as a ‘dedicated spirit and the great mission of his life now became to preach the gospel and secret message of nature to humanity torn as under by ravages and carnage of the Free Revolution.’



Joy of Nature -          Wordsworth finds joy in Nature.  The feeling of pessimism does not oppress the heart of the poet when he is in the presence of the beautiful and joyful aspects of nature.  The personal dealing with nature in all her moods produces a joy.  In the words of Hudson, “ Wordsworth finds a never failing principle of joy.”

Presentation of peaceful aspects of Nature -  It is one of the peculiar  features of Wordsworth’s  nature poetry that all the attention of the poet is directed to the representation of calm and tranquil sights and scenes of nature.   He never presents nature ‘red in tooth and claw’
Wordsworth’s healing balm to festered sores of humanity rises out of this tranquil and peaceful representation of nature’s  objects.  We are deeply impressed and influenced by his calm and tranquil representations bring before us :
                        The silence that is in the starry sky
                        The sleep that is among the lonely hill.

Graphic description -  Wordsworth’s representations of nature’s mystical and spiritual aspects are quite graphic, vivid and colorful.  He can give delicate and subtle expression to the “sheer sensuous delight of the world of Nature.”

Wordsworth – the poet of the ear – In the presentation of nature Wordsworth is fascinated by the sound in the objects of nature, just as Shelley was fascinated by the color in the spectacles of nature.

A great worshipper of Nature -  Throughout his life Wordsworth remained a true interpreter of nature to humanity.  He became the worshipper of nature,  her true priest and a revealer of her harmonies to humanity.  His essential attitude towards nature remained that of a devout worshipper.

Treatment of Nature -  Coleridge is a great poet of Nature.  Like Wordsworth, Coleridge was a pantheist and in his early poems we notice the presence of a Divine Spirit colorings the objects of Nature, Like Wordsworth, Coleridge also believed that a Divine spirit pervades through the objects of Nature :
At  this state he also believes in a spiritual contact between man and Nature and in the moral and educative influence of Nature on man.  In ‘Frost at Midnight’ the same pantheistic faith finds an almost Wordsworthian expression :


Later on, a change comes in Coleridge’s attitude towards Nature when instead of feeling the presence of an independent life in Nature, he thinks that life to Nature is given by the individual’s  own personal feelings.  In the ‘Ode to Dejection,’ the poet expressed his belief that it is the subjective experience of a person that colors the objects of Nature.
Lady! We receive but what we give
And in our life alone does Nature live :
Ours is her wedding garment, ours her shroud.
Coleridge had a keen feeling for the super-sensual in Nature and his descriptions of landscapes are delicately beautiful.  His pictures of Nature are colored by human associations.

Coleridge remained throughout his life a subtle and minute observer of Nature; he gets joy in presenting pictures of Nature; their broad and general effects remained a permanent possession of his life.  His pictures of Nature are pleasing to the readers as they had been to the poet.  And the landscape in ‘Kubla Khan’ is so levelly that we again and again turn to it for imaginative delight.

Byron’s Nature poetry is free from theory or ulterior intention  -    The first point to be noticed in Byron’s attitude towards nature is that it is free from theory or ulterior motive.  In this connection, Bowra points out in ‘ The Romantic Imagination’ : “ While Wordsworth sought vision or moral interpretation, Byron took nature as he found it, and appreciated much that Wordsworth missed.  His poetry of Nature is instructive and immediate, free from theory or ulterior intention.”
Byron loved solitude -  Byron went to nature to seek refuge from human society.  Byron loved solitude and this he could find only in Nature. ( Moorman says, : Byron seeks communion with Nature in order to escape from man; high mountains become ‘a feeling’  to him when the hum of human cities is a torture,” )
Wordsworth hears in Nature the music of sad humanity;
Byron hears no music of humanity in Nature.  For him Nature is a refuge, a place of shelter, where he can hid himself from the weariness, the fever and fret of the world.
Byron’s subject approach to Nature  à  It means that nature is intimately related to Byron’s feelings, and he colours nature according to his mental and physical state.  There is the subjective approach of the poet to nature.  He did not find the ‘ healing balm’ that Wordsworth  found in nature, but still his feelings well formed the basis of communion with the objects of nature.



Fine descriptions of Nature -  Byron,  being no philospher and moralist, takes delight  in giving fine descriptions of nature.  His descriptions are far superior to Wordsworth, though inferior to Tennyson in the point of accuracy and precision.  Byron describes Nature in broad outlines and fuses his feelings with objects of nature.  He does not analyse the objects minutely.  The fact is that, “ the object which he sees and his own feelings are fused together and take shape in imaginative and metaphorical language.” (Tozer)

Byron presents both calm  and stormy aspects of Nature à
Byron sees Nature both in its calm and story aspects.  Wordsworth was drawn only by the silence that is in the starry sky but Byron presented nature both in its tranquil and stormy aspects.
Byron’s treatment of the sinister side of Nature à  Byron was able to face the cruel and inhuman aspects of nature as most of the Romantics  could not.  With Byron there is no shuddering about the presentation of the sinister side of nature.  He does so without contempt and without complaint.   The helplessness of man before nature was a subject from which the Romantics shrank, but Byron saw it and spoke sincerely about it.

Q : Write an essay on the Nature poetry of Keats.

Ans : Keats as a great lover of Nature -  Keats was one of the greatest lovers and admirers of  Nature and in his poetry we come across beautiful descriptions of the wonderful sights and scenes of Nature just for its own sake and for the ‘ glory and loveliness’ that is everywhere found in it.
Scenes and sights of nature à In the early poems of Keats we come across fine descriptions and charming pictures of nature.  In ‘Sleep and Poetry’ and ‘Endymion’ the poet paints nature with the skill of a consummate artist.  His first poem ‘ I stood tiptoe upon a little hill’ opens with a beautiful and lovely description of an early summer’s day.  The poet finds in nature the perennial source of poetry.

This mood of rapture in the presence of the beauties of nature is reflected in several descriptions and is best seen in the ‘Ode to Autumn’ where a complete picture of the autumn season is presented with a minuteness of details that does  credit to the poet’s imagination and vivid observation of nature.  He showed with the Greeks the instinct for personifying the power of nature in this ode and the picture of the season is presented through a series of vivid personifications.


Sensitiveness in Keats’ treatment of Nature -  Keats exhibited a wonderful sensitiveness in the treatment of nature.  All the sense organs, such as eyes, ears, nose and touch were always alive  to carry the impressions to his mind and through it to the soul.  He felt a feeling of joy in his sensitivity to nature.  He identified the highest works of Art with nature and to him art and nature gave the same joy.
No Scientific analysis of the aspects of Nature à  Keats like Wordsworth had no place for ‘meddling intellect’ in the appreciation and understanding of nature  Analysis of the objects of nature could give no joy.  He complained in Lamia that analysis spoilt the beauty and charm of nature.
Sorrow and despair in Keats’ treatment of Nature à Sometimes Keats’ note of happiness towards nature was colored by sorrow and despair.  When he had finished Endymion,  when the troubles of the world had come upon him, when he had seen his brother die, and felt himself that life was ill-made for him, his note towards nature changed.
Nature as a source of joy à  Keats wished to die into Nature to ‘cease upon the midnight with no pains’, but this was not his ordinary mood.  It was rather the characteristic mood of Shelley.  Keats sought, in spite of such moments of pain, to live in nature and to be incorporated with one beautiful thing after another.
His love of the earth and Nature à Scott’s passionate attachment for the past of this country was blended with his equally passionate attachment to its soil.  He had a great love for the Nature of Scotland in its tranquil as well as stormy aspects.  He did not have the transcendental affection felt by Wordsworth and Shelley for Nature.  The scenery and the sounds of nature moved him; and it was with him ‘Earth worship, not Nature worship and the earth is particular of localities, endeared to him by a hundred associations.’  Scott did not idealize Nature but simply caught the beauty of landscapes, hills, dales and the borderlands in the haunting loveliness.  He loved his country’s soil and he told Washington Irving that if he did not see the heather once a year he thought he would die.  Yet a landscape to him meant little without the human touch in it.  He combined man and Nature and often made a Landscape as the background of his human feelings.  In short, Scott humanized and romanticized Nature without ever caring for its mystical message that Nature had suggested to Wordsworth.








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