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JeremiahErikaAustinPatrick
ROMANTIC POETRY
A “revolt” against the established order of precise rules, laws, dogmas, and formulas that heavily characterized Classicism as well as Neoclassicism.
As an international artistic and philosophical movement, it redefi ned the ways in which people in Western cultures thought about themselves and their world.
It countered the belief that logic and reason could solve l ife’s problems, which were popular ideas from the scientifi c and technological advances of the Enlightenment and Rationalism.
Embraced freedom and revolution in their art and politics as well as emphasized the qualities of the human personality, its moods and mental potentialit ies.
THE ROMANTIC MOVEMENT
ROUGHLY AROUND THE 1790S TO 1830S
Although it’s named the “Romantic” movement, the work of this period has very little to do with romance, although love is a recurring topic of some works.
The poems of this period highlighted meter or verse that expressed emotions as well as using: metaphors similes imagery repetition rhyme onomatopoeia
Common thematic elements included: individualism idealism the natural world physical and emotional passion the supernatural
ROMANTIC POETRY
allusion: a reference in a work of l i terature to something outside the work, especial ly to a well -known historical or l i terary event, person, or work
apostrophe: a fi gure of speech in which someone (usual ly, but not always absent), some abstract qual ity, or a nonexistent personage is direct ly addressed as though present
couplet: a two-l ine stanza, usual ly with end-rhymes the same diction: the use of words in a l i terary work imagery: the images of a l i terary work; the sensory detai ls of a work; the
fi gurative language of a work lyric poem: any short poem that presents a single speaker who expresses
thoughts and feel ings. Love lyrics are common, but lyr ic poems have also been written on subjects as diff erent as rel igion and reading.
metaphor: a fi gurative use of language in which a comparison is expressed without the use of a comparative term l ike “as,” “l ike,” or “than”
onomatopoeia : the use of words whose sound suggests their meaning personifi cation : a kind of metaphor that gives inanimate objects or
abstract ideas human characterist ics repetition : the repeating of a certain word or phrase; usual ly to provide
emphasis tone: the manner in which an author expresses his or her att itude; the
intonation of the voice that expresses meaning
POETIC ELEMENTS
Born May 31 , 1819 i n the town o f West H i l l s , New York
Cons idered to be a human i s t who ’s works fu r thered the t ranscendenta l i s t movement
Had 8 o ther s i b l i ngs and g rew up in a fami l y o f modes t means and l i ved on a fa rm bu t by the age o f th ree , they moved to Brook l yn
Pu l l ed ou t o f schoo l a t 11 to he lp suppor t h i s fami l y and by 17 became a teacher fo r fi ve years
Worked in the fi e ld o f j ou rna l i sm fo r newspapers i n New York and New Or l eans
Vo lun teered i n hosp i ta l s and i n the med i ca l fi e ld dur i ng the C i v i l War a fte r h i s b ro ther was i n j u red
Afte r the war , he se t t l ed down i n Camden , New Je r sey to take ca re o f h i s fami l y
POETRY He i s o ften re fe rred to as the “fa ther o f f ree
verse” His poet ry used many unusua l symbo l s and
images ; poet i c d i c t i on l i ke reg iona l d ia lec ts ; emphas i zed the i nd iv idua l and p ra i sed the human body
Pre fe rred wr i t i ng about open p laces , j ou rneys , c i t i es , e tc . to b lu r the l i ne between the i nd iv idua l and the wor ld , pub l i c and p r i va te
His parent ’ s p ro found l ove fo r Amer i ca (named ch i l d ren a fte r Amer i can heroes ) i nfl uenced Wh i tman ’s Amer i can p r i de i n h i s poet ry /work
WALT WHITMAN
1819-1892
miraclesby whitman
WHY, WHO MAKES MUCH OF A MIRACLE?AS TO ME I KNOW OF NOTHING ELSE BUT MIRACLES, WHETHER I WALK THE STREETS OF MANHATTAN, OR DART MY S IGHT OVER THE ROOFS OF HOUSES TOWARD THE SKY, OR WADE WITH NAKED FEET ALONG THE BEACH JUST IN THE EDGE OF THE WATER, OR STAND UNDER TREES IN THE WOODS, OR TALK BY DAY WITH ANY ONE I LOVE, OR SLEEP IN THE BED AT N IGHT WITH ANY ONE I LOVE, OR S IT AT TABLE AT D INNER WITH THE REST, OR LOOK AT STRANGERS OPPOSITE ME R ID ING IN THE CAR, OR WATCH HONEY-BEES BUSY AROUND THE H IVE OF A SUMMER FORENOON, OR ANIMALS FEEDING IN THE F IELDS, OR B IRDS, OR THE WONDERFULNESS OF INSECTS IN THE A IR , OR THE WONDERFULNESS OF THE SUNDOWN, OR OF STARS SHIN ING SO QUIET AND BRIGHT, OR THE EXQUIS ITE DEL ICATE THIN CURVE OF THE NEW MOON IN SPR ING; THESE WITH THE REST, ONE AND ALL , ARE TO ME MIRACLES, THE WHOLE REFERRING, YET EACH DIST INCT AND IN ITS PLACE.
TO ME EVERY HOUR OF THE L IGHT AND DARK IS A MIRACLE,EVERY CUBIC INCH OF SPACE IS A MIRACLE,EVERY SQUARE YARD OF THE SURFACE OF THE EARTH IS SPREAD WITH THE SAME,EVERY FOOT OF THE INTERIOR SWARMS WITH THE SAME. TO ME THE SEA IS A CONTINUAL MIRACLE,THE F ISHES THAT SWIM—THE ROCKS—THE MOTION OF THE WAVES— THE SHIPS WITH MEN IN THEM,WHAT STRANGER MIRACLES ARE THERE?
Notable works• Leaves of
Grass• Drum-Taps• When Lilacs
Last in the Dooryard Bloom’d
• Song of the Open Road
• Crossing Brooklyn Ferry
• When I Heard the Learn’d Astronomer
• O Captain! My Captain!
Born on December 10, 1830, in Amherst , Massachusetts
parents raised her to become a tradit ional Chr ist ian woman who would one day be responsible for a family of her own
l ived most of her l i fe in isolat ion never marr ied but she did have
relat ionships with several fr iends, confi dantes, and mentors
family name was known her father Edward Dickinson
served as a lawyer her work was never publ ished
during l i fet ime, except for two after her death on May 15, 1886,
her s ister publ ished her poetry reputat ion changed, making her
one of l i terature’s most wel l -known poets
EMILY DICKINSON
1830-1886
“why do i love" you, sir?by dickinson
"WHY DO I LOVE" YOU, S IR?BECAUSE—THE WIND DOES NOT REQUIRE THE GRASSTO ANSWER—WHEREFORE WHEN HE PASSSHE CANNOT KEEP HER PLACE.
BECAUSE HE KNOWS—ANDDO NOT YOU—AND WE KNOW NOT—ENOUGH FOR USTHE WISDOM IT BE SO—
THE L IGHTNING—NEVER ASKED AN EYEWHEREFORE IT SHUT—WHEN HE WAS BY—BECAUSE HE KNOWS IT CANNOT SPEAK—AND REASONS NOT CONTAINED——OF TALK—THERE BE—PREFERRED BY DAINT IER FOLK—
THE SUNRISE—SIRE—COMPELLETH ME—BECAUSE HE 'S SUNRISE—AND I SEE—THEREFORE—THEN—I LOVE THEE—
Notable works• Much
Madness • Hope is the
Thing with Feathers
• Because I Could Not Stop for Death
Born in Laleham, England Studied and graduated from
Ball iol Col lege and worked as a government school inspector al lowing to travel al l over England developing an interest of education and poetry
After gaining a reputation as a poet he was off ered a posit ion as Professor of Poetry at Oxford where he began writ ing his most famous works
He was considered as one of the “Big Three” Victorian poets of his t ime
Many historians see Arnold as the bridge between Romanticism and Modernism, but wasn’t recognized in his t ime
MATTHEW ARNOLD
1822-1888
dover beachby arnold
THE SEA IS CALM TONIGHT, THE T IDE IS FULL , THE MOON L IES FA IR UPON THE STRAITS; ON THE FRENCH COAST THE L IGHT GLEAMS AND IS GONE; THE CL IFFS OF ENGLAND STAND, GL IMMERING AND VAST, OUT IN THE TRANQUIL BAY. COME TO THE WINDOW, SWEET IS THE N IGHT A IR!ONLY, FROM THE LONG L INE OF SPRAY WHERE THE SEA MEETS THE MOON-BLANCHED LAND, L ISTEN! YOU HEAR THE GRATING ROAR OF PEBBLES WHICH THE WAVES DRAW BACK, AND FL ING, AT THEIR RETURN, UP THE H IGH STRAND, BEGIN, AND CEASE, AND THEN AGAIN BEGIN, WITH TREMULOUS CADENCE SLOW, AND BRING THE ETERNAL NOTE OF SADNESS IN .SOPHOCLES LONG AGO HEARD IT ON THE AGEAN, AND IT BROUGHT INTO HIS MIND THE TURBID EBB AND FLOW OF HUMAN MISERY; WE F IND ALSO IN THE SOUND A THOUGHT, HEARING IT BY THIS D ISTANT NORTHERN SEA.THE SEA OF FA ITH WAS ONCE, TOO, AT THE FULL , AND ROUND EARTH'S SHORE LAY L IKE THE FOLDS OF A BR IGHT GIRDLE FURLED. BUT NOW I ONLY HEAR ITS MELANCHOLY, LONG, WITHDRAWING ROAR, RETREATING, TO THE BREATH OF THE N IGHT WIND, DOWN THE VAST EDGES DREAR AND NAKED SHINGLES OF THE WORLD.AH, LOVE, LET US BE TRUE TO ONE ANOTHER! FOR THE WORLD, WHICH SEEMS TO L IE BEFORE US L IKE A LAND OF DREAMS, SO VARIOUS, SO BEAUTIFUL, SO NEW, HATH REALLY NE ITHER JOY, NOR LOVE, NOR L IGHT, NOR CERTITUDE, NOR PEACE, NOR HELP FOR PA IN; AND WE ARE HERE AS ON A DARKLING PLA IN SWEPT WITH CONFUSED ALARMS OF STRUGGLE AND FL IGHT, WHERE IGNORANT ARMIES CLASH BY N IGHT.
Notable works• Dover Beach• The
Forsaken Merman
• To a Friend- Published
• The Scholar Gipsy
• The Buried Life
• Shakespeare• To
Marguerite
Born in London, son of a guards offi cer, Captain John Byron which later left him and his mother Catherine Gordon, lived in considerable poverty
One of the most important figures of the romantic movement, his works, active life, and physical beauty became to be considered the personification of the romantic poet.
GEORGE GORDON BYRON
1788-1824
she walks in beautyby byron
SHE WALKS IN BEAUTY, L IKE THE N IGHT OF CLOUDLESS CL IMES AND STARRY SKIES; AND ALL THAT 'S BEST OF DARK AND BRIGHT MEET IN HER ASPECT AND HER EYES: THUS MELLOW'D TO THAT TENDER L IGHT WHICH HEAVEN TO GAUDY DAY DENIES. ONE SHADE THE MORE, ONE RAY THE LESS, HAD HALF IMPAIR 'D THE NAMELESS GRACE WHICH WAVES IN EVERY RAVEN TRESS, OR SOFTLY L IGHTENS O'ER HER FACE; WHERE THOUGHTS SERENELY SWEET EXPRESS HOW PURE, HOW DEAR THEIR DWELL ING-PLACE. AND ON THAT CHEEK, AND O'ER THAT BROW, SO SOFT, SO CALM, YET ELOQUENT, THE SMILES THAT WIN, THE T INTS THAT GLOW, BUT TELL OF DAYS IN GOODNESS SPENT,A MIND AT PEACE WITH ALL BELOW, A HEART WHOSE LOVE IS INNOCENT!
Notable works• A Spirit
passed Before me
• She Walks in Beauty
• Darkness• Solitude
Prompt 1: In the poem “Dover Beach” by Matthew Arnold (1822-1888) the poet depicts his view towards religion during his time period. Carefully read the poem and create an essay analyzing the poetic devices Arnold uses to express his attitude towards people’s faith toward religion.
Prompt 2: Read the following poem entitled “Miracles” by Walt Whitman (1819-1892). In an essay, explain the Romantic elements of repetition and diction and the connection they make with the themes of the time.
AP PROMPTS
WRITE YOUR OWN POEM DRAWING ON ROMANTIC ELEMENTS.
QUIZ
WHEN DID ROMANTICISM
APPEAR?a. in the High Middle Agesb. in the beginning of the 20th centuryc. around the middle-late of the 18th centuryd. during the late 19th centurye. during the early 20th century
QUIZ
WHEN DID ROMANTICISM
APPEAR?a. in the High Middle Agesb. in the beginning of the 20th centuryc. around the middle-late of the 18th centuryd. during the late 19th centurye. during the early 20th century
QUIZ
WHY DID ROMANTICISM
APPEAR?a. as an opposition to the Russian Revolutionb. because the technological contributionc. as a result of the publication of the Theory of Evolutiond. as a revolt against the rationalism of the Enlightenment periode. because it wanted to
QUIZ
WHY DID ROMANTICISM
APPEAR?a. as an opposition to the Russian Revolutionb. because the technological contributionc. as a result of the publication of the Theory of Evolutiond. as a revolt against the rationalism of the Enlightenment periode. because it wanted to
QUIZ
WHAT IS THE UNDERLYING THEME
FOR ALL ROMANTICS?a. ideas of the imagination is equal to or better
than the ideas of scienceb. the portrayal of life through minute details and realistic imagesc. focus on the love and hate aspect of human natured. emphasis on mental and physical growth through consumptione. none of the above
QUIZ
WHAT IS THE UNDERLYING THEME
FOR ALL ROMANTICS?a. ideas of the imagination is equal to or better
than the ideas of scienceb. the portrayal of life through minute details and realistic imagesc. focus on the love and hate aspect of human natured. emphasis on mental and physical growth through consumptione. none of the above
QUIZ
WHERE DO ROMANTICS FIND INSPIRATION FOR
THEIR WORK?a. Natureb. Emotionsc. Religiond. both a and be. all of the above
QUIZ
WHERE DO ROMANTICS FIND INSPIRATION FOR
THEIR WORK?a. Natureb. Emotionsc. Religiond. both a and be. all of the above
QUIZ
a. It is subjective, emotionally intense, and dreamlikeb. It is extremely detailed and complex techniques are employedc. It is eccentric and stimulates the sensesd. it is meant to be enjoyed by the aristocracye. all of the above
HOW CAN ONE DESCRIBE ROMANTIC
ART?
QUIZ
HOW CAN ONE DESCRIBE ROMANTIC
ART?a. It is subjective, emotionally intense, and dreamlikeb. It is extremely detailed and complex techniques are employedc. It is eccentric and stimulates the sensesd. it is meant to be enjoyed by the aristocracye. all of the above
QUIZ
WHAT HUMAN ABILITY IS NOT
PRIMARY ACCORDING TO THE ROMANTICS?a. Intuition b. Feeling c. Deductive reason d. Imaginatione. none of the above
QUIZ
WHAT HUMAN ABILITY IS NOT
PRIMARY ACCORDING TO THE ROMANTICS?a. Intuition b. Feeling c. Deductive reason d. Imaginatione. none of the above
QUIZ
HOW DID LEADING ROMANTICS VIEW
LOCAL TRADITIONS?a. as something to be eliminated because they violated the integrity of the individualb. as something to be eliminated because they were largely based on mysticism rather than reasonc. as something to be embraced because they represented the idyllic pastd. as something to be embraced because one's place in the greater society is the source of individual identitye. none of the above
QUIZ
HOW DID LEADING ROMANTICS VIEW
LOCAL TRADITIONS?a. as something to be eliminated because they violated the integrity of the individualb. as something to be eliminated because they were largely based on mysticism rather than reasonc. as something to be embraced because they represented the idyllic pastd. as something to be embraced because one's place in the greater society is the source of individual identitye. none of the above
QUIZ
WHICH DID THE ROMANTICS MOSTLY REVOLT AGAINST IN
GENERAL?a. Bohemianismb. Nationalismc. Classicismd. Expressionisme. none of the above
QUIZ
WHICH DID THE ROMANTICS MOSTLY REVOLT AGAINST IN
GENERAL?a. Bohemianismb. Nationalismc. Classicismd. Expressionisme. none of the above
QUIZ
WHAT DID ROMANTICS
GENERALLY USE TO CONVEY EMOTION?a. imagery and word association
b. allusion and blank versec. consonance and alliterationd. hyperbole and ironye. none of the above
QUIZ
WHAT DID ROMANTICS
GENERALLY USE TO CONVEY EMOTION?a. imagery and word association
b. allusion and blank versec. consonance and alliterationd. hyperbole and ironye. none of the above
QUIZ
IN WHAT AREAS DID THE ROMANTIC
MOVEMENT OCCUR?a. industry, science, politics, and religionb. literature, art, music, dance, and theaterc. language, books, and politicsd. medicine, industry, and religione. none of the above
QUIZ
IN WHAT AREAS DID THE ROMANTIC
MOVEMENT OCCUR?a. industry, science, politics, and religionb. literature, art, music, dance, and theaterc. language, books, and politicsd. medicine, industry, and religione. none of the above
http://allpoetry.com/Emily_Dickinsonhttp://
www.encyclopedia.com/topic/Emily_Dickinson.aspxhttp://www.sparknotes.com/poetry/whitman/
themes.htmlhttp://www.biography.com/people/walt-whitman-
9530126?page=1
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