116-) English Literature
Romanticism
The Romantic period
The nature of Romanticism
As
a term to cover the most distinctive writers who flourished in the last years
of the 18th century and the first decades of the 19th, “Romantic” is
indispensable but also a little misleading: there was no self-styled “Romantic
movement” at the time, and the great writers of the period did not call
themselves Romantics. Not until August Wilhelm von Schlegel’s Vienna lectures
of 1808–09 was a clear distinction established between the “organic,” “plastic”
qualities of Romantic art and the “mechanical” character of Classicism.
Many
of the age’s foremost writers thought that something new was happening in the
world’s affairs, nevertheless. William Blake’s affirmation in 1793 that “a new
heaven is begun” was matched a generation later by Percy Bysshe Shelley’s “The
world’s great age begins anew.” “These, these will give the world another
heart, / And other pulses,” wrote John Keats, referring to Leigh Hunt and
William Wordsworth. Fresh ideals came to the fore; in particular, the ideal of
freedom, long cherished in England, was being extended to every range of human
endeavour. As that ideal swept through Europe, it became natural to believe
that the age of tyrants might soon end.
The
most notable feature of the poetry of the time is the new role of individual
thought and personal feeling. Where the main trend of 18th-century poetics had
been to praise the general, to see the poet as a spokesman of society
addressing a cultivated and homogeneous audience and having as his end the
conveyance of “truth,” the Romantics found the source of poetry in the
particular, unique experience. Blake’s marginal comment on Sir Joshua
Reynolds’s Discourses expresses the position with characteristic vehemence: “To
Generalize is to be an Idiot. To Particularize is the alone Distinction of
Merit.” The poet was seen as an individual distinguished from his fellows by
the intensity of his perceptions, taking as his basic subject matter the
workings of his own mind. Poetry was regarded as conveying its own truth;
sincerity was the criterion by which it was to be judged.
The
emphasis on feeling—seen perhaps at its finest in the poems of Robert Burns—was
in some ways a continuation of the earlier “cult of sensibility”; and it is
worth remembering that Alexander Pope praised his father as having known no
language but the language of the heart. But feeling had begun to receive
particular emphasis and is found in most of the Romantic definitions of poetry.
Wordsworth called poetry “the spontaneous overflow of powerful feeling,” and in
1833 John Stuart Mill defined poetry as “feeling itself, employing thought only
as the medium of its utterance.” It followed that the best poetry was that in
which the greatest intensity of feeling was expressed, and hence a new
importance was attached to the lyric. Another key quality of Romantic writing
was its shift from the mimetic, or imitative, assumptions of the Neoclassical
era to a new stress on imagination. Samuel Taylor Coleridge saw the imagination
as the supreme poetic quality, a quasi-divine creative force that made the poet
a godlike being. Samuel Johnson had seen the components of poetry as
“invention, imagination and judgement,” but Blake wrote: “One Power alone makes
a Poet: Imagination, the Divine Vision.” The poets of this period accordingly
placed great emphasis on the workings of the unconscious mind, on dreams and
reveries, on the supernatural, and on the childlike or primitive view of the
world, this last being regarded as valuable because its clarity and intensity
had not been overlaid by the restrictions of civilized “reason.” Rousseau’s
sentimental conception of the “noble savage” was often invoked, and often by
those who were ignorant that the phrase is Dryden’s or that the type was
adumbrated in the “poor Indian” of Pope’s An Essay on Man. A further sign of
the diminished stress placed on judgment is the Romantic attitude to form: if
poetry must be spontaneous, sincere, intense, it should be fashioned primarily
according to the dictates of the creative imagination. Wordsworth advised a
young poet, “You feel strongly; trust to those feelings, and your poem will
take its shape and proportions as a tree does from the vital principle that
actuates it.” This organic view of poetry is opposed to the classical theory of
“genres,” each with its own linguistic decorum; and it led to the feeling that
poetic sublimity was unattainable except in short passages.
Hand
in hand with the new conception of poetry and the insistence on a new subject
matter went a demand for new ways of writing. Wordsworth and his followers,
particularly Keats, found the prevailing poetic diction of the late 18th
century stale and stilted, or “gaudy and inane,” and totally unsuited to the
expression of their perceptions. It could not be, for them, the language of
feeling, and Wordsworth accordingly sought to bring the language of poetry back
to that of common speech. Wordsworth’s own diction, however, often differs from
his theory. Nevertheless, when he published his preface to Lyrical Ballads in
1800, the time was ripe for a change: the flexible diction of earlier
18th-century poetry had hardened into a merely conventional language.
Period
The
period typically called Romantic varies greatly between different countries and
different artistic media or areas of thought. Margaret Drabble described it in
literature as taking place "roughly between 1770 and 1848", and few
dates much earlier than 1770 will be found. In English literature, M. H. Abrams
placed it between 1789, or 1798, this latter a very typical view, and about
1830, perhaps a little later than some other critics. Others have proposed 1780–1830.
In other fields and other countries the period denominated as Romantic can be
considerably different; musical Romanticism, for example, is generally regarded
as only having ceased as a major artistic force as late as 1910, but in an
extreme extension the Four Last Songs of Richard Strauss are described
stylistically as "Late Romantic" and were composed in 1946–48.
However, in most fields the Romantic period is said to be over by about 1850,
or earlier.
The
early period of the Romantic era was a time of war, with the French Revolution
(1789–1799) followed by the Napoleonic Wars until 1815. These wars, along with
the political and social turmoil that went along with them, served as the
background for Romanticism. The key generation of French Romantics born between
1795 and 1805 had, in the words of one of their number, Alfred de Vigny, been
"conceived between battles, attended school to the rolling of drums".
According to Jacques Barzun, there were three generations of Romantic artists.
The first emerged in the 1790s and 1800s, the second in the 1820s, and the
third later in the century.
Context and place in history
The
more precise characterization and specific definition of Romanticism has been
the subject of debate in the fields of intellectual history and literary
history throughout the 20th century, without any great measure of consensus
emerging. That it was part of the Counter-Enlightenment, a reaction against the
Age of Enlightenment, is generally accepted in current scholarship. Its
relationship to the French Revolution, which began in 1789 in the very early
stages of the period, is clearly important, but highly variable depending on
geography and individual reactions. Most Romantics can be said to be broadly
progressive in their views, but a considerable number always had, or developed,
a wide range of conservative views,[37] and nationalism was in many countries
strongly associated with Romanticism, as discussed in detail below.
In
philosophy and the history of ideas, Romanticism was seen by Isaiah Berlin as
disrupting for over a century the classic Western traditions of rationality and
the idea of moral absolutes and agreed values, leading "to something like
the melting away of the very notion of objective truth",[38] and hence not
only to nationalism, but also fascism and totalitarianism, with a gradual
recovery coming only after World War II.[39] For the Romantics, Berlin says,
in
the realm of ethics, politics, aesthetics it was the authenticity and sincerity
of the pursuit of inner goals that mattered; this applied equally to
individuals and groups—states, nations, movements. This is most evident in the
aesthetics of romanticism, where the notion of eternal models, a Platonic
vision of ideal beauty, which the artist seeks to convey, however imperfectly,
on canvas or in sound, is replaced by a passionate belief in spiritual freedom,
individual creativity. The painter, the poet, the composer do not hold up a
mirror to nature, however ideal, but invent; they do not imitate (the doctrine
of mimesis), but create not merely the means but the goals that they pursue;
these goals represent the self-expression of the artist's own unique, inner
vision, to set aside which in response to the demands of some
"external" voice—church, state, public opinion, family friends,
arbiters of taste—is an act of betrayal of what alone justifies their existence
for those who are in any sense creative.
Arthur
Lovejoy attempted to demonstrate the difficulty of defining Romanticism in his
seminal article "On The Discrimination of Romanticisms" in his Essays
in the History of Ideas (1948); some scholars see Romanticism as essentially
continuous with the present, some like Robert Hughes see in it the inaugural
moment of modernity, and some like Chateaubriand, Novalis and Samuel Taylor Coleridge
see it as the beginning of a tradition of resistance to Enlightenment
rationalism—a "Counter-Enlightenment"— to be associated most closely
with German Romanticism. An earlier definition comes from Charles Baudelaire:
"Romanticism is precisely situated neither in choice of subject nor exact
truth, but in the way of feeling."
The
end of the Romantic era is marked in some areas by a new style of Realism,
which affected literature, especially the novel and drama, painting, and even
music, through Verismo opera. This movement was led by France, with Balzac and
Flaubert in literature and Courbet in painting; Stendhal and Goya were
important precursors of Realism in their respective media. However, Romantic
styles, now often representing the established and safe style against which
Realists rebelled, continued to flourish in many fields for the rest of the
century and beyond. In music such works from after about 1850 are referred to
by some writers as "Late Romantic" and by others as "Neoromantic"
or "Postromantic", but other fields do not usually use these terms;
in English literature and painting the convenient term "Victorian"
avoids having to characterise the period further.
In
northern Europe, the Early Romantic visionary optimism and belief that the world
was in the process of great change and improvement had largely vanished, and
some art became more conventionally political and polemical as its creators
engaged polemically with the world as it was. Elsewhere, including in very
different ways the United States and Russia, feelings that great change was
underway or just about to come were still possible. Displays of intense emotion
in art remained prominent, as did the exotic and historical settings pioneered
by the Romantics, but experimentation with form and technique was generally
reduced, often replaced with meticulous technique, as in the poems of Tennyson
or many paintings. If not realist, late 19th-century art was often extremely
detailed, and pride was taken in adding authentic details in a way that earlier
Romantics did not trouble with. Many Romantic ideas about the nature and
purpose of art, above all the pre-eminent importance of originality, remained
important for later generations, and often underlie modern views, despite
opposition from theorists.
Literature
Romanticism
proper was preceded by several related developments from the mid-18th century
on that can be termed Pre-Romanticism. Among such trends was a new appreciation
of the medieval romance, from which the Romantic movement derives its name. The
romance was a tale or ballad of chivalric adventure whose emphasis on
individual heroism and on the exotic and the mysterious was in clear contrast
to the elegant formality and artificiality of prevailing Classical forms of
literature, such as the French Neoclassical tragedy or the English heroic
couplet in poetry. This new interest in relatively unsophisticated but overtly
emotional literary expressions of the past was to be a dominant note in
Romanticism.
Romanticism
in English literature began in the 1790s with the publication of the Lyrical
Ballads of William Wordsworth and Samuel Taylor Coleridge. Wordsworth’s
“Preface” to the second edition (1800) of Lyrical Ballads, in which he
described poetry as “the spontaneous overflow of powerful feelings,” became the
manifesto of the English Romantic movement in poetry. William Blake was the
third principal poet of the movement’s early phase in England. The first phase
of the Romantic movement in Germany was marked by innovations in both content and
literary style and by a preoccupation with the mystical, the subconscious, and
the supernatural. A wealth of talents, including Friedrich Hölderlin, the early
Johann Wolfgang von Goethe, Jean Paul, Novalis, Ludwig Tieck, August Wilhelm
and Friedrich von Schlegel, Wilhelm Heinrich Wackenroder, and Friedrich
Schelling, belong to this first phase. In Revolutionary France,
François-Auguste-René, vicomte de Chateaubriand, and Madame de Staël were the
chief initiators of Romanticism, by virtue of their influential historical and
theoretical writings.
The
second phase of Romanticism, comprising the period from about 1805 to the
1830s, was marked by a quickening of cultural nationalism and a new attention
to national origins, as attested by the collection and imitation of native
folklore, folk ballads and poetry, folk dance and music, and even previously
ignored medieval and Renaissance works. The revived historical appreciation was
translated into imaginative writing by Sir Walter Scott, who is often
considered to have invented the historical novel. At about this same time
English Romantic poetry had reached its zenith in the works of John Keats, Lord
Byron, and Percy Bysshe Shelley.
A
notable by-product of the Romantic interest in the emotional were works dealing
with the supernatural, the weird, and the horrible, as in Mary Shelley’s
Frankenstein and works by Charles Robert Maturin, the Marquis de Sade, and
E.T.A. Hoffmann. The second phase of Romanticism in Germany was dominated by
Achim von Arnim, Clemens Brentano, Joseph von Görres, and Joseph von
Eichendorff.
By
the 1820s Romanticism had broadened to embrace the literatures of almost all of
Europe. In this later, second, phase, the movement was less universal in
approach and concentrated more on exploring each nation’s historical and
cultural inheritance and on examining the passions and struggles of exceptional
individuals. A brief survey of Romantic or Romantic-influenced writers would
have to include Thomas De Quincey, William Hazlitt, and Charlotte, Emily, and
Anne Brontë in England; Victor Hugo, Alfred de Vigny, Alphonse de Lamartine,
Alfred de Musset, Stendhal, Prosper Mérimée, Alexandre Dumas, and Théophile
Gautier in France; Alessandro Manzoni and Giacomo Leopardi in Italy; Aleksandr
Pushkin and Mikhail Lermontov in Russia; José de Espronceda and Ángel de
Saavedra in Spain; Adam Mickiewicz in Poland; and almost all of the important
writers in pre-Civil War America.
In
literature, Romanticism found recurrent themes in the evocation or criticism of
the past, the cult of "sensibility" with its emphasis on women and
children, the isolation of the artist or narrator, and respect for nature.
Furthermore, several romantic authors, such as Edgar Allan Poe, Charles Maturin
and Nathaniel Hawthorne, based their writings on the supernatural/occult and
human psychology. Romanticism tended to regard satire as something unworthy of
serious attention, a view still influential today. The Romantic movement in
literature was preceded by the Enlightenment and succeeded by Realism.
Some
authors cite 16th-century poet Isabella di Morra as an early precursor of
Romantic literature. Her lyrics covering themes of isolation and loneliness,
which reflected the tragic events of her life, are considered "an
impressive prefigurement of Romanticism", differing from the Petrarchist
fashion of the time based on the philosophy of love.
The
precursors of Romanticism in English poetry go back to the middle of the 18th
century, including figures such as Joseph Warton (headmaster at Winchester College)
and his brother Thomas Warton, Professor of Poetry at Oxford University. Joseph
maintained that invention and imagination were the chief qualities of a poet.
The Scottish poet James Macpherson influenced the early development of
Romanticism with the international success of his Ossian cycle of poems
published in 1762, inspiring both Goethe and the young Walter Scott. Thomas
Chatterton is generally considered the first Romantic poet in English. Both
Chatterton and Macpherson's work involved elements of fraud, as what they
claimed was earlier literature that they had discovered or compiled was, in
fact, entirely their own work. The Gothic novel, beginning with Horace
Walpole's The Castle of Otranto (1764), was an important precursor of one
strain of Romanticism, with a delight in horror and threat, and exotic
picturesque settings, matched in Walpole's case by his role in the early
revival of Gothic architecture. Tristram Shandy, a novel by Laurence Sterne
(1759–67), introduced a whimsical version of the anti-rational sentimental
novel to the English literary public.
Great
Britain
In
English literature, the key figures of the Romantic movement are considered to
be the group of poets including William Wordsworth, Samuel Taylor Coleridge,
John Keats, Lord Byron, Percy Bysshe Shelley and the much older William Blake,
followed later by the isolated figure of John Clare; also such novelists as
Walter Scott from Scotland and Mary Shelley, and the essayists William Hazlitt
and Charles Lamb. The publication in 1798 of Lyrical Ballads, with many of the
finest poems by Wordsworth and Coleridge, is often held to mark the start of
the movement. The majority of the poems were by Wordsworth, and many dealt with
the lives of the poor in his native Lake District, or his feelings about
nature—which he more fully developed in his long poem The Prelude, never
published in his lifetime. The longest poem in the volume was Coleridge's The
Rime of the Ancient Mariner, which showed the Gothic side of English
Romanticism , and the exotic settings that many works featured. In the period
when they were writing, the Lake Poets were widely regarded as a marginal group
of radicals, though they were supported by the critic and writer William
Hazlitt and others.
In
contrast, Lord Byron and Walter Scott achieved enormous fame and influence
throughout Europe with works exploiting the violence and drama of their exotic
and historical settings; Goethe called Byron "undoubtedly the greatest
genius of our century". Scott achieved immediate success with his long
narrative poem The Lay of the Last Minstrel in 1805, followed by the full epic
poem Marmion in 1808. Both were set in the distant Scottish past, already
evoked in Ossian; Romanticism and Scotland were to have a long and fruitful
partnership. Byron had equal success with the first part of Childe Harold's
Pilgrimage in 1812, followed by four "Turkish tales", all in the form
of long poems, starting with The Giaour in 1813, drawing from his Grand Tour,
which had reached Ottoman Europe, and orientalizing the themes of the Gothic
novel in verse. These featured different variations of the "Byronic
hero", and his own life contributed a further version. Scott meanwhile was
effectively inventing the historical novel, beginning in 1814 with Waverley, set
in the 1745 Jacobite rising, which was a highly profitable success, followed by
over 20 further Waverley Novels over the next 17 years, with settings going
back to the Crusades that he had researched to a degree that was new in
literature.
In
contrast to Germany, Romanticism in English literature had little connection
with nationalism, and the Romantics were often regarded with suspicion for the
sympathy many felt for the ideals of the French Revolution, whose collapse and
replacement with the dictatorship of Napoleon was, as elsewhere in Europe, a
shock to the movement. Though his novels celebrated Scottish identity and
history, Scott was politically a firm Unionist, but admitted to Jacobite
sympathies. Several Romantics spent much time abroad, and a famous stay on Lake
Geneva with Byron and Shelley in 1816 produced the hugely influential novel
Frankenstein by Shelley's wife-to-be Mary Shelley and the novella The Vampyre
by Byron's doctor John William Polidori. The lyrics of Robert Burns in
Scotland, and Thomas Moore from Ireland, reflected in different ways their
countries and the Romantic interest in folk literature, but neither had a fully
Romantic approach to life or their work.
Though
they have modern critical champions such as György Lukács, Scott's novels are
today more likely to be experienced in the form of the many operas that
composers continued to base on them over the following decades, such as
Donizetti's Lucia di Lammermoor and Vincenzo Bellini's I puritani (both 1835).
Byron is now most highly regarded for his short lyrics and his generally
unromantic prose writings, especially his letters, and his unfinished satire
Don Juan. Unlike many Romantics, Byron's widely publicised personal life
appeared to match his work, and his death at 36 in 1824 from disease when
helping the Greek War of Independence appeared from a distance to be a suitably
Romantic end, entrenching his legend. Keats in 1821 and Shelley in 1822 both
died in Italy, Blake (at almost 70) in 1827, and Coleridge largely ceased to write
in the 1820s. Wordsworth was by 1820 respectable and highly regarded, holding a
government sinecure, but wrote relatively little. In the discussion of English
literature, the Romantic period is often regarded as finishing around the
1820s, or sometimes even earlier, although many authors of the succeeding
decades were no less committed to Romantic values.
The
most significant novelist in English during the peak Romantic period, other
than Walter Scott, was Jane Austen, whose essentially conservative world-view
had little in common with her Romantic contemporaries, retaining a strong
belief in decorum and social rules, though critics such as Claudia L. Johnson
have detected tremors under the surface of many works, such as Northanger Abbey
(1817), Mansfield Park (1814) and Persuasion (1817). But around the mid-century
the undoubtedly Romantic novels of the Yorkshire-based Brontë family appeared,
most notably Charlotte's Jane Eyre and Emily's Wuthering Heights, both
published in 1847, which also introduced more Gothic themes. While these two
novels were written and published after the Romantic period is said to have
ended, their novels were heavily influenced by Romantic literature they had
read as children.
Byron,
Keats, and Shelley all wrote for the stage, but with little success in England,
with Shelley's The Cenci perhaps the best work produced, though that was not
played in a public theatre in England until a century after his death. Byron's
plays, along with dramatizations of his poems and Scott's novels, were much
more popular on the Continent, and especially in France, and through these
versions several were turned into operas, many still performed today. If
contemporary poets had little success on the stage, the period was a legendary
one for performances of Shakespeare, and went some way to restoring his
original texts and removing the Augustan "improvements" to them. The
greatest actor of the period, Edmund Kean, restored the tragic ending to King
Lear; Coleridge said that "Seeing him act was like reading Shakespeare by
flashes of lightning."
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