M.A. Semester: 2
Paper No. (5) Romantic Literature
Assignment Topic: Wordsworth and Coleridge( as a Romantic Poet):
a critical
study.
*Biography.
*works
*features of poetry
* comparison and contrast in Wordsworth and Coleridge.
*conclusion
The age of Romanticism is known
as the second creative period of English Literature. The poetry of this age
was marked by intense human sympathy and a consequent understanding
of the human heart. Wordsworth and Coleridge were the two great poets of
Romanticism and it was by their joint effort that the romantic
revival in poetry was brought about during nineteenth century. So
let’s study William Wordsworth and Samuel Taylor Coleridge in detail.
*WILLIAM
WORDSWORTH ( 1770-1850)
William Wordsworth ( 7 April-
1770- 23 April- 1850) a major English romantic poet, was born at
Cockermouth, Cumberland, a town outside the Lake district.His father was a
lawyer, died when he was thirteen years old. So the orphan was the
orphan was taken in charge by some relatives, who sent him to school at
Hawkshed in the beautiful lake region.
Born
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7,April, 1770
Cockermouth, Cumberland
England.
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Died
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23, April, 1850 (aged 80)
Cumberland, England.
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Occupation
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Poet
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Almamater
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Cambridge University
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Literary Movement
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Notable works
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‘lyrical Ballads’, ‘ Poems in
two Volumes’, ‘ The Excursion’,’ The Prelude’, ‘I wandered lonely as a
cloud’
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Here apparently, the unroofed school of nature attracted him
more than the discipline of the classics, and he learned more eagerly from
flowers and hills and stars than from his books.
Wordsworth went Cambridge, entering St. John’s college in 1787, and having
graduated in 1791 He left with no foxed career in view. After
spending few months in London he crossed over to France (1791), and stayed
at Orleans and Blois for nearly a year. An enthusiasm for the revolution
was aroused in him; he himself has chronicled the mood in one of his
happiest passages.
Bliss was it in that dawn to be alive,But to be young was very heaven
!
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Three things in his poems must
impress the casual reader
1. Wordsworth loves to be alone,
and is never lonely with nature
2. Like every other child who
spends much time alone in the woods and fields, he feels the presence
of some living spirit.
His impressions are exactly like our own, and
delightfully familiar when he tells of the long summer day spent in
swimming, basking in the sun, and questing over the hills or of the
winter night when, on hid skates he chased the reflection of a star
in the black ice, or of his exploring the lake in a boat.
The second period of Wordsworth’s life begins with his university course
at Cambridge. All his life he was poor, and lived in an atmosphere of “ Plain living
and High thinking” In 1839 Oxford
conferred upon him the degree of D.C.L., in 1842 the crown awarded him a
pension of £300 a year.On the death of Southey in 1843 he became
the Poet Laureate.
William Wordsworth died from an aggravated care of
pleurisy on 23, April, 1850, and was buried at St.
Oswald’s church, Grasmere.Wordsworth was hailed by critics as the
first living poet, and one of the greatest that England had ever
produced.
Poetry was his life,
his soul was in all his works.Outwardly his long and uneventful life
divides naturally into four periods.1. His childhood and youth, in the Cumberland Hills, from 1770 to 1787.
2. A period
of uncertainty, of storm and stress, including his university life at
Cambridge, his travels abroad and his revolutionary experience from 1787 to
1797.
3. A short but significant period of
finding himself, and his work, from 1797 to 1799.
A long period of retirement in the northern lake region, where he was born,
and where for a full half century he lived so close to nature that her
influence is reflected in all his poetry.
‘Lyrical
Ballads’, with a few other poems (1798)
“simon
Lee”
‘we are
seven’
‘lines
written in early spring’
‘expostulation
and reply’
‘The
Thorn’
‘The
Tables Turned’
“Lines
composed A few Miles above Tintern Abbey’
‘Lyrical
Ballads’ with other poems (1800)
‘Preface
to the Lyrical Ballad’
‘Strange
Fits of Passion have I Known’
‘She Dwelt
among the Untrodden Ways’’
‘Three
Years she Grew’
‘A slumber
did my spirit seal’
‘I
travelled among unknown men’
‘Lucy
Gray’
‘The two
April Mornings’
‘Nuttuing’
‘ The
Ruined Cottage’
‘Michael’
‘The
Kitten at Play’
‘Poems, in
two Volumes’ (1807)
‘Resolution
and Independence’
‘I
Wandered Lonely As a Cloud’ also known as “DAFFODILS”
‘my heart
leaps up’
‘Ode to
Duty’
‘The
solitary Reaper’
‘London’
‘Elegiac
Stanzas’
‘Guide to
the Lakes’
‘To the
Cuckoo’
‘Ode:
Intimation to Immortality’
‘The
Prelude’
‘Laodamia’
‘The world
is too much with us’
‘Composed
upon Westminster Bridge’, September 3, 1802’.
At the university he
composed some poetry, which appeared as ‘An Evening walk’ (1793) and
‘Descriptive Sketches’ (1793). In style this poems have little originality,
but they already show the Wordsworthian eye for nature.
The fruits of his genius were seen in the “ Lyrical Ballads” (1798), a
joint production by Coleridge and himself, which was published at Bristol.
Some of his poems as ‘ The Thorn’ and ‘ The Idiot Boy’ are condemned as
being trivial and childish in style.
A few, such as ‘Simon Lee’ and ‘ Expostulation and Reply’ are made
adequate in their expression. And the concluding piece ,
‘Tintern Abbey’, is one of the triumph of his genius.
Almost the most noteworthy of the new works in this collection were
‘Michael’, ‘ The Old Cumberland Beggar’, ‘She Dwelt among the Untrodden
Ways’, ‘Strange fits of passion have I Known’, and ‘ Nutting’.
‘The Prelude’, which was completed in 1805 but not published until 1850,
after Wordsworth’s death, is the record of his development as a poet. He
describes his experiences with a fullness, closeness, and laborious anxiety
that are unique in our literature.
‘The prelude’ was intended to form part of a vast philosophical work called
‘The Recluse’, which was never completed.
Next to be published, in 1807, were two volumes of poem which represent the
fine flower of his genius. It is impossible here to list even the very
great poems in these volumes, but even in poetic form that he used,
with the possible exception of the narrative, Wordsworth is here seen at
the height of his powers.
‘The Solitary Reaper’
‘Ode to Duty’
‘I wandered Lonely as a Cloud’
‘Ode on Intimations of Immortality’
‘Resolution and Independence’
‘Sonnets dedicated to National
Independence and Liberty’
All this are of a quality which has led many critics to hail them as the
finest sonnets in the language.
After the publication of The Excursion Wordsworth’s poetical
power was clearly on the wane, but his productivity was unimpaired. His
later volumes include ‘The White Doe of Rylstone’ (1815), ‘The Waggoner,
(1819) ‘Peter Bell’ (1819), ‘Yarrow Revisited' (1835) and ‘The
Borderers’ (1842) a drama.
Wordsworth’s
theory of poetry:-
In the Preface to the second edition of the Lyrical Ballads (1800),
Wordsworth set out his theory of poetry. Wordsworthian dogma can be divided
into two portions concerning (1) the subject and (2) the style of poetry.Wordsworth’s
Definition of poetry:-
“poetry is a spontaneous overflow of powerful
feeling, recollected in tranquility”
*object- ( Subject Matter of Poetry)
-to choose incidents and situations from
common life
-a
selection of language really used by men, and to throw over them a certain
coloring of imagination.
Subject matter of poetry:-
Humble and rustic life
Language/ Diction of poetry ( style of poetry)
Wordsworth’s
views on poetical style are the most revolutionary of all the ideas in his
preface.
He
discarded the gaudiness and inane phraseology of many modern writers.
He insist that ‘ his poems are written in selection of language really used
by men in a state of vivid sensation.
His views on poetic diction can be summed up as “ there neither is
nor can be any essential difference between the language of prose and
metrical composition.
He is a man speaking to men, endowed with more
lively sensibility, more enthusiasm and tenderness. He has a greater
knowledge of human nature and a more comprehensive soul.
*Some of his beautiful poems
The following lyrics illustrates this mood of
perfection.
Rainbow
My heart leaps up when I behold
A rainbow in the sky
So was it when my life began;
So is it now I am a man;
So be it when I shall grow old,
Or let me die !
The child is the father of the
man;
And I could wish my days to be
Bound each to each by natural
piety.
The series of Lucy poems are
typical of their kind:
She dwelt among the untrodden waysBeside the
spring of Dove,A maid whom there where none to praise,And very few to
love.A violet by mossy stoneHalf hidden from the eye!Fair as a star, when
only oneIs shining in the sky.She lived unknown, and few could knowWhen
Lucy ceased to br;But she is in her grave, and oh,The difference to me !
In this sonnets his lyrical mood burns clear
and strong, and as a result they rank among the best in English poetry.
Wordsworth’s use of Petrarchan form was so striking that he re-established
its supremacy over the Shakespearean sonnet , which had eclipsed it in
popularity during the last great age of sonneteering- the Elizabethans.
his
dealing with nature are his chief glory as a poet. Even the slightest of
his poems have evidence of close observation.
The cattle are grazing,
Their heads never raising;
There are forty feeding like one.
He tries to see more deeply and to find the
secret spring of this joy and thanksgiving.
To me the
meanest flower that blow can giveThoughts that do often lie to deep for
tears.
Let’s see
his another beautiful poem..
Our birth
is but a sleep and a foregetting:
The soul
that rises with us, our life’s star
Hath had
elsewhere its seting,
And cometh
from a far;
Not in
entire forgetfulness,
And not in
utter nakedness,
But
trailing clouds of glory do we come
From god,
who is our home.
-Ode: Intimations of Immortality
And also the most famous poem among all
‘Daffodils’
‘I wandered lonely as a cloud…..
It is always to be remembered that at his best Wordsworth can unite
simplicity with sublimity. He has a kind of middle style, at its best it
has grace and dignity, a heart searching simplicity, and a certain
enlightenment of phrase that is all his own.
SAMUEL TAYLOR COLERIDGE
(1772-1834)
*Biography
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21, October,
1772Devonshire, ENGLAND.
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25, July 1834
(aged 61)
Highgate, Middlesex, England.
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Poet, Critic,
Philosopher
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‘The Rime of the
Ancient mariner’
‘Kubla Khan’.
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Coleridge was born in Devonshire
in 1772. As a child he was unusually precocious. He was a poet, literary
critic and a philosopher who, with his friend William Wordsworth , was a
founder of the ROMANTIC movement in ENGLAND and a member of the
LAKE POETS.
At Bristol Coleridge lecture and
issued a newspaper called ‘ The Watchman’ (1796). At this time(1797) he met
Wordsworth, and as has already been noticed , planned their joint
production of the
‘Lyrical Ballads’, which was published at Bristol.
If Wordsworth represents the central pillar of early Romanticism, Coleridge
is nevertheless an important structural support. His emphasis on the
imagination, its independence from the outside world and its creation of
fantastic pictures such as those found in the “Rime” exerted a profound
influence on later writers such as Shelley.
His depiction of feelings if alienation and numbness helped to define more
sharply the Romantics idealized contrast between the emptiness of the
city-where such feelings are experienced and the joys of nature.
Coleridge’s intellect was quick, versatile and penetrating. He was
idealistic and ranged for in the abstract thought.
Coleridge went to the Medieval period for creating the atmosphere of magic
and mystery.
In 1792, he won the Brown Gold Medal for ode that he wrote on the slave
trade.
*His poetry:-
The real blossoming of Coleridge’s poetical
genius was brief indeed, but the fruit of it was rich and wonderful.
His first book was “Poems on Various Subjects” (1796), issued at Bristol.
Then, in collaboration with Wordsworth he produced the ‘Lyrical Ballads’
(1798). This remarkable volume contains nineteen poems by Wordsworth and
four by Coleridge, and of these four by far the most noteworthy is “The
Rime of the Ancient Mariner”.
Wordsworth has set on record the origin of ‘The Ancient Mariner’. He and
Coleridge discussed the poem during their walk on the Quantock Hills. The
main idea of the voyage, founded on a dream of his own, was Coleridge’s,
Wordsworth suggested details, and they thought of working on it together.
Very soon, however, Coleridge’s imagination was fired with the story, and
his friend was sensibly left him to write it all. Hence we have that
marvelous series of that dissolving pictures, so curiously distinct and yet
so strangely fused into one. The voyage through the polar ice, the death of
the Albatross, the amazing scenes during the calm and the storm, and the
return home. In style, in swift stealthiness of narrative speed , and in
its weird and compelling strength of imagination the poem is without
parallel.
In 1797 Coleridge also wrote the first part of ‘Christabel’, but though the
second part was added in 1800. Christabel is the tale of a kind of witch,
who by taking the shape of a lovely lady, wins the confidence of the
heroine Christabel.
‘KUBLA KHAN’, written in 1798 but remained unpublished until 1816. It is
the echo of a dream- the shadow of a shadow. Coleridge averts that he
dreamt the lines, awoke in a fever of inspiration, threw the words on
paper, but before the fit was over was distracted from the composition, so
that the glory of the dream never returned and Kubla Khan remained
unfinished.
In the same year Coleridge composed several other poems, including the fine
‘Frost at Midnight’ and ‘France: an ode.
In 1802 he wrote the great ode ‘Dejection’, in which he already bewails the
suspension of his “shaping spirit of imagination”
His play “Remorse” was on recommendation of Byron, accepted by the
management of the Drury Lane Theatre and produced in 1813. It succeeded on
stage, but as literature it is of little importance.
*features of his
poetry:-
· Intense imaginative
power
· Witchery of language
His prose work
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‘Lectures on Shakespeare and other poet’
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At its best Coleridge’s prose has much of the evocative suggestiveness
of his finest poetry, and is an admirable stimulus to keener perception in
the reader, while his choice of language is discriminating, particularly in
the fine distinction he makes while describing the process of artistic
creation.
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