The last quarter of the 18th century was a time of social and political
turbulence, with revolutions in the United States,
France, Ireland and
elsewhere. In Great Britain,
movement for social change and a more inclusive sharing of power was also
growing. This was the backdrop against which the Romantic movement in English
poetry emerged.
The main poets of this movement were William Blake, William Wordsworth,
Samuel Taylor Coleridge, Percy Bysshe Shelley, Lord Byron, and John Keats. The
birth of English Romanticism is often dated to the publication in 1798 of
Wordsworth and Coleridge's Lyrical Ballads. However, Blake had been
publishing since the early 1780s. However, much of the focus on Blake only came
about during the last century when Northrap Frye discussed his work in his book
"The Anatomy of Criticism."
In poetry, the Romantic movement emphasised the creative expression of the
individual and the need to find and formulate new forms of expression. The
Romantics, with the partial exception of Byron, rejected the poetic ideals of the
eighteenth century, and each of them returned to Milton
for inspiration, though each drew something different from Milton. They also put a good deal of stress
on their own originality. To the Romantics, the moment of creation was the most
important in poetic expression and could not be repeated once it passed.
Because of this new emphasis, poems that were not complete were nonetheless
included in a poet's body of work (such as Coleridge's "Kubla Khan"
and "Christabel").
Additionally, the Romantic movement marked a shift in the use of language.
Attempting to express the "language of the common man", Wordsworth
and his fellow Romantic poets focused on employing poetic language for a wider
audience, countering the mimetic, tightly constrained Neo-Classic poems
(although it's important to note that the poet wrote first and foremost for his
own creative, expression). In Shelley's "Defense of Poetry", he
contends that poets are the "creators of language" and that the
poet's job is to refresh language for their society.
The Romantics were not the only poets of note at this time. In the work of
John Clare the late Augustan voice is blended with a peasant's first-hand
knowledge to produce arguably some of the finest nature poetry in the English
language. Another contemporary poet who does not fit into the Romantic group
was Walter Savage Landor. Landor was a classicist whose poetry forms a link
between the Augustans and Robert Browning, who much admired it.
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