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The Romantic Era
1798-1832
Romanticism
• The words Romantic or Romance originally
referred to Medieval tales of knights written
in the original Roman language - Latin. These
tales often included love stories between a
knight and his lady - resulting in the modern
meaning of romance.
• When talking about the Romantic Era in
literature, we are actually referring to
romantic as “freely imaginative fiction” and
not romantic as in “romantic love”
Age of Reason vs. Romantic Era
In the Age of Reason,
Writers stressed:
• Reason and Judgment
• Concerned with the
universal experience
• The value of society as a
whole
• The value of rules
In the Romantic Era,
Writers stressed:
• Imagination and
Emotion
• Concern with the
particular experience
• The value of the
individual human being
• The value of freedom
Historical Events
The following historical events led to the
Romantic movement in Britain:
The French Revolution
 The “September massacre”
 The Guillotine
 Napoleon Bonaparte
The Industrial Revolution
 Laissez Faire economic policy
The French Revolution
Began with the storming of the prison
called the Bastille on July 14, 1789
 democratic overthrow of the monarchy
 Triumph of radical principles
 The “September massacre” – hundreds of
French aristocrats were beheaded by
guillotine for their alleged allegiance to
Louis XVI
Napoleon Bonaparte
 Emerged as a tyrannical
dictator, then emperor of
France
Did implement some
positive changes:
abolished feudalism,
spread religious tolerance
 Was bent on world
domination, and almost
succeeded
Napoleon Bonaparte
English first defeated
Napoleon’s navy at the
battle of Trafalgar
In 1815, with the help of
Allies, Britian finally
defeated Bonaparte at
Waterloo
The Industrial Revolution
 City populations increased, resulting in
desperate living conditions
 Farmland was no longer communally
owned which resulted in large numbers of
landless people
 The homeless migrated to the cities to
search for work or, more likely, rely on
charity (poorhouses or begging),
furthering the congestion problem,
Laissez Faire
 “let people do as they please”
Economic forces should be allowed to
operate freely without government
interference
 the result: the rich got richer, the poor got
poorer
Characteristics
 Romanticism refers to a movement in art,
literature, and music during the 19th
century.
 Romanticism is characterized by the 5 “I”s
Imagination
Intuition
Idealism
Inspiration
Individuality
Imagination
 Considered necessary for creating all art.
 British writer Samuel Taylor Coleridge
called it “intellectual intuition.”
 Imagination and naturalness wasImagination and naturalness was
emphasized over “reason.” They wereemphasized over “reason.” They were
fascinated with the ways nature and thefascinated with the ways nature and the
human mind “mirrored” each other’shuman mind “mirrored” each other’s
creative properties.creative properties.
Inspiration
 The Romantic artist, musician, or writer, is
an “inspired creator” rather than a “technical
master.”
 What this means is “going with the moment”
or being spontaneous, rather than “getting it
precise.” Thus, they rejected formal and witty
works of the previous century.
 They preferred poetry that spoke ofThey preferred poetry that spoke of
personal experiences and emotions in simplepersonal experiences and emotions in simple
unadorned language.unadorned language.
Intuition
 Romantics placed value on “intuition,” or
feeling and instincts, over reason.
 Emotions were important in Romantic
art.
 British Romantic William Wordsworth
described poetry as “the spontaneous“the spontaneous
overflow of powerful feelings.”overflow of powerful feelings.”
Idealism
 Idealism is the concept that we can make
the world a better place.
 Romantics turned to a past or an innerRomantics turned to a past or an inner
dream world that they felt was moredream world that they felt was more
picturesque and magical than the uglypicturesque and magical than the ugly
industrial age they lived in.industrial age they lived in.
 Immanuel Kant, a German philosopher,
held that the mind forces the world we
perceive to take the shape of space-and-
time.
Individuality
 Romantics celebrated the individual andcelebrated the individual and
individual libertyindividual liberty.
 Sympathized with those who rebelled
against tyranny
 During this time period, Women’s Rights
and Abolitionism were taking root as
major movements.
Six Major Romantic Era Poets
William Wordsworth
Samuel Taylor Coleridge
William Blake
Lord Byron
Percy Shelley
John Keats
Romantic Poetry Presentation
The Romantic Movement… brief overview
http://EzineArticles.com/?expert=Rakesh_Ramubhai_Patel
• The Romantic Movement was a revolt against the
Enlightenment and its focus on rational and scientific thought.
• The characteristics of Romantic literature involved an
emphasis on passion, emotion, spontaneity, subjectivity,
mortality, and nature.
• Throughout the 19th century, romantic poetry, in particular,
became the most significant work of the period.
• William Wordsworth, Samuel Taylor Coleridge, William Blake,
Lord Byron, Percy Bysshe Shelley, and John Keats are the
notable British Romantic poets.
• Nature, religious fervor, emotional response to beauty, and
Ancient Greek aesthetics, are some of the common themes in
their work.
• Note that each Romantic poet had his own style and
emphasized different aspects. That’s where you come in with
your research.
Your Presentation:
• To collaborate with your peers to present an extensively
researched, creative, intelligent, and perceptive lesson to the
class, based upon your English Romantic poet.
• Your objective is to reveal a clear, deep understanding of
eighteenth century English Romanticism and its ideals,
precepts, style, and themes in poetry as it pertains specifically
to your poet.
• You should engage the class in an interesting lesson that will
enhance their understanding of the poems written by your
romantic poet, and you should test their knowledge with a
quiz at the end of the lesson.
• Divide the work up equally and fairly, and be a responsible
and positive group contributor.
The Task
Components of the lesson:
• Provide an interesting, comprehensive, creative,
entertaining background insight into the poet, his
major works, and his “philosophy” of art (poetry)
• Select a format to impart the information (skit,
interview, talk show, video, lecture notes, visuals,
power-point, etc.)
Introducing Your Poet
Teaching a poem to the class
• Select one of your Romantic poet’s poems to teach to the class.
• This means analyzing the poem thoroughly, paying special
attention to the language, poetic devices, structure, and overall
style of the poem, and its overall meaning.
• Be sure to connect the poem’s concepts to those of Romanticism.
• Turn in a written copy of your analysis of the poem, along with a
thoroughly annotated copy of the poem to Mrs. Abercrombie on the
day of presentation.
• Make sure that you give a copy of the poem to every student in the
class. (There are 8 students in the class.)
• Be sure to include the class and invite them to participate in your
lesson with some kind of activity, etc.
Original poem written in the style of your poet
• Compose, and then read to the class an original poem
that models the style, format, structure, concepts, etc.
of your romantic poet.
• Turn in a copy of this poem to Mrs. Abercrombie on
the day of presentation, along with a one-page, typed
rationale/explanation of the techniques that you
employed in order to replicate your poet’s style.
Class QUIZ
• Create a quiz for the class, based upon the poem that you
taught them in your lesson.
• Your quiz should address the literary devices, style, and
meanings of the poems, as well as the information that you
provided on the poet.
• Turn in a copy of the quiz and key to Mrs. Abercrombie on the
day of presentation.
• If there’s time, you will give your quiz at the end of your
lesson, or the class will take the quiz at the beginning of the
next class period.
• You will be responsible for grading the quizzes and turning
them all in with scores attached, to Mrs. Abercrombie the
following class period.
• Your quiz should contain ten multiple-choice questions and
five matching questions for a total of fifteen points.
Have Fun!
• Please note! You must turn in a thorough
works cited and list of sources/references.
• No woks cited? No grade.
William Wordsworth
• Helped to launch the Romantic Age with his
collaboration on Lyrical Ballads
• His most famous work is The Prelude
chronicles the spiritual life of the poet
• Has an interest and sympathy for the life and
troubles of the “common man”
• He is considered the nature poet by focusing
ordinary people in country settings
Quickwrite
You have ten minutes to complete the following writingYou have ten minutes to complete the following writing
assignment. Minimum one paragraph.assignment. Minimum one paragraph.
The “world” is sometimes thought of as the
world of material objects –the world of money
and status symbols, the world of power,
competition, and ambition. In seeking out the
pleasures of this material world, what could a
person lose?
The World is too Much With Us
The World is too Much With Us
Pg. 746
With your table/
a partner
Answer questions 1-6
on page 747. Your
written answers will not
be collected, however
we are going to discuss
the answers together.
The World is too Much With Us
Samuel Taylor Coleridge
• Helped to launch the Romantic Age with his
collaboration on Lyrical Ballads
• Heavily addicted to opium
• Famous for his works: The Rime of the Ancient
Mariner and Kubla Khan
• His poetry was philosophical and metaphysical
in nature; the focus on dreams and the
supernatural
Kubla Khan
Quickwrite
You have ten minutes to complete the following writingYou have ten minutes to complete the following writing
assignment. Minimum two paragraphs.assignment. Minimum two paragraphs.
Think of some dreams that you have had.
Describe how dreams seem to work. Are they
logical or illogical? How do they progress? Do
they tell coherent stories or do they consist
mostly of images and fragments of stories?
Kubla Khan
The poem you are about to read may challenge
the limits of your imagination. Fantastical and
strange, it is like a vivid yet incomprehensible
dream. Coleridge, in fact, suggested that the
poem came to him in a dream (brought on by
opium).
Kubla Khan
Like a dream, the poem contains allusions to the
deepest human desires –for pleasure, order,
beauty, even chaos and war. It also holds within it
the moment when, upon waking, the vividness and
the supposed logic of the dream are suddenly –
perhaps forever– lost to the dreamer.
As you read, think about how the poem mayAs you read, think about how the poem may
imitate or reproduce this process.imitate or reproduce this process.
Kubla Khan
Page 759
Kubla Khan
Page 759
Kubla Khan
Writing Assignment
You have the remainder of the class to complete the following writingYou have the remainder of the class to complete the following writing
assignment. Minimum five paragraphs.assignment. Minimum five paragraphs.
Review the prewriting assignment you did earlier
describing dreams. How do your thoughts on the way
dreams work compare to the dreamlike flow of “Kubla
Khan”? Use your notes to evaluate Coleridge’s claim that
the poem began as a dream. Explain whether “Kubla
Kahn” reads like a dream, using examples from the poem
as evidence. Then, draw your own conclusion about
Coleridge’s Claim. Do you think the poem is in fact the
product of a dream?
Kubla Khan
Writing Assignment
Par I: Introduction and Thesis
Par II: Review the prewriting assignment you did earlier
describing dreams. How do your thoughts on the way
dreams work compare to the dreamlike flow of “Kubla
Khan”?
Par III: Use your notes to evaluate Coleridge’s claim that
the poem began as a dream. Explain whether “Kubla
Kahn” reads like a dream, using examples from the poem
as evidence.
Par IV: Then, draw your own conclusion about Coleridge’s
Claim. Do you think the poem is in fact the product of a
dream?
Par V: Conclusion
William Blake
• Started writing poetry when he was twelve
• Blake was a nonconformist who associated
with some of the leading radical thinkers of
his day
• He rebelled against traditional poetic forms
and techniques
The Life of a Chimney Sweep
HANDOUTHANDOUT
Quickwrite
You have ten minutes to complete the following writingYou have ten minutes to complete the following writing
assignment. Minimum one paragraph.assignment. Minimum one paragraph.
If you could cry out against an evil of our day –
and actually get people to listen– which social
injustice would you protest?
The Chimney Sweeper
The Chimney Sweeper
Page 726-727
The Chimney Sweeper
Assignment
In complete sentences,
answer questions 1-10
on page 730. Be as
detailed as possible. Be
sure to incorporate
evidence from the
poems when necessary.
Lord Byron
• He was the “rebel” of this
group.
• He indulged in excesses and
had huge debts and many love
affairs
• His most famous creations are
his dark heroes, called Byronic
heroes, who, in fact, were not
heroes at all, but stood out
from ordinary humans as
larger than life HANDOUTHANDOUT
Lord Byron
Quickwrite
You have ten minutes to complete the following writingYou have ten minutes to complete the following writing
assignment. Minimum two paragraphs.assignment. Minimum two paragraphs.
No matter how often we hear that beauty is only skin deep, we
all know the undeniable allure of an extremely good-looking
person beauty moves us. Often, we want to believe that outer
appearances express inner qualities of goodness and beauty of
character as well.
Can a person’s inward nature be accurately judged by
his or her outward appearance?
Lord Byron
1. Please read “She Walks in Beauty” on page
795.
2. Answer questions 1 – 6 on page 795 with a
partner.
3. On your own, answer the writing prompt
under the heading Only Skin Deep? on page
795. You may use the same sheet of paper on
which you did your quick write.
Lord Byron
• He was the “rebel” of this
group.
• He indulged in excesses and
had huge debts and many love
affairs
• His most famous creations are
his dark heroes, called Byronic
heroes, who, in fact, were not
heroes at all, but stood out
from ordinary humans as
larger than life
Characteristics of the
Byronic Hero
Please Read
Byronic Heroes
• Hypersensitive rebels that are isolated from society as
wanderers or in exile of some kind.
• This social separation can be imposed by an external
force or self-imposed.
• The Byronic Hero has emotional and intellectual
capacities that are superior to the average man, which
causes him to be arrogant, abnormally sensitive, and
very conscious of himself.
Byronic Heroes
“The Byronic hero, incapable of love, or capable
only of an impossible love, suffers endlessly. He
is solitary, languid, his condition exhausts him. If
he wants to feel alive, it must be in terrible
exaltation of a brief and destructive action”
Albert Camus, The Stranger
Byronic Heroes
• Dark, Handsome appearance
• Brilliant but cynical and self-destructive
• A restless tortured soul
Tony Stark Edward Cullen
Jim Stark
James Dean from
Rebel without a
Cause (1955)
Assignment
Choose a character from a novel, play, TV show, or film, that has Byronic qualities. Write a
minimum 5-paragraph essay convincing your reader that he/she has what it takes to be
classified as a Byronic hero. For a maximum score, you must have plenty of examples to support your
claim.
Due at the end of the period
100 point quiz grade
Percy Shelley
Percy Shelley
Percy Shelley
Percy Shelley
Quickwrite
The faces of nature range from peaceful to terrifying and
the Romantics explored all of them. What attracted the
Romantics to nature was the aspect philosophers call the
sublime: the wildness, the immensity, terror, and awesome
grandeur of natural phenomena like the Alps or violent
storms. To experience nature’s power by suddenly—
whether by living through a hurricane or viewing Niagara
falls– is while terrible, also exhilarating, even transporting.
Why do you think people find such displays ofWhy do you think people find such displays of
power so thrilling? What emotions are evoked?power so thrilling? What emotions are evoked?
Freewrite about a time when you experienced theFreewrite about a time when you experienced the
sublime in nature.sublime in nature.
Percy Shelley
• Very idealistic
• Was a radical nonconformist
• Left his first wife Harriet for Mary Godwin, the
daughter of Mary Wollstonecraft and William
Godwin. She is the author of Frankenstien.
• Mary’s stepsister had a brief affair with Lord
Byron, which is how Shelley was introduced to
him.
Terms
• Apostrophe – figure of speech in which a
writer directly addresses an absent or dead
person, a personified inanimate object, or an
abstract idea
• Ode - A favorite form among Romantics. A
complex, generally long lyric poem on a
serious subject.
Ode to the West Wind
Was inspired by an oncoming storm. It marks
Shelley’s creative life, a temporary note of
exaltation after a period of intense grief over
the death of his three year old son.
Page 806
Assignment
Write an essay explaining why humans are
drawn to the sublime in nature. Draw
conclusions about Shelley’s own attraction to
–and identification with –the west wind.
Include how you would answer the question
he poses at the end of the poem.
(You may use the article “Shelley and the Ode”
on page 809 as reference)
John Keats
• Studied most of his life to be a doctor, but at
age twenty-one, before becoming legally
licensed as a surgeon, switched careers to
poetry.
• Did most of his writing at age twenty-three
• Died at twenty-five of tuberculosis
• One of England’s major poets; though he died
so young.
Terms
• Synesthesia – one sense experience (like
smell) is described as another (such as touch)
e.g. In “Ode to a Nightingale” the speaker
remarks that he “cannot see…what soft
incense hangs upon the boughs”
Ode on a Grecian Urn
This poem is a work of art
about the contemplation
of a work of art –a Grecian
urn, or jar. That means the
ode is both concrete
(descriptive) and
contemplative
(philosophical). It moves
from rich images to
abstract ideas about art
versus life, permanence
versus change, and body
versus spirit.
Page 836
Ode on a Grecian Urn
Writing Assignment
Ode on a Grecian Urn
In the age of Facebook, Twitter, Vine,
tumblr., etc., we can often tailor our
lives to look ideal to others, creating
our own little Grecian urn. However,
unlike the Urn, the internet is forever,
so anything that goes on the internet
doesn't come back (kind of like a
black hole). What is the relevancy of
our past urns today, and what do they
really tell us about the past?

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Romantic poetry intro

  • 2. Romanticism • The words Romantic or Romance originally referred to Medieval tales of knights written in the original Roman language - Latin. These tales often included love stories between a knight and his lady - resulting in the modern meaning of romance. • When talking about the Romantic Era in literature, we are actually referring to romantic as “freely imaginative fiction” and not romantic as in “romantic love”
  • 3. Age of Reason vs. Romantic Era In the Age of Reason, Writers stressed: • Reason and Judgment • Concerned with the universal experience • The value of society as a whole • The value of rules In the Romantic Era, Writers stressed: • Imagination and Emotion • Concern with the particular experience • The value of the individual human being • The value of freedom
  • 4. Historical Events The following historical events led to the Romantic movement in Britain: The French Revolution  The “September massacre”  The Guillotine  Napoleon Bonaparte The Industrial Revolution  Laissez Faire economic policy
  • 5. The French Revolution Began with the storming of the prison called the Bastille on July 14, 1789  democratic overthrow of the monarchy  Triumph of radical principles  The “September massacre” – hundreds of French aristocrats were beheaded by guillotine for their alleged allegiance to Louis XVI
  • 6. Napoleon Bonaparte  Emerged as a tyrannical dictator, then emperor of France Did implement some positive changes: abolished feudalism, spread religious tolerance  Was bent on world domination, and almost succeeded
  • 7.
  • 8. Napoleon Bonaparte English first defeated Napoleon’s navy at the battle of Trafalgar In 1815, with the help of Allies, Britian finally defeated Bonaparte at Waterloo
  • 9. The Industrial Revolution  City populations increased, resulting in desperate living conditions  Farmland was no longer communally owned which resulted in large numbers of landless people  The homeless migrated to the cities to search for work or, more likely, rely on charity (poorhouses or begging), furthering the congestion problem,
  • 10. Laissez Faire  “let people do as they please” Economic forces should be allowed to operate freely without government interference  the result: the rich got richer, the poor got poorer
  • 11. Characteristics  Romanticism refers to a movement in art, literature, and music during the 19th century.  Romanticism is characterized by the 5 “I”s Imagination Intuition Idealism Inspiration Individuality
  • 12. Imagination  Considered necessary for creating all art.  British writer Samuel Taylor Coleridge called it “intellectual intuition.”  Imagination and naturalness wasImagination and naturalness was emphasized over “reason.” They wereemphasized over “reason.” They were fascinated with the ways nature and thefascinated with the ways nature and the human mind “mirrored” each other’shuman mind “mirrored” each other’s creative properties.creative properties.
  • 13. Inspiration  The Romantic artist, musician, or writer, is an “inspired creator” rather than a “technical master.”  What this means is “going with the moment” or being spontaneous, rather than “getting it precise.” Thus, they rejected formal and witty works of the previous century.  They preferred poetry that spoke ofThey preferred poetry that spoke of personal experiences and emotions in simplepersonal experiences and emotions in simple unadorned language.unadorned language.
  • 14. Intuition  Romantics placed value on “intuition,” or feeling and instincts, over reason.  Emotions were important in Romantic art.  British Romantic William Wordsworth described poetry as “the spontaneous“the spontaneous overflow of powerful feelings.”overflow of powerful feelings.”
  • 15. Idealism  Idealism is the concept that we can make the world a better place.  Romantics turned to a past or an innerRomantics turned to a past or an inner dream world that they felt was moredream world that they felt was more picturesque and magical than the uglypicturesque and magical than the ugly industrial age they lived in.industrial age they lived in.  Immanuel Kant, a German philosopher, held that the mind forces the world we perceive to take the shape of space-and- time.
  • 16. Individuality  Romantics celebrated the individual andcelebrated the individual and individual libertyindividual liberty.  Sympathized with those who rebelled against tyranny  During this time period, Women’s Rights and Abolitionism were taking root as major movements.
  • 17. Six Major Romantic Era Poets William Wordsworth Samuel Taylor Coleridge William Blake Lord Byron Percy Shelley John Keats
  • 19. The Romantic Movement… brief overview http://EzineArticles.com/?expert=Rakesh_Ramubhai_Patel • The Romantic Movement was a revolt against the Enlightenment and its focus on rational and scientific thought. • The characteristics of Romantic literature involved an emphasis on passion, emotion, spontaneity, subjectivity, mortality, and nature. • Throughout the 19th century, romantic poetry, in particular, became the most significant work of the period. • William Wordsworth, Samuel Taylor Coleridge, William Blake, Lord Byron, Percy Bysshe Shelley, and John Keats are the notable British Romantic poets. • Nature, religious fervor, emotional response to beauty, and Ancient Greek aesthetics, are some of the common themes in their work. • Note that each Romantic poet had his own style and emphasized different aspects. That’s where you come in with your research.
  • 20. Your Presentation: • To collaborate with your peers to present an extensively researched, creative, intelligent, and perceptive lesson to the class, based upon your English Romantic poet. • Your objective is to reveal a clear, deep understanding of eighteenth century English Romanticism and its ideals, precepts, style, and themes in poetry as it pertains specifically to your poet. • You should engage the class in an interesting lesson that will enhance their understanding of the poems written by your romantic poet, and you should test their knowledge with a quiz at the end of the lesson. • Divide the work up equally and fairly, and be a responsible and positive group contributor. The Task
  • 21. Components of the lesson: • Provide an interesting, comprehensive, creative, entertaining background insight into the poet, his major works, and his “philosophy” of art (poetry) • Select a format to impart the information (skit, interview, talk show, video, lecture notes, visuals, power-point, etc.) Introducing Your Poet
  • 22. Teaching a poem to the class • Select one of your Romantic poet’s poems to teach to the class. • This means analyzing the poem thoroughly, paying special attention to the language, poetic devices, structure, and overall style of the poem, and its overall meaning. • Be sure to connect the poem’s concepts to those of Romanticism. • Turn in a written copy of your analysis of the poem, along with a thoroughly annotated copy of the poem to Mrs. Abercrombie on the day of presentation. • Make sure that you give a copy of the poem to every student in the class. (There are 8 students in the class.) • Be sure to include the class and invite them to participate in your lesson with some kind of activity, etc.
  • 23. Original poem written in the style of your poet • Compose, and then read to the class an original poem that models the style, format, structure, concepts, etc. of your romantic poet. • Turn in a copy of this poem to Mrs. Abercrombie on the day of presentation, along with a one-page, typed rationale/explanation of the techniques that you employed in order to replicate your poet’s style.
  • 24. Class QUIZ • Create a quiz for the class, based upon the poem that you taught them in your lesson. • Your quiz should address the literary devices, style, and meanings of the poems, as well as the information that you provided on the poet. • Turn in a copy of the quiz and key to Mrs. Abercrombie on the day of presentation. • If there’s time, you will give your quiz at the end of your lesson, or the class will take the quiz at the beginning of the next class period. • You will be responsible for grading the quizzes and turning them all in with scores attached, to Mrs. Abercrombie the following class period. • Your quiz should contain ten multiple-choice questions and five matching questions for a total of fifteen points.
  • 25. Have Fun! • Please note! You must turn in a thorough works cited and list of sources/references. • No woks cited? No grade.
  • 26. William Wordsworth • Helped to launch the Romantic Age with his collaboration on Lyrical Ballads • His most famous work is The Prelude chronicles the spiritual life of the poet • Has an interest and sympathy for the life and troubles of the “common man” • He is considered the nature poet by focusing ordinary people in country settings
  • 27. Quickwrite You have ten minutes to complete the following writingYou have ten minutes to complete the following writing assignment. Minimum one paragraph.assignment. Minimum one paragraph. The “world” is sometimes thought of as the world of material objects –the world of money and status symbols, the world of power, competition, and ambition. In seeking out the pleasures of this material world, what could a person lose? The World is too Much With Us
  • 28. The World is too Much With Us Pg. 746
  • 29. With your table/ a partner Answer questions 1-6 on page 747. Your written answers will not be collected, however we are going to discuss the answers together. The World is too Much With Us
  • 30. Samuel Taylor Coleridge • Helped to launch the Romantic Age with his collaboration on Lyrical Ballads • Heavily addicted to opium • Famous for his works: The Rime of the Ancient Mariner and Kubla Khan • His poetry was philosophical and metaphysical in nature; the focus on dreams and the supernatural
  • 31. Kubla Khan Quickwrite You have ten minutes to complete the following writingYou have ten minutes to complete the following writing assignment. Minimum two paragraphs.assignment. Minimum two paragraphs. Think of some dreams that you have had. Describe how dreams seem to work. Are they logical or illogical? How do they progress? Do they tell coherent stories or do they consist mostly of images and fragments of stories?
  • 32. Kubla Khan The poem you are about to read may challenge the limits of your imagination. Fantastical and strange, it is like a vivid yet incomprehensible dream. Coleridge, in fact, suggested that the poem came to him in a dream (brought on by opium).
  • 33. Kubla Khan Like a dream, the poem contains allusions to the deepest human desires –for pleasure, order, beauty, even chaos and war. It also holds within it the moment when, upon waking, the vividness and the supposed logic of the dream are suddenly – perhaps forever– lost to the dreamer. As you read, think about how the poem mayAs you read, think about how the poem may imitate or reproduce this process.imitate or reproduce this process.
  • 36. Kubla Khan Writing Assignment You have the remainder of the class to complete the following writingYou have the remainder of the class to complete the following writing assignment. Minimum five paragraphs.assignment. Minimum five paragraphs. Review the prewriting assignment you did earlier describing dreams. How do your thoughts on the way dreams work compare to the dreamlike flow of “Kubla Khan”? Use your notes to evaluate Coleridge’s claim that the poem began as a dream. Explain whether “Kubla Kahn” reads like a dream, using examples from the poem as evidence. Then, draw your own conclusion about Coleridge’s Claim. Do you think the poem is in fact the product of a dream?
  • 37. Kubla Khan Writing Assignment Par I: Introduction and Thesis Par II: Review the prewriting assignment you did earlier describing dreams. How do your thoughts on the way dreams work compare to the dreamlike flow of “Kubla Khan”? Par III: Use your notes to evaluate Coleridge’s claim that the poem began as a dream. Explain whether “Kubla Kahn” reads like a dream, using examples from the poem as evidence. Par IV: Then, draw your own conclusion about Coleridge’s Claim. Do you think the poem is in fact the product of a dream? Par V: Conclusion
  • 38. William Blake • Started writing poetry when he was twelve • Blake was a nonconformist who associated with some of the leading radical thinkers of his day • He rebelled against traditional poetic forms and techniques
  • 39. The Life of a Chimney Sweep HANDOUTHANDOUT
  • 40. Quickwrite You have ten minutes to complete the following writingYou have ten minutes to complete the following writing assignment. Minimum one paragraph.assignment. Minimum one paragraph. If you could cry out against an evil of our day – and actually get people to listen– which social injustice would you protest? The Chimney Sweeper
  • 42. The Chimney Sweeper Assignment In complete sentences, answer questions 1-10 on page 730. Be as detailed as possible. Be sure to incorporate evidence from the poems when necessary.
  • 43. Lord Byron • He was the “rebel” of this group. • He indulged in excesses and had huge debts and many love affairs • His most famous creations are his dark heroes, called Byronic heroes, who, in fact, were not heroes at all, but stood out from ordinary humans as larger than life HANDOUTHANDOUT
  • 44. Lord Byron Quickwrite You have ten minutes to complete the following writingYou have ten minutes to complete the following writing assignment. Minimum two paragraphs.assignment. Minimum two paragraphs. No matter how often we hear that beauty is only skin deep, we all know the undeniable allure of an extremely good-looking person beauty moves us. Often, we want to believe that outer appearances express inner qualities of goodness and beauty of character as well. Can a person’s inward nature be accurately judged by his or her outward appearance?
  • 45. Lord Byron 1. Please read “She Walks in Beauty” on page 795. 2. Answer questions 1 – 6 on page 795 with a partner. 3. On your own, answer the writing prompt under the heading Only Skin Deep? on page 795. You may use the same sheet of paper on which you did your quick write.
  • 46. Lord Byron • He was the “rebel” of this group. • He indulged in excesses and had huge debts and many love affairs • His most famous creations are his dark heroes, called Byronic heroes, who, in fact, were not heroes at all, but stood out from ordinary humans as larger than life
  • 47. Characteristics of the Byronic Hero Please Read
  • 48. Byronic Heroes • Hypersensitive rebels that are isolated from society as wanderers or in exile of some kind. • This social separation can be imposed by an external force or self-imposed. • The Byronic Hero has emotional and intellectual capacities that are superior to the average man, which causes him to be arrogant, abnormally sensitive, and very conscious of himself.
  • 49. Byronic Heroes “The Byronic hero, incapable of love, or capable only of an impossible love, suffers endlessly. He is solitary, languid, his condition exhausts him. If he wants to feel alive, it must be in terrible exaltation of a brief and destructive action” Albert Camus, The Stranger
  • 50. Byronic Heroes • Dark, Handsome appearance • Brilliant but cynical and self-destructive • A restless tortured soul Tony Stark Edward Cullen Jim Stark James Dean from Rebel without a Cause (1955)
  • 51.
  • 52. Assignment Choose a character from a novel, play, TV show, or film, that has Byronic qualities. Write a minimum 5-paragraph essay convincing your reader that he/she has what it takes to be classified as a Byronic hero. For a maximum score, you must have plenty of examples to support your claim. Due at the end of the period 100 point quiz grade
  • 56. Percy Shelley Quickwrite The faces of nature range from peaceful to terrifying and the Romantics explored all of them. What attracted the Romantics to nature was the aspect philosophers call the sublime: the wildness, the immensity, terror, and awesome grandeur of natural phenomena like the Alps or violent storms. To experience nature’s power by suddenly— whether by living through a hurricane or viewing Niagara falls– is while terrible, also exhilarating, even transporting. Why do you think people find such displays ofWhy do you think people find such displays of power so thrilling? What emotions are evoked?power so thrilling? What emotions are evoked? Freewrite about a time when you experienced theFreewrite about a time when you experienced the sublime in nature.sublime in nature.
  • 57. Percy Shelley • Very idealistic • Was a radical nonconformist • Left his first wife Harriet for Mary Godwin, the daughter of Mary Wollstonecraft and William Godwin. She is the author of Frankenstien. • Mary’s stepsister had a brief affair with Lord Byron, which is how Shelley was introduced to him.
  • 58. Terms • Apostrophe – figure of speech in which a writer directly addresses an absent or dead person, a personified inanimate object, or an abstract idea • Ode - A favorite form among Romantics. A complex, generally long lyric poem on a serious subject.
  • 59. Ode to the West Wind Was inspired by an oncoming storm. It marks Shelley’s creative life, a temporary note of exaltation after a period of intense grief over the death of his three year old son. Page 806
  • 60. Assignment Write an essay explaining why humans are drawn to the sublime in nature. Draw conclusions about Shelley’s own attraction to –and identification with –the west wind. Include how you would answer the question he poses at the end of the poem. (You may use the article “Shelley and the Ode” on page 809 as reference)
  • 61. John Keats • Studied most of his life to be a doctor, but at age twenty-one, before becoming legally licensed as a surgeon, switched careers to poetry. • Did most of his writing at age twenty-three • Died at twenty-five of tuberculosis • One of England’s major poets; though he died so young.
  • 62. Terms • Synesthesia – one sense experience (like smell) is described as another (such as touch) e.g. In “Ode to a Nightingale” the speaker remarks that he “cannot see…what soft incense hangs upon the boughs”
  • 63. Ode on a Grecian Urn This poem is a work of art about the contemplation of a work of art –a Grecian urn, or jar. That means the ode is both concrete (descriptive) and contemplative (philosophical). It moves from rich images to abstract ideas about art versus life, permanence versus change, and body versus spirit. Page 836
  • 64. Ode on a Grecian Urn
  • 65. Writing Assignment Ode on a Grecian Urn In the age of Facebook, Twitter, Vine, tumblr., etc., we can often tailor our lives to look ideal to others, creating our own little Grecian urn. However, unlike the Urn, the internet is forever, so anything that goes on the internet doesn't come back (kind of like a black hole). What is the relevancy of our past urns today, and what do they really tell us about the past?