Saturday, June 11, 2016

Romanticism Part Two: Poetry


As I mentioned in part one of this blog, it would be impossible to separate poetry from Romanticism.  It is as indelible to the genre as the genre itself is to literature as a whole.  Now, yes, this is a blog about books and poetry doesn’t necessarily count as a form of “novel,” however, I’m willing to blur the lines a bit if you are.  I also understand that poetry isn’t for everyone (something that my students remind me of every time I teach poetry in class), but hear me out for a second to at least listen to why it is so awesome.
            The main facet of Romantic poetry that I find enticing is its direct union with nature.  To put it simply, all the best Romantic poets moved to the Lake District (which is essentially the Yosemite of England) and walked around all day until inspiration struck them through a flower or a storm or a tree or what have you and they composed some brilliant piece and then they repeated the process until they died or committed suicide.  One major component of Romanticism was the autonomy of the Poet.  Nothing was more powerful than the imagination of an artist except for the sheer power of nature and the sublime.  As Friedrich Schlegel says in his Philosophical Fragments, “[Poetry] alone is infinite, just as it alone is free; and it recognizes as its first commandment that the will of the poet can tolerate no law above itself.  The romantic kind of poetry is the one on that is more than a kind, that is, as it were, poetry itself: for in a certain sense all poetry is or should be romantic.”  So here are a few of my favorite Romantic poets, the most powerful people who ever lived (or so they thought):

Songs of Innocence and Experience, by William Blake

The great thing about William Blake is that he was literally crazy.  He was known to go into his backyard naked with his wife in order to have visions (aka: hallucinations) to fuel his next artistic expression.  The other great thing about Blake was that he was not only a poet, but he was also an artist!  His paintings were singularly unique because of his medium.  What he would do was take his poetry and write it down backwards so that he could inscribe it onto a copper plate and formulate it in a varnish and soak it in an acid bath.  Following that, he would use water color to complete the process.  In this way, no two of his poems were the same and each was as wild as it was a revelation.  I put one of his most famous paintings here, “The Ancient of Days,” for your viewing pleasure.  Feel free to google more if you’re curious.  Blake’s most famous collection of poetry is actually two collections of poetry which are each a direct response to the other.  It is called Songs of Innocence and Experience, respectively.  In these poems, Blake toys with the themes of childlike innocence and hope juxtaposed against the despair and cynicism of a jaded adulthood.  In this, his poetic voice shines as he forces you to question which side of this slightly schizophrenic argument is correct.  Both disturbing and hopeful, these poems will show you the darkness that is in the tunnel of existence, but also point towards the light that shines in the dark. 

 

The Rime of the Ancient Mariner, Samuel Taylor Coleridge

            Coleridge had a very sad life that had constant tragedy throughout, which provided us with one of the most famous poems ever written.  The Rime of the Ancient Mariner is an elegiac tale that explores the evil and darkness that exist within all of us.  The basic plot is simple: the mariner is on a ship with his shipmates and an albatross appears, an omen of good luck and prosperity, to guide them through a particularly dangerous part of the ocean.  Following this, the mariner kills the albatross for, ostensibly, no reason whatsoever.  What follows is an exploration of good and evil, life and death, and the humanity that is caught in between those celestial battles.  Told with beautiful imagery and immaculate form, this poem is a must read for anyone who has ever wondered why evil exists in the world and, more disturbingly, why it exists in ourselves.

 

The Complete Poems, John Keats

            John Keats was a doctor out of necessity, but a poet out of passion.  Interestingly enough, out of all the most famous Romantic poets, Keats was born later, but died first at the young age of twenty-five.  In the short time that he lived, he gave us some of the best poetry of the age.  To Keats, the poet and the reader are indistinguishably linked and carry a shared imagination through the communal experience of nature.  This imagination is exactly the thing that he explores through his poetry.  Best known for his Odes, these songs walk the reader through a singular experience at the exact moment that it shoots outwards to the interconnectedness of all phenomena.  In other words, Keats will take something simple, like a nightingale, and use it as a conduit to explain the great truths of life, love, and loss.  His poetry is insightful, compassionate, but most of all, it is simply beautiful.  His words roll of the page and drip into your mind in such a tangible way that you can’t help but fall into the whatever experience he wrote about.  Keats was a true master of language.

 

Rimas y Leyendas, Gustavo Adolfo Bécquer

            Bécquer was the king of ghost stories.  Not only are his stories super creepy and wonderful, they are also filled with amazing themes of love, passion, vengeance, and, most of all, regret.  His Rimas y Leyendas is the collection of all of his poetry and most of his short stories.  My favorites include “El Monte de las Animas,” which is the original zombie story.  Complete with unrequited love that results in the dead coming back to life, this story will chill you to your core.  Also, in “Maese Pérez,” Spain’s greatest organist is murdered in a jealous rage, but that doesn’t stop him from playing his haunting tune in the decrepit, hollow cathedral.  In his poetry, he moves through a cycle of emotion that ranges from the highest passion of love, to disillusionment with love, all the way to utter despair and hopelessness.  Throughout all of this, he tells us how the only love worth having is unattainable, but we should go for it anyway.  The heights and depths that he throws his reader through are entirely relatable.  We’ve all felt love like this.  We’ve all hated love like this.  We’ve all felt misery like this.  Bécquer merely gives it the words that we never seem to have to describe it.

 

Anna Laetitia Barbauld, “Epistle to William Wilberforce” and “The Rights of Woman”

            One other component to Romanticism that often goes overlooked due to the Wordsworth’s and Shelley’s and other dead, white men is an outpouring of social justice that, previously, hadn’t really existed.  Romantics were among the first to become abolitionists and Mary Wollstonecraft is ubiquitously hailed as the mother of feminism!  Anna Laetita Barbauld came before Wollstonecraft and is best known for these two amazing compositions.  The first, “Epistle to William Wilberforce” came after Wilberforce (one of the most prominent abolitionists of the time) tried, and failed, to bring about abolition in the House of Commons.  His motion was rejected at the time, which resulted in this response by Barbauld to encourage and reignite the cause.  Beautifully written and caustically critical, this poem exhorts the efforts of Wilberforce and reminds him as well as others to keep fighting for what they knew to be right.  On the other hand, it is a harsh indictment of slavery as it existed in England in the 1700s.  Secondly, Barbauld wrote “The Rights of Woman,” which was one of the first overt works of feminism ever published.  Wollstonecraft came after Barbauld and had some valid criticisms of her ideology, however it is clear that Barbauld was one of her inspirations and a precursor to feminism as a movement.  In this poem, hails, “Yes, injured woman, rise, assert thy right!” (ll. 1).  In an age where patriarchy and oppression were even more prominent than they are today, Barbauld had the courage to speak up and fight for the rights of minorities.