Themes in Romantic and Victorian Poetry
Themes in Romantic and Victorian Poetry
Themes in Romantic and Victorian Poetry
Debbie Barry
Ashford University
THEMES IN ROMANTIC AND VICTORIAN POETRY 2
The poetry of the Romantic period includes the themes of nature, of the contrast between
innocence and experience, and of dissatisfaction with Christian ideology. All three themes
appear in the work of William Blake. The poetry of the Victorian era includes the themes of
social injustice, of romantic love, and of the loss of innocence. Elizabeth Barrett Browning
writes about social injustice and about romantic love, and Alfred Lord Tennyson writes about the
loss of innocence.
Blake uses the nature imagery of the lamb in several of his poems. The lamb is a symbol
of innocence and purity. It is also a reference to salvation in the person of Jesus Christ, who is
depicted as the Good Shepherd and as the Lamb of God. In "The Lamb," Blake writes: "Little
Lamb, who made thee?/ ... He is callèd by thy name,/ For he calls himself a Lamb" (ll. 1, 13-14)
(Greenblatt, et. al., 2006, pp. 83-84). In this poem, Blake is using the lamb first to refer to a
child when Blake asks the question. He then uses the lamb to refer to Christ when Blake tells the
Blake contrasts innocence and experience in his paired poems from Songs of Innocence
and Songs of Experience. In his two poems that are each called “Holy Thursday,” Blake
illustrates this contrast. In the first of the poems, Blake writes: “O what a multitude they seemd,
these flowers of London town!/ Seated in companies they sit with radiance all their own./ The
hum of multitudes was there, but multitudes of lambs,/ Thousands of little boys & girls raising
their innocent hands” (ll. 5-8) (Greenblatt, et. al., 2006, p. 86). In the second poem by the same
name Blake writes: “Is this a holy thing to see,/ In a rich and fruitful land,/ Babes reduced to
misery,/ Fed with cold and usurous hand?” (ll. 1-4) (Greenblatt, et. al., 2006, p. 90). The first
version of “Holy Thursday” depicts the beautiful innocence of childhood. The second version
THEMES IN ROMANTIC AND VICTORIAN POETRY 3
contrasts it with the miserable experience of the children of poverty in industrialized England.
The nature imagery of the lamb is repeated in this poem, referring to the innocent children.
Hell. Blake writes a section of “Proverbs of Hell” that mimics the book of Proverbs in the Old
Testament of the Bible. Among the perverted proverbs, Blake writes: "Prisons are built with
stones of Law, Brothels with bricks of Religion. The pride of the peacock is the glory of God.
The lust of the goat is the bounty of God. The wrath of the Lion is the wisdom of God. The
nakedness of woman is the work of God" (Greenblatt, et. al., 2006, p. 114). Blake opposes the
common beliefs that prostitution and nudity are in opposition with Christian religion, and that
pride, lust, and wrath are sinful. Blake uses the nature imagery of the peacock, the goat, and the
lion in these proverbs. The peacock is a symbol of beauty and pride, the goat is a symbol of lust
and sexual appetite, and the lion is a symbol of wrath and aggression.
Barrett Browning writes about social injustice in industrialized England when she
describes the lives of poor children who are forced to work in the mines in “The Cry of the
Children.” She writes: "They look up with their pale and sunken faces,/ And their looks are sad
to see,/ For the man's hoary anguish draws and presses/ Down the cheeks of infancy;/ ... Alas,
alas, the children! they are seeking/ Death in life, as best to have" (ll. 25-28, 53-54) (Greenblatt,
et. al., 2006, p. 1080). Browning describes the children’s misery in uncomfortably clear, stark
images of near-starvation, and she describes the children's preference for death over the life that
they experience.
Browning writes about romantic love in Sonnets from the Portuguese. One of the most
famous lines from poetry is in poem “43”: “How do I love thee? Let me count the ways” (l. 1)
(Greenblatt, et. al., 2006, p. 1085). In “22” she writes: "Let us stay/ Rather on earth, Belovèd, --
THEMES IN ROMANTIC AND VICTORIAN POETRY 4
where the unfit/ Contrarious moods of men recoil away/ And isolate pure spirits, and permit/ A
place to stand and love in for a day" (ll. 9-13) (Greenblatt, et. al., 2006, p. 1084). She proposes
remaining on earth with her husband rather than going to Heaven, so they can remain together in
their love for each other. She imagines a place that is apart from the rest of the world, where she
Tennyson writes about the loss of innocence in “The Lotos-Eaters.” “Tennyson expands
Homer’s brief account into an elaborate picture of weariness and the desire for rest and death”
(Greenblatt, et. al., 2006, p. 1119). The characters in Tennyson’s poem have lost the innocence
of seeing the beauty in “Music that brings sweet sleep down from the blissful skies./ … cool
mosses deep./ And through the mosses the ivies creep” (ll. 52-54) (Greenblatt, et. al., 2006, p.
1120). Tennyson uses the nature images of moss and ivy to evoke a feeling of calm and an
image of lush life. With the loss of innocence, the characters experience the discomforts of a life
of experience: “Why are we weighed upon with heaviness,/ And utterly consumed with sharp
distress,/ While all things else have rest from weariness?” (ll. 57-59) (Greenblatt, et. al., 2006, p.
1120). This shift from the beauty of innocence to the suffering of experience returns to the
References
Greenblatt, S., et al. (Eds.) (2006). The Norton anthology of English literature (8th ed., Vol.2).