Chapter 3: Later Periods in English Litearture Lesson 1: The Romantic Period
Chapter 3: Later Periods in English Litearture Lesson 1: The Romantic Period
Chapter 3: Later Periods in English Litearture Lesson 1: The Romantic Period
Romantic Writers
1. Robert Burns (1759-96) is also known as the national poet of Scotland because
he wrote not only in Standard English, but also in the light Scot’s dialect.
2. Horace Walpole (The Castle of Otranto), Ann Radcliffe (The Mysteries of
Udolpho) and Matthew Gregory Lewis (The Monk) are Gothic writers who
crafted stories of terror and imagination.
• Gothic Literature is a literary style popular during the end of the 18 th
century and the beginning of the 19 th. This style usually portrayed fantastic
tales dealing with horror, despair, the grotesque and other “dark” subjects.
3. Mary Wollstonecraft Shelley (1797-1851) followed Gothic tradition in her
Frankenstein.
4. William Blake (1757-1827) was both poet and artist. He not only wrote books,
but he also illustrated and printed them. He devoted his life to freedom and
universal love. He was interested in children and animals the most innocent of
God’s creatures.
5. Samuel Taylor Coleridge (1772-1834) wrote a long narrative poem about
sinning and redemption in The Rime of the Ancient Mariner
6. William Wordsworth (1770-1850), together with Coleridge, brought out a
volume of verse, Lyrical Ballads, which signaled the beginning of English
Romanticism. Wordsworth found beauty in the realities of nature, which he vividly
reflects in the poems: The World is Too Much with Us, I Wandered Lonely as a
Cloud, She Dwelt Among the Untrodden Ways, and She was a Phantom of
Delight.
7. Charles Lamb (1775-1834) wrote the playful essay Dissertation on Roast Pig.
He also rewrote many of Shakespeare’s plays into stories for children in Tales
from Shakespeare.
8. Sir Walter Scott (1771-1832) wrote poems and novels. The Lay of the Last
Minstrel and The Lady of the Lake are representative of Scott’s poems. Between
1814 and 1832 Scott wrote 32 novels which include Guy Mannering and Ivanhoe
9. Jane Austen (1775-1817) a writer of realistic novels about English middle-class
people. Pride and Prejudice is her best-known work. Her other novels include:
Northanger Abbey, Persuasion, Mansfield Park, Emma, and Sense and
Sensibility.
10. George Gordon Byron (1788-1824) was an outspoken critic of the evils of his
time. He hoped for human perfection, but his recognition of man’s faults led him
frequently to despair and disillusionment. He is much remembered for his poems:
Childe Harold’s Pilgrimage, She Walks in Beauty, and The Prisoner of Chillon
11. Percy Bysshe Shelley (1792-1822), together with John Keats, established the
romantic verse as a poetic tradition.
• Many of his works are meditative like Prometheus Unbound; others are
exquisitely like The Cloud, To a Skylark, and Ode to the West Wind.
Adonais, an elegy he wrote for his best friend John Keats, ranks among
the greatest elegies.
• In Ode to the West Wind, Shelley shows an evocation of nature wilder and
more spectacular than Wordsworth described it.
12. John Keats (1795-1821) believed that true happiness was to be found in art and
natural beauty.
• His Ode to a Nightingale spoke of what Keats called “negative capability,”
describing it as the moment of artistic inspiration when the poet achieved
a kind of self-annihilation – arrived at that trembling, delicate perception of
beauty.
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By William Wordsworth
By Thomas Gray
THE EPITAPH