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    Poems that are based on romanticism such as "Thanatopsis" by William Cullen Bryant express a certain feeling not obtained in other kinds of poems. Many people in the romantic era believed that man’s purpose was to become one with nature. They felt power and wisdom comes from nature. They also believed in humanitarian which was an elevated common man or noble savage. Intuition was said to be more important than reason. People stressed the concept of following instincts. The poem "Thanatopsis" is a

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    Picart Professor‚ Kalayaan College --------------- written and submitted by ZACH HONTIVEROS PAGKALINAWAN B.A. in Literature October 2011 – October 2012 TABLE OF CONTENTS TABLE OF CONTENTS 2 ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS 5 CHAPTER ONE: Introduction (short and simple sentences) 7 A. Background And Foreground 7 B. Statement Of The Problem 7 C. Significance Of The Study 8 D. Scope And Limitations 8 E. Methods Of Research 8 F. Definition Of Terms

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    Romantics and Realists

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    The Romantics and the Realists Romanticism and Realism are separate artistic periods that overlapped each other for almost a decade‚ and even though they are very different‚ there are similarities as well. Romanticism was an intellectual movement in the arts from 1790s until 1870s. It focused more on the individual‚ unfairness‚ irrational‚ creative‚ emotional‚ and the transcendental. Realism was also an intellectual movement. It began in about 1861 and lasted until 1914 when World War began. Realism

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    During the late 18th century in Europe‚ a movement known as Romanticism first defined by "German poet Friedrich Schlegel as […]‚ "literature depicting emotional matter in an imaginative form‚"" (Whitney) had rooted into the artistic world to fashion poets including John Keats‚ Percy Shelley‚ and in particular‚ Lord George Gordon Byron and William Blake. Although Blake and Byron were stark opposites in both life and literature‚ Blake preferring to live a more pious life utilizing poetry as entertainment

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    Romantic Literature

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    through personal emotion and imagination; the truest experience was to be found in nature. The concept of the Sublime strengthened this turn to nature‚ because in wild countrysides the power of the sublime could be felt most immediately. Wordsworth’s romanticism is probably most fully realized in his great autobiographical poem‚ "The Prelude" (1805–50). In search of sublime moments‚ romantic poets wrote about the marvelous and supernatural‚ the exotic‚ and the medieval. But they also found beauty in the

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    Solitude — the state of seclusion — in the modern world differs from solitude in the Romanticism era. Romanticism is a point in time within the 19th century‚ most known for its literature written about sadness‚ loss‚ and heartbreak. The article “The End of Solitude‚” written by William Deresiewicz‚ addresses how solitude no longer exists today due to the access of technology. He believes the newer generations do not have moments of solitude because of their constant need for visibility‚ or referred

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    Payge Carboni Mr. Curry Introduction to American Literature 26 December 2011 The Spread of Passion Nathaniel Hawthorne once said‚ "Cupid in these latter times has probably laid aside his bow and arrow‚ and uses fire-arms -- a pistol -- perhaps a revolver." (Hawthorne 82). This excerpt from Nathaniel Hawthorne’s American Note-Books depicts the contemporary attitude of literary works during the time of romanticism. The romantic period was a literary movement that transformed the writing

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    Romaticisim

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    Romanticism was arguably the largest artistic movement of the late 1700s. Its influence was felt across continents and through every artistic discipline into the mid-nineteenth century‚ and many of its values and beliefs can still be seen in contemporary poetry. It is difficult to pinpoint the exact start of the Romantic movement‚ as its beginnings can be traced to many events of the time: a surge of interest in folklore in the mid- to late-eighteenth century with the work of the brothers Grimm

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    representation of Romanticism. At the age of 21‚ Keats gives up his pursuit to be a surgeon and starts to be a full-time poet. Keats change his occupation to be a poet after reading Edmund Spenser’s 16th-century epic poem The Faerie Queen‚ which leads Keats to write his poem Lines in Imitation of Spenser. Addition to Spenser’s work influencing Keats to be a poet‚ William Wordsworth and Samuel Taylor Coleridge influence Keats to change his style of writing to be more Romanticism. Keats’ tone and

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    Romanticism is a literary movement in which writers focus on nature while weaving in the essence of the supernatural. A short story that is based in this movement is Edgar Allan Poe’s The Fall of the House of Usher. This short story describes the interactions between a narrator and the last remaining member of the House of Usher‚ Roderick. Answering Roderick Usher’s call the narrator starts noticing supernatural signs that something in the house and its surrounding area is infested with evil. Romanticism

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