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    assonance‚ metaphors and similes. POETS Poets that wrote in free verse were T.E. Hulme‚ Ezra Pound and T.S. Elliot. Other poets that had experimented with free verse were the romantic poets; John Keats Samuel Taylor Coleridge Percy Bysshe Shelley and William Wordsworth Also some American poets wrote in free verse

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    politics are both generated by the same human craving for freedom from traditions and tyranny. The Romantic Movement revives the poetic ideals of love‚ beauty‚ emotion‚ imagination‚ romance and beauty of Nature. Keats celebrates beauty‚ Shelley adores love‚ Wordsworth glorifies nature Byron idealizes humanism‚ Scott revives the medieval lore and Coleridge amalgamates supernatural. As a result‚ the Romantic Movement revolts against the ideals‚ principles‚ intellectualism‚ aristocracy and technicality

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    this era lies with the poets. Such as Wordsworth and Coleridge‚ the renowned poets of this era. Other popular poets were Samuel Taylor Coleridge‚ William Blake‚ John Keats‚ Percy Bysshe Shelley Lord Byron. Romanticism‚ according to these poets mainly was all about unabashed emotions. Wordsworth in his preface to the lyrical ballads defined romantic poetry as “the spontaneous overflow of powerful feelings” These poets wrote mostly about Nature‚ William Wordsworth wrote about supernaturalism‚ believing

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    Outline Of Romanticism

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    Romanticism A revolution in art‚ philosophy‚ politics and social issues Influential philosophers • • • • Emmanuel Swedenborg (Heaven and Hell -1758) Voltaire (man in control of his own destiny) Montesquieu (division of powers) Locke (limited‚ liberal gov)‚ Bentham (liberty & rights ) • Rousseau (The Social Contract – 1762-) and Diderot (Manifesto of Pure Reason -1760) • Immanuel Kant (Critique of Pure Reason -1781- and Critique of Judgement -1790-) • Thomas Paine and Jefferson Major historic

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    German writer Johann Wolfgang von Goethe. Originally it was thought that a romantic writer is someone who reinforces his or her own uniqueness through their work. In a preface to the second edition of Lyrical Ballads (1800)‚ by English poets William Wordsworth and Samuel Taylor Coleridge it has been quoted that romantic poems were a language of men in a state of vivid sensation‚ that sort of pleasure and that quantity of pleasure may be imparted‚ which a Poet may rationally endeavour to impart [1].

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    Common Knowledge

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    Common Knowledge in Academic Papers As you read in the WR last week‚ writers cite borrowed information by providing a signal phrase‚ page number if a printed source‚ url in case of a picture taken from the web‚ etc. One exception to this rule‚ however‚ is whenever the information is common knowledge. Common knowledge is a term applicable to any piece of information that is widely available in basic sources about the subject. In a paper about psychology‚ for instance‚ you wouldn’t need to cite

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    appreciated nature so much. Romanticism in England is most commonly connected at first with the poets William Blake‚ William Wordsworth and Samuel Coleridge. These three are known as the early Romantics. Later other great poets would come along. The most important of the later Romantics were John Keats‚ Percy Bysshe Shelley‚ and Lord George Byron. Coleridge and Wordsworth‚ who wrote the book "Lyrical Ballads" together in 1798‚ said in the preface of the book‚ "The majority of the following poems

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    The Puritan Period and the Age of Classicism (1620-1780) • Puritanism was a great moral and political reform that happened after the death of Queen Elizabeth • Literature was more critical and intellectual (made readers think than feel) • John Milton was crowning glory of the period • Paradise Lost (The Fall of Man) was the greatest religious epic of England • John Bunyan wrote The Pilgrim’s Progress • With King Charles II the Monarchy was restored • Next 40 years was known as Restoration

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    where Shelley not only echoes and agrees with many of Wordsworth’s views regarding: nature and its awe- inspiring beauty‚ ability to mesmerize and the presence of majestical divinity amongst all things natural but also‚ a conversational moment where Shelley steps away from Wordsworth by expressing different views regarding the type of power nature exudes and how nature should affect and effect the human consciousness and life. Where Wordsworth feels peace‚ Shelley feels fear; Wordsworth sees himself

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    Frankenstein: The Relationship Struggles of Mary Shelley What secrets hide beneath Mary Shelley’s Frankenstein that make it the subject of such extensive research and discussion by many of the world’s preeminent literary scholars? Is it the elements that make it the first example of what we today call science fiction (Ginn)? Perhaps in part‚ but the fascination of many with Frankenstein comes not from the story itself‚ but from the mind of the author who created it. It is thought that Mary Shelley’s

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