We have been reading literature from the Romantic Period for
the past few weeks. The Romantic Period
of English literature is characterized by its aesthetic and imaginative descriptions. It also focuses on the unique experience of
an individual. Before the Romantic
Period, philosophers believed that human nature was the same everywhere because
everyone experienced and lived in the same world. During this time, “poets began developing a
new language for… individual variations in perception and the capacity the
receptive consciousness has to filter and to re-create reality” (Greenblatt
13). Poets began to write from individual
experiences instead of just nature or common ideas.
This new idea in Romanticism can be seen in William Blake’s Songs of Innocence and Experience. The poems in Songs of Innocence and Experience are divided into two sections,
innocence (from the point of view of childhood) and experience (from the point
of view of adulthood). These two sides
are each distinctly different from each other in Blake’s work. Many of the poems in this collection show very
similar events from two unique points of view.
This change in perspective demonstrates the shift in how poetry was
written during the Romantic Period. It also allows us as readers to see how
much it changes the poems themselves.
In “The Chimney Sweeper”
from Songs of Innocence, the chimney
sweeper is optimistic even though he is in a very bad situation. He cheers up another chimney sweeper who is
upset and is eagerly awaiting the joy that he will experience in Heaven. At the end of the poem he says “Tho’ the
morning was cold, Tom was happy & warm; / So if all do their duty they need
not fear harm” (Blake 122). The chimney
sweeper is happy and content even though his life is so miserable.
In “The Chimney Sweeper” from Songs of Experience, however, the chimney sweeper is not happy at
all. He understands how awful his
situation is and shares none of the hope and optimism that his counterpart
feels. He blames his parents for his
situation and doesn’t even hold out hope that things will be better for him in
Heaven. He says that his parents “are
gone to praise God & his Priest & King, / Who make up a heaven of our
misery” (Blake 128).
The comparison of these two similar, yet strikingly
different poems demonstrates the change that took place in poetry and
literature in general during the Romantic Period.
Sourcse: Blake, William. "Songs of Innocence and Experience." The Norton Anthology of English Literature: The Romantic Period. Ed. Stephen Greenblatt. New York: Norton, 2012. 118-135. Print.
Greenblatt, Stephen. The Norton Anthology of English Literature: The Romantic Period. New York: Norton, 2012. Print.
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