Assignment
Name:- Gujarati Krishna V.
Class:- M.A. SEM
2
Topic:- . Nature in English romantic poetry Wordsworth
,Kats, and Shelley as nature poets
Paper
No :- 05 Romantic age
ROLL NO :- 17
Submitted to:-
Smt S.B.Gardy Department of English,
Maharaja
Krishnakumarsinhji Bhavnagar University,
Bhavnagar.
Introduction
Romanticism is an imaginative point of view that has
influenced many art forms. Love of nature played an important part in the
revival of romanticism.
Nature
in WORDSWORTH’S POETRY
The Beneficial
Influence of Nature
Throughout Wordsworth’s work, nature
provides the ultimate good influence on the human mind. All manifestations of
the natural world—from the highest mountain to the simplest flower—elicit
noble, elevated thoughts and passionate emotions in the people who observe
these manifestations. Wordsworth repeatedly emphasizes the importance of nature
to an individual’s intellectual and spiritual development. A good relationship
with nature helps individuals connect to both the spiritual and the social
worlds. As Wordsworth explains in The
Prelude, a love of nature can lead to a love of humankind. In such poems as
“The World Is Too Much with Us” and “London, people
become selfish and immoral when they distance themselves from nature by living
in cities. Humanity’s innate empathy and nobility of spirit becomes corrupted
by artificial social conventions as well as by the squalor of city life. In
contrast, people who spend a lot of time in nature, such as laborers and
farmers, retain the purity and nobility of their souls.
Keats and nature
Nature was
one of the greatest sources of inspiration for Keats. Like Wordsworth he had a
cult of nature, though, unlike him, he did not see an immanent God in it. He
simply saw another form of Beauty, which he could transform into poetry without
the aid of memory; he only enriched it with his Imagination. While Wordsworth
thought that “sweet melodies are made sweeter by distance in time”, Keats
believed that “heard melodies are sweet, but those unheard are sweeter”, i.e.:
beauty imagined is superior to beauty perceived, since the senses are more
limited than the Imagination and its creative power. While Wordsworth´s love
for nature is well explained by the fact that he grew up in the Lake District,
thus being influenced by the suggestive landscape, it is harder to understand
the connection between Keats and nature, since he was a city boy. For this
reason, unlike Wordsworth, whose relationship with nature was spiritual, he
looked at nature with the eye of the aesthete, recreating the physical world,
including all living things.
Nature was a
major theme among the Romantics, but Keats turned natural objects into poetic
images. When he already knew that he was gonig to die, he looked back at
childhood and realized that concrete contact with natural objects at that time
was responsible for the postitive associations they continued to communicate in
adulthood.
Nature led
Keats to the formulation of a concept he called “negative capability”,
described as the ability to experience “uncertainties, mysteries, doubts,
without any irritable reaching after fact or reason”, managing to negate
personality and opening to the reality around. It is an intuitive activity of
mind, a metaphysical process in which nature is a potential source of truth.
That of the poet is a visionary activity, which uses natural objects as means
to represent the poet’s ideas. Though a great number of images connected with
nature in Keats’s poems are used only to represent experiences, thus becoming a
symbol of the psyche.
Nature in
Shelley and Wordsworth
For Shelley, nature represents a powerfully sublime entity which feels utter indifference for man. Certainly,
Shelley describes such beautiful scenes as "earthly rainbows stretched
across the sweep / Of the etherial waterfall". At the same time, however,
he recognizes nature's merciless potential:
But a flood of
ruin
Is there, that from the boundaries of the sky
Rolls its perpetual stream; vast pines are strewing
Its destined path, or in the mangled soil
Branchless and shattered stand: the rocks, drawn down
From yon remotest waste, have overthrown
The limits of the dead and living world,
Never to be reclaimed.
Is there, that from the boundaries of the sky
Rolls its perpetual stream; vast pines are strewing
Its destined path, or in the mangled soil
Branchless and shattered stand: the rocks, drawn down
From yon remotest waste, have overthrown
The limits of the dead and living world,
Never to be reclaimed.
According to Shelley, nature is at once
splendorous and deadly, a dynamic force that cannot be tamed by man. While
appreciating nature's aesthetic majesty, Shelley warns man not to equate beauty
with tranquility. Rather, Shelley advises us to view nature from both sides of
the coin, admiring its unapproachable synthesis of power and grace.For
Wordsworth, on the other hand, nature plays a more comforting role. Like
Shelley, Wordsworth sees nature as an eternal and sublime entity,
but rather than threatening the poet, these qualities
give Wordsworth comfort. As Wordsworth writes:
I have felt
A presence that disturbs me with the joy
Of elevated thoughts; a sense sublime
Of something far more deeply interfused,
Whose dwelling is the light of setting suns,
And the round ocean and the living air,
And the blue sky, and in the mind of man.
A presence that disturbs me with the joy
Of elevated thoughts; a sense sublime
Of something far more deeply interfused,
Whose dwelling is the light of setting suns,
And the round ocean and the living air,
And the blue sky, and in the mind of man.
Rather than placing man and
nature in opposition, Wordsworth views them as complementary elements of a
whole, recognising man as a part of nature. Hence, Wordsworth looks at the
world and sees not an alien force against which he must struggle, but rather a
comforting entity of which he is a part.
Shelley was an atheist, a fact
which certainly contributed to his vision of nature as a powerfully indifferent
entity. Having no benevolent God to give reason and order to the world, Shelley
lived in an immensely intimidating universe of powerful and fractious
components. Nature could be beautiful for Shelley, but that does not imply that
it was caring. Shelley seems to echo Pascal, who said, while gazing at the
stars, "The silence of these infinite spaces terrifies me."
Wordsworth, on the other hand, was a relatively solid and conservative member
of the Church of England.
Thus, with the faith of religion to back him up, Wordsworth was able to look at
nature and see the benevelonce of God behind it. For Wordsworth, the world
could be a place of sorrow, but it was not cruel. Though suffering surely
occurred, Wordsworth comforted himself with the belief that all things happened
by the hand of God, manifesting Himself in the ultimately just and divine order
of nature.
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