{"id":29,"date":"2020-07-25T09:01:00","date_gmt":"2020-07-25T03:31:00","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/witcritic.com\/index.php\/romantic-criticism\/"},"modified":"2023-06-28T08:04:09","modified_gmt":"2023-06-28T02:34:09","slug":"romantic-criticism","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/witcritic.com\/index.php\/romantic-criticism\/","title":{"rendered":"Romantic Criticism: William Wordsworth, S. T. Coleridge and P. B. Shelley"},"content":{"rendered":"<div dir=\"ltr\" style=\"text-align: left;\">\n<div style=\"break-before: page; text-align: center;\" align=\"center\"><b><span style=\"font-size: 16pt;\">Romantic Criticism \u2013 An Introduction<\/span><\/b><\/div>\n<div><\/div>\n<table style=\"float: right;\" cellspacing=\"0\" cellpadding=\"0\">\n<tbody>\n<tr>\n<td style=\"text-align: center;\"><a style=\"clear: right; margin-bottom: 1em; margin-left: auto; margin-right: auto;\" href=\"https:\/\/i0.wp.com\/1.bp.blogspot.com\/-mrZhHx7yTRc\/XyQPDbfeUjI\/AAAAAAAAAa4\/9fIbNACE2rg6b1LftC5o-cXKz85YWjhDgCLcBGAsYHQ\/s1600\/romanticism.jpg?ssl=1\" target=\"_blank\" rel=\"noopener\"><img data-recalc-dims=\"1\" fetchpriority=\"high\" decoding=\"async\" title=\"Literary Criticism\" src=\"https:\/\/i0.wp.com\/1.bp.blogspot.com\/-mrZhHx7yTRc\/XyQPDbfeUjI\/AAAAAAAAAa4\/9fIbNACE2rg6b1LftC5o-cXKz85YWjhDgCLcBGAsYHQ\/w400-h248\/romanticism.jpg?resize=400%2C248&#038;ssl=1\" alt=\"Romantic criticim\" width=\"400\" height=\"248\" border=\"0\" data-original-height=\"177\" data-original-width=\"285\" \/><\/a><\/td>\n<\/tr>\n<tr>\n<td style=\"text-align: center;\">Romantic criticism<\/td>\n<\/tr>\n<\/tbody>\n<\/table>\n<div><\/div>\n<div><span style=\"font-size: 11.5pt;\">A thousand handicraftsmen wore the mask <\/span><\/div>\n<div><span style=\"font-size: 11.5pt;\">Of Poesy. Ill-fated, impious race! <\/span><\/div>\n<div><span style=\"font-size: 11.5pt;\">That blasphemed the bright Lyrist to his face, <\/span><\/div>\n<div><span style=\"font-size: 11.5pt;\">And did not know it, no, they went about, <\/span><\/div>\n<div><span style=\"font-size: 11.5pt;\">Holding a poor, decrepid standard out <\/span><\/div>\n<div><span style=\"font-size: 11.5pt;\">Mark\u2019d with most flimsy mottos, and in large <\/span><\/div>\n<div><span style=\"font-size: 11.5pt;\">The name of one Boileau! <\/span><\/div>\n<div><span style=\"font-family: garamond, serif; font-size: 11.5pt;\">&#8211; <\/span><b><span style=\"font-size: 11.5pt;\">John Keats, \u201cSleep and Poetry\u201d (1817)<\/span><\/b><\/div>\n<div><\/div>\n<div><span style=\"font-size: 11.5pt;\">Keats condemns the mechanical rules of writing as arbitrary and artificial. Any adherence to regularity is an external restraint superimposed on the poet. Poetry must transcend the particularities of time and space, and transport the reader to an imagined realm. This is at the heart of the above passage \u2013 and the quintessential \u2013 characteristic of what is identified as the Romantic period. The term \u2018<b><a href=\"https:\/\/witcritic.com\/index.php\/romantic-criticism\/\">Romanticism<\/a>\u2019 <\/b>describes the literary and philosophical engagement of the late eighteenth and early nineteenth centuries. While Enlightenment, as <b>Immanuel Kant<\/b>defines in \u201c<b>What is Enlightenment?<\/b>\u201d, is a process of man\u2019s liberation from bondage and oppression through the faculty of reason; Romanticism ushered in an alternative school of thought that emphasized subjective emotions (against reason and intellect), spontaneity (against order), and a radical skepticism with regard to the precepts of Enlightenment. Published first in <b>1798<\/b>, <b>William<\/b> <b>Wordsworth<\/b> and <b>Samuel<\/b> <b>Taylor Coleridge\u2019s <i>Lyrical Ballads<\/i><\/b><i> <\/i>embody the intellectual impulses of this period and are often seen as a critical manifesto of Romanticism. The <b>Preface to <i>Lyrical Ballads <\/i>(1800)<\/b> argues that poetry ought to convey authentic human feelings, use the ordinary \u201clanguage of conversation\u201d, the \u2018lower\u2019 forms of diction, and emerges from the poet\u2019s feelings and imagination. Coleridge, however, departs from Wordsworth\u2019s definition of poetry as \u201cthe real language of men\u201d and the Poet as \u201ca man speaking to men\u201d, and proposes a critical study of aesthetic experience in<b> <i>Biographia Literaria <\/i>(1817)<\/b>. Coleridge\u2019s distinctions between <b>fancy, primary imagination, and secondary imagination <\/b>and the<b> \u2018revolutionary Powers\u2019 <\/b>of the mind re-appears in <b>Percy Bysshe Shelley\u2019s <i>Defence of Poetry<\/i><\/b><i> <\/i>wherein the higher imaginative powers of the mind enable man to realize love, beauty, and delight. From <b><i>Lyrical Ballads <\/i>to <i>Defence of Poetry<\/i><\/b>, this paper traces the trajectory of romantic prose writings that critique the certainties of the intellect and establish poets, as Shelley puts it, \u201c<b>the unacknowledged legislators of the world<\/b>\u201d. <\/span><\/div>\n<div><b><span style=\"font-size: 11.5pt;\">Rene Wellek\u2019s<\/span><\/b><span style=\"font-size: 11.5pt;\"> classic definition: \u201cImagination for the view of poetry, nature for the view of the world, and symbol and myth for poetic style\u201d identifies nature, imagination, and symbolism as the defining features of Romanticism. The Romantics reject the emphasis on reason, and retreat from the neoclassical norm of writing. This subjective turn of aesthetic theory is influenced by <b>John Locke\u2019s <i>Essay Concerning Human Understanding <\/i>(1690)<\/b>. Locke argues that the human mind does not have innate or <i>a priori <\/i>ideas, and like a blank sheet of paper (<b><i>tabula rasa<\/i><\/b>), absorbs ideas derived from sensations. The mind, first, senses, perceives the world through sensory faculties, and then, reflects, generates ideas based on the perceptions. Knowledge is built up of perceptible qualities that give rise to sense impressions. Locke\u2019s theory of association of ideas is developed further by <b>David Hartley in <i>Observations on Man <\/i>(1749<\/b>). Hartley proposes that external objects create vibrations in the mind which thereafter form the basis of ideas. Through a process of association, a man arrives at knowledge, that is, morality and divinity. <\/span><\/div>\n<div><\/div>\n<div><span style=\"font-size: 11.5pt;\">Both Locke and Hartley believed that knowledge is derived from experience and an appropriate environment is crucial to the development of benevolence and love. This notion of association is crucial to Wordsworth\u2019s theory of poetry that illustrates the \u201c<b>primary laws of our nature: chiefly as far as regards the manner in which we associate ideas in a state of excitement<\/b>\u201d. For Wordsworth, poetry is dependent on the habits of association and natural landscape is vital to the development of the poet\u2019s mind. At the same time, for Wordsworth, the source of the poem is not the external nature, but the poet\u2019s individual consciousness. Unlike Locke who believed that the sensory experience of the external world shaped human nature, Wordsworth stressed the individual consciousness that creates perceptions and in turn poetry. This emphasis on the inner feelings of the poet as a resource for poetry, rather than the external world, became a major turn in Romanticism. Introspection and reflection become the hallmarks of poetic creation. The subject of reflection, the poetic self, thus occupies the center stage in Romantic aesthetic theory.<\/span><\/div>\n<div><\/div>\n<div><span style=\"font-size: 11.5pt;\">When Wordsworth\u2019s Preface to <b><i>Lyrical ballads<\/i><\/b><i> <\/i>defines the poet as \u2018<b>a man speaking to men\u2019<\/b>, he alerts to the democratization of letters that was emerging in this period and turns to hermeneutics and interpretation to explain the phenomenon of poetry. The psychological impulse of the poet to create poetry, and the interpretative act of reading poetry is married together. Sublime, for example, does not remain a characteristic of the natural landscape, but a power of the mind itself \u2013 as Wordsworth puts it in <b><i>Prelude <\/i><\/b>(1805) &#8211; the \u201cmind\/ Is lord and master\u201d over \u201coutward sense\u201d (270-1). This psychological impulse becomes the meta-value of Romantic poetry rather than the formal structures of rhetoric. Therefore, poetry, for Wordsworth and Coleridge, reflects a transcendent vision. This vision is always created by a poet. A poet is an imaginative, senate, and a conscious being. Theorizing about poetry becomes a theory of who is a poet, about the creative process, and responses to this creative process. <\/span><\/div>\n<div><\/div>\n<h2><b><span style=\"font-size: 11.5pt;\">William Wordsworth \u2013 \u201cPreface to <i>Lyrical Ballads<\/i>\u201d <\/span><\/b><\/h2>\n<div><\/div>\n<div><span style=\"font-size: 11.5pt;\">The Principal object, then, proposed in these poems was to choose incidents and situations from common life, and to relate or describe them, throughout, as far as was possible, in a selection of language really used by men, and, at the same time, to throw over them a certain coloring of imagination, whereby ordinary things should be presented to the mind in an unusual aspect.<\/span><\/div>\n<div><span style=\"font-size: 11.5pt;\">The Preface imparts not just a \u201c<b>systematic defense of the theory<\/b>\u201d upon which the poems of <b><i>Lyrical Ballads <\/i><\/b>were composed, as Wordsworth states; it also presents a systematic theory of poetic complexity and poetical limits set against a world of experience and material things. Wordsworth defines poetry as \u201c<b>the spontaneous overflow<\/b>\u201d of feelings that are recollected in tranquility. Language, form, and meter are added to this \u2018overflow\u2019 of feelings. Wordsworth argues against the poetic diction, the \u201c<b>gaudiness, and inane phraseology\u201d<\/b>and the \u201c<b>vague, glossy and unfeeling language<\/b>\u201d of poets. For Wordsworth, poetic diction alienates human sympathy. There is no essential difference between the language of prose and metrical composition. Poetry should be composed in the \u201c<b>real language of men<\/b>\u201d and the less-restrained language of the low and rustic. Meter is not essential to poetry, but only an additional source of pleasure. <\/span><\/div>\n<div><span style=\"font-size: 11.5pt;\">Expanding his apologia for the rejection of poetic diction and privileging of ordinary language, Wordsworth defines a Poet as a man speaking to men. A poet has greater knowledge of human nature, the greater power of communication, and can communicate not only feelings he individually experiences but also those he perceives in his environment. Poetry, for Wordsworth, is the most philosophic of all writings, with its object as truth that is general and operative. Poetry embodies the \u201c<b>breath and finer spirit of all knowledge<\/b>\u201d and is emblematic of a deep sympathy between man and nature. The verbal artifices and poetic expressions are therefore mere ornamentations. Because the rules of a meter are fixed, poetic diction can have a restraining effect with the use of a meter. <\/span><\/div>\n<div><\/div>\n<div><b><span style=\"font-size: 11.5pt;\">M. H. Abrams<\/span><\/b><span style=\"font-size: 11.5pt;\"> in <b><i>The mirror and the lamp<\/i><\/b><i> <\/i>characterizes this emphasis on the human mind as the progenitor of poetry as the shift from mimetic to \u2018expressive\u2019 critical standards. Hayden argues that the \u2018Romantics\u2019 were interested not in the expressive but rather in \u2018<b>creative theory\u2019<\/b>. Wordsworth\u2019s Preface is a manifesto that expresses some of the poet\u2019s most familiar and powerful ideas within a conveniently small space. The conception of animistic powers ready to feed the mind, the superiority of natural to human law, and the potential moral application of that law, are all discernible within the Preface. Wordsworth defends the ideational content of what his mind perceives in solitary, unmediated contemplation of nature against the claims of that knowledge is <b>reason and intellect<\/b>. This conflict must be understood as parallel to the tension in Wordsworth\u2019s socio-historical context of <b>French Revolution<\/b>. The dictates of the ideally unchained individual conscience and the subjective lyric are forces against the institutionalized dictates of the society. The connection is made clear by the fact that Wordsworth\u2019s meditation is understood to have not just aesthetic but moral consequences. Wordsworth asserts that the essentially private contemplation in which he is engaged is the only proper foundation of moral conscience. His \u201c<b>thoughts and feelings<\/b>\u201d demonstrate his superior nature; they must be seen not as <i>perceptions <\/i>but <i>creations<\/i>: \u201cthoughts and feelings\u201d which proceed \u201cby his own choice\u201d and \u201cfrom the structure of his own mind.\u201d <\/span><\/div>\n<div><\/div>\n<h2><b><span style=\"font-size: 11.5pt;\">S. T. Coleridge \u2013 <i>Biographia Literaria <\/i><\/span><\/b><\/h2>\n<div><\/div>\n<div><span style=\"font-size: 11.5pt;\">On <b>30 March 1815, <\/b>Coleridge wrote to Byron of his intention to add to his poems \u201cA general Preface will be pre-fixed, on the principles of philosophic and genial [having to do with genius] criticism relatively to the Fine Arts in general, but especially to Poetry\u201d (26). Several <\/span><\/div>\n<div style=\"break-before: page;\"><span style=\"font-size: 11.5pt;\">weeks later when Wordsworth\u2019s 1815 <b><i>Poems<\/i><\/b><i> <\/i>with its new Preface to <b><i>Lyrical Ballads<\/i><\/b><i> <\/i>is printed, Coleridge asserts \u2013 \u201c<b>altho\u2019<\/b>Wordsworth\u2019s Preface is half a child of my own Brain <i>\u2026 <\/i>yet I am far from going all lengths with Wordsworth <i>. . . <\/i>I rather suspect that somewhere or other there is a radical difference in our theoretical opinions respecting Poetry \u2013 \/ this I shall endeavor to go to the Bottom of\u201d (83). Eventually in 1817 Coleridge publishes <b><i>Biographia Literaria<\/i><\/b><i>, <\/i>an extended dialogue with \u2013 and a critique of \u2013 Wordsworth\u2019s two Prefaces (1800 and 1815). <\/span><\/div>\n<div><b><i><span style=\"font-size: 11.5pt;\">Biographia Literaria<\/span><\/i><\/b><i> <\/i><span style=\"font-size: 11.5pt;\">is an autobiographical, philosophical, religious, and critical text. The first four chapters present literary events of Coleridge\u2019s life from <b>Christ\u2019s Hospital<\/b>to 1798; chapters 5\u20139 summarise his intellectual migration from various mechanistic and associative systems to rest on religious and transcendental principles; chapters 12 and 13 discuss <b>fancy, primary and secondary imagination<\/b>; chapter 14 is a philosophic discussion of perceptions, imagination, and the aesthetic experience of fine arts, particularly poetry. Sections in chapters 10, 12, 13, and 24 explain Coleridge\u2019s religious and moral beliefs, wherein Coleridge rejects the mechanistic view of the universe and adopts a principle of imagination that rests on the Logos or the Word. In chapters 17-20 and 22, Coleridge critiques Wordsworth\u2019s theoretical principles of poetry. Rejecting empiricism and materialism as adequate explanations of the human psyche, Coleridge develops an argument on how the mind works, processes details, reflects, associates, and connects impressions and ideas derived from the senses. Poetry in <i>Biographia Literaria <\/i>emerges as a nexus of philosophy, life, religion, friendship, theory, and practice of writing. <\/span><\/div>\n<div><span style=\"font-size: 11.5pt;\">Coleridge describes poetry in chapter fourteen as \u201cthat species of composition, which is opposed to works of science, by proposing for its immediate object pleasure, not truth; and from all other species (having this object in common with it) it is discriminated by proposing to itself such delight from the <i>whole<\/i>, as is compatible with distinct gratification from each component <i>part<\/i>\u201d (32). A single word or the stanza in a poem does not gratify or achieve perfection. <\/span><\/div>\n<div><\/div>\n<div><span style=\"font-size: 11.5pt;\">In the same chapter, <b>Coleridge<\/b>defines the <b>poet<\/b> as: <\/span><\/div>\n<div><span style=\"font-size: 11.5pt;\">The poet, described in ideal perfection, brings the whole soul of man into activity, with the subordination of its faculties to each other, according to their relative worth and dignity. He diffuses a tone and spirit of unity that blends, and (as it were) fuses, each into each, by that synthetic and magical power, to which we have exclusively appropriated the name of imagination. This power, first put in action by the understanding, and retained under their irremissive, though gentle unnoticed, control (<i>laxis effertur habenis<\/i>) reveals itself in the of reconciliation of opposite or discordant qualities: of sameness, difference; of the general, with the concrete; the idea, with the individual, with the representative; the sense of novelty and freshness, with old and familiar objects; a more than the usual state of emotion, more than usual order&#8230;. (43) <\/span><\/div>\n<div><span style=\"font-size: 11.5pt;\">For Coleridge, \u201c<b>what is Poetry?<\/b>\u201d fuses with \u201c<b>who is a Poet<\/b>?\u201d and finally \u201c<b>what is Art?<\/b>\u201d Imagination, as Coleridge defines in chapter seven, is \u201ca superior degree of the faculty [of synthesis], joined to superior voluntary control over it\u201d (22). The mind not only gathers details (<b>fancy<\/b>) but also creates something new by the coming together of all images (<b>imagination<\/b>). Fancy is the passive power of the mind. Imagination is the active power \u2013 of forging new territories. The passive power enables the mind to pause, make sense, and sequentially, through a series of apprehensions, consolidate images into perceptions and meanings. Fancy works with \u201c<b>fixities and definites<\/b>\u201d untransformed individually or by the work as a whole; through \u201cchoice\u201d or \u201cmemory\u201d. The active power of Imagination transforms, rearranges the \u201cfixities and definites\u201d to create: The <b>IMAGINATION<\/b>&#8230; <b>dissolves, diffuses, dissipates<\/b>, in order to re-create; or where this process is rendered impossible, yet still, at all events it struggles to idealize and to unify. It is essentially vital, even as all objects (as objects) are essentially fixed and dead. <b>FANCY<\/b>, on the contrary, has no other counters to play with, but <b>fixities<\/b> and <b>definites<\/b>. The Fancy is indeed no other than a mode of Memory emancipated from the order of time and space; while it is blended with, modified by that empirical phenomenon of the will, which we express by the word CHOICE. But equally, with the ordinary memory, the Fancy must receive all its materials ready-made from the law of association&#8230;<\/span><\/div>\n<div><span style=\"font-size: 11.5pt;\">While fancy observes and is a function of memory, imagination associates, and discovers connections between disparate images to create something new. This skillful arrangement of parts to create a harmonious whole is what Coleridge further classifies as <b>Primary and Secondary imagination<\/b>. The power of perception, innate ability of man, is the primary image. Secondary imagination is a heightened degree of the conscious will which a poet possesses. A poet with the \u201c<b>synthetic and magical power\u201d<\/b> of secondary imagination becomes an agent of the unifying process. The formless mass of experience that fancy accumulates is dissolved, dissipated, diffused, and unified by the poet through secondary imagination. This act of creation by the poet \u201cwith form, connections, and unity\u201d is an aesthetic experience. In chapter fourteen, Coleridge describes the reading experience as: \u201cThe reader should be carried forward, not merely or chiefly by the mechanical impulse of curiosity, or by a restless desire to arrive at the final solution; but by the pleasurable activity of the mind excited by the attractions of the journey\u201d (34). <\/span><\/div>\n<div><span style=\"font-size: 11.5pt;\">In chapter 18, Coleridge argues that there neither is nor can be any essential difference between the language of prose and that of metrical composition. Metrical composition implies an \u2018order\u2019, one that in poetry is directed by \u201cthat prospectiveness of mind, that <i>surview<\/i>, which enables a man to foresee the whole of what he is to convey\u201d (58). Coleridge stresses the organic integration of all resources of language in poetry, something that reconciles opposites into an organic whole. A poet, \u201can ideal perfection\u201d, speaks in \u201cdelight from the <i>whole<\/i>, as is compatible with a distinct gratification from each component <i>part<\/i>\u2019; that \u2018the parts\u2026mutually support and explain each other\u201d (13). <\/span><\/div>\n<div><\/div>\n<div><b><span style=\"font-size: 11.5pt;\">Dialectic unity between Wordsworth and Coleridge <\/span><\/b><\/div>\n<div><\/div>\n<div><span style=\"font-size: 11.5pt;\">While Wordsworth described imagination as a mode of association, Coleridge believed that powers of imagination perceive, create, transform, and unify our perceptions. For Wordsworth, imagination associates and can explain the human powers of creativity. For Coleridge, mind in its dynamic, active relation to the world has primacy; possesses a power unmentioned and unaccounted for in the materialists\u2019 schemes \u2013 \u201cthe living Power and prime Agent of all human Perception\u201d, that allows man to create perceptions in a manner constitutive not only with nature but with the creator of nature, God (\u2018the infinite I am\u2019). This power produces fine arts and poetry. Fancy is valued but confined to the reorganization and recombination of already existing, separate sense impressions; it juxtaposes or yokes but does not transform or unify. Imagination, for Coleridge, metamorphoses. <i>Biographia Literaria <\/i>echoes Wordsworth\u2019s distinction between <b>science<\/b> and <b>poetry<\/b>, but critiques Wordsworth\u2019s emphasis on the language of the rustic. Wordsworth responds to the neoclassical poetic diction wherein individual vocabulary and experience was considered inappropriate for poetry, and develops the notion of a poetic diction that imitates the language of common experience. Coleridge, on the other hand, claims that the rustic\u2019s language \u201cpurified from all provincialism and grossness, and <i>. . . <\/i>made consistent with the rules of grammar <i>. . . <\/i>will not differ from the language of any other man of common-sense\u201d (52-4). <\/span><\/div>\n<div><\/div>\n<div><span style=\"font-size: 11.5pt;\">For Coleridge, the best parts of language are derived from the mind. This understanding of the creative power of the mind re-appears in Keats\u2019s idea of \u201cnegative capability\u201d, and Shelley\u2019s <b><i>Defence of Poetry<\/i><\/b><i> <\/i>in which he distinguishes between the materialistic \u2018reason\u2019 and the spiritual imagination. <\/span><\/div>\n<div><\/div>\n<h2><span style=\"font-size: 11.5pt;\"><strong>P. B. Shelley \u2013 \u201cA Defense of Poetry\u201d<\/strong> <\/span><\/h2>\n<div><\/div>\n<div><b><span style=\"font-size: 11.5pt;\">\u201cA Defence of Poetry\u201d<\/span><\/b><span style=\"font-size: 11.5pt;\"> is an essay by Percy Bysshe Shelley written in <b>1821<\/b>and first published posthumously in 1840 in <b><i>Essays, Letters from Abroad, Translations and Fragments <\/i>by Edward Moxon<\/b> in London. Shelley aims to provide a justification of poetry against the attacks of an age of<b>scientific materialism<\/b>. He insists on the social and moral utility of poetry and how poetry produces its useful effect on men. Refusing to justify poetry either as mere pleasure or as didacticism, Shelley develops a theory for art that is aware that imagination is not autonomous. The \u2018defense\u2019 is about the act of writing itself and attempts to reconceive the Poet, who will otherwise become an empty sign. Shelley develops a romantic ideology of vision that draws the reader\u2019s attention to the hermeneutic problem of fiction. <\/span><\/div>\n<div><b><span style=\"font-size: 11.5pt;\">Shelley<\/span><\/b><span style=\"font-size: 11.5pt;\"> begins his <b>defense<\/b> against <b>Thomas Love Peacock<\/b>\u2019s account of poetry, \u201c<b>The Four Ages of Poetry<\/b>\u201d, as a sentimental anachronism in the modem age of reason and science. Shelley asserts: in the infancy of society every author is necessarily a poet because language itself is poetry. . . . Every original language near to its source is in itself the chaos of a cyclic poem: the copiousness of lexicography and the distinctions of grammar are the works of a later age, and are merely the catalog and the form of the creations of a poet (82). <\/span><\/div>\n<div><\/div>\n<div><span style=\"font-size: 11.5pt;\">Language is inherently metaphorical and expressive, hence poetic. From the idealistic defense of the morality of poetry, Shelley moves to psychological support of his theory, explaining how \u201c<b>poetry acts to produce the moral improvement of man<\/b>.\u201d Shelley divides the mental faculty into two parts:<b> reason and imagination<\/b>. Reason implies a kind of logical process that enables one to connect ideas together and\/or determine their relationships with one another. It is a passive thing. Imagination, meanwhile, acts upon those thoughts. It enables creation; it is the source of our artistic desires. For Shelley, a poet receives inspiration through his imaginative apprehension of \u201cthe indestructible order,\u201d or his participation \u201cin the eternal, the infinite, the one.\u201d Inspiration, moments of \u201ctransitory brightness\u201d that come unbidden, is the heart of poetry, while composition when the mind is already but \u201c<b>fading coal<\/b>,\u201d produces at its best only \u201ca feeble shadow on the original conception of the Poet\u201d (135). If Shelley sees the poet as the happiest and best of men, it is not only because of his \u201cmost refined organization\u201d but also because he is capable of penetrating the veil of the world and apprehending the universal and eternal reality. <\/span><\/div>\n<div><span style=\"font-size: 11.5pt;\">For Shelley, imagination arises \u201cfrom within\u201d. Shelley represents the imagination\u2019s displacing power by rewriting the Aeolian lyre figure. From a transcendental a priori (such as nature or the imagination) to its effect in the phenomenal world, the Aeolian lyre is like the wind that moves the strings to the \u201cinvisible influence\u201d of the causative imagination. This idea of imagination has two distinct sources: Neo-Platonism and the associationism. Neo-Platonism is evident in Shelley\u2019s concept of the imagination as apprehending \u201cthe eternal, the infinite, the one\u201d; thus, poets \u201cimagine and express [the] indestructible order\u201d (112) or \u201capprehend the true and the beautiful\u201d (3). The Neo-Platonic aspect of imagination in Shelley\u2019s Defence also informs such statements as \u201cPoets are the hierophants of an unapprehended inspiration\u201d (140). Associationist theory is apparent in Shelley\u2019s treatment of imagination as the faculty of love or sympathy, the moral effect of poetry. Both the <b>Neo-Platonic <\/b>and the associationist concepts of the imagination operate to free man from a Lockeian world of sense impressions. The imagination that <b>Shelley<\/b> describes is capable of apprehending that reality that lies beyond the phenomenal world and is therefore unavailable to the senses: \u201c&#8230;poetry defeats the curse which binds us to be subjected to the accident of surrounding impressions\u201d (137). Imagination is not mechanically chained to the world of sense impressions, nor does it deal with sense-stimulated thoughts; rather it responds to those impressions and colors them with its \u201clight\u201d. The autonomy of the imagination as it is here described provides an escape from the dry and fixed empirical concepts of the mind. <\/span><\/div>\n<div><span style=\"font-size: 11.5pt;\">Shelley\u2019s notion of <b>language\u2019s<\/b><b>proximity<\/b> to imagination departs from an earlier, empirical conception that subordinates word to a referent in favor of understanding language as self-reflexive. For Shelley imagination is nothing but an effect of language. From Wordsworth to Shelley, a trajectory of aesthetic theory appears that, as <b>William K. Wimsatt, Jr. and Cleanth Brooks<\/b> put it, prefer \u201c<b>the primitive, the na\u00efve, the directly passionate, the natural spoken word<\/b>\u201d (339). In words of Kathleen M. Wheeler this trajectory is the precursor of the twentieth century post-structuralist theories: \u201cColeridge\u2019s concept of polarity, of opposition, is in many ways anticipatory of Derrida\u2019s concept of difference \u2026 for Coleridge, as for <b>Derrida<\/b>, relations and oppositions form the substances of experience.\u201d The Romantic aesthetic theory posits a visionary idea of poetry, orchestrates carefully theorized claims on the value of a poet, and espouses poetic selfhood that is inward, introspective, and reflective. This turn of self-consciousness in the context of the French Revolution, industrialization, and emerging scientific materialism is crucial to the legacy of Romanticism. Not only do the Romantics reject diction, craftsmanship, and decorum of meter, their intense self-absorbing individualism that emphasized an organic unity with the landscape, radically critiques the inorganic human community.<b> Paul de Man and Geoffrey Hartman<\/b> see this as a moment of blindness that offsets Romantic tradition by denying the<b> <i>imitatio naturae<\/i><\/b><i> <\/i>principle and Enlightenment visuals, turning from the outward to the inward and establishing of the imaginative autonomy. But blindness is also insight \u2013 the \u201cflash upon that inward eye\u201d (Wordsworth\u2019s phrase in the poem \u201cI wandered lonely as a cloud\u201d) \u2013 revealing the truth of nature that appears in metaphors, symbols, hieroglyphs, emblems. Unlike the Petrarchan or Elizabethan love-poems, the first-person Romantic lyric reinvents the organic form of English literary criticism. The revolutionary impulse of the Romantic aesthetic theory is complex and lies in each poet\u2019s individual responses to the ideas of imagination, nature, nature, and poetry itself. <\/span><\/div>\n<\/div>\n","protected":false},"excerpt":{"rendered":"<p>Romantic Criticism \u2013 An Introduction Romantic criticism A thousand handicraftsmen wore the mask Of Poesy. Ill-fated, impious race! That blasphemed [&hellip;]<\/p>\n","protected":false},"author":1,"featured_media":238,"comment_status":"open","ping_status":"open","sticky":false,"template":"","format":"standard","meta":{"googlesitekit_rrm_CAow3MbQCw:productID":"","site-sidebar-layout":"default","site-content-layout":"","ast-site-content-layout":"","site-content-style":"default","site-sidebar-style":"default","ast-global-header-display":"","ast-banner-title-visibility":"","ast-main-header-display":"","ast-hfb-above-header-display":"","ast-hfb-below-header-display":"","ast-hfb-mobile-header-display":"","site-post-title":"","ast-breadcrumbs-content":"","ast-featured-img":"","footer-sml-layout":"","theme-transparent-header-meta":"","adv-header-id-meta":"","stick-header-meta":"","header-above-stick-meta":"","header-main-stick-meta":"","header-below-stick-meta":"","astra-migrate-meta-layouts":"default","ast-page-background-enabled":"default","ast-page-background-meta":{"desktop":{"background-color":"var(--ast-global-color-4)","background-image":"","background-repeat":"repeat","background-position":"center center","background-size":"auto","background-attachment":"scroll","background-type":"","background-media":"","overlay-type":"","overlay-color":"","overlay-opacity":"","overlay-gradient":""},"tablet":{"background-color":"","background-image":"","background-repeat":"repeat","background-position":"center center","background-size":"auto","background-attachment":"scroll","background-type":"","background-media":"","overlay-type":"","overlay-color":"","overlay-opacity":"","overlay-gradient":""},"mobile":{"background-color":"","background-image":"","background-repeat":"repeat","background-position":"center center","background-size":"auto","background-attachment":"scroll","background-type":"","background-media":"","overlay-type":"","overlay-color":"","overlay-opacity":"","overlay-gradient":""}},"ast-content-background-meta":{"desktop":{"background-color":"var(--ast-global-color-5)","background-image":"","background-repeat":"repeat","background-position":"center center","background-size":"auto","background-attachment":"scroll","background-type":"","background-media":"","overlay-type":"","overlay-color":"","overlay-opacity":"","overlay-gradient":""},"tablet":{"background-color":"var(--ast-global-color-5)","background-image":"","background-repeat":"repeat","background-position":"center center","background-size":"auto","background-attachment":"scroll","background-type":"","background-media":"","overlay-type":"","overlay-color":"","overlay-opacity":"","overlay-gradient":""},"mobile":{"background-color":"var(--ast-global-color-5)","background-image":"","background-repeat":"repeat","background-position":"center center","background-size":"auto","background-attachment":"scroll","background-type":"","background-media":"","overlay-type":"","overlay-color":"","overlay-opacity":"","overlay-gradient":""}},"jetpack_post_was_ever_published":false,"_jetpack_newsletter_access":"","_jetpack_dont_email_post_to_subs":false,"_jetpack_newsletter_tier_id":0,"_jetpack_memberships_contains_paywalled_content":false,"_jetpack_memberships_contains_paid_content":false,"footnotes":""},"categories":[7],"tags":[197,179,182,183,196,193,188,194,178,184,187,195,177,189,181,186,192,180,190,191,185],"class_list":["post-29","post","type-post","status-publish","format-standard","has-post-thumbnail","hentry","category-literary-criticism","tag-a-defense-of-poetry","tag-sleep-and-poetry","tag-biographia-literaria-1817","tag-defence-of-poetry","tag-dialectic-unity","tag-fancy","tag-french-revolution","tag-imagination","tag-john-keats","tag-lyrical-ballads","tag-m-h-abrams","tag-primary-and-secondary-imagination","tag-romanticism","tag-s-t-coleridge-biographia-literaria","tag-samuel-taylor-coleridges-lyrical-ballads","tag-the-mirror-and-the-lamp","tag-what-is-art","tag-what-is-enlightenment","tag-what-is-poetry","tag-who-is-a-poet","tag-william-wordsworth"],"jetpack_featured_media_url":"https:\/\/i0.wp.com\/witcritic.com\/wp-content\/uploads\/2020\/07\/romanticism.jpg?fit=285%2C177&ssl=1","jetpack-related-posts":[{"id":34,"url":"https:\/\/witcritic.com\/index.php\/phases-of-literary-criticism\/","url_meta":{"origin":29,"position":0},"title":"PHASES OF LITERARY CRITICISM","author":"witcritic","date":"July 23, 2020","format":false,"excerpt":"PHASES OF LITERARY CRITICISM\u00a0Hellenic Criticism:Criticism follows the creative activity. Generally in Greece, Plato and Aristotle were the most important critics in literature. Aristotle is the first scientific critic, theorist. 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