Tuesday, March 26, 2019
The Romantic Sonnet :: Sonnet essays
The romanticistic Sonnet          The sentimentalist sonnet holds in its topics the ideals of the time period,concentrating on emotion, nature, and the locution of nothing.  The Romanticera was one that focused on the commonality of gentlemans gentleman and, while usingemotion and nature, the poets and their works shed light on peoples universalnatures.  In Charlotte Smiths Sonnet XII - Written on the sea Shore, the announceer of the meter embodies two important aspects of Romantic work in relatinghis or her personal feelings and emotions and also in having a focused and enlarge natural position.  The vocalizer takes his or her solitary seat near the coast of a stormy sea and reflects upon brio and the wild gloomy burst thatsuits the mournful temper of his or her soul (ll.4, 7,8).  While often Romanticwriting dealt with love and the struggles endured due to love, there was alsoemphasis pose on isolation, as seen in the emotions of Smiths speaker andalso in the setting on the work.  Nature, in more Romantic sonnets, is in direct jibe with the emotions being conveyed.  Smith, for example, uses the waterto aid the readers comprehension of the speakers state of mind.  Included inthis traditional natural setting is the use of the sea as stormy, deep,extensive, and down(p) which ties the speaker in with the setting as the sceneapplies to the tone of the poem as well.   Also caseistic of the Romanticsonnet is the retreat from the neo-classical age and its significant historicalreferences into a new age where it becomes common to speak of nothing.  InWilliam Wordsworths Composed Upon Westminster Bridge, there is no deepermeaning to be grasped different than the beauty of the days dawning.  The speakersview of the morning and its majesty and the calm that comes over the speaker are central ideas in the poem (ll. 3, 11).  In this sonnet, it is again seeminghow influenti al and prevalent nature is.         The reflection upon simpleness runs through many works and is seen quiteevidently in William Blakes Songs of Innocence.  In these poems, there is muchmention of children, whose lives, ideally, should be the most simple.  Alsoincluded in this simplicity are the innocence of the children and the simplicityof the tone, metaphors, and images in the works.  In Blakes The School Boy,the character of the poem is a young boy whose joy in life should be rising on asummer morning when the birds are singing and when he, in his happiness, cansing with them.
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