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FREE ESSAY ON ROMANTIC ERA

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The Romantic Era
An evaluation of the writers and poetry of the Romantic era in English literature. -- 1,950 words; MLA

The Suicide of a Young Romantic
A review of the Romantic era and the common misconceptions surrounding this era. -- 900 words;

Romantic Era Music
This paper analyzes the musical composition of Hector Berlioz "Harold en Italie." -- 1,826 words; MLA

Romantic Poets and the Representation of Memory
A paper on how poets from the Romantic era sought to convey the complexities of the human mind through the representation of memory in their poetry. -- 2,255 words; APA

Romantic Writers
An analysis of how John Keats's poem, "Ode to a Nightingale", and Samuel Taylor Coleridge and Percy Shelley's poem, "Ode to the West Wind", express the Romantic era. -- 715 words; MLA

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ROMANTIC ERA

The romantic is given the date of 1798 as its official beginning. The romantic era was 
known for its connection to nature in the author's writing. They always bring up emotion

of some kind. They are sometimes also epic type that depict a hero and a struggle of 
some kind. They are usually somewhat lengthy and have a beginning, middle and an end. 
There has been evidence that some writers could be called romantics even before the 
period is said to have begun. Two writers that fit this mold are William Collins and 
Thomas Gray, who wrote just before the romantic era started. 
Thomas Gray was said to have written to the common people in his works. He didn't 
use the english language of that time, but instead used an archaic and distorted type of

meaning. Thomas Gray wrote a piece called "Elegy in a Country Churchyard" and this 
does have some romantic writer characteristics. This starts off very dark and is talking

about death. In line 15 he says "Each in his narrow cell forever laid" which refers to
the 
coffin and being buried in a grave. Death is a part of nature and romantics would try to

make a connection to humanity. Death also brings up sadness over the person who has 
died, which is another romantic characteristic. 
Stanzas 10-15 go on to talk about those who have died, but received no notice in 
their life or death. The speaker says that many people go on unnoticed in life like a 
desert flower that has "waste its sweetness on the desert air" This is connecting to 
nature once again. These type of stanzas are also trying to make the reader feel sorry
for 
the speaker. He goes on to further describe the situation for the dead and still takes
pity 
on them and wants the reader to do the same. At the end he ends the poem with what can 
be seen as the end of someone's time on earth, the epitaph of a gravestone. 
William Collins wrote a lot of odes in his time. They were said to personify his 
emotions such as pity, fear, etc. His odes reflect nature in the title sometimes, like
Ode 
to an Evening. Collins is referring to a farmer or a sheepherder that has finished the
day 
and is now ready to rest before the next day. He is also making some kind of a plea to 
nature. He is saying that he wants to learn from nature "Now teach me, maid composed, 
to breate some softened strain," this draws more of connection to nature and humanity. 
The speaker sounds like he is asking nature to teach him. He says he loves when the 
morning star comes around again to start the work day over again "Thy genial loved 
return! For when thy folding-star arising shows his paly circlet, at his warning lamp." 
This line shows that he relies on nature to tell him when to herd the sheep before it
gets 
to late in the day. He seems to like the early morning before the sun really gets up
there 
because he says that he wants the star to wake him early so he can see "the freshening 
dew" and the pensive Pleasures sweet." He is making his connection to nature here 
because he is saying that without nature he would not get up on time to tend to the
sheep. 
He would also miss the scents and sights of early morning in nature before the sun gets 
hot. He make another plea that when he can't work "be mine the hut that from the 
mountain's side views wild, and swelling floods, and hamlets brown, and dim-discovered 
spires" because he still wants to experience nature at all times. Even if he can't be 
outside in it he wants to at least be able to witness it. He is begging here for nature
to 
allow him to see it everyday. He asks that throughout all the seasons he will be able to

survive "shall fancy, friendship, science, rose-lopped health, they gentlest influence
own, 
and hymn favorite name! 

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