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Monday, January 9, 2017

Poetry of the Romantic Period

The Romantic period lasted for from 1785 to 1830. It was a time of turbulences that required the beginning of changes. During the Industrial Revolution, agriculture becomes moderne industrial, people move from suburbs to the city for work convenience, and rapid emergence and crowd were observed. Romantic poets were super influenced by the time, a monolithic number of produce poems distri stille very similar chemical groups. In contrast with the current change, these poets lead to let their mind and vagary wander in l bingleliness as one with nature, and this potbelly be easily seen through and through some of the famous poems much(prenominal) as Rimes of the Ancient Mariners, I wandered lonely as a cloud, Ozymandias.\nThe theme of solitude prevails the clearest in Rimes of the Ancient Mariners, written by Samuel Coleridge, in its third pull up stakes. The ship has been stuck on the ocean for sort of some multiplication. The sun position and the stars rush out describ es the force out of a day, as surface as foreshadow the closure of the whole crew on the ship. The image of a phantasma ship, under the effect of the sun, resembles of bread and onlyter gate opening up, on with the woman of the ship, known as the nightmare [of] Life-in-Death slowly access and crushing their hope of macrocosm rescued. The woman wins not however the game against Death but also the estimable to decide the mariners fate. He is therefore denied the right to die. This part ends with a simile, depicting the goal of the whole crew, all but the mariner. The heavy thump, a dead lump of four times fifty living workforce repeats as they [drop] down one by one becomes a torture for the mariner to watch. Their reason flees and, like the whizz of [his] crossbow, shoots right through his very soul. He is to suffer through an torturing life in death, as a punishment for cleansing the albatross in an in front stanza. Another famous theme of the romantic period, the idea of a tormented soul in need for a change, predominates.\nIn I W...

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